- (1911 - 1956) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1911) Stage Play: The Garden of Allah. Written by Robert Hitchens and Mary Anderson. Directed by Hugh Ford. Century Theatre: 21 Oct 11- May 1912 (unknown closing date/241 performances). Cast: Zabell Amar (as "Ouardi"), Asmasa (as "Tamouda"), Keill Ayobb (as "Sheik"), Salum Ayobb (as "Mueddin"), Paul Braconnier (as "Ensemble"), Edwin Brandt (as "Captain DeTrevignac"), Henri Dufresne (as "Ensemble"), Frank Durand (as "Ensemble"), Alphonse Fabre (as "Garcon"), Faddma (as "Irena"), Forcin (as "Selima"), William Grossen (as "Ensemble"), Charles Hayne (as "The Sand Diviner"), Clarence Heritage (as "Dr. Peter Androvsky"), Franklyn Hurleigh (as "A Trappist Monk"), Edouard Laroche (as "Ensemble"), Alfred Lecomte (as "Ensemble"), Mary Mannering (as "Domini Enfilden"), Herschel Mayall (as "Father Roubier"), Roy Merrill (as "Hadj"), Eugene Moulin (as "Ensemble"), Charles Nollet (as "Ensemble"), Eben Plympton (as "Count Anteoni"), José Ruben (as "Batouch") [Broadway debut], Mrs. Alexander Salvini (as "Suzanne"), Dikran Seropyan (as "Larbi"), Lewis Waller (as "Boris Androvsky/Father Antoine"). Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1916) Stage Play: Ghosts (Revival). Written by Henrik Ibsen. Comedy Theatre: 7 May 1916- 26 May 1917 (unknown performances). Cast: T.W. Gibson, Arthur Hohl, Margaret Mower, José Ruben (as "Oswald Alving"), Mary Shaw. Produced by The Washington Square Players.
- (1917) Stage Play: The Life of Man. Written by Leonid Andreyev, as translated by Clarence L. Meader and Fred Newton Scott. Comedy Theatre: 14 Jan 1917- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Elinor M. Cox, T.W. Gibson, Arthur Hohl, Jean Robb, José Ruben (as "As "Man"), Marjorie Vonnegut, Helen Westley.
- (1917) Stage Play: Madame Sand. Written by Philip Moeller. Criterion Theatre (moved to The Knickerbocker Theatre on 31 Dec 1917 to close): 19 Nov 1917- Jan 1918 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Undetermined role. Produced by Klaw & Erlanger, and George C. Tyler.
- (1918) Stage Play: Laurette Taylor in Scenes from Shakespeare [production composed of the following shows: The Merchant of Venice, Romeo and Juliet, The Taming of the Shrew]. Written by William Shakespeare. Criterion Theatre: 5 Apr 1918- unknown (unknown performances). The Merchant of Venice: Cast: Laurette Taylor (as "Portia, an heiress in Belmont"), Hubert Druce (as "Duke of Venice"), Lynn Fontanne (as "Nerissa, Portia's waiting gentle-woman"), O.P. Heggie (as "Shylock, a Jewish moneylender"), Edward MacKay (as "Antonio, a merchant of Venice"), Leonard Mudie (as "Bassanio, friend of Antonio"), Frederick Perry (as "Gratiano, gentleman of Venice"), Bouve Souther (as "Solanio, friend of Antonio"). Romeo and Juliet: Cast: Laurette Taylor (as "Juliet, daughter to Capulet"), José Ruben (as "Romeo, son of Montague"). The Taming of the Shrew: Cast: Laurette Taylor (as "Katharina"), Herbert Druce (as "Gremio, Suitor to Bianca"), Lynn Fontanne (as "Bianca"), Shelly Hull (as "Petruchio"), Edward MacKay (as "Baptista"), Frederick Perry (as "Hortensio, Suitor to Bianca"), Bouve Souther (as "Curtis, A Servant to Petruchio").
- (1918) Stage Play: I.O.U. Written by Hector Turnbull and Willard Mack [based on the film, The Cheat (1915)]. Belmont Theatre: 5 Oct 1918- Oct 1918 (closing date unknown/10 performances). Cast: James Dolan, Emily Fitzroy, Florence Flynn, Lynn B. Hammond, Andrew Higginson, Kenneth Hill, Nat Johnson, Martha McGraw, Mary Nash, Helen Pingree, George Riddell, José Ruben, Frederick Truesdell. Produced by William A. Brady. Note: Possibly the earliest stage production based on a film.
- (1919) Stage Play: The Dancer. Drama. Written by Edward Locke. Harris Theatre: 29 Sep 1919- Nov 1919 (closing date unknown/61 performances). Cast: Renée Adorée, George Burnett, Philip Dunning, Mirian Elliott, Richard Freeman, John Halliday, Eva Lang, Isabelle Lowe, Mary Mitman, William Morris, Effingham Pinto, José Ruben (as "Bojdan Borivenko"), Helen Salinger. Produced by J.J. Shubert and Lee Shubert.
- (1916) Stage Play: Sacred and Profane Love. Drama. Written by Arnold Bennett. Directed by B. Iden Payne. Morosco Theatre: 23 Feb 1920- May 1920 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Katherine Brook (as "Emmeline Palmer"), Romaine Callender (as "Snape"), Denise Corday (as "Leonie"), Renee De Monvil (as "Rosalie"), Elsie Ferguson (as "Carlotta Peel"), Susan Given (as "A Parlor Maid"), Peggy Harvey (as "Jocelyn Sardis"), Agusta Haviland (as "Mrs. Joicey"), Bertha Kent (as "Louisa Benbow"), Maud Milton (as "Marie Sardis"), Olive Oliver (as "Mary Ispenlove"), Alexander Onslow (as "Frank Ispenlove"), José Ruben (as "Emilio Diaz"), J. Sebastian Smith (as "Lord Francis Alcar"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (1920) Stage Play: The Checkerboard. Comedy.
- (1920) Stage Play: Thy Name is Woman. Drama. Playhouse Theatre: 15 Nov 1920- Feb 1921 (closing date unknown/120 performances). Cast: Curtis Cooksey (as "A Soldier"), Edwin Maynard (as "A Frontier Guard"), Mary Nash (as "A Woman"), José Ruben (as "A Man"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1921) Stage Play: Swords. Drama. Written by Sidney Howard [earliest Broadway credit]. Directed by Brock Pemberton. National Theatre: 1 Sep 1921- Sep 1921 (closing date unknown/36 performances). Cast: Raymond Bloomer (as "Damiano") [final Broadway role], Jane Darwell (as "Maria"), Lillian Dix (as "Giovanna"), Clare Eames (as "Fiamma"), Helen Forrest (as "Madelina"), Edward MacKay (as "Captain of the Garrison"), Catherine Roberts (as "Fiorenzo"), José Ruben (as "Cannetto"), John Saunders (as "Jacopone"), Charles Waldron (as "Ugolino"), Sophie Wilds (as "Amina"). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1922) Stage Play: Gringo. Written by Sophie Treadwell. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Comedy Theatre: 12 Dec 1922- Jan 1923 (closing date unknown/35 performances). Cast: Arthur Albertson, Jorge Anez, Richard Barbee, Alcides Bricena, Manuel Carillo, Leonard Doyle, Olin Feld, Harry Hahn, Jefferson Heath, Edna Hubbard, J. Andrew Johnson, Harold McKee, Frederick Perry, Justino Rosales, José Ruben (as "Tito"), Manuel Valdispino, Edna Walton. Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Exile. Comedy-drama. Written by Sidney Toler. Directed by José Ruben. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 9 Apr 1923- May 1923 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Tiny Allen, Aubrey Beattie, Wallis Clark, Etienne Girardot, Leonard Ide, Rikel Kent, Eleanor Painter, Sidney Riggs, Jose Ruben (as "Jacques Cortot"). Produced by Joseph Sidney.
- (1924) Stage Play: Mme. Simone. Gaiety Theatre: 21 Mar 1924- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Michelette Burani, Mr. De Rigoult, Mr. Delaquerere, Dupius, Morrell, José Ruben, Mme. Simone, Soutzo, Miss Tilden, Villemain. Produced by George C. Tyler.
- (1924) Stage Play: Leah Kleschna. Drama (revival). Written by C.M.S. McLellan. Lyric Theatre: 21 Apr 1924- May 1924 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Katharine Alexander, Edith Baker (as "Madame Berton"), Ulric Collins, Hal Crane, Arnold Daly, William Faversham (as "Paul Sylvaine"), Helen Gahagan, Mary Hone, Arnold Korff (as "General Berton"), José Ruben (as "Schram"), Lowell Sherman. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1924) Stage Play: Bewitched. Written by 'Sidney Howard (I)' and Edward Sheldon (I)'. National Theatre: 1 Oct 1924- Oct 1924 (closing date unknown/29 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders, Carol Benezet, Joseph Bingham, Willard Collins, Florence Eldridge (as "The Girl"), William Griffith, Albert Hall, Stanley Landahl, José Ruben (as "The Marquis"), Joseph Sweeney, Herbert Westman, George Williams. Produced by John Cromwell.
- (1925) Stage Play: Merchants of Glory.
- (1926) Stage Play: Ghosts. Drama (revival).
- (1926) Stage Play: The Two Orphans. Drama (revival). Written by Adolphe D'Ennery and Eugene Cormon. Translated by N. Hart Jackson. Directed by William A. Brady.Cosmopolitan Theatre: 5 Apr 1926- May 1926 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Produced by J.J. Shubert and Lee Shubert. Produced in association with William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman.
- (1927) Stage Play: Jacob Slovak. Written by Mercedes De Acosta. Directed by James Light. Greenwich Village Theatre: 5 Oct 1927- Oct 1927 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Richard Abbott (as "Hezekiah Brent"), Nancy Baker (as "Kitty"), Wyrley Birch (as "Rev. Ezra Hale"), Jerome Collamore (as "Samuel Jones"), June DeWitt (as "Lola Flint"), Miriam Doyle (as "Myra Flint"), Arthur Hughes (as "Josiah Flint"), Leslie Hunt (as "Theophilus Brent"), Beatrice Moreland (as "Sarah Flint"), José Ruben (as "Jacob Slovak"). Produced by Joseph P. Bickerton Jr.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Red Robe. Musical romance. Written by Stanley Weyman. Directed by Stanley Logan. Shubert Theatre: 25 Dec 1928- 20 May 1929 (167 performances). Cast: Ivan Arbuckle, Lee Beggs, Violet Carlson, Charles Carver, Hugh Chilvers, Sally Coakley, George Dobbs, Peggy Dolan, Grace Driggs, Charles Froom, Gerald Gehlert, Helen Gilliland, John Goldsworthy (as "Sir John Blunt"), Ernest Goodhart, Roy Gordon, Alice Kennedy, Barry Lupino (as "Hercule"), Edward Marshall, Nell Moran, Edward Orchard, Barnett Parker, Marjorie Peterson, Manilla Powers, José Ruben (as "His Eminence, Cardinal Richelieu"), Fred Von Golisch, Walter Woolf. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1929) Stage Play: First Mortgage. Drama. Written by Louis Weitzenkorn [earliest Broadway credit]. Directed by José Ruben. Broadhurst Theatre: 29 Oct 1929- Nov 1929 (closing date unknown/4 performances). Cast: Richard Abbott, Walter Abel (as "Elmer Gray"), Frank Burton, Maxwell Driscoll, Ray Earles, Sara Haden, Beatrice Hendricks, Walter O. Hill, Leona Maricle, Dodson Mitchell (as "Elmer's Father"), Josephine Morse, Ely Solomon, Dorothy Walters. Produced by W.P. Farnsworth and H.M. Hayman.
- (1929) Stage Play: A Wonderful Night. Musical. Music by Johann Strauss. Book by Fanny Todd Mitchell. Based on "Die Fledermaus" by Johann Strauss. Jr. From the story of "Le Reveillon" by Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy. Musical Direction by Robert A. Goetz. Choreographed by Chester Hale. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Costume Design by Orry-Kelly and Ernest Schrapps. Directed by José Ruben. Majestic Theatre: 31 Oct 1929- 15 Feb 1930 (125 performances). Cast: Marian Alden, Julia Barker, Gladys Baxter, Virginia Bethel, Eddie Bird, Sarah Brown, Edward Browne, Robert Burk, Ken J. Butler, Glib Chandro, Charles Chesney, Madeline Clancy, Jashe Crandall, Irene Day, Anna May Denehy, Dolores Distasio, Lula Dubagio, Evangeline Edwards, Frances Ellington, Mabel Ellis, Lawrence Elwin, Alice Everling, Hal Forde (as "Bochmeister"), John Fredericks, Truman Gaige (as "Third Flunkey/Ensemble") [Broadway debut], Donald Gale, Dorothy Gilbert, Marion Gillon, Catherine Gray, Roland Guerard, Georgia Gwynne, Bobby Hamilton, Thalie Hamilton, Harold Haskin, Robert Irving, Charlotte Joslin, Dorothy Kane, Zachary Karr, Kathryn Krech, Jeanne Kriston, Cary Grant (as "Max Grunewald") [credited as Archie Leach], Joseph Lertora, Jack London, Evelyn Lowman, Florence Mallee, Reed McClelland, Mary McCoy, Chula Morrow, Marnella Ney, Constant Nickoll, Garda Norheim, Ernest Pavano, Sally Ritz, Allan Rogers, Meekie Ruth, James Santry, Ann Scarborough, Norma Schutt, Val Sholar, Bartlett Simmons, George Smith, Robert E. Smith, William Jay Spencer, Florence Starr, Sallie Stembler, Betty Stratton, Charles Townshend, Robert Turner, Peggy Udell, Marie Valdez, Armand Vallerie, Ramy Varnell, M. Varrelle, Solly Ward (as "Blatz"), Alma Wertley, Chester J. Williams, Gwilym Williams, Gretchen Wilson, Rosalind Wishon, Arthur Wood, Evert Woodsman, Ray Wright. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1930) Stage Play: Cafe. Comedy. Written by Marya Mannes. Directed by José Ruben. Ritz Theatre: 28 Aug 1930- Aug 1930 (closing date unknown/4 performances). Cast: Victor Achison, Martha Brevka, Jules Broussard, Sam Byrd, Francois Cabuchon, Georgia Caine, King Calder, Helene Cambridge, Renee Cartier, Robert Chandler, Eugenie Daudet, Frank De Silva, Edouard Dennee, Georges Des Lions, Rosa Des Lions, Athy Dimitrieff, Albert Duchartris, Flora Dupree, Theodosia Dusanne, Armand Faure, Frances Fuller, Marjorie Gateson, Leon Hartl, Columbus Jackson, Albert Jacob, Arline Kazanjeau, Edouard La Roche, Pierre Latouche, Gregory Lebedeff, Robert Leguillon, Philip Leigh (as "Rolf Gates"), Raymond Leon, Ramon Lion, Arnold Makowski, Vivian McGill, Henri Murguier, Fred Newton, Marguerite Orme, Allan Parr, Rollo Peters, Marie Pitot, Paul Rigaud, Czara Romanyi, Leonce Rousselot, Lota Sanders, Albert Simard, Claire Sorgus, Ernest A. Treco. Produced by William A. Brady. Produced in association with John Tuerk.
- (1931) Stage Play: As You Desire Me. Drama. Written by Luigi Pirandello. Adapted from the Italian by Dmitri Ostrov. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Directed by Marcel Varneli. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 28 Jan 1931- Jun 1931 (closing date unknown/142 performances). Cast: Judith Anderson (as "The Unknown One"), Hugh Cairns (as "Another Young Man"), Goo Chong (as "Moto, a servant"), Dorothy Day (as "Inez, Lena's niece"), Douglass Dumbrille (as "Carl Salter"), Vera Hurst (as "Lena"), Amy Jonap (as "Another Woman"), Philip Leigh (as "Salesio"), Mary Miner (as "Mop, Salter's daughter"), John O'Meara (as "A Doctor"), Charlotte Orr (as "A Maid/A Nurse"), Brandon Peters (as "Bruno Pieri"), Cledge Roberts (as "A Young Man"), José Ruben (as "Boffi"), Mortimer Weldon (as "Masperi, her husband"). Produced by J.J. Shubert and Lee Shubert.
- (1931) Stage Play: The Cat and the Fiddle. Romantic musical comedy. Based on material by Otto A. Harbach and Jerome Kern. Music by Jerome Kern and Otto A. Harbach. Lyrics by Otto Harbach and Jerome Kern. Orchestrations devised by Jerome Kern. Orchestrations scored by Robert Russell Bennett. Musical Director: Victor Baravalle. Directed by José Ruben. Globe Theatre (moved to George M. Cohan's Theatre from 24 May 1932 to close): 15 Oct 1931- 24 Sep 1932 (395 performances). Cast: Margaret Adams, Doris Carson, Peter Chambers, Eddie Foy Jr., Lawrence Grossmith, Lisa Guigon, Bettina Hall, George Kirk, Dorothy Lane, Flora Le Breton, George Magis, George Meader (as "Pompineau"), Georges Metaxa, Odette Myrtil, Georgianna Orr, José Ruben, Karl Theman, Lucette Valsy, Fred Walton, Frances Wise. Produced by Max Gordon. Produced in association with Erlanger Productions, Inc.
- (1933) Stage Play: The Drums Begin. Drama. Written by Howard Irving Young. Directed and co-produced by George Abbott. Shubert Theatre: 24 Nov 1933- Dec 1933 (closing date unknown/11 performances). As "Gaston Corday." Cast: Walter Abel, Judith Anderson, Oliver Barbour, Mathilda Baring, C.C. Charles, Harry Cooke, Pierre De Ramey, Joseph Downing, William Foran, Robert Gleckler, F. Cliff Jewell, Moffat Johnston, Alexander Lewis, William Shea, Asher Smith, Kent Smith, Lionel Stander, Ingeborg Tillisch, Juan Varro, William Wadsworth, Alf Weinberg. Co-produced by Philip Dunning.
- (1934) Stage Play: All the King's Horses. Musical/romantic comedy. Book by Frederik Herendeen. Lyrics by Frederik Herendeen. Based on the play "Carlo Rocco" by Lawrence Clarke and Max Giersberg. Music by Edward A. Horan. Musical Director: Oscar Bradley. Music orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett and Hans Spialek. Choreographed by Theodore Adolphus. Directed by José Ruben. Shubert Theatre (moved to The Imperial Theatre from 19 Feb 1934 to close): 30 Jan 1934- 12 May 1934 (120 performances). Cast: Doris Anderson, Frank Augustyn, Virginia Davies, Winnie Duncan, Jack Edwards, Harold Freeman, Frank Greene, Russell Hicks (as "Count Ergard Regitard Batthy"), Gertrude Hogan, Einar Holt, Manart Kippen (as "A Patron"), Dorothy Koster, Blanche Lytell, Nancy McCord, Howard Morgan, Louis Morrell, Robert O'Conner, Joan Orner, Arthur F. Otto, Naida Pahl, Doris Patston, Guy Robertson, Leonard Rogall, Etna Ross, Helen Ryan, Betty Starbuck, June Tempest, Frances Thress, Andrew Tombes, Mora Vordkin, Edna West. Produced by Harry L. Cort and Charles H. Abramson. Produced by arrangement with E. Steuart-Tavant. Note: Produced on film as All the King's Horses (1935) by Paramount as a Carl Brisson vehicle.
- (1934) Stage Play: Rain from Heaven. Comedy. Written by S.N. Behrman. Directed by Philip Moeller. John Golden Theatre: 24 Dec 1934- Mar 1935 (closing date unknown/99 performances). Cast: Alice Belmore-Cliffe, Lily Cahill, Hancey Castle, Jane Cowl, Marshall Grant, Thurston Hall (as "Hobart Eldridge"), John Halliday, José Ruben (as "Nikolai Jurin"), Ben Smith, Robert Woods. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1935) Stage Play: Strip Girl. Comedy. Written by Henry Rosendahl. Music by Harry Archer. Lyrics by Jill Rainsford. Directed by José Ruben. Longacre Theatre: 19 Oct 1935- Nov 1935 (closing date unknown/33 performances). Cast: Ruth Abbott (as "Helen Meighten"), Elaine Blauvelt (as "Peter's Girl"), Walter Gilbert (as "Wells Carter"), Dwight Goodwin (as "Peter"), Seymour Gross (as "Bellhop"), C. Norman Hammond (as "Satchel Pants"), Franklin Heller (as "Hotel Waiter"), Robert Le Seuer (as "Doctor Griffith"), James Lewis (as "Homer"), Frederick Malcolm (as "Magistrate"), Frank McNellis (as "Larry Stevens"), Albert McWilliams (as "Second Detective"), Mayo Methot [credited as Mayo Jane Methot] (as "Dixie Potter"), Paul Morton (as "Straight Man"), William Nugent (as "Third Detective"), Joan Oates (as "Lex's Girl"), Doris Packer (as "Peaches Moran"), Al Raymond (as "Schultz"), Frederick Raymond (as "Court Attendant"), Edwin Redding (as "Stage Manager"), Emmett Rogers (as "Lex"), Worthington L. Romaine (as "Waiter"), George Rossum (as "Head Waiter"), Katharine Sheridan (as "Homer's Girl"), Helen Shields (as "Nurse"), Julia Steger (as "Rose-Marie"), Howard Sydney (as "First Detective"), Dick Wallace (as "Leonard Potter"), Edna West (as "Jail Matron"). Produced by L. Lawrence Weber.
- (1935) Stage Play: May Wine. Musical. Music by Sigmund Romberg. Additional orchestrations by Robert Russell Bennett. Material by Frank Mandel. Adapted from the "The Happy Alienist" by Erich von Stroheim and Wallace Smith. Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. Musical Direction by Robert Emmett Dolan. Music orchestrated by Don Walker. Directed by José Ruben. St. James Theatre: 5 Dec 1935- 6 Jun 1936 (213 performances). Cast: Betty Allen, Beulah Blake, Remo Buffano, Patricia Calvert, Victor Casmore, Tomes Chapman, Frank Chester, Lee Childs, Jack Cole, Radley E. Collins, Alice Dudley, Robert C. Fischer, Michael J. Forbes, Roy Gordon, Rollin Grimes Jr., Inga Hill, Marian Huntley, Betty Kerr, Walter Woolf King, Bela Lublov, Nancy McCord, Clifford Menz, Harry Mestayer, Charles Palloy, Marie Louise Quevli, Walter Slezak (as "Prof. Johann Volk"), Guy Smith Jr., Maury Tuckerman. Produced by Laurence Schwab.
- (1936) Stage Play: Alice Takat. Drama. Written by José Ruben, from the Hungarian of Dezso Szomory. Directed by Frank Merlin. John Golden Theatre: 10 Feb 1936- Feb 1936 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Percy Ames (as "Homer Horeb"), A.G. Andrews (as "Fritz"), Florence Auer (as "Mrs. Dubra"), Al Baron (as "A Patient"), Mady Christians, Leo Curley (as "Professor Glotz"), Florence Earle (as "Miss Haus"), John Emery (as "George Kroos"), Lloyd Gough (as "Max Durak"), Russell Hardie, Nicholas Joy (as "Zuard Takat"), Arnold Korff (as "Prof. Tardy Kroos"), Kate Mayhew (as "Mrs. Helvet"), Howard Emmett Rogers, Peggy Shannon (as "Kitty Linderman"), Edna West (as "Mrs. Baneyi"), Marjorie Wood (as "Mrs. Gantz"). Produced by Ed Wynn.
- (1936) Stage Play: Forbidden Melody. Musical comedy.
- (1936) Stage Play: Matrimony Pfd. Comedy. Written by Louis Verneuil. Book adapted by Grace George and James Forbes. Directed by José Ruben. Cast: Rosemary Ames, Sylvia Field (as "Mrs. Robert Levy-de Coudray"), Grace George (as "Linda Lessing"), A.J. Herbert, May Marshall, A.E. Matthews as "Victor Gustav Martineau"), Victor Morley (as "Florist"), Rex O'Malley, José Ruben (as "Andre Lorre"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1938) Stage Play: Madame Capet. Drama. Written by Marcelle Maurette, as adapted by George Middleton. Directed by José Ruben (also appearing as "Herman"). Cort Theatre: 25 Oct 1938- Oct 1938 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Eva Le Gallienne, Charita Bauer, Anne Baxter, George Baxter (as "Baron de Besenval/Fouquier-Tinville, Prosecutor"), Barbara C. Brown, Staats Cotsworth (as "Count de Vaudreuil/Chauveau-Lagarde, The Queen's advocate"), George Coulouris (as "Mirabeau"), Diane De Brett, Elizabeth Dewing, Diana Donnenwirth, Carol Evans, Marion Evanson, Harold Gould (as "Count de Mercy"), W.J. Hackett, Phyllis Holden, Alice John (as "Madame de Misery"), Merle Maddern, Mary Michael, Warren Miller, Earle Mitchell, Elizabeth Murray, Bram Nossen, LeRoi Operti, William Post (as "Count Axel de Fersen"), Louis Veda Quince, Fred Redulic, Helen Renee, Blanche Ring (as "Rose Bertin, dressmaker") [final Broadway role], William Webb Sanders, Fred Sears, Frederic Tozere (as "Joseph II, Emperor of Austria/Count de la Tour du Pin"), Harvey Welch, Craig Williams. Produced by Eddie Dowling.
- (1939) Stage Play: Susanna, Don't You Cry. Musical romance.
- (1943) Stage Play: The Vagabond King. Musical comedy (revival).
- (1944) Stage Play: La Bohème. Opera/Drama/tragedy (revival).
- (1944) Stage Play: La Traviata. Opera (revival).
- (1944) Stage Play: The New Moon. Romantic comedy. Music by Sigmund Romberg. Book by Laurence Schwab, Frank Mandel, Oscar Hammerstein II and Oscar Hammerstein 2d. Choreographed by Charles Weidman. Directed by José Ruben. City Center: 17 May 1944- unknown (44 performances). Cast: Everett Anderson (as "Ensemble"), Virginia Barnes (as "Ensemble"), Lucille Barton (as "Ensemble"), Jeanne Beauvais (as "Ensemble"), Hamilton Benz (as "Besac"), G. Raymond Breit (as "Ensemble"), George Bruno (as "A Sailor"), Hall Carnegie (as "Clotilde Lombaste/Emile"), Roberta Casell (as "Ensemble"), Molly Consley (as "Ensemble"), Jerry Davenport (as "Ensemble"), John Duane (as "Ensemble"), Margit Fisher (as "Ensemble"), Donna Gardner (as "Ensemble"), Aaron Girard (as "Ensemble"), Harold Gordon (as "Vicomte Ribaud"), Jeanne Gordon (as "Ensemble"), John Hamill (as "Phillippe"), Peter Hamilton (as "A Spaniard"), Laurence Hayes (as "Monsieur Beaunoir"), Elizabeth Houston (as "Julie"), Anne Jackson [credited as Ann Jackson] (as "Ensemble") [Broadway debut], John Jackson (as "Ensemble"), Martha King (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Kirsten (as "Marianne"), Betty Leighton (as "Ensemble"), Patricia Leith (as "Ensemble"), Zoya Leporsky (as "A Dancer/Ensemble"), George Mitchell (as "Captain Paul Duval"), Joe Monte (as "Ensemble"), Johnny Morgan (as "Alexander"), Carl Nelson (as "Fouchette/Ensemble"), Harriet O'Neill (as "Ensemble"), Frederick Poller (as "Jacques"), David Raher (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Ramsey (as "Clotilde Lombaste"), Kenneth Renner (as "Ensemble"), Alice Richmond (as "Ensemble"), Villetta Russell (as "Ensemble"), Ralph Sassano (as "Latouche/Ensemble"), John Scott (as "Gervais/Ensemble"), John Sheridan (as "Ensemble"), William Sutherland (as "Doorkeeper of Tavern/Ensemble"), William Sydenstricker (as "Ensemble"), Dick Todd (as "Admiral De Jean"), Vaughn Trinnier (as "Brunet/Ensemble"), Elline Walther (as "Ensemble"), Ludlow White (as "Proprietor of the Tavern/Ensemble"), Jeanne Winters (as "Ensemble"), Earl Wrightson (as "Robert"). Produced by Sigmund Romberg.
- (1944) Stage Play: Manon Lescaut. Drama (revival).
- (1946) Stage Play: Flamingo Road. Comedy. Written by Robert Wilder and Sally Wilder. From "Flamingo Road" by Robert Wilder. Directed by José Ruben. Belasco Theatre: 19 Mar 1946- 23 Mar 1946 (7 performances). Cast: Philip Bourneuf (as "Dan Curtis"), Hazel Burgess (as "Matron"), Sally Carthage, Evelyn Davis (as "Virgie"), Francis Felton, Paul Ford (as "Ulee Jackson"), Will Geer (as "Doc Watterson"), Lauren Gilbert (as "Fielding Carlisle"), Martha Jensen, Marcella Markham, Frank McNellis, Tom Morrison, Mahlon Naill, Judith Parrish, Olvester Polk, Bernard Randall, Doris Rich (as "Lute-Mae Saunders"). Produced by Rowland Stebbins and Laurence Rivers Inc. Note: Filmed as Flamingo Road (1949), Flamingo Road (1980), Pilot (1980), Flamingo Road (1956).
- (1956) Stage Play: The Great Sebastians [A Melodramatic Comedy]. Melodrama/comedy. Written by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse. Scenic Design by Raymond Sovey. Assistant Director: James Adams. Directed by Bretaigne Windust. Cast: Lynn Fontanne (as "Essie Sebastian"), Alfred Lunt (as "Rudi Sebastian"), Ben Astar (as "General Otokar Zandek"), Martin Brandt (as "Second Security Policeman"), Michael Egan (as "Second Soldier"), Doris Fesette (as "Marie Balzar"), Anne Francine (as "Colonel Bradacova"), Susan Frank (as "Manya"), Arny Freeman (as "Josef"), Grant Gordon (as "Novotny"), Peter Gumeny (as "First Soldier"), Ted Gunther (as "Corporal"), Ben Hammer (as "Pavlat"), Joseph Holland (as "Bacilek"), Sheppard Kerman (as "Third Soldier"), Edward Moor (as "Dr. Balzar"), Peg Murray (as "Vlasta Habova"), Simon Oakland (as "Sergeant Javorsky"), Burns Oliver (as "First Security Policeman"), Eugenia Rawls (as "Sophie Cerny"), José Ruben (as "Karel Cerny") [final Broadway credit]. Replacement actor: Sy Travers (as "First Security Policeman"). Produced by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse.
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