- (1922 - 1945) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1922) Stage Play: Swifty. Comedy.
- (1928) Stage Play: A Most Immoral Lady. Comedy. Written by Townsend Martin. Scenic Design: Jo Mielziner. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Directed by Dwight Wiman. Cort Theatre: 26 Nov 1928- Apr 1929 (closing date unknown/160 performances). Cast: Lawrence Adams, Kirk Ames (also assistant stage manager), Harry Barfoot (also stage manager), Sydney Booth, Alice Brady, Helen Brooks, Blythe Daly, Pauline Denton, Austin Fairman, Inger Ghika, Michael Hoffman, Guido Nadzo, Erik Rhodes (as credited as Ernest Sharpe), Robert Strange. Produced by William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman.
- Jonesy (1929). Comedy. Written by Anne Morrison Chapin [credited as Anne Morrison] and John Peter Toohey. Directed by Earle Boothe. Bijou Theatre: 9 Apr 1929- Jul 1929 (closing date unknown/96 performances). Cast: Seldon Bennett (as "Mr. Silverberg"), Helen Brooks, Spring Byington (as "Mrs. Henry Jones"), Robert Crozier (as "A Plumber"), Gene Raymond (as "Wilbur Jones") [credited as Raymond Guion], Eloise Keeler, Kate Mayhew (as "Katie"), Jack Mead, Donald Meek (as "Henry Jones"), Percy Moore, Edward Racey, Nydia Westman (as "Mildred Ellis"). Produced by Earle Boothe.
- Jenny (1929). Comedy. Written by Margaret Ayer Barnes and Edward Sheldon. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Directed by Frederick Stanhope. Booth Theatre: 8 Oct 1929- Jan 1930 (closing date unknown/111 performances). Cast: Jane Cowl, Charles Brokaw, Helen Brooks, Joyce Carey, Katherine Emmett, Coburn Goodwin, Ben Lackland, Robert Lowe, Lewis Martin, Guy Standing. Produced by William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman.
- Once in a Lifetime (1930). Comedy.
- Oh, Promise Me (1930). Comedy/farce. Written by Howard Lindsay and Bertrand Robinson. General Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Directed by Howard Lindsay and Bertrand Robinson. Morosco Theatre: 24 Nov 1930- Mar 1931 (closing date unknown/145 performances). Cast: Eleanore Bedford, Clarence Bellair, Rosamund Carpentier, Chester Clute (as "Mr. Brown"), Frazer Coulter (as "Judge Hawley"), Arthur Davies, Jeanne Greene, Eleanor Hicks, Eddie Hodge (as "Bell Boy"), Harry Hornick (as "Mr. Siegel"), Donald Meek (as "Luther Bowen"), Jack Morgan, William Nelson, J. Francis O'Reilly, Mary Philips, Edward H. Robins, Frank Sylvester (as "Marshall Durant"), Lee Tracy (as "Mark Reed"), George Wilson. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (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).
- As Thousands Cheer (1933). Musical revue. Music by Irving Berlin. Lyrics by Irving Berlin. Book by Moss Hart. Musical Director: Frank Tours. Music orchestrated by Adolph Deutsch, Frank Tours, Ed Powell, Russell Wooding and Helmy Kresa. Choreographed by Charles Weidman. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Directed by Hassard Short. Music Box Theatre: 30 Sep 1933- 8 Sep 1934 (400 performances). Cast: Helen Broderick (as "Mrs. Andrews, "Mrs. Hoover," "Majestic Sails at Midnight" Singer, "Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.," "Mrs. Williams," "Aimee Semple MacPherson," "Mrs. Fisher," "Queen Mary"), Marilyn Miller, Clifton Webb (as "Douglas Fairbanks Jr"m 'Mahatma Ghandi," "Mons. Peppiton," "Henry Perlmutter," "John D. Rockefeller, Sr."), Ethel Waters (as "Ella," "Josephine Baker"), Leslie Adams, Helen Bache, Jack Barnes, Jeanette Bradley, Robert Castaine, Debby Coleman, Peggy Cornell, Jerome Cowan (as "Editor," "Second Reporter," "Majestic Sails at Midnight" Singer), Arthur Craig, Dorothy Dodd, Elsie Duffy, Helen Ericson, Hal Forde (as "Langley"), Robert Gorham, Thomas Hamilton, Hamtree Harrington, Jay Hunter, Letitia Ide, Harry Joyce, Jose Limon, Katherine Litz, William Matons, Fred Mayon, Irene McBride, Katherine Mulowney, Jeanette Mundell, Harry Murray (as "Prince DeLuneville," "First Reporter," "Camera Man," "Second Bellboy"), Chester O'Brien, Mortimer O'Brien, John Perkins, Paul Pierce, Margaret Sande, Toni Sorel, Harry Stockwell, Ward Tallmon, Lucille Tayloe, Harold Voeth, Jack Voeth, Elsa Walbridge, Teddy West, Paula Yasqour. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1933) Stage Play: The Dark Tower. Melodrama. Co-written and co-directed by Alexander Woollcott and George S. Kaufman. General Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Morosco Theatre: 25 Nov 1933- Jan 1934 (closing date unknown/57 performances). Cast: Beatrice Blinn, Margaret Dale, John T. Doyle, Margalo Gillmore, John Griggs, Porter Hall, Margaret Hamilton, William Harrigan, William MacFadden, Leona Maricle, Ernest Milton, Charles Romano, Anton Stengel, Basil Sydney. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (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, John Cromwell (as "Lanning Halsey"), Margaret Dale (as "Mrs. Mingott"), Dona Earl, Hope Landin, Yvonne Mann, George Nash, Gail Reade, Mary Ricard, Warren Trent, Frederick Voight, Robert Wallsten, Florence Williams. Produced by Harry Moses.
- Jubilee (1935). Musical comedy. Based on material by Moss Hart. Music by Cole Porter. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Directed by Hassard Short. Imperial Theatre: 12 Oct 1935-7 Mar 1936 (169 performances). Cast: Mary Boland, Margaret Adams, Betty Allen, Virginia Allen, Albert Amato, Dorothy Atkins, Bruce Barclay, May Boley, Jeanette Bradley, Charles Brokaw, Donald Brown, Jerry Bruce, Bobby Burns, Wyn Cahoon, Kay Cameron, Leo Chalzel, Montgomery Clift, Helen Cole, Melville Cooper, Tom Curley, Miriam Curtis, Denise Denning, Jack Donaldson, Donald Douglas, Evelyn Eaton, Jack Edwards, Jane Evans, Ted Fetter, Alice Fitzsimmons, Dorothy Forsythe, Dorothy Fox, Jacqueline Franc, Rose Gale, Dorothy Graves, Vernon Hammer, Marion Hammer, Marion Heemsath, Buddy Hertelle, Jay Hunter, Michael James, Joyce Johnson, Janice Joyce, Adele Jergens, Jackie Kelk, James Keogan, Leslie Kingdon, June Knight, Robert Lewis, Richie Ling, Helene Louise, Jules Mann, Philip Mann, Patricia Martin, Jack Millard, John Moore, Mickey Moore, Harry Murray, Frank Nay, Austra Neiman, Mark Plant, David Preston, Victor Pullman, Olive Reeves-Smith, Patricia Roe, Raymond Roe, Wilma Roelof, Sid Salzer, Tanya Sanina, Bob Schultz, Peggy Seel, Grena Sloan, Ralph Sumpter, Vernon Tanner, Rose Tyrrell, Norman Van Emburgh, Elsa Walbridge, Charles Walters, Gil White, Jack Whitney, Castle Williams, Derek Williams, Gilbert Wilson, Janice Winter, Erika Zaranoya. Produced by Sam Harris and Max Gordon.
- First Lady (1935). Comedy. Written by Katharine Dayton and George S. Kaufman. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Music Box Theatre: 26 Nov 1935- Jun 1936 (closing date unknown/246 performances). Cast: Jane Cowl (as "Lucy Chase Wayne"), Florenz Ames, Don Beddoe (as "Jason Fleming"), Leslie Bingham, Isis Brinn, Helen Brooks, Jessie Busley, Lily Cahill, Armand Cortes (as "Senor Ortega"), Frank Dae (as "George Mason"), Thomas Findlay, Ruth Hovey, Bradford Hunt, Naoe Kondo, Charles La Rue, Judson Laire, Donald McKenzie, Lillian Norton, Daniel Ocko, George Parsons, Diantha Pattison (as "Sophy"), Susan Powers, Stanley Ridges (as "Stephen Wayne"), Margherita Sargent, James Seeley, John M. Troughton, Rita Vale, Regina Wallace, Ethel Wilson, Hon. Wu, Oswald Yorke (as "Cater Hibbard"). Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1936) Stage Play: You Can't Take It With You. Comedy. Written by Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman. Scenic Design by Donald Oenslager. Techncial Assistant to Mr. Oenslager: Isaac Benesch. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Booth Theatre (moved to The Imperial Theatre from 19 Sep 1938- close): 14 Dec 1936- 3 Dec 1938 (838 performances). Cast: Ruth Attaway (as "Rheba"), Jess Barker, Frank Conlan (as "Mr. DePinna"), Mitzi Hajos, Virginia Hammond, Franklin Heller, George Heller, Ralph Holmes (as "G-Man"), Josephine Hull (as "Penelope Sycamore"), William J. Kelly, George Leach, Anna Lubowe, Oscar Polk (as "Donald"), Hugh Rennie (as "Wilbur C. Henderson"), Margot Stevenson (as "Alice Sycamore"), George Tobias (as "Boris Kolenkhov"), Henry Travers (as "Martin Vanderhof/Grandpa") [final Broadway role], Paula Trueman (as "Essie"), Frank Wilcox. Produced by Sam Harris. Replacement actors during Booth Theatre run: Aldrich Bowker (as "Martin Vanderhof, Grandpa"), George Calvert (as "G-Man"), C.M. Clough (as "G-Man"), Muni Seroff (as "Boris Kolenkhov"), Fred Stone. Replacement actors during Imperial Theatre run: None. Note: Filmed as You Can't Take It with You (1938).
- Fulton of Oak Falls (1937). Comedy.
- (1937) Stage Play: Of Mice and Men. Drama. Written by John Steinbeck. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Scenic Design by Donald Oenslager. Costume production by John Hambleton. Technical assistant to Mr. Oenslager: Isaac Benesch. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Music Box Theatre: 23 Nov 1937- May 1938 (closing date unknown/207 performances). Cast: Walter Baldwin (as "Whit"), Sam Byrd (as "Curley"), Broderick Crawford (as "Lennie"), Thomas Findley (as "The Boss"), Wallace Ford (as "George"), Will Geer (as "Slim"), John F. Hamilton (as "Candy"), Claire Luce (as "Curley's Wife"), Charles Slattery (as "Carlson"), Leigh Whipper (as "Crooks"). Produced by Sam Harris. Note: Theatre Owned and operated by Sam H. Harris and Irving Berlin [who did not have direct involvement in production]. Produced on film as Of Mice and Men (1939) by Hal Roach.
- (1938) Stage Play: Missouri Legend. Comedy.
- (1939) Stage Play: The American Way. Written by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart. Scenic Design by Donald Oenslager. Costume Design by Irene Sharaff. Lighting Design by Hassard Short. Scene Technician for Mr. Oenslager: Isaac Benesch. Assistant to Miss Sharaff: Anna Hill Johnstone and Florence Keady. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Conducted by Oscar Levant. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Center Theatre: 21 Jan 1939- Jun 1939 (closing date unknown/164 performances). Cast: Fredric March (as "Martin Gunther"), Florence Eldridge (as "Irma Gunther"), McKay Morris (as "Samuel Brockton"), Ruth Weston (as "Winifred Baxter"), Eve Abbott, Albert Amato, Jack Arnold (as "Ed Lorenz"), Suzanne Ashbrook, Cathie Bailey, Alan Bandler, Bobby Barron, Robin Batcheller, Vivian Baule, Joseph Beale, Walter Beck (as "A Minister"), Herman Belmonte, Mary Bennett, Ronald Bennett, Evelyn Bernie, Whit Bissell [credited as Whitner Bissell] (as "Karl, Age 21"), Milton Blumenthal, Orin Borston, Mary Brandon, Louise Buck, Buddy Buehler, Eileen Burns, Joe Bush, Hugh Cameron (as "Mayor McEvoy"), Eleanore Campsall, Gloria Carey, Gerry Carr, Eldridge Carson, Kenneth Casey, Teddy Casey, Natalie Chilvers, Laura Church, Norma Clerc, Beatrice Cole, Daniel Conway, Russell Conway, George Cotton, Alex Courtney, Ed Crosswell, Harry Crox, Tom Curley, Robert Cushman, Kenneth Dana, Ethel Darling, Gretchen Davidson, Bud Davis, Celeste DeBellis, Louis Delgado, Sandford Dody, Gene Douglas, Dorothy Downs, Katherine Duncan, Helen Edwards, Marian Edwards, Clark Eggleston (as "Ensemble"), Edward Elliott, Ruth Enders, Elsa Ersi (as "Clara Heinrich"), Herbert Everin, Gilbert Fates, Edward Fisher, Alice Fitzsimmons, Janet Fox, Eugene Francis, Vincent Gardiner, Bob Gewald, Herbert Goff, Brant Gorman, Carl Gose, Sydney Grant (as "Dr. Squires"), Norma Green, Claire Greenwood, Donn Hagerty, Gilbert Haggerty, Ann Hagye, Vernon Hammer, Robert Hanley, Lola Harris, Michael Harvey, William Hawes, James Hayes, George Herndon, Alan Hewitt (as "Alex Hewitt"), Nina Hill, Mary Hoban (as "Ensemble"), Cynthia Holbrook, Danny Hood, Claire Howard, Carol Hulings, Bradford Hunt, Buddy Irving, Carl Johnson, Peter Johnson, Marilyn Jolie, Curtis Karpe (as "Ensemble"), Allen Kearns, Walter Kelly, John Kerr, Robert Kerr, Lila King, Dorothy Knox, William Layton (as "Ensemble"), Kenneth Le Roy, Michael Leonard, Tommy Lewis, Richard Lloyd, Audrey Lodge, Constance Lodge, Virginia Lodge, John Long, John Lorenz, Betty MacDonald, James MacDonald, Marvel MacInnis (as "Ensemble"), Edward Mann, Jules Mann, Adrienne Marden, Jean Martel, Remi Martel, Gaylord Mason, Buddy Matthews, Gordon Merrick, Dorothy Miller, Gordon Mills, Patricia Minty, Carman Mitchell, Lois Montgomery, James Moore, Mona Moray, Mary Murray, May Muth, Florrie Nadel, Edna Nagy, Cecil Natapoff, Doris Newcomb, Donald O'Day, Grace O'Malley, LeRoi Operti (as "Dr. MacFarlane"), Margaret Owens, Melvin Parks, Judy Parrish, Lee Parry, Albert Patterson, Charles Payne, Jeannie Belle Perry, Martha Pickens, Gloria Pierre, Elinor Pittis, Philip Pollard, Jean Porter, Janet Regan, Ronald Reiss, George Repp, Robert Rhodes, Eric Roberts, James Roland, Mary Romano, Peggy Romano, Sylvia Roseman, James Russo, Nathaniel Sack, Stephen Sandes, Ray Santos, Lesley Savage, Dora Sayers, Louise Segal, Nat Seigal, Jeanne Shelby, Thomas Speidel, Don Starr, Mary Stevenson, Rodney Stewart, Sidney Stone, Elliott Stranger, Ruth Strome, Daphne Sylva, Jerry Sylvon, Ward Tallman (as "Henry Courtney"), John Thomas, Jerome Thor (as "Ensemble"), Frances Thress, Harry Todd, Carl Urbont, Grace Valentine, Dick Van Patten (as "Karl Gunther, Age 9; Martin Gunther's grandchild") [credited as Dickie Van Patten], Joan Vitez, Julia Walsh, George Ward, Jeanne Wardley, David Wayne (as "Karl Gunther"), William Welch, Maurice Wells, Peggy Wells, Alan Wenfield, Bob White, Albert Whitley, Nancy Whitman, Lynn Whitney, Mary Williamson, Lois Winston, Janice Winter, Barbara Wooddell, Gene Yell. Produced by Sam Harris and Max Gordon.
- (1941) Stage Play: The Land Is Bright. Written by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Costume Design by Irene Sharaff. Lighting Design by Jo Mielziner. Technical Assistant to Mr. Mielziner: George Jenkins. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey and Ben Kornzweig. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Music Box Theatre: 28 Oct 1941- 3 Jan 1942 (79 performances). Cast: Leon Ames, Diana Barrymore (as "Linda Kincaid"), Walter Beck (as "Dorset"), Constance Brigham, Grover Burgess (as "Ollie Pritchard"), Flora Campbell, Russell Conway, John Draper, Herbert Duffy, Ruth Findlay, Jack Hartley, Muriel Hutchison, James La Curto, Louise Larabee, Hugh Marlowe, Roderick Maybee (as "Jesse Andrews"), Charles McClelland, Arnold Moss (as "Count Waldemar Czarniko/Count Waldemar Czarniko II"), Phyllis Povah (as "Ellen Kincaid"), William Roerick (as "Theodore Kincaid"), Edith Russell, Robert Shayne (as "Jerry Hudson"), Elaine Shepard, Martha Sleeper (as "Tana Kincaid"), G. Albert Smith (as "Dan Frawley"), K.T. Stevens, Norman Stuart, Ralph Theodore (as "Lacey Kincaid"), Lili Valenty, Dick Van Patten (as "Timothy Kincaid") [credited as "Dickie Van Patten"]. Produced by Max Gordon.
- (1944) Stage Play: The Late George Apley. Comedy. Written by John P. Marquand and George S. Kaufman. Based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by John P. Marquand. Scenic Design by Stewart Chaney. Costume Design by Stewart Chaney. Lighting Design by Albert Alloy. Wig Design by Alfred Barris. Hair Design by Charles of the Ritz. Make-Up Design by Charles of the Ritz. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey [final Broadway credit]. Casting: Myra Hampton Streger. Advertising: Kenneth Gray. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Lyceum Theatre: 23 Nov 1944- 17 Nov 1945 (384 performances). Cast: Leo G. Carroll (as "George Apley"), Janet Beecher (as "Catherine Apley"), Margaret Dale (as "Amelia Newcombe"), Percy Waram (as "Roger Newcombe"), Mabel Acker (as "Emily Southworth"), Joan Chandler (as "Eleanor Apley"), John Conway (as "Howard Boulder"), Sayre Crawley (as "Henry"), Reynolds Evans (as "Horatio Willing"), David McKay (as "John Apley"), Mrs. Priestly Morrison (as "Margaret"), Margaret Phillips (as "Agnes Willing"), Catherine Proctor (as "Jane Willing"), Byron Russell (as "Wilson"), Howard St. John (as "Julian H. Dole"), Ivy Troutman (as "Lydia Leyton"). Produced by Max Gordon.
- (1943) Stage Play: Lady in the Dark. Musical (revival). Book by Moss Hart. Music by Kurt Weill. Lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Musical Director: Maurice Abravanel. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Production Design by Hassard Short. Lighting Design by Hassard Short. Scenic Design by Harry Horner. Costume Design by Irene Sharaff. Gowns Designed by Hattie Carnegie. Assistant to Mr. Horner: Lester Polakov and Dick Bernstein. Assistant to Miss Sharaff: Brion. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey and Marian Byram. General Stage Manager: William McFadden. Directed by Moss Hart. Broadway Theatre: 27 Feb 1943- 15 May 1943 (110 performances). Cast: Gertrude Lawrence (as "Liza Elliott"), Adelaide Abbot (as "Mapleton High Glee Club"), Lynn Alden (as "Jack/Mapleton High Glee Club"), Robert Allen [credited as Bob Allen](as "Child"), Bonnie Baker (as "Child"), Lee Bergere (as "Ben Butler"), Ken Black (as "Mapleton High Glee Club"), Anne Bracken (as "Child"), Ingeborg Bransen (as "Mapleton High Glee Club"), Eric Brotherson (as "Russell Paxton"), Edward Browne (as "Joe, an office boy/Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Rita Charise (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Jack Collins (as "Mapleton High Glee Club"), Jean Cumming (as "Mapleton High Glee Club"), Margaret Dale (as "Maggie Grant"), 'Richard D'Arcy' (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Arthur Davies (as "Soloist/Mapleton High Glee Club"), Phyllis De Bus (as "Child"), Joyce Doncaster (as "Mapleton High Glee Club"), Rose Marie Elliott (as "Ruthie, a model/Mapleton High Glee Club"), Nikolai Fatula (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Sally Ferguson (as "Child"), Matthew Ferrugio (as "Mapleton High Glee Club"), Margaret Gibson (as "Carol, a model/Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Richard Hale (as "Dr. Brooks"), Anne Helm (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Christine Horn (as "Marcia, a model/Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Jane Irving (as "Barbara/Mapleton High Glee Club"), Warren Jones (as "Soloist/Mapleton High Glee Club"), Ann Lee (as "Alison Du Bois"), Joan Lee (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), John Leslie (as "Kendall Nesbitt"), June MacLaren (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Hugh Marlowe (as "Charley Johnson"), George Martin (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Scott Merrill (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Byron Milligan (as "Soloist/Mapleton High Glee Club"), Adrienne Moore (as "Miss Stevens"), Willard Parker (as "Randy Curtis"), Louise Pearl (as "Child"), Fred Perrone (as "Mapleton High Glee Club"), Gedda Petry (as "Miss Foster"), Nicholas Saunders (as "Liza's Father"), John Scott (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Jeanne Shelby (as "Miss Bowers"), Alla Shishkina (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Janice Smith (as "Child"), Walter Stane (as "Tom, an office boy/Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Edward Tappa (as "Child"), William Welch (as "Child"), Florence White (as "Mapleton High Glee Club"), Florence Wyman (as "Mapleton High Glee Club"), Helene Young (as "Helen, a model"), Edwin Ziegler (as "Mapleton High Glee Club"). Replacement actors: Jane Davies (as "Barbara"), Wayne Walker (as "Mapleton High Glee Club"), Geoffrey Warren (as "Mapleton High Glee Club/Soloist"), Lester Wolf (as "Mapleton High Glee Club). Produced by Sam Harris. Note: Filmed by Paramount Pictures as Lady in the Dark (1944).
- (1941) Stage Play: Lady in the Dark. Musical comedy. Book by Moss Hart. Music by Kurt Weill. Lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Musical Director: Maurice Abravanel. Music orchestrated by Kurt Weill. Vocal arrangements by Kurt Weill. Production Design by Hassard Short. Lighting Design by Hassard Short. Scenic Design by Harry Horner. Costume Design by Irene Sharaff. Gowns Designed by Hattie Carnegie. Assistant to Mr. Horner: Lester Polakov and Dick Bernstein. Assistant to Miss Sharaff: Brion. Costume Design by Irene Sharaff. All musical sequences staged by Hassard Short. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Scenic Design by Harry Horner. Directed by Moss Hart. Alvin Theatre: 23 Jan 1941- 15 Jun 1941 (162 performances). Cast: Gertrude Lawrence (as "Liza Elliott"), Jerome Andrews (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Nelson Barclift (as "Tom, an office boy/Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Dorothy Bird (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), George Bockman (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Anne Bracken (as "Child"), Macdonald Carey (as "Charley Johnson"), Kenneth Casey (as "Child"), Andre Charise (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Catherine Conrad (as "Singer"), Audrey Costello (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Jean Cumming (as "Singer"), Davis Cunningham (as "Jack/Singer"), Margaret Dale (as "Maggie Grant"), Patricia Deering (as "Carol, a model/Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Carol Deis (as "Singer"), Eleanor Eberle (a "Barbara"), Hazel Edwards (as "Singer"), Max Edwards (as "Singer"), Sally Ferguson (as "Child"), Len Frank (as "Singer"), Dan Harden (as "Ben Butler"), Fred Hearn (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Manfred Hecht (as "Singer"), Danny Kaye (a "Russell Paxton"), Yaroslav Kirov (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Ellie Lawes (as "Child"), Joan Lawes (as "Child"), Ann Lee (as "Miss Stevens"), Robert Lee (as "Child"), Bert Lytell (as "Kendall Nesbitt"), June MacLaren (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Jacqueline MacMillan (as "Child"), William Marel (as "Singer"), Victor Mature (as "Randy Curtis") [only Broadway role], Robert Mills (as "Child"), Warren Mills (as "Child"), Beth Nichols (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Virginia Peine (as "Helen, a model"), Gedda Petry (as "Ruthie, a model/Singer"), Donald Randolph (as "Dr. Brooks"), June Rutherford (as "Singer"), Natalie Schafer (as "Alison Du Bois"), Jeanne Shelby (as "Miss Bowers"), Ward Tallmon (as "Joe, an office boy"), Lois Volkman (as "Child"), George Ward (as "Child"), William Welch (as "Child"), Wana Wennerholm (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Margaret Westberg (as "Marcia, a model/Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Evelyn Wyckoff (as "Miss Foster"), Florence Wyman (as "Singer"). Replacement actors: Joseph Anthony (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), George Bockman (as "Tom, an office boy"), Eric Brotherson (as "Singer"), Patricia Deering (as "Barbara"), William Howell (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"), Beth Nichols (as "Carol, a model"), John Sweet (as "Alberta Rasch Group Dancer"). Produced by Sam Harris. Note: Filmed by Paramount Pictures as Lady in the Dark (1944).
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content