- (1900 - 1935) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1900) Stage Play: King Henry V. Historical drama (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Garden Theatre: 3 Oct 1900- Nov 1900 (closing date unknown/54 performances). Produced by Richard Mansfield.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Triumph of Love. Comedy. Written by Martha Morton. Directed by Max Figman. Criterion Theatre: 8 Feb 1904 (1 performance). Cast: Victoria Addison, Macklyn Arbuckle, George Backus, Henry Conklin, Louise Delmar, Malcolm Duncan, Edward Earle, Marion Fairfax, Grace Filkins, William Harcourt, Ellis N. Harris, Minna Gale, Grace Heyer, Harold Howard, F.F. MacKay, W.J. McNess, R.R. Neill, Carlotta Nillson, Dudley E. Oatman, Bennett Phelan, Sydney Rice, May Davenport Seymour, Roy Dana Tracy, Isabel Waldron, Robert Whittier, Douglas J. Wood.
- (1905) Stage Play: Rip Van Winkle.
- (1906) Stage Play: Lincoln.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Movers. Drama. Written by Martha Morton. Hackett Theatre: 3 Sep 1907- Sep 1907 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Myra Brooks, Mary Leslie Cahill, Robert Conness, Dorothy Donnelly (as "Marion Manners"), Malcolm Duncan, Laurence Eddinger, W.J. Ferguson, Joseph Kilgour, Desiree Lazard, Edward See, Vincent Serrano, Abner H. Symmons, Nellie Thorne, Ida Waterman, Stanhope Wheatcroft. Produced by Henry B. Harris.
- (1911) Stage Play: Our World.
- (1911) Stage Play: Mrs. Bumpstead-Leigh. Comedy/farce. Written by Harry James Smith. Lyceum Theatre: 3 Apr 1911- May 1911 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Florine Arnold (as "Mrs. De Salle"), Henry E. Dixey (as "Peter Swallow"), Malcolm Duncan (as "Geoffrey Rawson"), Minnie Maddern Fiske [credited as Mrs. Fiske] (as "Mrs. Bumpstead-Leigh'), Charles Harbury, Kate Lester (as "Miss Rawson") [final Broadway role], Kathlene MacDonell (as "Violet De Salle"), Veda McEvers, Paul Scardon, Helen Van Brugh, Douglas J. Wood (as "Anthony Rawson"), Cyril Young. Produced by Harrison Grey Fiske.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Talker.
- (1912) Stage Play: Discovering America.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Fight.
- (1914) Stage Play: What Happened at 22.
- (1914) Stage Play: Just Herself. Written by Ethel Watts Mumford. Playhouse Theatre: 23 Dec 1914- Jan 1915 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: France Bendsten, Aldrich Bowker, Royal Byron, Malcolm Duncan, Eleanor Gordon, Gregory Kelly, Lydia Lopokova, Kate Mayhew, Henry Morley, Harold Stoddard, Olive Temple, Frederic Thomas, Aletha Walters. Produced by Harrison Grey Fiske.
- (1917) Stage Play: The Pawn. Written by Azelle M. Aldrich and Joseph Noll. Fulton Theatre: 8 Sep 1917- Sep 1917 (closing date unknown/17 performances). Cast: K. Akashi, Isa Aoki, James L. Crane, Gertrude Dallas, Malcolm Duncan, S. Furusho, Ione McGrane, C. Mijaki, Edward G. Robinson, Charles A. Sellon, Joseph Selman, K. Takemi, G. Tatsuno, Eizo Terui, Walker Whiteside, Marjorie Wood. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1917) Stage Play: Yes or No. Written by Arthur Goodrich. Directed by G.M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson [credited as G.M. Anderson] and L. Lawrence Weber. 48th Street Theatre (moved to The Longacre Theatre from 21 Jan 1918 to close): 21 Dec 1917- Apr 1918 (closing date unknown/147 performances). Cast: John Adair [Broadway debut], Lois Bartlett, Byron Beasley, Halbert Brown, John A. Butler, Malcolm Duncan, Eva Francis, Robert Kelly, Willette Kershaw [final Broadway role], Margaret Lytle, Kalman Matus, Emilie Polini, William Read, Walter Regan, Frank Wilcox, Marjorie Wood. Produced by Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson and L. Lawrence Weber.
- (1918) Stage Play: Information Please. Written by Jane Cowl and Jane Murfin. Selwyn Theatre: 2 Oct 1918- Nov 1918 (closing date unknown/46 performances). Cast: Clifford Brooke [credited as Clifford Brook], Alan Brooks, Orme Caldara, Viola Compton, Malcolm Duncan, Jules Epailly, Hetty Graham, Harry Hanlon, Jack McKee, Cecil Owen, Robert Rendel, Helen Salinger, Henry Stephenson, Blanche Yurka. Produced by Selwyn & Co.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Long Dash.
- (1919) Stage Play: Nighty-Night.
- (1922) Stage Play: Your Woman and Mine.
- (1934) Stage Play: Merrilly We Roll Along. Written by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Music Box Theatre: 29 Sep 1934- Feb 1935 (closing date unknown/155 performances). Cast: Walter Abel (as "Jonathan Crale"), Robert Adams, Joan Adrian, George Alison, Ariane Allen, Patricia Allen, Roaine Baker, Peggy Bancroft, Granville Bates (as "Mr. Murney"), Elsa Beamish, Paul Benson, Leslie Bingham, Elaine Blauvelt, Beatrice Blinn, Robert Bowen, Joan Brewster, Isis Brinn, Martha Brown, Dan Carey, John Cosby, Louis Cruger, Annette DuBois, Malcolm Duncan (as "Harry Nixon"), Chouteau Dyer, Doris Eaton, Jack Edwards, Jeanne Ellyn, Charles Engel, Henry Ephron, Cliff Furst, Henry Gallagher, Gloria Gill, Herbert Greenberg, Claire Greenwood, Robert Griffith, Dorothy Groman, Charles Halton, John Hampshire, Mary Heberden, Mary Howes, Lawrence Hutt, George Jackson, Sonya Jaffe, Elizabeth Kennedy, John Kennedy, Leo Kennedy, Helen Kim, William Kruger, Charles La Rue, Jessie Royce Landis (as "Althea Royce"), Howard Lane, Cecilia Loftus (as "Mrs. Riley"), Jacqueline Logan, Edward Loud, Jenny Mac, Kenneth MacKenna (as "Richard Niles"), Connie Madison, Burton Mallory, Adrienne Marden, Joan Marston, William McFadden, George McKay, Grant Mills, Harold Moffet, Patricia Palmer, George Parsons, Mary Philips, Betty Reynolds, Annette Robinson, Carl Rose, Hattie Ross, Robert Russell, Elsa Ryan, Otis Schaefer, Irving Schneider, Wilfrid Seagram, James Seeley, Hudson Shotwell, Toni Sorel, Gilbert Squarey, Herbert Steiner, Michael Stirling, Robert Stone, Richard Stringfellow, Morris Tepper, Frank Waldecker, Geraldine Wall, Eleanor Whitney, Murial Williams, Emily Winston, Biacouren Yoshiwara. Produced by Sam Harris. (1932). Stage Play: When the Bough Breaks. Drama. Written by Jerome Sackheim'. Directed by Arthur Lubin. 48th Street Theatre: 16 Feb 1932- Mar 1932 (closing date unknown/17 Performances). Cast: Malcolm Duncan (as "Walker Maitland"), Maud Durand (as "Pritch"), Clyde Franklin (as "Lewis Warren"), Pauline Frederick (as "Magma Warren"), Louis Jean Heydt (as "Jim Hamilton"), Dorothy Libaire (as "Joan Leonard"), William Post (as "Richard Warren"). Produced by Arthur Lubin.
- (1922) Stage Play: Whispering Wires.
- (1925) Stage Play: Out of Step. Comedy. Written by James Forbes.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Backslapper. Written by Paul Dickey and Mann Page. Hudson Theatre: 11 Apr 1925- May 1925 (closing date unknown/33 performances). Cast: Harry C. Browne (as "Bob Alden"), Francis Conlan (as "Sam"), Jack Daniels (as "Lester"), Don Dillaway (as "Ralph"), Joe Duckworth (as "Chick"), Malcolm Duncan (as "Dave Kennedy"), Florence Earle (as "Sarah"), Mary Fowler (as "Beth Lane"), Leila Frost (as "Gloria Dennis"), Leon Hatton (as "Slats"), Lee Patrick (as "Mrs. Kennedy"), Roger Pryor (as "Douglas Lane") [Broadway debut], Frank Sylvester (as "Judge Dennis"), Charles Trowbridge (as "John Trainor"). Produced by John Henry Mears and Paul Dickey.
- (1925) Stage Play: Young Blood. Written by James Forbes. Directed by James Forbes. Ritz Theatre: 24 Nov 1925- 26 Jan 1926 (73 performances). Cast: Cameron Clemons (as "Simmons"), Eric Dressler (as "Alan Dana, Jr."), Malcolm Duncan (as "William Eames, Ph.D."), Florence Eldridge (as "Louise"), Helen Hayes (as "Georgia Bissell"), Monroe Owsley (as "Sammy Bissell"), Norman Trevor (as "Alan Dana"). Produced by The Dramatists Theatre Inc.
- (1926) Stage Play: Glory Hallelujah. Written by Bertram Bloch and Thomas Mitchell. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Broadhurst Theatre: 6 Apr 1926- Apr 1926 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Morris Ankrum(as "Davis"), Charles Bickford (as "Winters"), George Blackwood, Edward Butler, Malcolm Duncan, Allen Jenkins (as "Whitey Adams"), Felix Krembs, Earl Mayne, Phillip M. Sheridan, Lee Tracy (as "Clerk"), Hilda Vaughn, June Walker, Olive West, Augustus Yorke. Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1926) Stage Play: Buy, Buy, Baby. Farce. Written by Russell G. Medcraft and Norma Mitchell. Based on a play by Francis R. Bellamy and Lawton Mackall. Princess Theatre: 7 Oct 1925- Oct 1926 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Shirley Booth (as "Betty Hamilton"), Maurice Burke, Mabel Colcord, Laura Hope Crews, Malcolm Duncan, Thurston Hall, Charles Mather, Edwin Nicander, Alison Skipworth, Verree Teasdale (as "Pauline Lunt"). Produced by Bertram Harrison.
- (1927) Stage Play: Spread Eagle. Drama. Written by George S. Brooks and Walter B. Lister. Directed by George Abbott. Martin Beck Theatre: 4 Apr 1927- Jun 1927 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Brenda Bond (as "Lois Henderson"), Charles D. Brown (as "Bill Davis"), Harry Cooke (as "Sentry"), Herbert Courtney (as "Captain"), Frank Dae (as "Theatre Manager"), Malcolm Duncan (as "Father Estrella"), Virginia Farmer (as "Grace"), Fred House (as "Brig. Gen. Wagner, U.S.A."), Felix Krembs (as "Gen. Ramon Angel de Castro"), Aline MacMahon (as "Rosalie Kent"), Donald Meek (as "Mike Riordan"), Lester Nielson (as "Peter"), Osgood Perkins (as "Joe Cobb"), Jose Rivas (as "Col. Rojas"), Eduardo Sanchez (as "Manuel"), Allen Vincent (as "Charles Parkman"), Fritz Williams (as "Martin Henderson"), Vincent Yorke (as "Radio Announcer"). Produced by Jed Harris.
- (1928) Stage Play: This Thing Called Love. Comedy.
- (1929) Stage Play: Cross Roads. Drama. Written by Martin Flavin. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Morosco Theatre: 11 Nov 1929- Dec 1929 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Anna Borden, Orrin Burke (as "Cronin"), Eric Dressler (as "Michael"), Malcolm Duncan, Herbert Heywood, Dennie Moore (as "A Girl"), Mary Morris, Oscar Polk (as "Jep"), Irene Purcell, Peggy Shannon (as "Dora"), Sylvia Sidney (as "Patricia"), Franchot Tone (as "Duke"). Produced by Lewis E. Gensler.
- (1930) Stage Play: Many a Slip. Comedy. Comedy. Written by Edith Fitzgerald and Robert Riskin. Directed by Robert Riskin. Little Theatre: 3 Feb 1930- Mar 1930 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Tom Brown (as "Ted Coster"), Elisha Cook Jr. (as "Stan Price"), Malcolm Duncan (as "William Coster"), Maude Eburne (as "Smithy"), Douglass Montgomery (as "Jerry Brooks"), Dorothy Sands, Sylvia Sidney (as "Patsy Coster"). Produced by Lew Cantor.
- (1930) Stage Play: Five Star Final. Melodrama. Written by Louis Weitzenkorn. Cort Theatre: 30 Dec 1930- Jun 1931 (closing date unknown/175 performances). Cast: Sydney Booth (as "Mr. Arthur Loveland Weeks"), Lillian Bronson, Arthur Byron (as "Randall"), King Calder (as "Philip Weeks"), Berton Churchill, Frank Dae (as "Brannegan"), Ken Dana, Mike D'Arcy, Amy Dennis, Malcolm Duncan (as "Michael Townsend"), Frances Fuller (as "Jenny Townsend"), Georgette Harvey (as "Minerva"), Fred House, Richard Huey (as "Harold"), Laurie Jacobs, Allen Jenkins (as "Ziggie Feonstein"), P.J. Kelly, Alvin Kerr (as "Arthur"), Kathryn Keyes, Bruce MacFarlane, Merle Maddern (as "Nancy Voorhees Townsend"), Madeline Marshall (as "Miss Edwards"), Dorothy McElhone (as "Rooney"), Alexander Onslow, Henry Sherwood, Helene Sinnott (as "Miss Taylor"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1932) Stage Play: When the Bough Breaks. Drama. Written by Jerry Sackheim [credited as Jerome Sackheim]. Directed by Arthur Lubin. 48th Street Theatre: 16 Feb 1932- Mar 1932 (closing date unknown/17 Performances). Cast: Malcolm Duncan (as "Walker Maitland"), Maud Durand (as "Pritch"), Clyde Franklin (as "Lewis Warren"), Pauline Frederick (as "Magma Warren"), Louis Jean Heydt (as "Jim Hamilton"), Dorothy Libaire (as "Joan Leonard"), William Post (as "Richard Warren"). Produced by Arthur Lubin.
- (1932) Stage Play: Dinner at Eight. Comedy. Written by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber. Scenic Design by Livingston Platt. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Assistant Director: Robert B. Sinclair. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Music Box Theatre: 22 Oct 1932- May 1933 (closing date unknown/232 performances). Cast: George Alison, Ann Andrews, Clarence Bellair, Marguerite Churchill (as "Paula Jordan"), Constance Collier, Margaret Dale (as "Hattie Loomis"), Malcolm Duncan (as "Oliver Jordan"), Austin Fairman (as "Dr. J. Wayne Talbot"), Janet Fox, Gregory Gaye, Robert Griffith, Paul Harvey (as "Dan Packard"), Vera Hurst, Ethel Intropidi, Sam Levene (as "Max Kane"), Frank Manning, William McFadden, Mary Murray, Hans Robert (as "Ed Loomis"), Cesar Romero (as "Ricci"), James Seeley (as "The Waiter"), Conway Tearle, Dorothy Waters, Judith Wood (as "Kitty Packard"), Olive Wyndham (as "Lucy Talbot"). Replacement actors: Margaret Sullavan (as "Paula Jordan") [from Mar 1933- close], Charles Trowbridge (as "Oliver Jordan"), Jane Wyatt (as "Paula Jordan") [from May 1933- ?]. Produced by Sam Harris. Note: Filmed by MGM [most notable version] as Dinner at Eight (1933), Dinner at Eight (1989), Dinner at Eight (2007).
- (1934) Stage Play: Merrilly We Roll Along. Written by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Music Box Theatre: 29 Sep 1934- Feb 1935 (closing date unknown/155 performances). Cast: Walter Abel (as "Jonathan Crale"), Robert Adams, Joan Adrian, George Alison, Ariane Allen, Patricia Allen, Roaine Baker, Peggy Bancroft, Granville Bates (as "Mr. Murney"), Elsa Beamish, Paul Benson, Leslie Bingham (as "Mrs. Murney"), Elaine Blauvelt, Beatrice Blinn (as "Molly"), Robert Bowen, Joan Brewster, Isis Brinn, Martha Brown, Dan Carey, John Cosby, Louis Cruger, Annette DuBois, Malcolm Duncan (as "Harry Nixon"), Chouteau Dyer, Doris Eaton, Jack Edwards, Jeanne Ellyn, Charles Engel, Henry Ephron, Cliff Furst, Henry Gallagher, Gloria Gill, Herbert Greenberg, Claire Greenwood, Robert Griffith, Dorothy Groman, Charles Halton, John Hampshire, Mary Heberden, Mary Howes, Lawrence Hutt, George Jackson, Sonya Jaffe, Elizabeth Kennedy, John Kennedy, Leo Kennedy, Helen Kim, William Kruger, Charles La Rue, Jessie Royce Landis (as "Althea Royce"), Howard Lane, Cecilia Loftus (as "Mrs. Riley"), Jacqueline Logan, Edward Loud, Jenny Mac, Kenneth MacKenna (as "Richard Niles"), Connie Madison, Burton Mallory, Adrienne Marden, Joan Marston, William McFadden, George McKay, Grant Mills, Harold Moffet, Patricia Palmer, George Parsons, Mary Philips, Betty Reynolds, Annette Robinson, Carl Rose, Hattie Ross, Robert Russell, Elsa Ryan, Otis Schaefer, Irving Schneider, Wilfrid Seagram, James Seeley, Hudson Shotwell, Toni Sorel, Gilbert Squarey, Herbert Steiner, Michael Stirling, Robert Stone, Richard Stringfellow, Morris Tepper, Frank Waldecker, Geraldine Wall, Eleanor Whitney, Murial Williams, Emily Winston, Biacouren Yoshiwara. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1933) Stage Play: Uncle Tom's Cabin. Melodrama. Written by G. L. Aiken. Musical program directed by Harry Gilbert. Revised by A.E. Thomas. Based on the novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe. Musical program prepared by Edward T. Emery. Directed by Earle Boothe. Alvin Theatre: 29 May 1933- Jun 1933 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Topsy"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Simon Legree"), Lyster Chambers (as "Haley"), Joseph Cummings Chase, George Christie (as "Mr. Wilson"), Russel Crouse (as "Ensemble"), Owen Culbertson, Francis H. Day, Pedro de Cordoba (as "George Harris"), Elizabeth Dewing, Malcolm Duncan, Mrs. Edward D. Dunn, Edward Delaney Dunn (as "Ensemble") [final Broadway role], Minnie Dupree (as "Aunt Ophelia"), Edwin T. Emery (as "Second Bidder"), Essie Emery, Sylvia Field (as "Marie"), William Fisher, Harry Gilbert, Ernest Glendinning (as "St. Clare"), Eleanor Goodrich, Harold W. Gould (as "Skeggs, the Auctioneer"), Harry Gresham (as "Quimbo"), Amy Groesbeck, Burford Hampden, Oswald Hering, Richard Hoffmann, Frederick Jagel, John C. King, John Knight, John Kramer, Wright Kramer, Ben Lackland (as "Sambo"), Roy Le May, Nancy Levering, Gene Lockhart (as "Gumption Cute"), Kathleen Lockhart (as "Ensemble"), Cecilia Loftus (as "Aunt Chloe"), Alice MacKenzie, Edward McNamara (as "Phineas Fletcher"), Oswald Marshall, Kate Mayhew (as "Aunt Hagar"), Harold McGee, Samuel Merwin, Earl Mitchell, T.H. Montgomery, John Daly Murphy (as "Marks"), Patricia O'Connell, Janice O'Connell, Patricia O'Connell, Paul Parks, George Riddell, Elisabeth Risdon (as "Eliza"), Lois Shore, Florence Short, Otis Skinner (as "Uncle Tom"), James Stanley, Harold Staton, W.B. Taylor, Raymond Thayer, Grenville Vernon, John Barnes Wells, Frank Wilcox (as "George Fisk"). Produced by The Players Club.
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