- The following works were adapted for the Broadway stage:
- Sky High (1925). Musical. Music by Robert Stolz, Al Goodman, Carlton Kelsey and Maurice Ruebens. Book by Harold Atteridge and Harry Graham. Lyrics by Harold Atteridge and Harry Graham. Musical Director: Carlton Kelsey. Additional lyrics by Clifford Grey. Based on an English musical farce by Harry Graham. Based on a Viennese Operette by Robert Bodansky, Bruno Hardt-Warden and Robert Stolz. Featuring songs by Hal Dyson and Irving Weil. Choreographed by Seymour Felix. Entire production supervised by J.J. Shubert. Directed by Fred G. Latham and Alexander Leftwich. Shubert Theatre (moved to The Winter Garden Theatre from 20 Mar 1925- Jun 1925, then moved to The Casino Theatre from 15 Jun 1925 to close): 2 Mar 1925- 5 Sep 1925 (217 performances). Cast: Florenz Ames (as "Alfred Horridge, Esq."), Arthur Appel, Charlotte Ayres, Jack Baker, Joyce Barbour, Hazel Beamer, William Birdie, Allen Blair, Peggy Brown, William Brown, Ysobel Cayer, John Creighton, Charlie Dodge, Edward Douglas, Violet Englefield, Elsie Frank, Norma Gould, Carol Grey, Ethel Guerard, Dorothy Hathaway, Bella Heyman, Roland Hogue (as "Duke of Dulchester, Montague Lush"), Willie Howard (as "Sammy Myers"), Joe Hughes, Catherine Huth, Walter Johnson, Emmy La Mar, Margy Lane, Betty Lee, James R. Liddy, Marcia Mack, Ruth Mayon, Lillian McNeil, Wallace Milam, Ann Milburn, Emily Miles, Mildred Morgan, Lorene Mumma, Fred Murray, Lucille Osborne, Betty Pecan, Gene Philips, Edith Pierce, Beatrice Reiss, Albert Royal, Bert Shadow, Betty Sheldon, Emily Sherman, Stella Shiel, Penny Singleton (as "Cloak Room Girl/Chorus") [credited as Dorothy McNulty/Broadway debut], Billie Smart, Gladys Smith, Marcella Swanson, Jeanne Tanny, Vanessi, Helen Veronica, Lucile Vinik, Billy Wagner, Marie Warner, Thomas Whitely, Margy Whitney, Emma Wyche. Produced by Messrs. Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Produced in association with Eugene Howard.
- Three Little Girls (1930). Musical/romance. Music by Walter Kollo. Book by Hermann Feiner and Bruno Hardt-Warden. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Book adapted by Marie Armstrong Hecht and Gertrude Purcell. Musical Director: Louis Kroll. Directed by J.J. Shubert. Shubert Theatre: 14 Apr 1930- 19 Jul 1930 (104 performances). Cast: Margaret Adams (as "Marie"), Ruth Adele (as "Ensemble"), Patricia Allen (as "Ensemble"), Mary Bell (as "Mademoiselle/Ensemble"), Eric Birlenbach (as "Ensemble"), Mary Bowman (as "Ensemble"), Charles Brown (as "Wendolin"), Sam Bunin (as "Ensemble"), Jerry Cummings (as "Ensemble"), George D'Andria (as "Ensemble"), George Dobbs (as "Franz Walden"), Maurice Dobell (as "Ensemble"), Diana Doering (as "Ensemble"), Alice Douglas (as "Ensemble"), John Edwards (as "Hans von Kursten"), Artemis Faque (as "Ensemble"), John Goldsworthy (as "Count von Rambow"), Thelma Goodwin (as "Charlotte/Ensemble"), Rollin Grimes Jr. (as "Fritz von Tormann"), Bettina Hall (as "Marie/Madame Morrosini"), Natalie Hall (as "Beate-Marie/Mme. Beate"), Charles Hedley (as "Hendrick Norgard/Karl Norgard"), Isabel Henderson (as "Ensemble"), Frances Hess (as "Little Marie"), Tom Houston (as "Attendant at the Opera/H.S.R. Prince von Hochberg/Ensemble"), Ralph Jameson (as "Ensemble"), Caven Jones (as "Ensemble"), Simeon Jurist (as "Ensemble"), Harry Kornbluth (as "Ensemble"), Lillian Lane (as "Elsa/Ensemble"), Edward Lester (as "Baron von Rankenau"), Martha Lorber (as "Annette"), Marion Mayon (as "Ensemble"), Charles McClelland (as "Ensemble"), Elaine Melchior (as "Ensemble"), Stephen Mills (as "Kunz"), Raymond O'Brien (as "von Hoffenstein"), Norma Perrin (as "Ensemble"), Buddy Proctor (as "Little Hans Norgard"), Harry Puck (as "Otto Kunz"), Mary Ray (as "Ensemble"), Rosalind Rensing (as "Ensemble"), Francis Riley (as "Escamillo"), Peggy Rose (as "Ensemble"), Frances Stevens (as "Ensemble"), Margaret Stevenson (as "Ensemble"), Lu Talbott (as "Ensemble"), Helen Turner (as "Ensemble"), Raymond Walburn (as "Baron von Biebitz-Biebitz"), Lorraine Weimar (as "Mrs. Munke"), Dorothy Wyndham (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content