- (1913 - 1963) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1913) Stage Play: The Passing Show of 1913. Musical revue. Music by Jean Schwartz and Al W. Brown. Book by Harold Atteridge. Lyrics by Harold Atteridge. Musical Director: Oscar Radin. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Directed by Ned Wayburn. Winter Garden Theatre: 24 Jul 1913- Sep 1913 (closing date unknown/58 performances). Cast: Clara Aldwyn, Jeannette Alpine, Ed Begley [juvenile role], May Boley , Lew Brice, Marie Caldwell, Ed Campbell, Nell Carrington, Lucille Cavanaugh, Bessie Clayton, Frank Conroy [Broadway debut], Kenneth Cooley, Herbert Corthell, Wellington Cross, Marjorie Dayton, Charles DeHaven, Mae Dealy, Daisy Delmar, Violet Delmar, Henry Detloff, Dick Dickinson, Nina DuBal, Grace DuBoise, Mary Ellison, Ethel Faber, Allen Fagan, Dudley Farnworth, George Ford, Corinne Frances, Elsie Froehlich, Beatrice Garland, Alex Gibson, Harry Gilfoil, Lillian Gonne, Nina Goulette, Fannie Grant, Sydney Grant, Bessie Gray, Charlotte Greenwood, Mabel Grete, Virginia Gunther, Agnes Hall, Carl Hall, Evelyn Hall, Laura Hamilton, George Hanlon Jr. [credited as George Hanlon], Andrew Harper, Ruth Heil, Mabel Hill, Nell Howard, Tony Hunting, Lois Josephine, Grace Kimball, Charlie King, Mollie King, Al Knight, John Kusky, George LeMaire, Gladys Leroy, Blanche Leslie, Helen Lloyd, Muriel Magill, Dotty Mantell, Irene Markey, Blanche Marr, Vinna Mason, Zounie Maury, Marion Mooney, Georgia Moore, Dorothy Moran, Nellie Moyse, Freddy Nice, Carel Orr, Mae Parker, Kathryn Perry, Evelyn Phillips, Edgar Pierce, Leslie Powers, Fay Pulsifer, Rose Quinn, Ethel Ray, Eve Ray, Miriam Sanford, Anna Sayce, Bessie Shannon, Gladys Smith, Irene Spencer, Clara Stanton, Georgica Storm, Ray Strath, Katherine Talbot, John Charles Thomas, Vera Tirrell, Alice Van Ryker, Rose Wertz, Arthur Whitman, Edith Whitney, Grace Williams, Ted Wing. Produced by The Winter Garden Company.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Passing Show of 1913. Musical revue (revival). Music by Jean Schwartz and Al W. Brown. Book by Harold Atteridge. Lyrics by Harold Atteridge. Musical Director: Oscar Radin. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Directed by Ned Wayburn. Winter Garden Theatre: 29 Sep 1913- 1 Nov 1913 (58 performances). Cast: Ed Begley, May Boley, Sadie Burt, Nell Carrington, Bessie Clayton, Frank Conroy, Herbert Corthell, Wellington Cross, Anne Dancrey, Charles DeHaven, Henry Detloff, George Ford, Corinne Frances, Laura Hamilton, George Hanlon, Ethel Hopkins, Lois Josephine, Charles King, Mollie King, George LeMaire, Irene Markey, Artie Mehlinger, Freddy Nice, Henry Norman, Katherine Sainpolis, Clara Stanton, John Charles Thomas, George Whiting, Swan Wood. Produced by The Winter Garden Company.
- (1914) Stage Play: The Garden of Paradise. Written by Edward Sheldon. Based on "The Little Mermaid" by Hans Christian Andersen. Park Theatre: 28 Nov 1914- Dec 1914 (closing date unknown/17 performances). Cast: Albert Barrett, Sheridan Block, Lionel Braham, Frank Conroy, Clarence Felter, W.W. Gear, Richard Hale, Renee Kelly, Bennett Kilpack, Murray Kinnell, Rosalie Mathieu, Eva Michner, Littledale Power, Maurice Robinson, John Rogers, Emily Stevens, Minnie Terry. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1915) Stage Play: Fads and Fancies. Musical revue. Book by Glen MacDonough. Music by Raymond Hubbell. Lyrics by Glen MacDonough. Additional music by Jerome Kern. Additional lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Musical Director: Raymond Hubbell. Electrical effects by Tony Greshoff. Scenic Design by John H. Young. Costume Design by F. Richard Anderson and Cora MacGeachy. Choreographed by Julian Mitchell. Directed by Herbert Gresham. Knickerbocker Theatre: 8 Mar 1915- 17 Apr 1915 (48 performances). Cast: David Abrahams (as "Musharoogoo"), David Abrahams Jr. (as "Fido"), Tyler Brooke (as "Alan"), Leo Carrillo (as "Sir Giovanni Gasolini") [Broadway debut], Frank Conroy (as "James Henry George"), G. Davenport (as "Another Cabaret Dancer"), Ethel Delmar (as "Mabelle"), Frank Doane (as "Leicester Square"), Maud Grey (as "Miss Murgatroyd"), Elsie Hamilton (as "Lucille"), Laura Hamilton. Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1915) Stage Play: Helena's Husband. [Production played in repertory with The Age of Reason, Pierre Patelin, The Magical City, Fire and Water, A Night of Snow, Helena's Husband, The The Roadhouse in Arden, 1616-1916]. Written by Philip Moeller. Bandbox Theatre: 4 Oct 1915- 20 May 1915 (unknown performances). Cast: Frank Conroy (as "Menelaus, the King"), Walter Frankl (as "Analytikos, Menelaus' librarian"), Noel Haddon (as "Helena, Queen of Sparta"), Harold Meltzer (as "Paris, a shepherd"), Helen Westley (as "Tsumu, Helena's slave"). Produced by The Washington Square Players.
- (1915) Stage Play: The Age of Reason. Written by Cecil Dorrian. Bandbox Theatre: 4 Oct 1915- 20 May 1916 (unknown performances/played in repertory with several other productions). Cast: E.J. Ballantine, Frank Conroy, Florence Enright, Noel Haddon, Spalding Hall, Alice Harrington, Holland Hudson, Glenn Hunter, Lydia Lopokova, Malcolm MacKinnon, Agnes McCarthy, Josephine A. Meyer, Ralph Roeder, Robert Strange, Helen Westley [Broadway debut]. Produced by The Washington Square Players. Note: Repertory production that rotated with numerous other productions at this theatre for over 8 months.
- (1916) Stage Play: The Seagull. Comedy/drama. Written by Anton Chekhov. Translated by Marion Fell. Bandbox Theatre: 20 May 1916- 31 May 1916 (unknown performances). Cast: E.J. Ballantine (as "Medvedenko"), Frank Conroy, Elinor M. Cox, Florence Enright, Walter Frankl, Mary Morris, W.A. Richardson, Ralph Roeder, Jean Strange, Robert Strange, Suzette Stuart, Helen Westley (as "Madame Arkadina"), Roland Young (as "Konstantin Treplev"). Produced by The Washington Square Players.
- (1917) Stage Play: Magic. Comedy. Written by G.K. Chesterton. Maxine Elliott's Theatre (moved to The Garrick Theatre from 19 Mar 1917- close): 12 Feb 1917- unknown (56 performances). Cast: Frank Conroy, Wallace Erskine, Donald Gallaher, O.P. Heggie, Thomas Louden, Leonard Mudie, Cathleen Nesbitt. Produced by Magic Producing Co. Inc.
- (1918) Stage Play: Karen. Written by Hjalmar Bergstrom. Translated by Edwin Bjorkman. Directed by Frank Conroy. Greenwich Village Theatre: 7 Jan 1918- Mar 1918 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Frank Conroy, Louise Earle, Margaret Fareleigh, Grace Henderson, Joseph Macauley [Broadway debut], Fania Marinoff, Harold Meltzer, Mary Pyne, Helen Robbins, Edwin Strawbridge.
- (1918) Stage Play: Pan and the Young Shepherd. Incidental music by W. Franke Harling. Written by Maurice Hewlett and Harley Granville-Barker. Greenwich Village Theatre: 18 Mar 1918- Apr 1918 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Janet Brownell, Sydney Carlyle, Frank Conroy, Anita Day, Margaret Fareleigh, Everett Glass, Grace Henderson, Joseph Macaulay, Fania Marinoff, Harold Meltzer, Ruth Ober, Mary Pyne, Helen Robbins, Hazel Sands, Edwin Strawbridge. Produced by The Greenwich Village Players.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Big Scene [production consisted of 3 parts, each written by a different playwright]. Directed by Roland Young. Greenwich Village Theatre: 18 Apr 1918- 18 May 1918 (unknown performances). Scene 1: Written by Arthur Schnitzler. Translated by Charles Henry Meltzer. Cast: Frank Conroy, Joseph Dailey, Clare Eames [Broadway debut], Francis McDonald, Harold Meltzer, Helen Robbins. Scene 2: Written by Eugene O'Neill. Cast: John Ahearn, Margaret Fareleigh, Everett Glass, Joseph McCauley, Francis McDonald, Harold Meltzer. Scene 3: Written by Harold Brighouse. Cast: Ruth Boyd, Frank Conroy, Everett Glass, Harold Meltzer, Helen Robbins. Produced by The Greenwich Village Players.
- (1918) Stage Play: A Woman's Honor. Written by Susan Glaspell. Greenwich Village Theatre: 20 May 1918- 1 Jun 1918 (unknown performances). Cast: Ruth Boyd, Frank Conroy, Margaret Fareleigh, Everett Glass, Francis McDonald, Ida Rau, Helen Robbins, Agnes Rogers, Dorothy Upjohn. Produced by The Greenwich Village Players.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Gentile Wife. Written by Rita Weiman. Vanderbilt Theatre: 24 Dec 1918- Jan 1919 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Mrs. A. Asheroff, Frank Conroy, Virginia Curtis, Amy Dennis, Vera Gordon, Charles Hammond, Stanley Jessup, Litta Mabie, Eleanor Montell, David Powell, Emily Stevens, William H. Thompson. Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1919) Stage Play: Hobohemia. Written by Sinclair Lewis. Greenwich Village Theatre: 8 Feb 1919- Apr 1919 (closing date unknown/89 performances). Cast: Mona Bruns, Ralph Bunker, Lois Frances Clark, Ruby Craven, Theodore Doucet, Hilda Englund, Grace Morse, Gladys Plinge, Beatrice Prentice, Geoffrey C. Stein, Noel Tearle, Frank M. Thomas, Helen Westley, Phil White. Produced by Frank Conroy.
- (1919) Stage Play: Shakuntala. Written by Kalidasa. Greenwich Village Theatre: 29 Apr 1919- May 1919 (closing date unknown/35 performances). Cast: Joan Bliss, Ruth Boyd, Frank Conroy, Marjorie Deen, J.M. Deeter, Theodore Doucet, Grace Henderson, Otto Liveright, Joseph Macauley, Harold Meltzer [final Broadway role], Perry Norman, Beatrice Prentice, Suzanne Sciamia, Geoffrey Stein.
- (1919) Stage Play: The Lost Leader. Drama. Written by Lennox Robinson. Greenwich Village Theatre: 11 Nov 1919- Dec 1919 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: John Ahearn, Frederick Arthur, Arthur Barry, Ruth Boyd, Frank Compton (as "Frank Ormsby"), Frank Conroy (as "Lucius Lenihan"), Theodore A. Doucet, Robert T. Haines, Hugh Huntley, J.M. Kerrigan (as "Peter Cooney, J.P.), Joseph Macauley, Eric Maxon, Mae Melvin, Edward O'Connor. Produced by William H. Harris, Jr.
- (1920) Stage Play: The Bad Man. Comedy/satire. Written by Porter Emerson Browne [final Broadway credit]. Directed by Lester Lonergan. Comedy Theatre: 30 Aug 1920- Jun 1921 (closing date unknown/342 performances). Cast: James H. Bell (as "Venustiano"), Frank Bixby (as "A Mexican Cook") [final Broadway role], Holbrook Blinn (as "Pancho Lopez"), Frances Carson (as "Lucia Pell"), Chief Whitehawk (as "Alvarado"), Frank Conroy (as "Gilbert Jones"), James A. Devine (as "Henry Smith"), Charles Gibney (as "Bradley"), John Harrington (as "Red Giddings"), Herbert Heywood (as "Pedro"), Edna Hibbard (as "Angela Hardy"), Indian Joe (as "Felip"), James B. Lenhart (as "Blake"), Wilson Reynolds (as "Jasper Hardy"), Fred Tiden [credited as Fred L. Tiden] (as "Morgan Pel"). Produced by William H. Harris Jr. Note: Filmed by Edwin Carewe Productions [distributed by Associated First National Pictures] as The Bad Man (1923), by First National Pictures [as a First National-Vitaphone Picture, controlled by Warner Bros.] as The Bad Man (1930), and by MGM as The Bad Man (1941) as a Wallace Beery vehicle.
- (1921) Stage Play: Eyvind of the Hills. Tragedy. Written by Jóhann Sigurjónsson. Directed by Frank Conroy. Greenwich Village Theatre: 28 Feb 1921- Mar 1921 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Charles P. Bates, Byron Beasley, Ed Begley (as "Jon"), Gus Beuerman, Hallem Bosworth, Elfin Finn, Gene Raymond [credited as Raymond Guion] (as "A Shepherd Boy") [Broadway debut], Henry Herbert (as "Arnes"), Arthur Hohl (as "Karl"), Eleanor Johnson, Beatrice Moreland, Lloyd Neal, Helen Olcott, Edmond J. Pardy, Gwendolyn Piers, Helene Russell, Marguerite Tebeau, Margaret Wycherly (as "Halla"). Produced by Conroy and Meltzer.
- (1921) Stage Play: Daddy's Gone A-Hunting. Drama. Written by Zoe Akins. 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, Frances Victory (as "Janet"), Jeanne Wardley, Winifred Wellington. Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1922) Stage Play: Rose Briar. Comedy. Written by Booth Tarkington. Empire Theatre: 25 Dec 1922- Mar 1923 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Billie Burke (as "Rose Briar"), Frank Conroy (as "Valentine"), Louis Darclee, Alan Dinehart (as "Paradee"), Paul Doucet (as "Crecelous"), Mark Haight, Julia Hoyt, Richie Ling (as "Little"), Frank McCoy, Florence O'Denishawn, Ethel Remey (as "Miss Sheppard") [Broadway debut]. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1923) Stage: Nobody's Business. Comedy. Written by Frank Mandel and Guy Bolton. Directed by Frank Conroy. Klaw Theatre: 22 Oct 1923- Nov 1923 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Louis Bennison, Burke Clarke, Frank Conroy, Frank Dae (as "Vincent"), Elaine Davies, Josephine Drake (as "Vera Smith"), Wallace Ford (as "Oliver Pratt"), Caryl Gillin, Francine Larrimore, Fred Irving Lewis, Arthur Sparks, Charles Webster, Alfred West, Paul Yaple. Produced by Robert McLaughlin.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Fake. Drama. Written by Frederick Lonsdale. Directed by Frank Reicher. Hudson Theatre: 6 Oct 1924- Dec 1924 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Marion Allen (as "A Parlormaid"), Frank Conroy (as "The Hon. Gerrard Pillick"), Orlando Daly (as "Ernest Stanton, M.P."), Boyd Davis (as "Watkins"), Reynolds Denniston (as "Sir Thomas Moorgate, M.D."), Evelyn Walsh Hall (as "Mrs. Stanton"), Frieda Inescort (as "Mavis Stanton"), Harry Neville (as "Dr. Hesketh Pointer, M.P."), Una O'Connor (as "A Waitress"), Godfrey Tearle (as "Geoffrey Sands"), Pauline Whitson, John Williams [Broadway debut]. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Piker. Drama. Written by Leon Gordon. Based on a story by Oliver Eastwood. Directed by Priestly Morrison. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 15 Jan 1925- Feb 1925 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Cast: Lionel Barrymore (as "Bernie Kaplan"), Alan Brooks, Frank Conroy, Robert Cummings (as "Fred Cunningham"), Irene Fenwick (as "June Knight"), James C. Malaidy (as "The Waiter"), Harry E. McKee (as "George Howe"), Adrienne Morrison (as "Mrs. Cunningham"), W.A. Norton, Charles Slattery (as "Broderick"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Sapphire Ring. Written by Laszlo Lakatos. Book adapted by Isabel Leighton. Directed by Lester Lonergan. Selwyn Theatre: 15 Apr 1925- Apr 1925 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Frank Conroy (as "Karoly"), Mildred Florence (as "Elsa"), Helen Gahagan (as "Krista"), Libby Holman [credited as Elizabeth Holman] (as "Mari") [Broadway debut], Kenneth MacKenna (as "Dr. Erno Nemeth"), Marcel Rousseau (as "Garzo"), Milano Tilden (as "Jossef"). Produced by George Choos.
- (1925) Stage Play: Human Nature. Comedy. Written by Elliott Nugent. Directed by J.C. Nugent and Frederick Stanhope Liberty Theatre: 24 Sep 1925- Sep 1925 (closing date unknown/4 performances). Cast: Helen Carew (as "Mrs. Dr. Langdon"), Frank Conroy (as "Phil Holt"), Mary Duncan (as "Bess Flanders"), Sue MacManamy (as "Mrs. Trayne"), John Marston (as "Jim Trayne"), Master Edwin Mills (as "Dicky Langdon"), Brandon Tynan (as "Mr. Hale"), Fritz Williams (as "Dr. Langdon"). Produced by Gene Buck.
- (1925) Stage Play: In a Garden. Comedy. Written by Philip Barry. Directed by Arthur Hopkins. Plymouth Theatre: 16 Nov 1925- Jan 1926 (closing date unknown). Cast: Marie Bruce (as "Miss Mabie"), Louis Calhern (as "Norrie Bliss"), Cecil Clovelly (as "Frederic"), Frank Conroy (as "Adrian Terry"), Ferdinand Gottschalk (as "Roger Compton"), Laurette Taylor (as "Lissa Terry"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1926) Stage Play: Hedda Gabler. Drama (revival). Written by Henrik Ibsen as translated by William Archer. Directed by Dudley Digges. Comedy Theatre: 26 Jan 1926- Mar 1926 (closing date unknown/59 performances). Cast: Louis Calhern, Patricia Collinge, Frank Conroy (as "Judge Brack"), Dudley Digges (as "George Tesman"), Hilda Helstrom, Emily Stevens, Helen Van Hoose (as "Bertha"). Produced by The Actors Theatre.
- (1926) Stage Play: Sour Grapes. Comedy. Written by Vincent Lawrence. Longacre Theatre: 6 Sep 1926- Oct 1926 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Alice Brady (as "Alice Overton"), John Halliday (as "John Overton"), Frank Conroy (as "James Milburn"), James Kearney (as "Phillips"), Flora Sheffield (as "Marjorie Lawson"). Produced by William H. Harris Jr.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Constant Wife. Comedy. Written by W. Somerset Maugham. Directed by Gilbert Miller. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 29 Nov 1926-13 Aug 1927 (296 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore (as "Constance Middleton"), Thomas Braidon [credited as Thomas A. Braidon] (as "Bentley, the Butler"), Frank Conroy (as "Bernard Kersal, a friend"), Walter Kingsford (as "Mortimer Durham, Marie-Louise's husband"), Jeannette Sherwin (as "Barbara Fawcett, a friend"), C. Aubrey Smith (as "John Middleton, FRCS, Constance's husband"), Verree Teasdale (as "Marie-Louise Durham, a friend"), Mabel Terry-Lewis, Cora Witherspoon (as "Martha Culver"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (1928) Stage Play: Wings Over Europe. Written by Robert Nichols and Maurice Brown. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian. Martin Beck Theatre (moved to the Alvin Theatre at unknown date to close): 10 Dec 1928- unknown (90 performances). Cast: Lionel Bevans (as "St. Man"), Thomas Braidon (as "Cossington"), Hugh Buckler (as "Stapp"), Charles Carden (as "Taggert"), Frank Conroy (as "Arthur"), Wheeler Dryden (as "Plimsoll"), John Dunn (as "Sunningdale"), Frank Elliott (as "Dedham"), Charles Francis (as "Faulkiner"), George Graham (as "Pascoe"), Nicholas Joy (as "Haliburton"), A.P. Kaye (as "Rummel"), Joseph Kilgour (as "Grindle"), Alexander Kirkland (as "Lightfoot"), Ernest Lawford (as "Grantby"), Edward Lester (as "Hand"), Robert Rendel (as "Vere"), Gordon Richards (as "Dunn"), Grant Stewart (as "Blount"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1929) Stage Play: Karl and Anna. Drama. Written by Leonhard Frank. Translated by Ruth Langner. Directed by Philip Moeller. Guild Theatre: 7 Oct 1929- Nov 1929 (closing date unknown/49 performances). Cast: Herbert J. Biberman (as "Sister's Husband"), Alice Brady (as "Anna"), Frank Conroy (as "Richard"), Larry Fletcher (as "Sister's Husband"), Ruth Hammond (as "Marie"), Otto Kruger (as "Karl"), Charles C. Leatherbee (as "A Guard"), Philip Leigh (as "Second Prisoner"), Robert Norton (as "Another Guard"), Claude Rains (as "First Prisoner"), Gale Sondergaard (as "Marie's Sister"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1929) Stage Play: The Game of Love and Death. Drama. Written by Romain Rolland as translated by Eleanor Stimson Brooks. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian. Guild Theatre: 15 Nov 1929- Jan 1930 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Alice Brady (as "Sophie de Courvoisier"), Frank Conroy (as "Jerome de Courvoisier"), Clinton Corwin (as "Other in the Play"), Frank De Silva (as "Other in the Play"), William Earle (as "Doucin"), Paul Farber (as "Other in the Play"), Henry Fonda (as "Other in the Play") [Broadway debut], Anita Fugazy (as "Chloris Soucy"), Leopoldo Gutierrez (as "Other in the Play"), Charles Henderson (as "Crapart"), Daniel Joseph (as "Other in the Play"), Lizbeth Kennedy (as "Peau d'Ane"), Otto Kruger (as "Claude Vallee"), P. Lapouchin (as "Other in the Play"), Charles C. Leatherbee (as "Other in the Play"), Hughie Mack (as "Other in the Play"), Robert Norton (as "Timoleon"), Sidney Paxton (as "Denis Bayot"), Frank Petrie (as "Fifer"), Claude Rains, Katherine Randolph (as "Other in the Play"), Lionel Stander (as "Other in the Play"), Laura Straub (as "Lodoiska Cerizier"), Mike Wagman (as "Other in the Play"), J.E. Whiffen (as "Other in the Play"), Alan Willey (as "Horace Bouchet"), Kitty Wilson (as "Other in the Play"), Irwin Young (as "Drummer"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1932) Stage Play: The Man Who Changed His Name. Written by Edgar Wallace. Directed by Clifford Brooke. Broadhurst Theatre: 2 May 1932- Jun 1932 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Mrs. Selby Clive"), Frank Conroy (as "Selby Clive"), Reynolds Denniston (as "Jeremiah Muller"), Derek Fairman (as "The Hon. Frank O'Ryan"), Emily Graham (as "Maid"), Maurice Greet (as "Lane"), Thomas Louden (as "Sir Ralph Whitcombe"). Produced by Edwal Productions Company.
- (1932) Stage Play: The Anatomist. Written by James Bridie. Directed by Thomas Wood Stevens. Bijou Theatre: 24 Oct 1932- Oct 1932 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Leslie Barrie (as "Walter Anderson") Paula Bauersmith (as "Mary Paterson"), Barlowe Borland (as "Landlord of the Three Tuns"), Frank Conroy (as "Robert Knox, M.D."), Ralph Cullinan (as "William Burke"), Denis Gurnsy (as "Augustus Raby"), Jack McGraw (as "William Burke"), Eunice Osborne (as "Mary Belle Dishart"), Bernard Ostertag (as "Janet"), Molly Pearson (as "Jessie Ann"), Audrey Ridgewell [credited as Audrey Ridgwell] (as "Amelia Dishart"), George Tawde (as "Davie Paterson"). Produced by Frank Conroy.
- (1936) Stage Play: O Evening Star. Comedy. Written by Zoe Akins. Directed by Leontine Sagan. Empire Theatre: 8 Jan 1936- Jan 1936 (closing date unknown/5 performances). Cast: Eddie Albert (as "Ben Martin") [Broadway debut], Edith Andree, Jack Ball, Quina Bilotti, Whitney Bourne, Ross Chetwynd, Frank Conroy (as "Mr. Hoawrd"), Emily Draper, Ada Elliott, Edward Emerson (as "Mr. Strassberg"), Joan Engel, Frank Fenton (as "Ellis Charteris"), Al Fields, Joe Fields, Sara Floyd, Grace Fox, Patterson Greene (as "The Radio Announcer"), Virginia Gregori, Hans Hansen, Mary Howes, Jobyna Howland (as "Amy Bellaire") [final Broadway role], Vera Hurst (as "Mrs. Hooper"), Ethel Intropidi (as "The Actress Playing "Hannah""), Josie Intropidi (as "Madame Marie"), Regis Joyce (as "Walter"), George Justin (as "The Auctioneer's Assistant"), Maxine Marlowe (as "Ensemble"), Richard Ogden (as "Ensemble"), John Raby, Annette Robinson (as "Ensemble"), Myrtle Ross, Ezra Stone (as "Ed"), Earl Talbot (as "Ensemble"), James Todd (as "Dr. Boyd"), Carrie Weller, O.Z. Whitehead (as "The Assistant Director"), Foster J. Williams, Larry Williams, Biacouren Yoshiwara (as "Richard"). Produced by Harry Moses.
- (1937) Stage Play: The Ghost of Yankee Doodle. Drama. Written by Sidney Howard. Production Supervised by Theresa Helburn and Lawrence Langner. Directed by John Cromwell. Guild Theatre: 22 Nov 1937- Jan 1938 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore (as "Sara Garrison"), Donald Black, Edward Butler, Eliot Cabot, Richard Carlson (as "Martin Holme"), Kathleen Comegys (as "Doris Garrison"), Frank Conroy (as "John Garrison"), Don Costello, John Drew Devereaux, Dudley Digges (as "James Madison Clevenger"), Marilyn Erskine, Lloyd Gough (as "Burke"), Russell Hardie (as "Steve Andrews"), Ethel Intropidi, Jack Kelly, George Nash, Barbara Robbins, Howard Roberts. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1938) Stage Play: On Borrowed Time. Comedy. Written by Paul Osborn, from a novel by Lawrence Edward Watkin. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Joshua Logan. Longacre Theatre: 3 Feb 1938- Nov 1938 (closing date unknown/321 performances). Cast: Jean Adair, Andy Anderson (as "Workman"), Elwell Cobb (as "Workman"), Frank Conroy (as "Mr. Brink"), Nick Dennis (as "Workman"), Dudley Digges (as "Julian Northrup, Gramps"), Lew Eckles (as "Mr. Grimes"), Clyde Franklin (as "Dr. Evans"), Edgar Henning (as "Workman"), Peter Miner (as "Pud"), Dorothy Stickney, Dick Van Patten, Al Webster (as "Sheriff"). Produced by Dwight Wiman. Note: Produced by MGM as a 1939 Lionel Barrymore vehicle as On Borrowed Time (1939).
- (1939) Stage Play: The Little Foxes. Drama. Written by Lillian Hellman. Directed by Herman Shumlin. National Theatre: 15 Feb 1939- 3 Feb 1940 (410 performances). Cast: Tallulah Bankhead (as "Regina Giddens"), Patricia Collinge (as "Birdie Hubbard"), Frank Conroy (as "Horace Giddens"), Lee Baker (as "William Marshall"), Charles Dingle (as "Benjamin Hubbard"), Dan Duryea (as "Leo Hubbard"), John Marriott (as "Cal"), Abbey Mitchell [credited as Abbie Mitchell] (as "Addie"), Carl Benton Reid (as "Oscar Hubbard"), Florence Williams (as "Alexandra Giddens"). Replacement actors: Eugenia Rawls (as "Alexandra Giddens"). Produced by Herman Shumlin. Note: Filmed by The Samuel Goldwyn Co. twice as These Three (1936) and The Little Foxes (1941), by the Mirisch Corp. as The Children's Hour (1961).
- (1944) Stage Play: For Keeps. Comedy. Written by F. Hugh Herbert Scenic Design by Raymond Sovey. Henry Miller's Theatre: 14 Jun 1944- 8 Jul 1944 (29 performances). Cast: George Baxter (as "Terry"), Grover Burgess (as "Frank"), Norma Clerc (as "June"), Frank Conroy (as "Paul Vanda"), Joseph R. Garry (as "Charlie"), Pat Kirkland [credited as Patricia Kirkland] (as "Nancy Vanda") [Broadway debut], Geoffrey Lumb (as "Mr. Reamer"), Ellen Mahar (as "Anna"), Donald Murphy (as "Jimmy McCarey"), Zolya Talma (as "Miss Maxwell"), Julie Warren (as "Pamela Vanda"), Joan Wetmore (as "Norma"). Produced by Gilbert Miller.
- (1945) Stage Play: One-Man Show. Written by Ruth Goetz [credited as Ruth Goodman] and Augustus Goetz [earliest Broadway credit]. Directed by Jed Harris. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 8 Feb 1945- 10 Mar 1945 (36 performances). Cast: John Archer (as "Francis Kearny"), Elizabeth Brew (as "A Woman"), Frank Conroy (as "Lucian Gardner"), Constance Cummings (as "Racine Gardner"), Hugh Franklin (as "James Dockerel"), Mitchell Harris (as "Tom"), Kasia Orzazewski (as "Blanche"), James Rennie (as "Emory Jelliffe"). Produced by Jed Harris.
- (1948) Stage Play: Bravo! Written by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber. Scenic Design by Leo Kerz. Costume Design by Rose Bogdanoff. Evening gowns for Miss Darvas and Miss Talma by Castillo. Lyceum Theatre: 11 Nov 1948- 18 Dec 1948 (44 performances). Cast: Oscar Homolka (as "Zoltan Lazko"), Lili Darvas (as "Rosa Rucker"), King Calder (as "Wallace"), Jean Carson, Oliver Cliff, Frank Conroy (as "Jeffrey Crandall"), George Cotton, Janet Fox, Christiane Grautoff, Arthur Havel, Morton Havel, Elena Karam, Kevin McCarthy (as "Kurt Heger"), Fritzi Scheff, Edgar Stehli (as "Martin Link"), Zolya Talma (as "Stephanie"). Produced by Max Gordon.
- (1951) Stage Play: Point of No Return. Written by Paul Osborn, from a novel by John P. Marquand. Lighting and Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Alvin Theatre: 13 Dec 1951- 22 Nov 1952 (356 performances). Cast: Henry Fonda (as "Charles Gray"), Phil Arthur (as "Jackie Mason"), Frances Bavier (as "Esther Gray") [final Broadway role], Heywood Hale Broun, Frank Conroy (as "Anthony Burton"), John Cromwell (as "John Gray"), Leora Dana (as "Nancy Gray"), Susan Harris (as "Evelyn Gray"), Pitt Herbert, Katherine Hynes, James Jolley (as "Joe"), Colin Keith-Johnston (as "Laurence Lovell'), Madeline King (as "Miss Marble"), James MacDonald (as "Conductor"), Davis Roberts (as "First Teller"), Bartlett Robinson (as "Roger Blakesley"), Robert Ross (as "Malcolm Bryant"), Keith Russell (as "Bill Gray"), Harriet Selby (as "Maid"), Patricia Smith, Stanley Tackney. Produced by Leland Hayward.
- (1953) Stage Play: Kind Sir. Comedy. Written by Norman Krasna. Scenic and Lighting Design by Jo Mielziner. Costume Design by Mainbocher. Assistant to Mr. Mielziner: John Harvey. Associate Director/Associate Producer: Marshall Jamison. Directed by Joshua Logan. Alvin Theatre, 4 Nov 1953- 27 Mar 1954 (166 performances). Cast: Charles Boyer (as "Philip Clair"), Mary Martin (as "Jane Kimball"), Frank Conroy (as "Alfred Munson"), Margalo Gillmore (as "Anna Miller"), Robert Ross (as "Carl Miller"), Dorothy Stickney (as "Margaret Munson"). Produced by Joshua Logan.
- (1957) Stage Play: The Potting Shed. Drama. Written by Graham Greene. Directed by Carmen Capalbo. Bijou Theatre (moved to The John Golden Theatre, from 22 Apr 1957- close): 20 Jan 1957- 1 Jun 1957 (143 performances). Cast: Lewis Casson (as "Dr. Frederick Baston"), Frank Conroy (as "Father William Callifer"), Joan Croydon (as "Miss Connolly"), Robert Flemyng (as "James Callifer"), Eda Heinemann (as "Mrs. Potter"), Stanley Lemin (as "John Callifer"), Richard Longman (as "Corner"), Carol Lynley (as "Anne Callifer") [Broadway debut}, Leueen MacGrath (as "Sara Callifer"), Dame Sybil Thorndike (as "Mrs. Callifer"), Rudolph Weiss (as "Dr. Kruezer"). Produced by Carmen Capalbo and Stanley Chase.
- (1957) Stage Play: Compulsion. Drama. Dramatization (Producer's Version) by Meyer Levin. Original Music by Cy Coleman. Musical Director: Cy Coleman. Scenic Design by Peter Larkin. Costume Design by John Boxer. Lighting Design by Charles Elson. Directed by Alex Segal. Ambassador Theatre: 24 Oct 1957- 22 Feb 1958 (140 performances). Cast: Roddy McDowall (as "Artie Straus"), Dean Stockwell (as "Judd Steiner [1924]"), Howard Da Silva (as "Horn, The Prosecuting Attorney"), Ben Astar (as "Charles Kessler/Dr. Allman") [final Broadway role], Ina Balin (as "Ruth Goldenberg"), Helen Baron (as "Sandra Mannheimer"), Julian Barry (as "Willie Weiss"), James Bender (as "Tom Daly, A Reporter"), Joseph Beruh (as "A Prison Guard/A Drugstore Clerk/A Waiter/Danny Mines, A Reporter"), Michael Constantine (as "Al, Owner of a Speakeasy/Jonathan Wilk, The Defense Attorney"), Joan Croydon (as "Mrs. Straus"), Edward Cullen (as "Judge Matthewson"), Roger De Koven (as "Ferdinand Feldscher "), Reynolds Evans (as "Dr. Stauffer"), Chris Gampel (as "Judd Steiner [today]/Emil, The Steiners' Chauffeur"), Stefan Gierasch (as "Max Steiner"), Gerald Gordon (as "Sid Silver [today]/Sid Silver [1924]), Mark Gordon (as "A Bartender/Prison Guard"), Lloyd Gough (as "Dr. McNarry"), Michael Gough (as "Dr. Ball"), James Greene (as "Mr. Farmer/Dr. Vincenti"), Ted Gunther (as "Swasey, A Detective"), Earl Hammond (as "James Straus"), Muriel Higgins (as "First Girl"), Bernard Lenrow (as "Judah Steiner Jr."), Barbara Loden (as "Myra Seligman"), John Marley (as "Mike Prager/Another Reporter"), Barbara Miners (as "Third Girl"), Gina Petrushka (as "Elsie Kessler"), Suzanne Pleshette (as "Fourth Girl"), James Ray (as "Lyman/A Third Reporter/Raphael Goetz"), Dorothy Raymond (as "A Medium/Aunt Bertha"), Patricia Roe (as "A Girl on the Telephone/Second Girl"), Luchino Solito de Solis (as "Billy Straus"), Paul Stevens (as "Padua, Assistant to the Prosecutor"), D.J. Sullivan (as "Milt Lewis"), Elliot Sullivan (as "McNamara, A Detective"), Maybelle Wright (as "Peg Sweet/A Newspaper Woman"), Ben Yaffee (as "Oliver Steger"). Replacement actors: Joseph Beruh (as "Al, Owner of a Speakeasy"), Frank Conroy (as "Jonathan Wilk, The Defense Attorney"), Elizabeth Hubbard (as "Sandra Mannheimer/Third Girl"), Suzanne Pleshette (as "Ruth Goldenberg"). Produced by Michael Myerberg. Produced in association with Len S. Gruenberg. Notes: (1) This was a thinly veiled dramatization of the infamous Leopold-Leob murder. (2) Filmed as Compulsion (1959).
- (1960) Stage Play: Face of a Hero. Written by Robert L. Joseph. Based on the novel by Pierre Boulle. Directed by Alexander Mackendrick. Eugene O'Neill Theatre: 20 Oct 1960- 19 Nov 1960 (36 performances + 2 previews). Cast: Edward Asner (as "Perry Cates"), Betsy Blair (as "Catherine Polle"), Russell Collins (as "Victor Bishop"), Carlton Colyer (as "Gordon"), Frank Conroy (as "Phillip Milliard"), Albert Dekker (as "Leo Fuller"), Sandy Dennis (as "Millicent Bishop"), James Donald (as "Simon De Grange"), Mary Farrell (as "Rhoda Grant"), George Grizzard (as "Harold Rutland, Jr."), Lynn Hamilton (as "Cleaning Woman"), Ellen Holly (as "Elizabeth Falk"), Jack Lemmon (as "David Poole"), Kip McArdle (as "Rosamund Killie"), Joseph Palma (as "Judge"), Roy Poole (as "Raphael Knox"), Edwin Sherin (as "Jonathan Spring"), Guy Sorel (as "Otto Litchfield"). Produced by Lester Osterman Jr.
- (1962) Stage Play: Calculated Risk. Mystery. Written by Joseph Hayes. Based on a play by George Ross and Campbell Singer. Scenic Design by Robert Randolph. Directed by Robert Montgomery [final Broadway credit]. Ambassador Theatre: 31 Oct 1962- 11 May 1963 (221 performances + 2 previews that began on 29 Oct 1962). Cast: Joseph Cotten (as "Julian Armstone") [final Broadway role], John Beal (as "Harrison Bellows"), Gene Blakely (as "Roger Parkhurst"), Alexander Clark (as "James McQueen"), Russell Collins (as "Jonathan Travis") [final Broadway role], Frank Conroy (as "Clyde Norman") [final Broadway role], Ben Hayes (as "Quentin Armstone") [Broadway debut], Dorrit Kelton (as "Miss Rhoda Andrews") [final Broadway role], Lois Markle (as "Rita Southard Armstone"), John McQuade (as "Walter Dodds"), Patricia Medina (as "Helen Bellows Armstone") [only Broadway role], Gerald S. O'Loughlin (as "William Medlow"), Frank Tweddell (as "Carl"), Roland Winters (as "Malcolm Turnbull"). Replacement actors: Robert Baines (as "Harrison Bellows"), Alexander Clark (as "Clyde Norman"), Franklin Cover (as "Roger Parkhurst"), Howard Erskine (as "Quentin Armstone"), Frank Hamilton (as "James McQueen/Harrison Bellows"), Kenneth Harvey (as "William Medlow"). Produced by Howard Erskine, Roger L. Stevens and Joseph Hayes. Produced by arrangement with Peter Bridge. Produced in association with Lyn Austin.
- (September 30, 1940) He acted in Lillian Hellman's play, "The Little Foxes," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Tallulah Bankhead, Abbie Mitchell, John Marriott, Marie Carroll, Carl Benton Reid, Dan Duryea, Lee Baker, Charles Dingle, and Eugenia Rawls in the cast. Howard Bay was set designer. Aline Bernstein was costume designer. Herman Shumlin was producer and director.
- (October 12, 1953) He acted in Norman Krasna's play, "Kind Sir," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Mary Martin, Charles Boyer, Dorothy Stickney, Margalo Gillmore and Robert Ross in the cast. Jo Mielziner was set designer. Mainbocher was costume designer. Joshua Logan was producer and director.
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