- (1917 - 1947) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1917) Stage Play: A Successful Calamity. Comedy. Written by Clare Kummer. Booth Theatre: 5 Feb 1917- Jun 1917 (closing date unknown/144 performances). Cast: Katharine Alexander (as "Julia Parkingston, Eddie's fiancé"), Richard Barbee (as "Eddie, Wilton's son"), Claus Bogel (as "Dr. Brodie, the family physician"), William Devereaux (as "Connors, the butler"), Ruth Findlay (as "Marguerite, Wilton's daughter"), William Gillette (as "Henry Wilton, a millionaire who longs to spend a quiet evening"), Manart Kippen (as "Pietro Rafaelo, an Italian portrait painter") [Broadway debut], Charles Lane (as "John Belden, Wilton's partner"), Mlle. Marcelle (as "Albertine, Mrs. Wilton's maid"), Richard Sterling (as "George Struthers, Marguerite's fiancé"), Estelle Winwood (as "Emma Wilton, Wilton's youngest daughter"), Roland Young (as "Clarence Rivers, another fiancé"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1920) Stage Play: Poldekin. Comedy. Written by Booth Tarkington. Park Theatre: 9 Sep 1920- Oct 1920 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Cast: Carl Anthony (as "Podoff"), George Arliss (as "Poldekin"), William H. Barwald (as "Sergeant"), Julia Dean (as "Blanche"), Emil Hoch (as "Endachieff"), Manart Kippen (as "Nicolai"), Elsie MacKay (as "Maria"), Edward G. Robinson (as "Pinsky"), Sidney Toler (as "Welch"), Hubert Wilke (as "Krimoff"). Produced by George C. Tyler.
- (1920) Stage Play: Samson and Delilah. Comedy/tragedy. Written by Sven Lange, as translated by Samuel S. Grossman. Greenwich Village Theatre: 17 Nov 1920- Mar 1921 (closing date unknown/143 performances). Cast: Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Peter Krumback") [Broadway debut], Marie Bruce, Robert T. Haines, Robert Harrison, Sam Jaffe, Jacob Kingsbury, Manart Kippen (as "Lundberg"), Stella Larrimore, Pauline Lord, Thomas Meegan, Olga Olonova, Alexis M. Polianov, A.W. Reno, Edward G. Robinson (as "The Director"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1921) Stage Play: Daddy's Gone A-Hunting. Drama. Written by Zoe Akins. Directed by Arthur Hopkins. Plymouth Theatre: 31 Aug 1921- Jan 1922 (closing date unknown/129 performances). Cast: Lee Baker (as "Walter Greenough"), Frank Conroy, Manart Kippen (as "Oscar"), Olga Olonova (as "Olga"), Marjorie Rambeau (as "Edith"), John Robb (as "Knight"), Helen Robbins (as "Mrs. Dahlgren"), Frances Victory (as "Janet"), Jeanne Wardley (as "Laura"), Winifred Wellington (as "Mrs. Price"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1922) Stage Play: Johannes Kreisler. Melodrama/fantasy. Written by Louis N. Parker. From the German of Meinhard and Rudolph Bernauer. Music by E.H. Von Reznich. Apollo Theatre: 20 Dec 1922- Feb 1923 (closing date unknown/65 performances). Cast: Fritz Adams (as "Vincent/Baron Puckler"), Anna Bates (as "Mrs. Mark"), Joseph Batistich (as "Don Ottavio"), Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Johannes Kreisler"), Charles R. Burrows (as "Mr. Mark"), Berthold Busch (as "The Fisherman/Don Juan"), A.M. Bush (as "The Schoolmaster/Assistant Stage Manager"), Millie Butterfield (as "Madame Von Benzon"), Burr Caruth (as "Sekonda"), F. Eckhard Dawson (as "Prince Von Soden"), Alta Virginia Houston (as "The Fisherman's Wife/Elvira"), Allyn Joslyn (as "Cuno"), Manart Kippen (as "Cyprian/Father Ignatius/The Lord Chamberlain"), Edward Le Duc (as "Gottlieb/Dittmaier"), William Lilling (as "A Lackey"), Oliver T. McCormick (as "Sylvester/Leporello"), Hyman Meyer (as "Othmar/Bartoni"), Rosa Nier (as "Undine's Voice/Voice of Donna Anna"), Cecil Owen (as "Ludwig, The Rich Man"), Lotus Robb (as "Julia Mark, Undine/Euphemia/Donna Anna"), Erskine Sanford (as "Theodor"), Hilda Steiner. Produced by The Selwyns.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Kreutzer Sonata. Drama.
- (1927) Stage Play: Puppets of Passion.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Royal Box.
- (1928) Stage Play: Sakura.
- (1929) Stage Play: Fifty Million Frenchmen.
- (1930) Stage Play: Mr. Samuel. Comedy. Written by Winthrop Ames. From the French of Edmond Fleg. Directed by Clifford Brooke. Little Theatre: 10 Nov 1930- Nov 1930 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: France Bendtsen, Fairfax Burger, Kate Byron, Wallis Clark, Thomas Coffin Cooke, Teresa Dale, Charles H. Doyle, Betty Hanna, Geneva Harrison, H. Dudley Hawley (as "Irving Van Ingen"), Robert Hudson, Harry Joyner, Manart Kippen (as "Joseph"), Gladys Lloyd, Henry Mortimer, Alexis M. Polianov, Adelaide Prince, Harry Redding, Charles Ritchie, Edward G. Robinson (as "Samuel Brisach"), Brinsley Shaw, Sam Silverbush, Jeanne Wardley, Eddie Wragge. Produced by George C. Tyler. Produced in association with Erlanger Productions, Inc.
- (1933) Stage Play: The Mask and the Face. Comedy (revival). Written by W. Somerset Maugham, from the Italian of Luigi Chiarelli. Scenic Design by Lee Simonson. Directed by Philip Moeller. Guild Theatre: 8 May 1933- Jun 1933 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Judith Anderson (as "Savina Grazia"), Humphrey Bogart (as "Luciano Spina"), Shirley Booth (as "Elisa Zanotti"), Charles Campbell, Leo G. Carroll, Ernest Cossart, Manart Kippen, William Lovejoy, Joan Marion, Donald McClelland, Dorothy Patten (as "Marta Setta"), Alice Reinheart, Stanley Ridges. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1933) Stage Play: American Dream. Drama.
- (1933) Stage Play: Yoshe Kalb. Drama.
- (1934) Stage Play: All the King's Horses. Romantic comedy.
- (1934) Stage Play: A Ship Comes In. Drama. Written by Joseph Anthony [earliest Broadway credit]. Scenic Design by Herbert Ward and Walter Harvey. Directed by Augustin Duncan. Morosco Theatre: 19 Sep 1934- Oct 1934 (closing date unknown/38 performances). Cast: Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Dr. Victor Bard"), Rudolf Brooks (as "Ship's Officer"), Nana Bryant (as "Mrs. Charlotte Strawbridge"), Edwin Cooper (as "Mr. Jenkins"), Elizabeth Farrar (as "Mrs. Jenkins"), Manart Kippen (as "Dr. Carl Brenner"), Bjorn Koefoed (as "Dr. Sawyer"), Boris Korlin (as "Oblanitcheff"), Anna Lubowe (as "Stella Rickert"), Frank Manning (as "Johann"), William Packer (as "Dr. Marvin"), Arthur Row (as "Ship's Steward"), Virginia Stevens (as "Blanche Mortimer"), Calvin Thomas (as "H. Gordon Mortimer"). Produced by Richard Herndon. Produced in association with John C. Mayer.
- (1935) Stage Play: For Valor. Comedy. Written by Martha Hedman and Henry Arthur House. Directed by Frank Craven. Empire Theatre: 18 Nov 1935- Nov 1935 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Charles Dow Clark (as "Mr. Sims"), Frank Coletti (as "Corporal Colt"), Thomas Coffin Cooke (as "Robert Lake"), Frank Craven (as "Wallace I. Brown"), Frederica Going (as "Frau Fritzie Schmitt"), John Harwood (as "A German Lieutenant"), Emil Hoch (as "First Landsturm") [final Broadway role], Manart Kippen (as "General Von Und Zu Puppendorf"), Frederick Klein (as "Orderly"), Charles Laite (as "Harold Pratt"), George Lewis (as "A Newsreel Photographer"), Rhea Martin (as "Betsy Dale"), Oscar Meyer (as "Second Officer"), Karl Mueller (as "Third Officer"), Hilda Plowright (as "Aurelia Slater"), Victor Rosenberg (as "Second Landsturm"), Sam Sidman (as "Private Malinsky"), Lenore Sorsby (as "The Siren"), Arnold Sudman (as "Fourth Officer"), Beatrice Terry (as "Mrs. Peter Teasdale"), June Walker (as "Mary Brown"), George Whitson (as "Postman"), Jay Wilson (as "Congressman Henry O'Day"), Hans Windel (as "First Officer"). Produced by George C. Tyler.
- (1937) Stage Play: Marching Song. Drama. Written by John Howard Lawson. Scenic Design by Howard Bay. Directed by Anthony Brown. Nora Bayes Theatre: 17 Feb 1937- Apr 1937 (closing date unknown/61 performances). Cast: Frieda Altman (as "Jenny Russell"), Sylvia Barnett, Richard Barrows, Frances Bavier (as "Mary McGillicuddy "), Walter Beck (as "Blister Haddock"), Tommi Bissell, Alice Brooks, Grover Burgess (as "Pete Russell"), Fanya Cherenko, Curt Conway, Theodore Corday, Maria Coxe, Edward Ferguson, Gertrude Flynn (as "Rose Graham"), Leonard S. Grime, Barbara Guerdon, Edward Everett Hale (as "Warren Winkle"), Alfred Herrick, Dorothy Howard, T.J. Hughes Jr., John Huntington (as "Tubby Smuts"), Rex Ingram (as "Lucky Johnson "), Dan James, Manart Kippen (as "Binks"), Charles Kuhn (as "Pop Fergus"), Roy Le May, Gloria Levinge, Mildred Lewis, Lester Lonergan III, Lester Lonergan Jr. (as "Parlez-vous"), James MacDonald, Lisa Markah, Ben Metz, Russell Morrison (as "Dopey Belcher"), Charles Neville, Robert Ober-Reich, Robert Reed, Clark Robinson, Amelia Romano, Charles Smith, Hester Sondergaard (as "Mrs. Malucci"), Joseph Taulane, Yngvi Thortelson, Mark Toby, Martin Wolfson (as "Bill Anderson"), Stanley G. Wood. Produced by The Theatre Union.
- (1937) Stage Play: To Quito and Back. Comedy. Written by Ben Hecht. Production Supervised by Lawrence Langner and Theresa Helburn. Directed by Philip Moeller [final Broadway credit]. Guild Theatre: 6 Oct 1937- Dec 1937 (closing date unknown/46 performances). Cast: Albert Allen, Walter Armin (as "Officer"), Leslie Banks (as "Alexander Sterns"), Harry Bellaver (as "Comrade Patayo"), Tommi Bissell, Samuel Brown, Joseph Buloff, Edilberto G. Burgos, Alfonso Chavez, Fred Clegg, Francis Compton (as "Howard Evans"), Aristes Corona, Natalia Danesi, Juan De Aguenta, Manuel De Moya, Joseph Monneret De Villard, Isobel Donald, Sidonie Espero, Fredericka Fortello, Tuan Garcia, Walter Greaza (as "Harold Frazer"), Virginia Gregori, Louis Halprin, Muggsie, Virginia Holden (as "Francisca"), Don Kelly, Manart Kippen (as "Colonel Pizarro"), Michael Lackman, Henry Levin, Mildred Levin, George J. Lewis, Lone Mountain, Lena Peters, Charles H. Pinkham, Eugenia Rawls, Shelia Richart, Manuel Risto, Sylvia Sidney (as "Lola Hobbs"), Horace Sinclair (as "Captain Stewart"), Jack Soanes, Jan Ullrich, Evelyn Varden, Augustin Gonzales Villaverde. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1947) Stage Play: Miracle in the Mountains.
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