- (1917 - 1935) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1917) Stage Play: The Three Bears. Written by Edward Childs Carpenter. Empire Theatre: 13 Nov 1917- Dec 1917 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: J.T. Chaillee, Alice Gale, Margaret Linden [Broadway debut], Percy Marmont [Broadway debut], Rex McDougall [credited as Rex McDougal], Ann Murdock, Jerome Patrick. Produced by Charles Frohman Inc. Note: Filmed by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation (1919-US)/Paramount Pictures [worldwide] as Three Men and a Girl (1919).
- (1918) Stage Play: Head Over Heels. Musical. Music by Jerome Kern. Lyrics by Edgar Allan Woolf. Book by Edgar Allan Woolf. Dramatized by Lee Arthur. From the story "Shadows" by Nalbro Bartley. Additional music by Harold A. Levey. Musical Director: Harold A. Levey. Musical Staging by Julian Mitchell. Directed by George F. Marion. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 29 Aug 1918- 23 Nov 1918 (100 performances). Cast: Angele Baber (as "Philene Van Stroock"), Irving Beebe (as "Mr. Edward Sterling"), Andy Bennett (as "Buxaume"), Martha Bowes (as "Miss Wentworth"), Florence Browne (as "Miss Collins"), Gertrude Dallas [final Broadway role], Grace Daniels, Joseph Dunn (as "Toni"), Marion Earle (as "Anita Vanderhayden"), Adelaide Fiset (as "Wanda Van Zandt"), Dorothy Gilbert (as "Diane Van Renssaler"), Edmund Gurney (as "Jarvis"), Fan Haggerty (as "Miss Graham"), Mitzi Hajos (as "Mitzi Bambinetti"), Marie Hollywell (as "Fanchon Van Twiller"), Edna Hyatt (as "Elsie Van Pelt"), Charles Judels (as "Signor Bambinetti"), Robert Emmett Keane (as "Mr. T. Anthony Squibbs"), Margaret Linden (as "Mrs. Sarah Montague"), Eleanor Livingston (as "Miss Hammond"), Dorothy MacKaye (as "Miss Muriel Sterling"), Jean Mann (as "Miss Edith Penfield"), Ernest Marini, Boyd Marshall (as "Mr. Robert Lawson"), Irma Marwick (as "Zoie Van Puyster"), Niobe Marwick (as "Lorine Vandusen"), Edward Mathews (as "Henri"), Carrie McManus (as "Molly"), James Oliver (as "Oscar"), Paul Oscard (as "Baron Everard Cesare D'Oultremont"), Ruth Parker (as "Dijonne Van Piet"), Marion Phillips (as "Delia Van Maarck"), Dorothy Smoller (as "Luella Vanderwater"), Lambert Terry (as "Office Boy"), Martha Voight (as "Marcine Vanbaar"). Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Madras House. Drama. Written by Harley Granville-Barker. Neighborhood Playhouse: 29 Oct 1921- Dec 1921 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Katherine Brook, Evelyn Carter Carrington, Albert Carroll, Dennis Cleugh, Marie De Becker, Warburton Gamble (as "Philip Madras"), Whitford Kane (as "Henry Huxtable"), Ernita Lascelles, Margaret Linden (as "Jessica Madras"), Aline MacMahon (as "Laura Huxtable") [Broadway debut], Esther Mitchell, Agnes Morgan, Marie Pinckard, Eugene Powers, John Roche, Montague Rutherford, Beatrice Sackett, Catherine Sayre, Eugenia Woodward.
- (1922) Stage Play: Listening In. Comedy. Written by Carlyle Moore [final Broadway credit]. Directed by Ira Hards. Bijou Theatre: 4 Dec 1922- Feb 1923 (closing date unknown/99 performances). Cast: Frank Andrews (as "Dr. Emil Bachman"), William B. Davidson, C.L. Emerson (as "Police Officer"), Herbert Farjeon (as "Abu"), Helen Flint (as "Miriam Adrian"), George Gaston (as "Messenger") [final Broadway role], Ernest Glendinning (as "John Coomber"), 'William Keighley' (as "William Archer"), Frank J. Kirk (as "Jonas McKesson"), Margaret Linden (as "Mrs. Grace Pemberton"), George Majeroni (as "Mr. Morrison"), Dodson Mitchell (as "Johnathan Cumberland"), Gerald Stopp, Harry Stubbs (as "Harry Van Sloan"). Produced by Milton Productions.
- (1923) Stage Play: Little Miss Bluebeard. Musical comedy. Written by Avery Hopwood. Adapated from the play by 'Gabor Dregely'. Featuring songs by E. Ray Goetz, José Padilla, Paul A. Rubens and George Gershwin. Featuring songs with lyrics by E. Ray Goetz, Buddy G. DeSylva, Arthur Francis and Percy Graham Paul. Directed by W.H. Gilmore. Lyceum Theatre: 28 Aug 1923- 26 Jan 1924 (175 performances). Cast: Arthur Barry (as "Sir John Barstow'), Eric Blore (as "The Hon. Bertie Bird") [Broadway debut], 'Irene Bordoni' (as "Colette"), Burton Brown (as "Paul Rondel"), William Evill (as "Smithers"), Eva Leonard Boyne (as "Lulu"), Margaret Linden (as "Eva Winthrop"), Stanley Logan (as "Bob Talmadge") [Broadway debut], Bruce McRae (as "Larry Charters"), Jeannette Sherwin (as "Gloria Talmadge"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc. Produced in association with E. Ray Goetz.
- (1933) Stage Play: Saint Wench. Comedy.
- (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 (as "Lady with Dog") [final Broadway role], 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. Note: Filmed by The Samuel Goldwyn Company [distributed by United Artists as Dead End (1937).
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content