- (April 1972 - May 1972) He acted in Ben Jonson's play, "Volpone," in a Philadelphia Drama Guild production at the Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania with Howard Da Silva, Ken Howard, Louise Sorel, Christine Carter, Hugh Hurd, William Preston, Sue Farley, Don Kersey, Arnold Soboloff, Thomas Markus, Ted Thurston, Charles Hudson, Beverlee McKinsey, and Douglas Wing in the cast. Stefan Zweig adapted. Ruth Langner was translator. Daniel M. Petrie was director. Clarke Dunham was lighting designer. Joseph F. Bella was costume designer. William Ross was artistic director. John Randolph was artistic consultant. Sidney S. Bloom was producer.
- (1964 season) Paul Ballantyne, Graham Brown, Douglas Campbell, Kristina Callahan, Charles Cioffi, John Cromwell, Harry Cronin, Mary Dykhouse, Katherine Emery, Ellen Geer, Sheila Goldes, George Grizzard, Michael Harvey, Jordon Howard, Michael Levin, John Lewin, James Lineberger, John MacKay, Sandy McCallum, Yvonne McElroy, Ruth Nelson, Robert Pastene, William Pogue, Lee Richardson, Ken Ruta, Willis Sherman, Thomas Slater, Robert Spanabel, Alvah Stanley, Jennifer Warren, Claude Woolman and he were members of the ensemble acting company at the Tyrone Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
- (June 1, 1964) He played Gentleman Caller in Tennessee Williams' play, "The Glass Menagerie," at the Tyrone Guthrie Theater at 725 Vineland Place, Minneapolis, Minnesota with Ellen Geer (Laura Wingfield) in the cast. Alan Schneider was director. Lewis Brown was set and costume designer. Richard Borgen was lighting designer. Herbert Pilhofer was composer.
- (1965 season) Paul Ballantyne, Earl Boen, Graham Brown, Zoe Caldwell, Kristina Callahan, John Cappalletti, Charles Cioffi, John Cromwell, Hume Cronyn, Niki Flacks, Kenneth Frankel, Ellen Geer, Helen Harrelson, James Horswill, James J. Lawless, John Lewin, John MacKay, Sandy McCallum, Evie McElroy, Robert Milli, Ruth Nelson, Robert Pastene, Lee Richardson, Ken Ruta, Thomas Slater, Alvah Stanley, Jessica Tandy, Donald West, Ann Whiteside and Nancy Wickwire and he were members of the ensemble acting company at the Tyrone Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
- (May 11, 1965) He acted in William Congreve's play, "The Way of the World," at the Tyrone Guthrie Theater, 725 Vineland Place, Minneapolis, Minnesota with Jessica Tandy, Ken Ruta, Paul Ballantyne and Nancy Wickwire in the cast. Douglas Campbell was director. Tanya Moiseiwitch was set and costume designer. Richard Borgen was lighting designer. Purcell, Herbert Pilhofer and Stokes were composers. Jim Bakkom and Dahl Delu were prop designers.
- (August 1, 1965) He acted in Bertolt Brecht's play, "The Caucasian Chalk Circle," at the Tyrone Guthrie Theater, 725 Vineland Place, Minneapolis, Minnesota with Zoe Caldwell, Helen Harrelson and Matt Talberg in the cast. Edward Payson Call was director. Lewis Brown was set and costume designer. Richard Borgen was lighting designer. Herbert Pilhofer was composer.
- (1966 season) Paul Ballantyne, Fran Bennett, Mark Berman, Earl Boen, Ron Boulden, Helen Carey, Len Cariou, Timothy Christie, Olivia Cole, John Cromwell, Patricia Elliott, Ellen Geer, Marie Geist, Hugh Hurd, Robert Jackson, Philip Kerr, Joseph Klimowski, James J. Lawless, Sandy McCallum, Evie McElroy, Michael Moriarty, Ruth Nelson, Robert Pastene, Jan Pearce, Lee Richardson, Ken Ruta, Tina Sattin, Robert Sloane, Dean Stricklin, James Wallace, Donald West, Nancy Wickwire, and Nick Zanides and he were members of the ensemble acting company at the Tyrone Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
- (September 6, 1966) He acted in George Bernard Shaw's play, "The Doctor's Dilemma," at the Tyrone Guthrie Theater, 725 Vineland Place, Minneapolis, Minnesota with Nancy Wickwire and John Cromwell in the cast. Douglas Campbell was director. Dahl Delu was set designer. Lewis Brown was costume designer. Richard Borgen was lighting designer.
- (1970 Winter) He directed John Millington Synge's play, "Playboy of the Western World," in the Old Globe Theatre production at the Cassius Carter Centre Stage in San Diego, California. Craig Noel was artistic director.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content