- Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- The Family Exit (1917). Written by Lawrence Langner. Directed by Edward F. Flammer. Comedy Theatre: 19 Sep 1917- Oct 1917 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: Winthrop Chamberlain, James Dyrenforth [Broadway debut], Helen Edwards, Edwin Forsberg, Alberta Gallatin, David Higgins, Frank E. Jamison, Frank Longacre, Alethea Luce, Kate Morgan, Elizabeth Patterson, Jean Robb, Frances Ross, Betty Ross-Clarke. Produced by The Washington Square Players and Edward L. George.
- An American Ace (1918). Written by Lincoln J. Carter [final Broadway credit]. Directed by Lawrence Narston. Casino Theatre: 2 Apr 1918- Apr 1918 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Richard Barrows, Kate Blair, Marcy Breuer, Claude Cooper, James L. Crane, Camilla Crume, Henry Dawson, James Dyrenforth, Robert Fischer, True James [Broadway debut], Arthur Klein, Edna Leslie, Sue MacManamy, Frank Marriman, Charles Martin, Joseph McManus [final Broadway role], Geo. E. Murphy. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- Back to Earth (1918). Written by William Le Baron. Based on a story by Oscar Graeve. Henry Miller's Theatre: 23 Dec 1918- Jan 1919 (16 performances). Cast: Charles Cherry, Kirby Davis, James Dyrenforth, Wallace Eddinger, Minna Gombell, Harold Hendee, James Kearney, Fred W. Peters, Ruth Shepley, Paula Sterling, Jay Wilson. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- Glory (1922). Musical comedy. Music by Maurice De Packh and Harry Tierney'. Book by James Montgomery. Lyrics by Joseph McCarthy and James Dyrenforth. Musical Director: Max Hirschfeld. Featuring songs by Al W. Brown. Scenic Design by Joseph Wickes. Costume Design by Vanderbilt Producing Company Wardrobe Department. Directed by Bert French. Vanderbilt Theatre: 25 Dec 1922- 24 Feb 1923 (74 performances). Cast: Arden Benham (as "Ensemble"), Violet Bristow (as "Ensemble"), David Brown (as "Ensemble"), John Cherry (as "Sumner Holbrook"), Jack Clifford (as "Hiram Dexter"), Bobby Culbert (as "Ensemble"), Conway Dillon (as "Ensemble"), Irene Enright (as "Ensemble"), Mabel Ferry (as "Myrtie Brown"), Helen Groody (as "Lucy Ann Willing"), Raymond Hackett (as "Lem King"), Marjorie Harrold (as "Ensemble"), Patti Harrold (as "Glory Moore"), Robert Higgins (as "Ansel Tollet"), Edward Howell (as "Ensemble"), Flo Irwin (as "Sarah King"), Constance Keating (as "Ensemble"), Florence Kinsley (as "Ensemble"), Ainsley Lambert (as "Ensemble"), Peter Lang (as "Abner Moore"), Margaret Leona (as "Ensemble"), Frances Lynde (as "Ensemble"), Bernice McCabe (as "Amanda Dexter"), Edith McGovern (as "Ensemble"), Ted McNamara (as "Alonzo"), Constance Montague (as "Ensemble"), Bessie Mulligan (as "Ensemble"), Marguerite Murray (as "Ensemble"), Robert Emmett O'Connor (as "Deacon Eaton"), Elizabeth Page (as "Ensemble"), Helen Paine (as "Ensemble"), Peggy Pidgin (as "Ensemble"), Walter Regan (as "William Harriman"), Edward Smith (as "Ensemble"), Thomas Weldon (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Whiteford (as "Ensemble"), Paul Winnell (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Vanderbilt Producing Company.
- Not So Fast (1923). Comedy.
- The Business Widow (1923). Comedy. Written by Gladys Unger. Ritz Theatre: 20 Dec 1923- Jan 1924 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Elwood Fleet Bostwick (as "Rex Ramsdell "), John Davidson (as "Phidias Caravopulo"), Leo Ditrichstein (as "Paul Bucklaw"), James Dyrenforth (as "Billy Windsor "), Lola Fisher (as "Ruby Bucklaw"), Baby Fleury (as "Natalie Frisson"), Alice Hung (as "Muey Fah"), Robert Lowing (as "Standish"), Albert Morrison (as "Pennington"), Marjorie Wood (as "Helen Lesley"), Palmer Young (as "John"). Produced by Lee Shubert.
- Nikki (1931). Musical comedy. Material by John Monk Saunders (based on his short stories "Nikki and Her War Birds," his novel "A Single Lady" and his film "The Last Flight."). Music by Philip Charig. Lyrics by James Dyrenforth [final Broadway credit]. Musical Direction by Jules Lenzberg. Music orchestrated by Louis Katzman. Scenic Design by P. Dodd Ackerman, James Morcom and Karle O. Amend. Costume Design by Bergdorf Goodman, Samuel Lorber, Stein & Blaine, Faye Graham and Edith Faggen. Directed by William B. Friedlander. Longacre Theatre (moved to George M. Cohan's Theatre from 19 Oct 1931 to close): 29 Sep 1931- 31 Oct 1931 (39 performances). Cast: Alexandra Alexander (as "Ensemble"), Rodolfo Badaloni (as "Benj"), Julia Barron (as "Specialty"), Charles Bath (as "Ensemble"), Maxine Bennett (as "Chorus"), John Brooke (as "Francis. The Washout"), Elizabeth Brown (as "Ensemble"), Cora Burlar (as "Ensemble"), Gertrude Byrnell (as "Chorus"), Frank Chapman (as "Specialty"), Anna Criena (as "Ensemble"), Ruth Cunliffe (as "Chorus"), Jean De Koven (as "Ensemble"), Adele Dixon (as "Chorus"), Manuel Duarte (as "Ensemble"), Natalie Dunhan (as "Ensemble"), Mimi Elsasser (as "Ensemble"), Eugenie Erganow (as "Ensemble"), Marjorie Fenton (as "Ensemble"), Albert Fontaine (as "Ensemble"), Louis Jean Heydt (as "Willard Crouch/Wiffie"), Page Innes (as "Specialty"), Hunter Kaufman (as "Ensemble"), Sandra Laxer (as "Chorus"), Cary Grant [credited as Archie Leach] (as "Cary Lockwood"), Sharon Lloyd (as "Chorus"), Jean Love (as "Chorus"), Agnes Marshall (as "Show Girl"), Rosalie McCallion (as "Chorus"), Modesca & Michael (as "Specialty"), Douglass Montgomery (as "Shepard Lambert"), Martin Muriel (as "Ensemble"), Harriett Murray (as "Chorus"), Lillian Okun (as "Ensemble"), Lidia Ordinsky (as "Ensemble"), Anna Ouzonoff (as "Ensemble"), Marcel Rousseau (as "Specialty"), Mimi Ruskin (as "Chorus"), Ali Sellier (as "Specialty"), Bobbie Sheehan (as "Chorus"), Toni Soral (as "Chorus"), Peggy Stebbins (as "Show Girl"), John Stellato (as "Ensemble"), Louis Sterner (as "Specialty"), Bobbi Tremain (as "Kiss-Me-Quick" [Specialty]), Helen Tschirgi (as "Chorus"), Fania Tuli (as "Ensemble"), Alva Vaughn (as "Show Girl"), Nathaniel Wagner(as "William Talbot/Bill"), George Wald (as "Ensemble"), Fay Wray (as "Nikki"), Marjorie Younger (as "Show Girl"). Produced by Harrison Hall.
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