- (1920 - 1933) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1920) Stage Play: Don't Tell. Comedy.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Bunch and Judy. Musical comedy. Music by Jerome Kern. Book by Anne Caldwell and Hugh Ford. Lyrics by Anne Caldwell. Music orchestrated by Stephen Jones. Musical Director: Victor Baravalle. Scenic Design by Frank E. Gates and Edward A. Morange. Costume Design by Wanamaker, Paul Poiret and George Barbier. Directed by Fred G. Latham. Globe Theatre: 28 Nov 1922- 20 Jan 1923 (63 performances). Cast: Helen Allen, Adele Astaire (as "Judy Jordan/Paulina"), Fred Astaire (as "Gerald Lane/Antonio"), Roberta Beatty (as "Lady Janet"), Marie Brady, Maurice Chapman, Mabel Claire (as "Tessa"), Patrice Clark, Betty Cline, Lola Curtis, Ursula Dale, Clifford Daly, Roger Davis, Delano Dell, Hazel Donnelly, Johnny Dooley (as "Otto Steger/Rocco"), Ray Dooley (as "Evie Dallas/Lizetta"), Helen Eby-Rock, Louis Emery, Gertrude Feeley, Carol Flower, Margery Flynn, Marie Francis, Gladys Goldwin, Chester Grady, Edward Graham, Ona Hamilton, Grace Hayes, Bertha Holley, Jack Hughes, Eleanor Ladd, Doris Landy, Edna Locke, Madelyn Lombard, J.M. McKenzie, W. McLellan, Alida Middlecoat, Augustus Minton, Kathleen Mullane, Kenneth Munro, Elaine Palmer, Lee Patrick (as "Ensemble"), Mary Pearce, Thomas Wigney Percyval (as "Foxhall Davidson"), Louise Powell, Eugene Revere (as "Kelly"), Charles Roberts, Adelaide Robinson, Rita Royce, Lydia Scott, Mildred Sinclair, Jet Stanley, Clifford Stone, George Tawde (as "Robin"), Philip Tonge (as "Lord Kinlock "), Al Watson, George Wharton, Lillian White (as "Marguerite de Belmont"), Ruth White (as "Estelle"), Billie Wilcox, R.H. Wilder. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1923) Stage Play: If Winter Comes.
- (1923) Stage Play: Aren't We All? Romantic comedy. Written by Frederick Lonsdale. Directed by Hugh Ford. Gaiety Theatre: 21 May 1923- Jun 1923 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Harry Ashford (as "Reverend Ernest Lynton"), Roberta Beatty (as "Kitty Lake"), F. Gatenby Bell (as "Roberts"), Denis Gurney (as "Arthur Wells"), Leslie Howard (as "Hon. William Tatham"), Cyril Maude (as "Lord Grenham"), Geoffrey Millar (as "John Willocks"), Marguerite St. John (as "Hon. Mrs. Ernest Lynton"), George Tawde (as "Morton"), Alma Tell (as "Margot Tatham"), Mabel Terry-Lewis (as "Lady Frinton"), Jack Whiting (as "Martin Steele"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Main Line. Comedy.
- (1928) Stage Play: She Stoops to Conquer. Comedy (revival). Written by Oliver Goldsmith. Directed by William Seymour. Erlanger's Theatre: 14 May 1928- May 1928 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Kate Hardcastle"), Horace Braham (as "George Hastings"), Marie Carroll (as "A Maid"), Mrs. Leslie Carter (as "Mrs. Hardcastle"), Patricia Collinge (as "Constance Neville"), Thomas Coffin Cooke (as "Stingo"), Lawrence D'Rosay (as "Sir Charles Marlow"), Lyn Harding (as "Squire Hardcastle"), O.P. Heggie (as "Diggory"), Glenn Hunter (as "Tony Lumpkin"), Suzanne Lawrance (as "A Bar-Maid"), William Lorenz (as "Aminadab"), John D. Saymour (as "Mat Muggins"), Wilfrid Seagram (as "Young Marlow"), George Tawde (as "Jeremy/Slang"), Harold Thomas (as "Tom Twist"). Produced by George C. Tyler.
- (1929) Stage Play: S. S. Glencairn. (Revival).
- (1929) Stage Play: Ladies of the Jury. Comedy. Written by Fred Ballard. Directed by Harrison Grey Fiske. Erlanger's Theatre: 21 Oct 1929-Jan 1930 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Vanda Curci, George Farren, Mrs. Fiske, Germaine Giroux, Claire Grenville, Dudley Hawley, Marie Hunt, Vincent James, Elsie Keene, Walter Kinsella (as "Steve Bromm"), Wilton Lackaye (as "Judge Fish"), Sardis Lawrence, William Lorenz, Hallie Manning, June Mullin, Virginia Murray, Eunice Osborne, Edward Powell, Al Roberts, J.H. Stoddart, George Tawde (as "Andrew MacKaig"), C.W. Van Voorhis. Produced by Abraham L. Erlanger and George C. Tyler.
- (1930) Stage Play: The Rivals. Comedy (revival).
- (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.
- (1933) Stage Play: Foolscap. Comedy. Written by Gennaro Curci and Eduardo Ciannelli. Directed by Geoffrey Kerr. Times Square Theatre: 11 Jan 1933- Jan 1933 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Harold Bolton (as "Another Lunatic"), Diane Bori (as "Martina"), Arthur Bowyer (as "Pierce"), Charles S. Brown (as "Electrician"), Francis Carter (as "Assistant Photographer"), Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Luigi Pirandello"), Frank Coulan (as "Property Man"), William Dorbin (as "Orderly"), Katherine Hastings (as "Helen of Troy"), Peggy Hovenden (as "Francesca da Rimini"), Geoffrey Kerr (as "Shakespeare"), Cynthia Latham (as "Nurse"), Alan Marshall (as "The Stranger"), Rosamund Merivale (as "Eve"), Gorris Nels (as "Menelaus"), Allen Nourse (as "Servant"), Henry O'Neill (as "Dr. Harrold"), William Orville (as "Second Orderly"), Arnold Preston (as "Photographer"), Alice Reinheart (as "Cleopatra"), Bennett Southard (as "Prof. Bluttner"), George Tawde (as "Octavius") [final Broadway role], Robert Wallsten (as "Marc Antony"), Richard Whorf (as "Lunatic"), Frederic Worlock (as "George Bernard Shaw"). Produced by John R. Sheppard, Jr. and Frank A. Buchanan.
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