- (1924 - 1961) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1924) Stage Play: The Living Mask. Comedy/satire. Written by Luigi Pirandello. 44th Street Theatre: 44th Street Theatre: 21 Jan 1924- Feb 1924 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Stuart Bailey, Rex K. Benware, Arthur Bowyer, Thomas Chalmers (as "Landolfo") [Broadway debut], Warburton Gamble, Gerald Hamer, Arnold Korff (as "Henry IV"), Ernita Lascelles, Thomas Louden, Ralph MacBane, Kay Strozzi. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Wild Duck. Drama (revival). Written by Henrik Ibsen. Directed by Dudley Digges and Clare Eames. 48th Street Theatre: 24 Feb 1925- May 1925 (closing date unknown/103 performances). Cast: Charles Angelo (as "Chamberlain Balle"), Mischa Auer (as "Guest"), Milton J. Bernd (as "Graaberg"), George Bratt (as "Petterson"), Romney Brent (as "Guest"), John Brewster (as "Chamberlain Kasperson"), Henry Carvill (as "Chamberlain Flor"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Relling"), Helen Chandler (as "Hedvig"), Kenneth Dana (as "Waiter"), Warburton Gamble (as "Hjalmar Ekdal"), Harry Hatch (as "Guest"), Edgar Henning (as "Waiter"), Moffat Johnston (as "Werle"), Eugene Keith (as "Guest"), Philip Leigh (as "Molvik"), Tom Powers (as "Gregers Werle"), Oliver S. Putnam (as "Guest"), Francis Sadtler (as "Jensen"), Pearl Sindelar (as "Mrs. Sörby"), Warner Tufts (as "Guest"), Cecil Yapp (as "Lt. Ekdal"), Blanche Yurka (as "Gina"). Produced by The Actors Theatre.
- (1925) Stage Play: A Bit of Love. Drama.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Call of Life. Written by Arthur Schnitzler. Translated by Dorothy Donnelly. Directed by Dudley Digges. Comedy Theatre: 9 Oct 1925- Oct 1925 (closing date unknown/19 performances). Cast: Katharine Alexander, Egon Brecher, Thomas Chalmers, Douglass Dumbrille, Rosalind Fuller, Derek Glynne, Alice John, Stanley Kalkhurst, Eva Le Gallienne (as "Marie"), Hermann Lieb, Leete Stone. Produced by The Actors Theatre.
- (1925) Stage Play: Morals. Written by Ludwig Thoma. Material adapted by Charles Recht. Directed by Dudley Digges. Comedy Theatre: 30 Nov 1925- Jan 1926 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Marion Allen, Joseph Allenton, Mischa Auer (as "An Officer" and "A Footman"), Henry Carvill, Elise Cavanna, Thomas Chalmers (as "Commissioner"), John Craig, Wheeler Dryden (as "Herr Hans Jacob Dobler"), Jennie A. Eustace, Millicent Grayson, Stanley Howlett, Alice John (as "Frau Beerman"), Cecil Kern, Hermann Lieb, Edward Nicander, Edward Van Sloan (as "Herr Hauser"), Marian Warring-Manley. Produced by The Actors Theatre.
- (1926) Stage Play: Love 'em and Leave 'em. Comedy. Written by George Abbott and John V.A. Weaver. Directed by George Abbott. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 3 Feb 1926- Jun 1926 (closing date unknown/152 performances). Cast: Joseph Bell (as "Kenyon"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Mr. McGonigle"), Elmer Cornell (as "Sam"), Camilla Crume (as "Ma Woodruff"), Eda Heinemann (as "Miss Streeter"), Florence Johns (as "Mame Walsh"), Nellie Leach (as "Agnes"), Frances Lynch (as "Pearl"), Donald MacDonald (as "Billingsly"), Vincent Mallory (as "Jack"), Donald Meek (as "Lem Woodruff"), G. Albert Smith (as "Aiken"), Harold Waldridge (as "Jim"), Katherine Wilson (as "Janie Walsh"). Produced by Jed Harris.
- (1926) Stage Play: King Henry IV, Part I.Historical drama (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Henry Herbert. Knickerbocker Theatre: 31 May 1926- Jun 1926 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: A.G. Andrews (as "Bardolph"), Edith Barrett (as "Page"), Doan Borrup [credited as Doan Borup] (as "Mouldy/A Chamberlain of an Inn"), Lawrence Cecil (as "Sir Richard Vernon"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Sir Walter Blunt"), Frazer Coulter (as "Earl of Northumberland"), William Courtleigh (as "King Henry IV"), John Cumberland (as "Peto"), Francis H. Day (as "Wart"), John Drew (as "Prologue"), Gilbert Emery (as "Lord Mortimer, Earl of March"), Jay Fassett (as "Gadshill"), David Glassford (as "Owen Glendower"), Gerald Hamer (as "Feeble"), Eileen Huban (as "Lord Mortimer, Earl of March"), J.M. Kerrigan (as "Silence/First Carrier"), Walter Kingsford (as "Bullcalf"), Betty Lawford (as "Page"), Philip Merivale (as "Henry Percy, Hotspur"), Percy Moore (as "Earl of Worcester"), Guy Nichols (as "Shallow"), Rosamond Pinchot (as "John of Lancaster"), James T. Powers (as "Francis"), Herbert Ransom [credited as Herbert Ranson] (as "Archibald, Earl of Douglas"), George Riddell (as "Earl of Westmoreland"), Blanche Ring (as "Mistress Quickly"), Otis Skinner (as "Sir John Falstaff"), Henry Stillman (as "Shadow"), Austin Strong (as "Second Carrier"), Basil Sydney (as "Henry, Prince of Wales"), Richard Thornton (as "A Sheriff"), Cedric Weller (as "A Servant to Hotspur"), John Westley (as "Poins"), Peggy Wood (as "Lady Percy"). Produced by The Players Club.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Humble. Drama.
- (1926) Stage Play: Beyond the Horizon. Drama/tragedy (revival). Written by Eugene O'Neill. Mansfield Theatre: 30 Nov 1926- Feb 1927 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Thomas Chalmers (as "Andrew Mayo"), Robert Keith (as "Robert Mayo"), Victor Kilian [credited as Victor Killian] (as "Ben"), Elaine Koch (as "Mary"), Judith Lowry (as "Kate Mayo"), Aline MacMahon (as "Ruth Atkins"), Joseph McInerney (as "Doctor Fawcett"), Albert Tavernier (as "Captain Dick Scott"), Eleanor Wesselhoeft (as "Mrs. Atkins"), Malcolm Williams (as "James Mayo"). Produced by The Actors Theatre.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Heaven Tappers. Written by George Scarborough and Annette Westbay. Directed by Edwin Carewe. Forrest Theatre: 8 Mar 1927- Mar 1927 (closing date unknown/9 performances). Cast: Charles S. Abbe (as "Lafe Ketcham"), Joseph Allen, Reginald Barlow (as "Kent Hardy"), Louis Bennison, John Benson, Thomas Chalmers (as "Bud Ketcham"), Harry Clarens, Florence Gerald, Thomas Gunn, John M. Kline, Margaret Lawrence, Frank Marlowe, Charles Waldron (as "David Calvin, alias "The Parson"), Lule Warrenton, Frank Williams. Produced by Lee Shubert. Produced in association with Edwin Carewe.
- (1927) Stage Play: Julius Caesar. Tragedy (revival).
- (1928) Stage Play: The Beaux Stratagem. Comedy (revival). Written by George Farquhar. Prologue by Edgar Lee Masters. Directed by Howard Lindsay. Hampden's Theatre: 4 Jun 1928- Jun 1928 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Robert I. Aitken (as "Soldier"), Fay Bainter (as "Mrs. Sullen"), David Belasco (as "Epilogue"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Soldier"), Joseph Cummings Chase (as "Soldier"), William Courtleigh (as "Gibbet"), Henrietta Crosman (as "Lady Bountiful"), Paul A. Curtis (as "Hounslow"), Harry Grant Dart (as "Traveller"), F.H. Day (as "Servant in the Inn"), Edwin T. Emery (as "Soldier"), Fred Eric (as "Archer"), George B. Fife (as "Traveller"), William Gustafson (as "Soldier"), Ruth Hammond (as "Gipsey"), Lyn Harding (as "Sullen"), O.P. Heggie (as "Sir Charles Freeman"), Raymond Hitchcock (as "Boniface, Landlord of the Inn"), Brian Hooker (as "Traveller"), Pamela Hooker (as "Traveller"), Josephine Hull (as "Servant in the Inn"), Ernest Hunter (as "Soldier"), John C. King (as "Soldier"), Kate Mayhew (as "A Countrywoman"), Patterson McNutt (as "Traveller"), Owen Meech (as "A Countryman"), Helen Menken (as "Dorinda"), Essie Mercedes (as "Traveller"), John Daly Murphy (as "Foigard"), Jack O'Donnell(as "Traveller"), T.C. Pakenham (as "Traveller"), Eric Pape (as "Traveller"), James T. Powers (as "Scrub"), Herbert Ranson (as "Gagshot"), Wilfrid Seagram (as "Aimwell"), James Stanley (as "Soldier"), Frederic Dorr Steele (as "Traveller"), Dorothy Stickney (as "Cherry"), Loren Stout (as "Traveller"), Thompson Sweeny (as "Traveller"), William B. Taylor (as "Soldier"), Raymond Thayer (as "Soldier"), Ray Vir Den (as "Soldier"), Judith Vosselli (as "Traveller"), Reinald Werrenrath (as "Soldier"), John Westley (as "Count Bellair"). Produced by The Players. Note: This play was first performed in New York in 1751 at the Nassau Street Theatre, making it one of the earliest productions ever mounted in the U.S. It was revived again in 1959.
- (1931) Stage Play: Mourning Becomes Electra. Drama.
- (1933) Stage Play: Far-Away Horses. Comedy.
- (1933) Stage Play: Uncle Tom's Cabin. Melodrama. Written by G. L. Aiken. Musical program directed by Harry Gilbert. Revised by A.E. Thomas. Based on the novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe. Musical program prepared by Edward T. Emery. Directed by Earle Boothe. Alvin Theatre: 29 May 1933- Jun 1933 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Topsy"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Simon Legree"), Lyster Chambers (as "Haley"), Joseph Cummings Chase, George Christie (as "Mr. Wilson"), Russel Crouse (as "Ensemble"), Owen Culbertson, Francis H. Day, Pedro de Cordoba (as "George Harris"), Elizabeth Dewing, Malcolm Duncan, Mrs. Edward D. Dunn, Edward Delaney Dunn (as "Ensemble") [final Broadway role], Minnie Dupree (as "Aunt Ophelia"), Edwin T. Emery (as "Second Bidder"), Essie Emery, Sylvia Field (as "Marie"), William Fisher, Harry Gilbert, Ernest Glendinning (as "St. Clare"), Eleanor Goodrich, Harold W. Gould (as "Skeggs, the Auctioneer"), Harry Gresham (as "Quimbo"), Amy Groesbeck, Burford Hampden, Oswald Hering, Richard Hoffmann, Frederick Jagel, John C. King, John Knight, John Kramer, Wright Kramer (as "Major Mann") [final Broadway role], Ben Lackland (as "Sambo"), Roy Le May, Nancy Levering, Gene Lockhart (as "Gumption Cute"), Kathleen Lockhart (as "Ensemble"), Cecilia Loftus (as "Aunt Chloe"), Alice MacKenzie, Edward McNamara (as "Phineas Fletcher"), Oswald Marshall, Kate Mayhew (as "Aunt Hagar"), Harold McGee, Samuel Merwin, Earl Mitchell, T.H. Montgomery, John Daly Murphy (as "Marks"), Patricia O'Connell, Janice O'Connell, Patricia O'Connell, Paul Parks, George Riddell, Elisabeth Risdon (as "Eliza"), Lois Shore, Florence Short, Otis Skinner (as "Uncle Tom"), James Stanley, Harold Staton, W.B. Taylor, Raymond Thayer, Grenville Vernon, John Barnes Wells, Frank Wilcox (as "George Fisk"). Produced by The Players Club. Note: Mr. Skinner played Uncle Tom (!) in blackface.
- (1934) Stage Play: Oliver Oliver. Comedy. Written by Paul Osborn. Directed by Auriol Lee. Playhouse Theatre: 5 Jan 1934- Jan 1934 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Ann Andrews, Helen Brooks, Alexandra Carlisle, Thomas Chalmers (as "Justin Stock"), Jolyn Fabing, Hugh Rennie (as "Carl Bridgewater"), Henry Vincent (as "Williamson"), Bretaigne Windust (as "Oliver Oliver"). Produced by Dwight Wiman.
- (1934) Stage Play: Ragged Army. Drama. Written by Beulah Marie Dix [final Broadway credit] and Bertram Millhauser. Scenic Design by Raymond Sovey. Directed by Crosby Gaige. Selwyn Theatre: 26 Feb 1934- Feb 1934 (closing date unknown/2 performances). Cast: Alice Ann Baker, Lee Baker (as "Henry Stockwell"), Mathilde Baring, Richard Bartel (as "Sandy McGregor"), Lalive Brownell, Justine Wayne, Roy Roberts (as "Pat Halloran"), Irby Marshall (as "Cordelia Page"), Lloyd Nolan (as "Geoffrey Carver"), Emily Lowry (as "Alethea Page"), Johnny Downs, Ann Dere, Thomas Chalmers (as "William Page"), Roy Gordon, Fleming Ward, Edwin Vickery, Forrest Taylor, Philip Van Zant, Edwin Vickery, Fleming Ward (as "Eliot Lovejoy"), Phillip Van Zant. Produced by Crosby Gaige.
- (1934) Stage Play: Mother Lode. Drama. Written by Dan Totheroh and George O'Neil. Directed by Melvyn Douglas. Cort Theatre: 22 Dec 1934- Dec 1934 (closing date unknown/9 performances). Cast: Ivan Arbuckle (as "Yank"), Frank Baer (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Bayley (as "Ensemble"), Louise Beaudet (as "Mrs. Schiller"), Beulah Bondi (as "Mrs. Kate Hawkins "), Roland Bottomley (as "Lord Berkeley Beresfield"), Barbara Brown (as "Ensemble"), Orrin Burke (as "Irish Johnnie ") [final Broadway role], Dorothea Cadwallader (as "Ensemble"), Frank Camp (as "Thomas Carter"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Frank O'Malley"), Cynthia Dane (as "Ensemble"), Clifford Dempsey (as "Whiskey Truman, Later, Senator Truman"), Melvyn Douglas (as "Carey Ried "), Alice Dowd (as "Ensemble"), Willis Duncan (as "Ensemble"), Edythe Elliott (as "Mrs. Thomas Carter"), Gertrude Flynn (as "Julia Musette"), William Franklin (as "Cassius, A Sailor"), Helen Freeman (as "Madame Lorska"), Helen Gahagan (as "Hannah Hawkins "), Al Guin (as "Ensemble"), Carolyn Hun (as "Ensemble"), J. James (as "Ensemble"), Lida Kane (as "Mother O'Brien"), Robert Kellard (as "A Young Man/Slim"), George Lamar (as "Curley/Dick Condon"), Frank Lambert (as "Ensemble"), Lenore Lonergan (as "Clarissa Ried"), Lester Lonergan III (as "Little Breeches"), Booth Ried/A Man "), Jean Marwood (as "Ensemble"), Barbara O'Neil (as "A Woman "), Arvid Paulson (as "Sing"), Paul Porter (as "Ensemble"), Franklin Reber (as "Ensemble"), Mary Reilly (as "Ensemble"), Tex Ritter (as "Red Dog/Another Man") [final Broadway role], C. Russell Sage (as "Speed Jake/Mike"), Robert Shayne (as "Horace Fields"), Einar Svalbe (as "Swede, A Lieutenant"), Valerie Tempest (as "Ensemble"), Robert Thorne (as "Pious Pete"), John Troughton (as "Brutus"), Rosalie Van der Stucken (as "Ensemble"), Lillian Walker (as "A Young Woman/Another Woman"), Kate Warriner (as "Evelyn"), Sam Worth (as "Ensemble"). Produced by George Bushar and John Tuerk.
- (1935) Stage Play: Kind Lady. Drama. Book adapted by Edward Chodorov. Based on a story by Hugh Walpole. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by H.C. Potter. Booth Theatre: 23 Apr 1935- 29 Jun 1935 (82 performances). Cast: Florence Britton (as "Peter Santard"), Alan Bunce (as "Peter Santard"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Mr. Edwards"), Justine Chase, Francis Compton, Henry Daniell (as "Henry Abbott"), Elfrida Derwent, Jules Epailly (as "Gustav Rosenberg"), Grace George (as "Mary Herries"), Irby Marshall, Marie Paxton, Alfred Rowe, Barbara Shields, Hope Winchester (as "Annie"). Produced by H.C. Potter and George Haight.
- (1935) Stage Play: If This Be Treason. Written by Dr. John Haynes Holmes and Reginald Lawrence. Directed by Harry Wagstaff Gribble. Music Box Theatre: 23 Sep 1935- Oct 1935 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Charles Bryant, Thomas Chalmers (as "Brainard"), Kathleen Comegys (as "Mrs. Bane"), Leo Curley, Frank Dae (as "Fulton"), Boyd Davis, Hunter Gardner, Kathryn Givney (as "Miss Folwell"), Walter Greaza (as "Turner"), Mitchell Harris, George Hirose (as "Baron Ishiwara"), Arthur Hughes, Lawrence M. Hurdle, Marcel Journet, Edgar Kent, Robert Lowe, Donald MacKenzie, Armina Marshall (as "Mrs. Gordon"), McKay Morris, Tom Neal (as "Jarvis"), Takashi Ohta, Tom Powers (as "Yato") [Broadway debut], James Spottswood (as "Admiral James"), John Stark, Harland Tucker (as "Aldrich"), Robert Williams, Biacouren Yoshiwara. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1937) Stage Play: The Eternal Road. Musical. Based on material by Franz Werfel, as adapted by William A. Drake and as translated by Ludwig Lewishon. Scenic Design, Costume Design, and Lighting Design by Norman Bel Geddes. Directed by Max Reinhardt. Music by Kurt Weill. Manhattan Opera House: 7 Jan 1937- 15 May 1937 (137 performances). Cast: Charles Adler, Maia Airoff, Herbert Alani, Antionette Allen, Louise Allen, Leslie Austen, Neslon Barclift, Fred Barrie, Michael Bataeff, Robert Bentley, Abner Biberman (as "Adversary's Partner"), Ida Bidner, Anthony Blair, Sophie Brent, Katherine Carrington, Albert Cazentre, Bennett Challis, Thomas Chalmers, Al Clifford, Noel Cravat (as "Shimon" and "Aaron"), Ben Cutler, Eva Dainova, Henry Day, Marguerite De Anguera, Roger De Koven, Olive Deering, Walter Elliott, William Elliott, Blanche Evan, Edward Fisher, Jules Flier, Carl Formes, ELizabeth Friend, Walter Gilbert, Samuel Goldenberg, Anita Gorin, Marie Guttman, Charles Hale, Harry Hamill, Paul Hammond, Robert Harrison, Frances Hellman, Charles Horner, William Howell, Carroll Howes, Sam Jaffe, Ralph Jameson, Janet Janov, Harold Johnsrud, Starr West Jones, Edward Kane, Kurt Kasznar, Hal Kingsley, Bertha Kunz-Baker, Alexander Lazuk, Lotte Lenya, Paul Leon, David A. Leonard, Ruth Virginia Lewis, Lil Liandre, Lou Lief, Betty Lind, Baruch Lumet, Sidney Lumet (as "The Estranged One's Son"), Joseph Macauley, Paul Marion, Leonard Mence, Florence Meyer, Raymond Miller, William M. Miller, Tommy Mott, Victorie Moussaieff, Ruth Nisenson, Eva Ortman, Sarah Osnath-Halevy, Doris Ostroff, Mary Perrine, Rosamond Pinchot, Cassius C. Quimby, Ruth Ross, Herbert Rudley, Lucien Rutman, Angela Schoop, Mark Schweid, Blake Scott, Eleanor Searle, Ethel Selwyn, Sylvia Shane, Marian Siwek, James Spivak, Harold Sternberg, Sam Sternberg, Ruth Stromberg, Gustav Stryker, Lydia Tarnova, Molly Taylor, Myron Taylor, Sol Tisman, Maxine Trevor, John Uppman, Dick Van Patten (credited as "Dickie Van Patten"), Edward Vermonti, Earl Weatherford, Benjamin Zemach. Produced by Crosby Gaige and Meyer W. Weisgal.
- (1937) Stage Play: Antony and Cleopatra. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Scenic and Costume Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Reginald Bach. Mansfield Theatre: 10 Nov 1937- Nov 1937 (closing date unknown/5 performances). Cast included: Henry Adrian, Tallulah Bankhead (as "Cleopatra"), Thomas Chalmers, Ralph Chambers, John Emery, Wilton Graff, Conway Tearle (as "Antony"), Regina Wallace, Robert Williamson. Produced by Laurence Rivers Inc.
- (1937) Stage Play: Western Waters. Drama. Written by Richard Carlson. Incidental music by Lehman Engel. Directed by Elsa Moses and Richard Carlson. Hudson Theatre: 28 Dec 1937- Jan 1938 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Thomas Chalmers (as "Josiah Cutler"), Thomas Gomez (as "Rev. Barnabus Harpie"), Jackie Grimes, H. Dudley Hawley, Van Heflin (as "Kaintuck"), Jimmy Lydon (as "Danny"), Mabel Paige, Robert Shrewsbury, Morton Stevens (as "Jabe Knuckles"), Maxine Stuart, Robert Thomsen, Joan Wheeler. Produced by Elsa Moses.
- (1938) Stage Play: Outward Bound. Drama (revival). Written by Sutton Vane. Directed by Otto Preminger. Playhouse Theatre: 22 Dec 1938- 22 Jul 1939 (255 performances). Cast: Florence Reed (as "Mrs. Clivedon-Banks"), Laurette Taylor (as "Mrs. Midget"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Rev. Frank Thomson"), Helen Chandler (as "Ann"), Morgan Farley (as "Scrubby"), Bramwell Fletcher (as "Mr. Prior"), Louis Hector (as "Mr. Lingley"), Alexander Kirkland (as "Henry"), Vincent Price (as "Rev. William Duke"). Produced by The Playhouse Company. Note: Theatre Owned by Brady Enterprises, Inc. [William A. Brady].
- (1939) Stage Play: Morning's at Seven. Comedy.
- (1940) Stage Play: Love for Love. Comedy (revival). Written by William Congreve. Incidental music by Macklin Marrow. Prologue and epilogue by Charles Hanson Towne. Directed by Robert Edmond Jones. Hudson Theatre: 3 Jun 1940- 8 Jun 1940 (8 performances). Cast: A.G. Andrews (as "Buckram"), Daisy Belmore (as "Nurse"), Jack Benwell, Romney Brent (as "Jeremy"), Leo G. Carroll (as "Scandal"), Thomas Chalmers, Bobby Clark (as "Ben"), Dudley Digges (as "Foresight"), Richard Ellington, Evan Stephen Evans, Dorothy Gish, Walter Hampden (as "Prologue"), Violet Heming (as "Mrs. Frail"), Barry Jones, Paul Parks, Jack Prescott, Herbert Ransom, Cornelia Otis Skinner (as "Angelica"), Neil Skinner, J. Ascher Smith, Edgar Stehli (as "Tattle"), Peggy Wood (as "Mrs. Foresight"). Produced by The Players.
- (1945) Stage Play: Live Life Again.
- (1945) Stage Play: Hamlet.
- (1949) Stage Play: Death of a Salesman - the original stage production, as Uncle Ben.
- (1953) Stage Play: The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker. Comedy.
- (1960) Stage Play: All the Way Home. Drama. Written by Tad Mosel. Based on the Pulitzer Prize novel "A Death in the Family" by James Agee. Assistant Director: Gene Lasko. Directed by Arthur Penn. Belasco Theatre: 30 Nov 1960- 16 Sep 1961 (333 performances + 1 preview on 29 Nov 1960). Cast: Robert Ader (as "A Boy"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Joel Lynch") [final Broadway role], Jeff Conaway (as "A Boy") [Broadway debut], Colleen Dewhurst (as "Mary Follet"), Lillian Gish (as "Catherine Lynch"), Arthur Hill (as "Jay Follet"), Clifton James (as "Ralph Follet"), Dorrit Kelton (as "Aunt Sadie Follet"), Aline MacMahon (as "Aunt Hannah Lynch"), John Megna (as "Rufus"), Christopher Month (as "Jim-Wilson"), Gary Morgan (as "A Boy"), Lenka Peterson (as "Sally Follet"), Larry Provost (as "A Boy"), Georgia Simmons (as "Jessie Follet"), Art Smith (as "Father Jackson"), Lylah Tiffany (as "Great-Great-Granmaw") [Broadway debut], Tom Wheatley (as "Andrew Lynch"), Edwin Wolfe (as "John Henry Follet"). Understudies: Robert Ader (as "Jim-Wilson"), Shirley Gale (as "Catherine Lynch/Great-Great-Granmaw") [final Broadway role], Charles Gerald (as "Father Jackson/Ralph Follet"), Christopher Month (as "Rufus), Richard Mulligan (as "Andrew Lynch/Jay Follet"), Mary Perry (as "Aunt Sadie Follet, Jessie Follet") and Lenka Peterson (as "Mary Follet"). Replacement actors: Elizabeth Lawrence (as "Sally Follet"), Lenka Peterson (as "Mary Follet"), Frank Tweddell (as "Joel Lynch"). Produced by Fred Coe. Produced in association with Arthur Cantor. Note: Filmed by Paramount Pictures as All the Way Home (1963).
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content