- (1928 - 1963) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1928) Stage Play: Marco Millions.
- (1949) Stage Play: Metropole. Comedy. Written by William Walden. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Lyceum Theatre: 6 Dec 1949- 7 Dec 1949 (2 performances). Cast: Edith Atwater (as "Miss Harrington"), Malcolm Lee Beggs, Reed Brown Jr. (as "Frederick M. Hill"), Jean Carson, George Cotton (as "Furniture Mover"), Royal Dano (as "Ellington"), Reynolds Evans (as "Crowell"), Arlene Francis (as "Carolyn Hopewell"), John Glendinning, Henry Jones (as "Stumm"), Burton Lewis, Lee Parry, Jane Seymour, Lee Tracy (as "Frederick M. Hill"), Frances Waller. Produced by Max Gordon.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Light of Asia. Written by Georgina Jones Walton. Choreographed by Ruth St. Denis. Directed by Walter Hampden. Hampden's Theatre: 9 Oct 1928- Oct 1928 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Dallas Anderson (as "Kondanna"), Gage Bennett (as "King of Koli"), Norbert Cameron (as "Noble"), George Cotton (as "Merchant"), M. D'Arcy (as "A Hillman"), Francis Dears (as "Soldiers"), Forrest Gains (as "Noble"), Thomas Gomez (as "An Old Leper/Assaji"), Evelyn Goodrich (as "Radha/Purna"), C. Norman Hammond (as "Shivamangala"), Walter Hampden (as "Siddartha, Prince of the Sakyas"), Gordon Hart (as "Another Astrologer/Vappa"), Isabel S. Hill (as "Nautch Girl"), Harriet Ingersoll (as "Nautch Girl"), Stephen Irving (as "Water Bearer"), Philip Jones (as "Soldiers"), Richard Lawrence (as "Water Bearer"), Omar Le Gant (as "A Page"), Jan Lindermann (as "A Hermit"), Judith Lowry (as "Prajapati"), Anna Lubow (as "Kisogatami"), Beatrice Maude (as "Gunga"), Kate Mayhew (as "An Outcaste Woman"), Caroline Meade (as "Draupadi"), Joseph Milton (as "Merchant/A Monk"), Eleanor Mish (as "Chitra"), Anne Mitchell (as "Nautch Girl"), Mabel Moore (as "Queen Maya/Sujata"), LeRoi Operti (as "Ormuzd"), Lou Polan (as "Devadatta, Prince of Koli"), Eugene Powers (as "King of the Sakyas"), Charles Quigley (as "Ananda"), Sri Ragini (as "Nautch Girl"), Edwin Ross Jr. (as "A Citizen"), Ernest Rowan (as "Channa"), Franklin Salisbury (as "Bhadya"), William Sauter (as "Asita/Mohanna"), Robert C. Schnitzer (as "Merchant"), Freddie Stange (as "Rahula"), William Thornton (as "An Attendant"), Ingeborg Torrup (as "Yashodara"), Cecil Yapp (as "Visvamitra "). Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Light of Asia. Written by Georgina Jones Walton. Choreographed by Ruth St. Denis. Directed by Walter Hampden. Hampden's Theatre: 9 Oct 1928- Oct 1928 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Dallas Anderson (as "Kondanna"), Gage Bennett (as "King of Koli"), Norbert Cameron (as "Noble"), George Cotton (as "Merchant"), M. D'Arcy (as "A Hillman"), Francis Dears (as "Soldiers"), Forrest Gains (as "Noble"), Thomas Gomez (as "An Old Leper/Assaji"), Evelyn Goodrich (as "Radha/Purna"), C. Norman Hammond (as "Shivamangala"), Walter Hampden (as "Siddhartha"), Gordon Hart (as "Another Astrologer/Vappa"), Isabel S. Hill (as "Nautch Girl"), Harriet Ingersoll (as "Nautch Girl"), Stephen Irving (as "Water Bearer"), Philip Jones (as "Soldier"), Richard Lawrence (as "Water Bearer"), Omar Le Gant (as "A Page"), Jan Lindermann (as "A Hermit"), Judith Lowry (as "Prajapati"), Anna Lubow (as "Kisogatami"), Beatrice Maude (as "Gunga"), Kate Mayhew (as "An Outcaste Woman"), Caroline Meade (as "Draupadi"), Joseph Milton (as "Merchant/A Monk"), Eleanor Mish (as "Chitra"), Anne Mitchell (as "Nautch Girl"), Mabel Moore (as "Queen Maya/Sujata"), LeRoi Operti (as "Ormuzd"), Lou Polan (as "Devadatta, Prince of Koli"), Eugene Powers (as "King of the Sakyas"), Charles Quigley (as "Ananda"), Sri Ragini (as "Nautch Girl"), Edwin Ross Jr. (as "A Citizen"), Ernest Rowan (as "Channa"), Franklin Salisbury (as "Bhadya"), William Sauter (as "Asita/Mohanna"), Robert C. Schnitzer (as "Merchant"), Freddie Stange (as "Rahula"), William Thornton (as "An Attendant"), Ingeborg Torrup (as "Yashodara"), Cecil Yapp (as "Visvamitra"). Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1930) Stage Play: Volpone. Comedy (revival). Written by Ben Jonson. Directed by Philip Moeller. Liberty Theatre: 10 Mar 1930- Mar 1930 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Lucille Banner (as "Maid to Colomba"), Alan Blaine (as "Sbirri"), George Cotton (as "Sbirri"), Walter Coy (as "Sbirri"), John C. Davis (as "Corbaccio's servant/Priest"), Fred DeVeau (as "Sbirri"), Sylvia Field (as "Colomba"), Philip Foster (as "Captain of the Sbirri"), Walter Franklyn (as "Singer"), Sydney Greenstreet (as "Volpone"), John Henry (as "Slave to Volpone"), Edgar Kent, Earle Larrimore (as "Mosca"), Thomas Mackay (as "Sbirri"), Sydney Little Mansfield (as "3rd Servant"), Burton McEvilly (as "1st Servant"), Sanford Meisner, Harry Mestayer (as "Corvino"), Clifford Odets (as "Sbirri") [Broadway debut], Frederick Roland (as "Voltore"), Lucian Scott (as "Clerk of the Court"), Vincent Sherman (as "Singer/Court Attendant"), Donald Smith (as "Singer"), Don Sylvester (as "Sbirri"), Helen Tilden, Albert Dekker [credited as Albert Van Dekker] (as "Leone"), Francis Ward, Harry Wise, Martin Wolfson (as "2nd Servant"), Paul Yost (as "Singer"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1938) Stage Play: Gloriana. Comedy. Written by Ferdinand Bruckner. Music by Thomas Jefferson Scott. Directed by Tom Powers. Little Theatre: 25 Nov 1938- Nov 1938 (closing date unknown/5 performances). Cast: Ainsworth Arnold (as "The Cardinal"), Robert Breen (as "Northumberland"), Conrad Cantzen (as "Spanish Grandee"), George Cotton (as "Tajo"), Boyd Crawford (as "Essex"), Sayre Crawley (as "Cecil"), Edwin Cushman (as "The Archbishop"), Nancy Cushman (as "A Tavern Wench"), Arthur Davison (as "Spanish Grandee"), Stephen Deere (as "English Solider"), Leslie Denison (as "Mountjoy"), Helen Edwards (as "Lady in Waiting"), Philip Faversham (as "Plantagenet"), Kenneth Ferrel (as "Spanish Soldier"), Hugh Franklin (as "English Solider"), Eric Franson (as "English Solider"), Beatrice Graham (as "Lady in Waiting"), Celeste Holm (as "Lady Mary") [Broadway debut], Alice John (as "Lady Ann"), Anthony Kemble-Cooper (as "Southampton"), Joseph R. Mann (as "Spanish Grandee"), John McKee (as "Idiaquez"), Benedict McQuarrie (as "Pater Mariana"), Philip Merrick (as "English Solider"), John Norton (as "English Solider"), Tom Powers (as "Bacon"), P.J. Rollow (as "Spanish Grandee"), Royal Rompel (as "English Solider"), Frederick Ross (as "English Solider"), Edward Stanbury (as "Spanish Soldier"), Francis Swann (as "A Tavern Singer"), Marjorie Tas (as "Barmaid"), Harold Vermilyea (as "Philip of Spain"), Randolph Wade (as "English Solider"), Betty Young (as "Isabella"), Blanche Yurka (as "Elizabeth of England"). Produced by Theatre House Inc.
- (1963) Stage Play: Andorra.
- (1963) Stage Play: Arturo Ui. Written by Bertolt Brecht (from "The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui"). Book adapted by George Tabori. Incidental music by Jule Styne. Music orchestrated by Ray Ellis. Production Design by Rouben Ter-Arutunian. Make-up Supervisor: Mitchell Erickson. Lighting Assistant: Martin Aronstein. Directed by Tony Richardson. Lunt-Fontanne Theatre: 11 Nov 1963- 16 Nov 1963 (8 performances + 5 previews that began on 6 Nov 1963). Cast: Christopher Plummer (as "Arturo Ui"), Michael Constantine (as "Dogsborough"), Elisha Cook (as "Giuseppe Givola"), Roger De Koven (as "The Actor"), Hugh Franklin (as "Clark"), Henry Lascoe (as "Butcher"), Lionel Stander (as "Manuele Giri"), Murvyn Vye (as "Ernesto Roma"), Sandy Baron (as "Bowl/Priest/Ensemble"), Leonardo Cimino (as "Fish/Ensemble"), Oliver Clark (as "Young Dogsborough"), James Coco (as "O'Casey/Ensemble"), George Cotton (as "Mulberry"), James Frawley (as "Flake/Ensemble"), Harold Gary (as "Arturo Ui's Bodyguard"), Louis Guss (as "Ragg/Ensemble"), Chuck Haren (as "Inna/Ensemble"), Diane Higgins (as "Ensemble"), Dossie Hollingsworth (as "Dockdaisy"), Bobby Dean Hooks (as "Ensemble"), John Karlen (as "Shorty/Ensemble"), Frank Loren (as "Ensemble"), Gubi Mann (as "Ensemble"), John Marriott (as "Jim Crocket" / "Ensemble"), Paul Michael (as "The Barker/Goodwill"), David O'Brien (as "Defense Counsel/Ensemble"), Tom Pedi (as "Arturo Ui's Bodyguard"), Antony Ponzini (as "Ensemble"), Beah Richards (as "The Woman"), Madeleine Sherwood (as "Betty Dullfeet"), William Shust (as "Sheet/Ensemble"), Jim Stark (as "Ensemble"), Glenn Stensel (as "Doctor/Ensemble"), Warren Wade (as "Gaffles/Judge"), Robert Weil (as "Ignatius Dullfeet"). Produced by David Merrick. Associate Producer: Neil Hartley.
- (1948) Stage Play: Bravo!
- (1954) Stage Play: Anastasia. Drama.
- (1935) Stage Play: Dead End. Drama. Written by Sidney Kingsley. Production Design by Norman Bel Geddes. Directed by Sidney Kingsley. Belasco Theatre: 28 Oct 1935- 12 Jun 1937 (687 performances). Cast: Carroll Ashburn (as "Mr. Griswald"), Charles Bellin, Charles Benjamin, Philip Bourneuf (as "Interne"), Marie R. Burke, Richard Clark, Francis G. Cleveland, George Cotton (as "Doorman"), Marc Daniels, Francis De Sales, Ethel Dell, Gabriel Dell (as "T.B.") [Broadway debut], Joe Downing (as "Babyface Martin"), Charles R. Duncan, Willis Duncan, Dan Duryea (as "G-Man") [Broadway debut], Elspeth Eric (as "Drina"), Sidonie Espero, Martin Gabel, Edward P. Goodnow, David Gorcey (as "Second Avenue Boy"), Leo Gorcey (as "Second Avenue Boy") [only Broadway appearance], Huntz Hall (as "Dippy") [only Broadway appearance], Billy Halop (as "Tommy") [Broadway debut], Drina Hill, Bobby Jordan (as "Angel"), Margaret Linden, Sidney Lumet (as "Small Boy"), Blossom MacDonald (as "Ensemble"), Marjorie Main (as "Mrs. Martin"), Margaret Mullen, Robert J. Mulligan, Theodore Newton, George N. Price (as "Old Gentleman") [final Broadway role], Bernard Punsly (as "Milty"), Lewis L. Russell, Harry Selby, Joseph Taibi, William Toubin, Sheila Trent (as "Francey"), Cyril Gordon Weld, Billy Winston, Louis Woods, Elizabeth Wrangle (as "Ensemble") [credited as Elizabeth Wragge], Dane Clark (as "Sailor") [credited as Bernard Zanville]. Produced by Norman Bel Geddes.
- (1939) Stage Play: The American Way. Written by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart. Scenic Design by Donald Oenslager. Costume Design by Irene Sharaff. Lighting Design by Hassard Short. Scene Technician for Mr. Oenslager: Isaac Benesch. Assistants to Miss Sharaff: Anna Hill Johnstone and Florence Keady. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Center Theatre: 21 Jan 1939- Jun 1939 (closing date unknown/164 performances). Cast: Fredric March (as "Martin Gunther"), Florence Eldridge (as "Irma Gunther"), McKay Morris (as "Samuel Brockton"), Ruth Weston (as "Winifred Baxter"), Eve Abbott, Albert Amato, Jack Arnold (as "Ed Lorenz"), Suzanne Ashbrook, Cathie Bailey, Alan Bandler, Bobby Barron, Robin Batcheller, Vivian Baule, Joseph Beale, Walter Beck (as "A Minister"), Herman Belmonte, Mary Bennett, Ronald Bennett, Evelyn Bernie, Whit Bissell (as "Karl, Age 21"; credited as Whitner Bissell), Milton Blumenthal, Orin Borston, Mary Brandon, Louise Buck, Buddy Buehler, Eileen Burns, Joe Bush, Hugh Cameron (as "Mayor McEvoy"), Eleanore Campsall, Gloria Carey, Gerry Carr, Eldridge Carson, Kenneth Casey, Teddy Casey, Natalie Chilvers, Laura Church, Norma Clerc, Beatrice Cole, Daniel Conway, Russell Conway, George Cotton (as "Ensemble"), Alex Courtney, Ed Crosswell, Harry Crox, Tom Curley, Robert Cushman, Kenneth Dana, Ethel Darling, Gretchen Davidson, Bud Davis, Celeste DeBellis, Louis Delgado, Sandford Dody, Gene Douglas, Dorothy Downs, Katherine Duncan, Helen Edwards, Marian Edwards, Clark Eggleston (as "Ensemble"), Edward Elliott, Ruth Enders, Elsa Ersi (as "Clara Heinrich"), Herbert Everin, Gilbert Fates, Edward Fisher, Alice Fitzsimmons, Janet Fox, Eugene Francis, Vincent Gardiner, Bob Gewald, Herbert Goff, Brant Gorman, Carl Gose, Sydney Grant (as "Dr. Squires"), Norma Green, Claire Greenwood, Donn Hagerty, Gilbert Haggerty, Ann Hagye, Vernon Hammer, Robert Hanley, Lola Harris, Michael Harvey, William Hawes, James Hayes, George Herndon, Alan Hewitt (as "Alex Hewitt"), Nina Hill, Mary Hoban (as "Ensemble"), Cynthia Holbrook, Danny Hood, Claire Howard, Carol Hulings, Bradford Hunt, Buddy Irving, Carl Johnson, Peter Johnson, Marilyn Jolie, Curtis Karpe (as "Ensemble"), Allen Kearns, Walter Kelly, John Kerr, Robert Kerr, Lila King, Dorothy Knox, William Layton (as "Ensemble"), Kenneth Le Roy, Michael Leonard, Tommy Lewis, Richard Lloyd, Audrey Lodge, Constance Lodge, Virginia Lodge, John Long, John Lorenz, Betty MacDonald, James MacDonald, Marvel MacInnis (as "Ensemble"), Edward Mann, Jules Mann, Adrienne Marden, Jean Martel, Remi Martel, Gaylord Mason, Buddy Matthews, Gordon Merrick, Dorothy Miller, Gordon Mills, Patricia Minty, Carman Mitchell, Lois Montgomery, James Moore, Mona Moray, Mary Murray, May Muth, Florrie Nadel, Edna Nagy, Cecil Natapoff, Doris Newcomb, Donald O'Day, Grace O'Malley, LeRoi Operti (as "Dr. MacFarlane"), Margaret Owens, Melvin Parks, Judy Parrish, Lee Parry, Albert Patterson, Charles Payne, Jeannie Belle Perry, Martha Pickens, Gloria Pierre, Elinor Pittis, Philip Pollard, Jean Porter, Janet Regan, Ronald Reiss, George Repp, Robert Rhodes, Eric Roberts, James Roland, Mary Romano, Peggy Romano, Sylvia Roseman, James Russo, Nathaniel Sack, Stephen Sandes, Ray Santos, Lesley Savage, Dora Sayers, Louise Segal, Nat Seigal, Jeanne Shelby, Thomas Speidel, Don Starr, Mary Stevenson, Rodney Stewart, Sidney Stone, Elliott Stranger, Ruth Strome, Daphne Sylva, Jerry Sylvon, Ward Tallman (as "Henry Courtney"), John Thomas, Jerome Thor (as "Ensemble"), Frances Thress, Harry Todd, Carl Urbont, Grace Valentine, Dick Van Patten (as "Karl Gunther, Age 9; Martin Gunther's grandchild") [creidted as Dickie Van Patten], Joan Vitez, Julia Walsh, George Ward, Jeanne Wardley, David Wayne (as "Karl Gunther"), William Welch, Maurice Wells, Peggy Wells, Alan Wenfield, Bob White, Albert Whitley, Nancy Whitman, Lynn Whitney, Mary Williamson, Lois Winston, Janice Winter, Barbara Wooddell, Gene Yell. Produced by Sam Harris and Max Gordon.
- (1948) Stage Play: A Story for Strangers. Fantasy.
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