- (1917 - 1936) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1917) Stage Play: Parlor, Bedroom and Bath. Written by C.W. Bell and Mark Swan. Theatre Republic: 24 Dec 1917- Jul 1918 (closing date unknown/232 performances). Cast: C.W. Butler, John Cumberland, Will Deming, Richard Gordon, Nick Judels, Francine Larrimore, Carolyn Lilja, Tommy Meade, Helen Menken [Broadway debut], Florence Moore, Sydney Shields, May Vallen. Produced by A.H. Woods. Note: Produced by MGM as a Buster Keaton vehicle in 1931 as Parlor, Bedroom and Bath (1931). Congai (1928). Written by Harry Hervey (based on his novel) and Carleton Hildreth. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 27 Nov 1928- Mar 1929 (closing date unknown/135 performances). Cast: M. Aki, Valerie Bergere, William Boren, Maurice Burke, Alan Campbell, Blanche Collins, Frank De Silva, J. Marshall De Silva, John T. Dwyer (as "Father Mehry"), Ara Gerald, H. Dudley Hawley (as "Maj. de Brissac"), Theodore Hecht, Vera G. Hurst, Helen Kim, Felix Krembs (as "Col. Urban Chauvet"), Camille Lanier, Helen Menken (as "Thi-Linh"), James Pall, Korena Rove, Harry Nelson, W.W. Sinigh, Catherine Taylor, Robert Toms, Charles Trowbridge (as "Justin Batteur"), Josephine Wehn (as "Annamite Woman"), Harold Woolf. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1918) Stage Play: Three Wise Fools. Comedy.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Triumph of X. Drama.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Mad Dog. Drama.
- (1922) Stage Play: Seventh Heaven. Comedy.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Makropoulis Secret.
- (1926) Stage Play: Little Eyolf. Drama (revival).
- (1931) Stage Play: Rock Me, Julie. Drama. Written by Kenneth Raisbeck. Directed by James Light. Royale Theatre: 3 Feb 1931- Feb 1931 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Jean Adair (as "Janet Satterlee"), Thomas Coffin Cooke (as "Joseph Satterlee"), Betty Hanna (as "Stella Satterlee"), Otto Hulett (as "Guy Dexter"), Wanda Lyon (as "Mrs. Archer Satterlee"), Helen Menken (as "Charlotte Satterlee"), Paul Muni (as "Steven Moorhead"), Dorothy Sands (as "Winifred Satterlee Dexter"), James Spottswood (as "Archer Satterlee"), Barry O'Moore (as "Raymond Purss"). Produced by Morris Green and Lewis E. Gensler.
- (1935) Stage Play: The Old Maid. Drama. Written by Zoe Akins. From a novel by Edith Wharton. Scenic Design by Stewart Chaney. Costume Design by Stewart Chaney. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Empire Theatre: 7 Jan 1935- Sep 1935 (closing date unknown/305 performances). Cast: Judith Anderson (as "Delia Lovell, later Mrs. James Ralson"), Helen Menken (as "Charlotte Lovell, Delia's cousin"), Margaret Anderson (as "Tina"), John Cromwell (as "Lanning Halsey"), Margaret Dale (as "Mrs. Mingott"), Dona Earl (as "Nora"), Hope Landin, Yvonne Mann, George Nash (as " Dr. Lanskell"), Gail Reade (as "Servant"), Mary Ricard, Warren Trent (as "John Halsey, Dee's husband"), Frederick Voight (as "James Ralston"), Robert Wallsten (as "Joseph Ralston"), Florence Williams (as "Dee, Delia's daughter"). Replacement actors: Alex Courtney (as "Lanning Halsey"), Diana Croye (as "Mrs. Jennie Meade"), Jackie Grimes (as "Tommy"), Luise G. Huntington (as "Bridget"), Jessie Royce Landis (as "Delia Lovell, later Mrs. James Ralson"), Marjorie Lord (as "Tina"), Robert Lowes (as "Joseph Ralston"), Gloria Mann (as "Susan"), Yvonne Mann (as "Young Tina"), Gretchen Rickel (as "Dee, Delia's daughter"), Charles Wiley Jr. (as "Benny"), Donald Willson (as "John Halsey, Dee's husband"). Produced by Harry Moses. Note: Filmed by Warner Bros. as The Old Maid (1939).
- (1933) Stage Play: Mary of Scotland. Historical drama. Written by Maxwell Anderson. Scenic/Costume Design by Robert Edmond Jones. Directed by Theresa Helburn. Alvin Theatre: 27 Nov 1933- Jul 1934 (closing date unknown/248 performances). Cast: Helen Hayes (as "Mary Stuart"), Helen Menken (as "Elizabeth Tudor"), Philip Merivale (as "James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell"), Quentin Anderson (as "A Warder"), Edgar Barrier (as "Lord Douglas"), Ernest Cossart (as "Lord Throgmorton"), George Coulouris (as "Lord Burghley/Lord Erskine"), Charles Dalton (as "Lord Huntley"), Philip Foster (as "Lord Gordon"), Wilton Graff (as "James Stuart, Earl of Moray"), Cecil Holm (as "Jamie, a Guard"), William Jackson (as "Monk, a Guard"), Anthony Kemble-Cooper (as "Lord Darnley"), Ernest Lawford (as "Maitland of Lethington"), Philip Leigh (as "David Rizzio"), Maurice F. Manson (as "A Page/Graeme, a Sergeant"), Jock McGraw (as "Tammas, a Guard"), Mary Michael (as "Mary Beaton"), Moroni Olsen (as "John Knox"), Stanley Ridges (as "Lord Morton"), Cynthia Rogers (as "Mary Fleming"), Helen Shea (as "Mary Seton"), Edward Trevor (as "Chatelard"), Leonard Willey (as "Duc de Chatelherault/Lord Ruthven"), Deane Willoughby (as "Mary Livingstone"). Produced by The Theatre Guild. Note: Filmed by Radio Pictures [RKO] as Mary of Scotland (1936).
- (1928) Stage Play: The Beaux Stratagem. Comedy (revival). Written by George Farquhar. Prologue by Edgar Lee Masters. Directed by Howard Lindsay. Hampden's Theatre: 4 Jun 1928- Jun 1928 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Robert I. Aitken (as "A Soldier"), Fay Bainter (as "Mrs. Sullen"), David Belasco (as "Epilogue"), Thomas Chalmers (as "A Soldier"), Joseph Cummings Chase (as "A Soldier"), William Courtleigh (as "Gibbet"), Henrietta Crosman (as "Lady Bountiful"), Paul A. Curtis (as "Hounslow"), Harry Grant Dart (as "Traveller"), F.H. Day (as "Servant in the Inn"), Edwin T. Emery (as "A Soldier"), Fred Eric (as "Archer"), George B. Fife (as "Traveller"), William Gustafson (as "A Soldier"), Ruth Hammond (as "Gipsey"), Lyn Harding (as "Sullen"), O.P. Heggie (as "Sir Charles Freeman"), Raymond Hitchcock (as "Boniface, Landlord of the Inn"), Brian Hooker (as "Traveller"), Pamela Hooker (as "Traveller"), Josephine Hull (as "Servant in the Inn"), Ernest Hunter (as "A Soldier"), John C. King (as "A Soldier"), Kate Mayhew (as "A Countrywoman"), Patterson McNutt (as "Traveller"), Owen Meech (as "A Countryman"), Helen Menken (as "Dorinda"), Essie Mercedes (as "Traveller"), John Daly Murphy (as "Foigard"), Jack O'Donnell(as "Traveller"), T.C. Pakenham (as "Traveller"), Eric Pape (as "Traveller"), James T. Powers (as "Scrub"), Herbert Ranson (as "Gagshot"), Wilfrid Seagram (as "Aimwell"), James Stanley (as "Soldier"), Frederic Dorr Steele (as "Traveller"), Dorothy Stickney (as "Cherry"), Loren Stout (as "Traveller"), Thompson Sweeny (as "Traveller"), William B. Taylor (as "A Soldier"), Raymond Thayer (as "A Soldier"), Ray Vir Den (as "A Soldier"), Judith Vosselli (as "Traveller"), Reinald Werrenrath (as "A Soldier"), John Westley (as "Count Bellair"). Produced by The Players. Note: This play was first performed in New York in 1751 at the Nassau Street Theatre, making it one of the earliest productions ever mounted in the U.S. It was revived again in 1959.
- (1930's- ). Productions other than Broadway [list may be incomplete]:
- (1933 - 1934) Stage: Appeared in Maxwell Anderson's "Mary of Scotland," at the Colonial Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts, with Helen Hayes and Philip Merivale in the cast.
- (1928) Stage Play: Congai. Written by Harry Hervey [only Broadway credit] and Carleton Hildreth, based on the novel by Harry Hervey. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 27 Nov 1928- Mar 1929 (closing date unknown/135 performances). Cast: M. Aki, Valerie Bergere, William Boren, Maurice Burke, Alan Campbell, Blanche Collins, Frank De Silva, J. Marshall De Silva, John T. Dwyer (as "Father Mehry"), Ara Gerald, H. Dudley Hawley (as "Maj. de Brissac"), Theodore Hecht, Vera G. Hurst, Helen Kim, Felix Krembs (as "Col. Urban Chauvet"), Camille Lanier, James Pall, Korena Rove, Helen Menken (as "Thi-Linh"), Harry Nelson, James Pall, W.W. Singh, Catherine Taylor, Robert Toms, Charles Trowbridge (as "Justin Batteur"), Josephine Wehn (as "Annamite Woman"), Harold Woolf. Produced by Sam Harris.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content