- (1918 - 1938) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1918) Stage Play: Hitchy-Koo. Musical review. Book by Glen MacDonough and E. Ray Goetz. Music by Raymond Hubbell. Lyrics by E. Ray Goetz and Glen MacDonough. Musical Director: Oscar Radin. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh and Frank Saddler. Additional music by Percy Wenrich, Carl Eckert, Luigi Arditi and Henry Marshall. Additional lyrics by Henry Marshall and Pietro Mazzini. Directed by Leon Errol. Globe Theatre: 6 Jun 1918- 3 Aug 1918 (68 performances). Cast: Ivan Arbuckle, Earl Benham, Frank Bessinger, Roy Binder, Irene Bordoni, Charles A. Cartmell, Roy Cummings, Lola Curtiss, J. Dare, Lucille Darling, Evelyn Des Roches, Ray Dooley, Leon Errol, Lillian Fermoyle, R. Fermoyle, June Gill, Emma Haig, Laura Harris, Raymond Hitchcock, William Holbrook, Miss Howard, Warren Jackson, Nellie Kouns, Sara Kouns, Virginia Lancier, Elsie Lawson, Genevieve Markham, Frank Matier, Laura Maverick, James Miller, The Miller Quartette, Ruth Mitchell, George Moore, Florence O'Denishawn, Gertrude Rial, June Roberts, Felix Rush, Grace Russell, Louise Saunders, Eleanor Sinclair, Edith Stockham, The Kouns Sisters. Produced by Raymond Hitchcock.
- (1920) Stage Play: What's in a Name? Musical revue. Music by Milton Ager. Book by John Murray Anderson. Lyrics by John Murray Anderson. Written in collaboration with Anna Wynne O'Ryan and Jack Yellen. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh and Arthur Lange. Musical Director: Augustus Barratt. Choreographed by Michio Ito and Jack Manning. Costume Design by Robert Locher and Kay Turner. Scenic Design by James Reynolds. Directed by John Murray Anderson. Maxine Elliott's Theatre (moved to The Lyric Theatre from 19 Apr 1920 to close): 19 Mar 1920- 26 Jun 1920 (115 performances). Cast: Gertrude Alces, John Alexander, Arjamond, Constance Barnes, Christine Bernsman, Olive Brower, Joe Burroughs, Juliet Compton, Vivian Connors, Sheila Courtney, Sara Crewe, Rex Dantzler, Grace De Carlton, Charles Derickson, Dorothy DeVinna, Richard Dolliver, Willard Eldridge, Ed E. Ford, Gloria Foy, Rosalind Fuller, Glenn Gamble, Marie Gaspar, A.M. Gowing, Emilie Haddone, Alice Hegeman, Beatrice Herford, Hildred, Olin Howard, Yasu Katayama, Honey Kay, Flora Keane, Allyn Kearns, June Korle, Mary Lane, Olive LaVaine, Virginia Lee, Jessie Lorraine, Dorothy Loveclark, Mildred Mann, Muriel Manners, Robert Manning, Lane McLeod, Carol Miller, Beatrice Milner, Loretta Morgan, Thomas Morgan, Vera Myers, Joseph Palkowitch, Frank Parker, Corone Paynter, Margaret Petit, Ethel Sinclair, Dorothy Smoller, Zola Terryl, Dorothy Utley, Phil White, Herbert Williams, Hilda Wolfus, Helen Lee Worthing, Sallie Yarrow, Mimi Youde. Produced by John Murray Anderson.
- (1920) Stage Play: Ziegfeld Follies of 1920. Musical revue/spectacle. Music by Irving Berlin, Dave Stamper, Gene Buck, Joseph J. McCarthy, Harry Tierney and Victor Herbert. Lyrics by Irving Berlin, Dave Stamper, Gene Buck, Joseph J. McCarthy, Harry Tierney and Victor Herbert. Musical Direction by Frank Tours. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh, Charles Grant, Stephen Jones and Frank Saddler. Featuring songs with lyrics by James Montgomery, Bert Kalmar, Harry Ruby, Gus Van, Joe Schenck, Eddie Cantor, Mac Emery, King Zany, George Fairman, Alex Gerber, Abner Silver, Jack Yellen, Abe Olman, Roger Lewis and Ernie Erdman [earliest Broadway credit]. Tableaux by Ben Ali Haggin. Directed by Edward Royce. New Amsterdam Theatre: 22 Jun 1920- 16 Oct 1920 (123 performances). Cast: Delyle Alda, William Blanche, Fanny Brice, Lillian Broderick, Eddie Cantor, Jane Carroll, Juliet Compton, Olive Cornell, Eleanor Dell, Jack Donohue, Ray Dooley, Emily Drange, Doris Eaton, Mary Eaton, W.C. Fields, Edna French, Eva Grady, Bernard Granville, Ethel Hallor, Margaret Irving, Jerome & Herbert, Alta King, Phebe Lee, Gladys Loftus, Jack Mahan, Albertine Marlowe, Beatrice Milner, Moran and Mack, Margaret Morris, Betty Morton, Carl Randall, Jessie Reed, Helen Shea, John Steel, Avonne Taylor, Van and Schenck, Olive Vaughn, Charlotte Wakefield, Florence Ware, Charles Winninger, Addison Young. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1921) Stage Play: Ziegfeld Follies of 1921. Musical revue. Dialogue by Channing Pollock, Willard Mack and Ralph Spence. Lyrics by Gene Buck and Buddy G. DeSylva. Music by Victor Herbert, Rudolf Friml and Dave Stamper. Musical Direction by Frank Tours. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh and Stephen Jones. Featuring songs with lyrics by Henry Creamer, Turner Layton, Grant Clarke, James F. Hanley, Channing Pollock, Blanche Merrill, Leo Edwards, Ballard MacDonald, Harry Carroll, Albert Willemetz, Jacques Charles, Buddy G. DeSylva, Gus Mueller, Buster Johnson, Andrew Sterling, 'Harry Von Tilzer' and Edward P Moran. Featuring songs by Elsie White and Henry Busse. Directed by Edward Royce. Globe Theatre: 21 Jun 1921- 1 Oct 1921 (119 performances). Cast: Marie Astrova, Miss Barnett, Emma Beresbach, Ethel Blaire, Eva Brady, Fanny Brice (as "Principal"), Evelyn Campbell, Betty Carsdale, Margery Chapin, Hazel Chappel, Miss Chase, John Clarke, The Darling Twins, Peggy Davis, Ray Dooley, Phil Dwyer, Charles Eaton, Mary Eaton (as "Principal"), Marguerite Falconer, W.C. Fields (as "Principal," and "M. Le Duc de Chateau Briand"), Consuelo Flowerton, Edna French, Pearl Germonde, Diana Gordon, Raymond Hitchcock, Herbert Hoey, Miss Hughes, Helen Hunt, Albert Innis, Frank Innis, Keene Twins, Miss Leigh, Mary Lewis, Doris Lloyd, Gladys Loftus, Madelyn Lombard, Miss Lomp, Mandal Brothers, Irene Marcellus, Albertine Marlowe, Vera Michelena, Mary Milburn, Beatrice Milner, Geneva Mitchell, Mlle. Mitti, Madilyn Morrissey, Florence O'Denishawn, Charles O'Donnell, Jessie Reed, Anastasia Reilly, Frances Reveaux, Miss Rolph, Gertrude Seldon, Peggy Stohl, Janet Stone, Avonne Taylor, M. Tillio, Van and Schenck, Edna Wheaton, Helen Lee Worthing. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1921) Stage Play: Sonny [production changed name to "Sonny Boy" a few days into the run]. Written by George V. Hobart. Music by Raymond Hubbell. Lyrics by George V. Hobart. Musical Director: Mario Agnolucci. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh. Choreographed by Carl Randall. Directed by George V. Hobart. Cort Theatre: 16 Aug 1921- 10 Sep 1921 (31 performances). Cast: Dorothy Clark, Berta Donne (as "Florence"), Emma Dunn (as "Mrs. Crosby"), Joseph Evans, Jack Fox, Ernest Glendinning, Nat C. Goodwin (as "Donald"), Violet Gray, Fred Grod, Esther Howard (as "Madge"), Horace James, James Kilpatrick, Georgie Lawrence (as "Nora"), Richie Ling (as "Harper Craig"), Russell G. Medcraft (as "James"), Bert Melville, William Meredith, Robert Pollock, Carl Randall, Mabel Withee. Produced by The Selwyns.
- (1921) Stage Play: Music Box Revue. Musical revue. Book by William Collier, T.J. Gray, Frances Nordstrom and George V. Hobart. Music by Irving Berlin. Music orchestrated by Frank Tours, Alfred Dalby, Maurice De Packh, Charles Grant, Stephen Jones and Oscar Radin. Musical Supervisor: Harry Akst. Directed by Hassard Short. Music Box Theatre: 22 Sep 1921- 30 Sep 1922 (440 performances). Cast: Aleta, Wilda Bennett, Irving Berlin, Sam Bernard, Hugh Cameron, William Collier, Paul Frawley, Frank Gill, Emma Haig, Margaret Irving, Richard Keene, Mlle. Marguerite, Florence Moore, Rene Riano, Rose Rolando, Joseph Santley, Ivy Sawyer. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Perfect Fool. Musical revue. Book by Ed Wynn. Lyrics by Ed Wynn. Music by Ed Wynn. Featuring songs with lyrics by Harry Richman and Lou Davis. Orchestra under the direction of Antonio Bafunno. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh. Directed by Julian Mitchell. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 7 Nov 1921- 1 Jul 1922 (275 performances). Cast: Kathryn Annis, Fred Ardath, Rose Boulais, Polly Bowman, Bobbie Breslaw, Florence Brooks, John Dale, Peggy Ellis, Margaret Ferguson, Anita Furman, Belle Gannon, Marjory Grant, Edna May Hamel, Dolla Harkins, Margaret Hoban, Katharine Kaye, Helen Kerr, Harriette Keyes, Marion King, Ivey Kirkwood, Gladys Laird, Grace Larue, Lorna Lincoln, Irene Mayberry, Madge McCarthy, Aline McGill, Flo Newton, Estelle Penning, True Rice, Marion Rich, Guy Robertson, Grace Russell, Edna Terry, Janet Velie, Dade Winlack, Johan Wittman, Ed Wynn. Produced by Abraham L. Erlanger.
- (1922) Stage Play: Elsie Janis and Her Gang. Musical revue. Book by Elsie Janis. Lyrics by Elsie Janis. Music by Elsie Janis. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh. Costume Design by Charles Le Maire. Directed by Elsie Janis. Gaiety Theatre: 16 Jan 1922- 4 Mar 1922 (56 performances). Cast: Inez Bauer (as "Performer"), Florence Courtney (as "Performer"), Claire Daniels (as "Performer"), Adelaide de St. Claire (as "Performer"), W. Dornfold (as "Performer"), Maude Drury (as "Performer"), Herbert Goff (as "Performer"), Chester Grady (as "Performer"), Bradley Knoche (as "Performer"), Eleanor Ladd (as "Performer"), Charlie Lawrence (as "Performer"), Elva Magnus (as "Performer"), Patricia Mayer (as "Performer"), Lane McLeod (as "Performer"), Buddy Merriam (as "Performer"), Frank Miller (as "Performer"), Elizabeth Morgan (as "Performer"), Red Murdock (as "Performer"), James F. Nash (as "Performer"), Duane Nelson (as "Performer"), Lewis Reid (as "Performer"), Gus Shy (as "Performer"), Margaret Sousa (as "Performer"), Jurien Thayer (as "Performer"), Asta Valley (as "Performer"), Dan Walker (as "Performer"), Monk Watson (as "Performer"), Paulette Winston (as "Performer"). Produced by Elsie Janis.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Gingham Girl. Musical comedy.
- (1922) Stage Play: Molly Darling. Musical comedy. Music by Tom Johnstone. Book by Otto A. Harbach and William Carey Duncan. Lyrics by Phil Cook. Musical Director: Milton Schwarzwald. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh. Featuring songs by Milton Schwarzwald. Featuring songs with lyrics by Arthur Francis. Staged by Julian Mitchell. Directed by Walter Wilson. Liberty Theatre (moved to The Globe Theatre from 13 Nov 1922- close): 1 Sep 1922- 25 Nov 1922 (101 performances). Cast: Ben Benny (as "Timmy, a Bootback"), Harold Bird Boy"), Liana Cloutier (as "Girl"), Marie Dolan (as "Girl"), Jack Donahue (as "Chic Jiggs, a News Vendor"), Lillian Downey (as "Girl"), Violet Follis (as "Girl"), Hal Forde (as "Chauncey Chesbro, a Music Publisher"), Mae Friend (as "Girl"), Myrtle Gilden (as "Girl"), Jay Gould (as "Archie Ames, an Exponent of Victorious Thought"), Emma Janvier (as "Mrs. Redwing, a Wealthy Widow"), Norman Jefferson (as "Boy"), Charles LaValle (as "Boy"), Frances Lyndel (as "Girl"), Lillian Mamet (as "Girl"), James Martin (as "Boy "), Bert McGuinnes (as "Boy"), Mary Milburn (as "Molly Ricardo, the Violin Maker's Daughter"), Ida Miller (as "Girl"), Dorothy Morris (as "Girl"), Esther Morris (as "Girl"), Catherine Mulqueen (as "Marivane, Niece of Mrs. Redwing"), Lester New (as "Boy"), Clarence Nordstrom (as "Jack Stanton, a Club Attorney"), Rhea Norton (as "Girl"), Nina Penn (as "Spirit of Eve"), Marie Pollitt (as "Girl"), Yvette Reals (as "Girl"), Albert Roccardi (as "Henri Ricardo, a Violin Maker"), Marion Rollins (as "Girl"), Jack Stanley (as "Boy"), Betty Stewart (as "Girl"), Cecil Summers (as "Oliver, a Butler"), Billie Taylor (as "Trix Morton, Miller's Dancing Partner"), Billy Taylor (as "Ted Miller, a Vaudevillian"), William Warren (as "Boy"), Burke Wilson (as "Tommy, a Bootback").
- (1922) Stage Play: Glory. 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.
- (1923) Stage Play: Jack and Jill. Musical comedy. Book by Frederic S. Isham and Otto A. Harbach. Based on a play by Frederic S. Isham. Lyrics by Otto A. Harbach, John Murray Anderson and Augustus Barratt. Music by Augustus Barratt. Musical Director: Charles Previn. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh and Stephen Jones. Additional music by Alfred Newman, William Daly, Muriel Pollock and Ivor Novello. Additional lyrics by Ivor Novello, Oliver Deering and Blanche Merrill. Choreographed by Larry Ceballos. Staged by John Murray Anderson. Directed by John Harwood. Globe Theatre: 22 Mar 1923- 9 Jun 1923 (92 performances). Cast: Kathlyn Ardelle (as "Ensemble"), Jean Barney (as "Solo Singer"), Leon Barte (as "Solo Dancer"), Lina Basquette (as "The Maid/Solo Dancer"), Beth Beri (as "Phyllis Sisson/Solo Dancer"), Helene Blair (as "Solo Dancer"), Brenda Bond (as "Solo Singer"), Anna Buckley (as "Ensemble"), Gladys Burgette (as "A Descendant of Mary Ball"), Cynthia Cambridge (as "Ensemble"), Barbara Cavello (as "Ensemble"), America Chedister (as "Mrs. DePeyster Fish/Ensemble"), Joan Clement (as "Ensemble"), Anna Mae Clift (as "Ensemble"), Beatrice Collenette (as "Solo Dancer"), Carlos Conte (as "The Footman"), Pauline Doria (as "Ensemble"), Elsa Doris (as "Ensemble"), Peggy Fish (as "Ensemble"), Ward Fox (as "Solo Dancer"), Alden Gay (as "Ensemble"), Eleanora Grover (as "Mrs. Foote/Ensemble"), Roger Imhof (as "Daniel Malone"), Brooke Johns (as "Donald Lee"), Leslie Joy (as "Solo Singer"), Eleanor Labelle (as "Ensemble"), Eileen Lawrie (as "Solo Singer"), Violet Lobell (as "Ensemble"), Edna Locke (as "Ensemble"), Donald MacDonald (as "Jack Andrews"), Nathalie Malowan (as "Solo Singer"), Geraldine Markham (as "Ensemble"), Kiki Maxwell (as "Corps de Ballet"), Gayle Mays (as "Solo Dancer"), Elizabeth North (as "Ensemble"), Nyoka-Nyoka (as "Solo Dancer"), Virginia O'Brien (as "Jill Malone"), Astrid Ohlson (as "Solo Singer"), Lester O'Keefe (as "Solo Singer"), Georgia O'Ramey (as "Mrs. Malone"), Metta Louise Orr (as "Mrs. Sylvester Jones"), Julia Parler (as "Corps de Ballet"), Lennox Pawle (as "Duke of Dippington"), Ann Pennington (as "Gloria Wayne"), Geneva Price (as "Corps de Ballet"), Russell Scott (as "(as "The Butler/Solo Singer"), Tarzanne (as "Ensemble"), Winifred Verina (as "Marcia Manners"), Doris Vinton (as "Corps de Ballet"), Clifton Webb (as "Jimmy Eustace"), Claudius Webster (as "Solo Dancer"), Cricket Wooten (as "Corps de Ballet"). Produced by Chelsea Producing Corp.
- (1924) Stage Play: George White's Scandals.
- (1924) Stage Play: Be Yourself. Musical comedy. Music by Lewis E. Gensler and Milton Schwarzwald. Book by George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly. Lyrics by George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly. Additional lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Music orchestrated by Stephen Jones and Maurice De Packh. Musical Director: Milton Schwarzwald. Choreographed by Vaughn Godfrey and Jack Mason. Costume Design by Mark Mooring. Scenic Design by H. Robert Law Studios. Directed by William Collier Sr.. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 3 Sep 1924- 22 Nov 1924 (93 performances). Cast: Peggy Anderson (as "Girl Friend"), Christine Bernsman (as "Girl Friend"), Ralph Brainard (as "Bull McLean"), Mildred Brown (as "Girl Friend"), Georgia Caine (as "Grandma Sarah Brennan"), Molly Christie (as "Girl Friend"), Faith Cullen (as "Girl Friend"), Eleanor Dana (as "Girl Friend"), Jack Donahue (as "Matt McLean"), Helen Evans (as "Girl Friend"), Peggy Gillespie (as "Girl Friend"), Barrett Greenwood (as "David Robinson"), Gladys Harris (as "Girl Friend"), Teddy Hudson (as "Betty"), G.P. Huntley (as "Joseph Peabody Prescott"), Jack Kearney (as "Eustace Brennan"), John Kearney (as "Hemp McLean"), Ramona Kogan (as "Girl Friend"), Cleo Lombard (as "Girl Friend"), James R. McCann (as "Adam McLean"), Florence Murphy (as "Girl Friend"), Gladys Smith (as "Girl Friend"), Queenie Smith (as "Tony Robinson"), Ray Smith (as "Girl Friend"), Mabel Stanford (as "Girl Friend"), Ann Summers (as "Girl Friend"), Edith Talbot (as "Girl Friend"), Ruth Trott (as "Girl Friend"), Ted Weller (as "Cyrus Brennan"), Dorothy Whitmore (as "Marjorie Brennan"), Jay Wilson (as "Mordecai Brennan"), Louise Wright (as "Girl Friend"). Produced by Walter Vincent and Sidney Wilmer.
- (1925) Stage Play: George White's Scandals. Musical revue. Music by Ray Henderson. Book by George White and Billy K. Wells. Lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva and Lew Brown. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh. Musical Director: William Daly. Featuring songs by Irving Berlin. Costume Design by Erté and Hugh Willoughby. Musical Staging by Albertina Rasch. Directed by George White. Apollo Theatre: 22 Jun 1925- 14 Nov 1925 (169 performances). Cast: Vada Alexander, Arthur Ball, Edna Bowman, Doris Bryant, Jim Carty, Katherine Chapman, Marion Courtney, Chris Crane, Marion Dickson, Betty Dillon, Harriet Dillon, Dolly Donnelly, Gordon Dooley, Dorothy Ellfelt, The Elm City Four, Janet Flynn, Harry Fox, Peggy Gallimore, Anita Gordon, Ruth Gordon, Viola Hage, Myrtle Hammerstead, Roberta Haynes, Helen Hudson, Emily Johns, Mildred Klaw, Kathryn Lambly, Muriel LeCount, Georgia Lerch, Fred Lyons, Dorothy McCarthy, Margaret McCarthy, Helen Morgan, Harry Morrissey, Martha Morton, Marjorie Murray, Mary Murray, Mary Norris, Mary Parsons, Tom Patricola, Laura Phillips, Norman Phillips, Norman Phillips Jr., Mrs. Norman Phillips, Ethel Sager, Clara Scott, Jean Scott, Jane Sels, Marjorie Shaw, Adele Smith, Joe Sullivan, Alice Thalman, Helen Titus, Mildred Turner, Alice Weaver, Helen Wehrle, Alice Wilkie. Produced by George White.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Cocoanuts. Musical comedy. Music by Irving Berlin. Lyrics by Irving Berlin. Book by George S. Kaufman. Additional text by Morrie Ryskind. Musical Director: Frank Tours. Music orchestrated by Frank Tours, Maurice De Packh, Stephen Jones and Louis Katzman. Scenic Design by Woodman Thompson. Costume Design by Charles Le Maire. Musical Staging by Sammy Lee. Directed by Oscar Eagle. Lyric Theatre: 8 Dec 1925- 7 Aug 1926 (276 performances). Cast: Chico Marx (as "Willie the Wop"), Groucho Marx (as "Henry W. Schlemmer"), Harpo Marx (as "Silent Sam"), Zeppo Marx (as "Jamison"), Jack Barker, The Breens (as "Specialty"), Lehman Byck, Grace Carroll, Kitty Clay, Beatrice Coniff, Ted Daniels, Billie Davis, Eugene Day, Antonio De Marco, Nina De Marco, Billy DeWolf, Margaret Dumont (as "Mrs. Potter"), Xela Edwards, Roberta Haines, Georgie Hale (as "Eddie"), Rella Harrison, Madeline Janis, Peggy Jones, Mildred Kelly, Evelyn Kermin, Charles Knowlton, Andre Lapue, Maude Lydiate, Lionel Maclyn, Frances Mallory, Liane Mamet, Philip Mann, Juan Marlow, Maxine Marshall, Helen Martin, Mat Matus, Virginia McCune, Adele McHatton, Nesha Medwin, Eleanor Meeker, Bonnie Murray, Marjorie Murray, Hazel Patterson, Jessie Payne, Elsie Pedrick, Gladys Pender, Nancy Phillips, Florence Regan, Jerome Robertson, Maxine Robinson, Basil Ruysdael, Bernice Speer, Hazel Stille, Sybil Stuart, Janet Velie, Jerry White, Henry Whittemore, Beryle Williams, Billie Williams, Frances Williams, Mabel Withee. Produced by Sam Harris. Note: Filmed by Paramount Pictures as The Cocoanuts (1929).
- (1926) Stage Play: Sweetheart Time. Musical comedy.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Girl Friend. Musical comedy. Music by Richard Rodgers. Book by Herbert Fields. Lyrics by Lorenz Hart. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh. Musical Director: Ernest Cutting. Scenic Design by P. Dodd Ackerman. Production Supervised by Lew Fields. Directed by John Harwood. Vanderbilt Theatre: 17 Mar 1926- 4 Dec 1926 (301 performances). Cast: Dorothy Barber, Olive Beebe, Walter Bigelow, Dorothy Brown, Arthur C. Budd, Evelyn Cavanaugh, Austin Clark, Roy Clements, June Cochrane, Gertrude Cole, Eva Condon (as "Fanny Silver"), Frank Doane (as "Arthur Spencer"), Francis X. Donegan, Joel Duroe, A. Goodrich, Eve Marie Gray, John Hundley, Jack Kogan, Alice Kosta, Ainsley Lambert, Eddie Leslie, Carol Lynne, William Marshall, Elizabeth Mears, Gypsy Mooney, Jan Moore, Herman Newman, Virginia Otis, Eva Puck, Leon Rose, Dorothy Roy, Paul Sabin, Silvia Shawn, Helen Shepard, K. Smith Stanley, Evelyn Ruth Urilda, Sam White, Sanford Wolf. Produced by Lew Fields.
- (1926) Stage Play: Kitty's Kisses. Musical comedy. Music by Con Conrad; Book by Philip Bartholomae and Otto A. Harbach. LLyrics by Gus Kahn. Featuring songs with lyrics by Otto Harbach. Featuring songs by Will Donaldson. Musical Director: John McManus. Music orchestrated by Maurice DePackh'. Musical Staging by Bobby Connolly. Directed by John Cromwell. Playhouse Theatre: 6 May 1926- 2 Oct 1926 (170 performances). Cast: Mildred Anders (as "Ensemble"), Pauline Bartlett (as "Ensemble"), Polly Blake (as "Ensemble"), John Boles (as "Robert Mason"), Billie Bostick (as "Ensemble"), Walter Bradbury (as "The Bell Boy/A Track Walker"), Frances Burke (as "Mrs. Dennison"), Emily Burton (as "Ensemble"), Mortimer Chadbourne (as "Brakeman"), Jane Corcoran (as "Mrs. Burke"), Warren Crosby (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Dilley (as "Kittie Brown"), Patsy Dunn (as "The Maid"), Lester Eldridge (as "Ensemble"), Paul Florence (as "Ensemble"), Jack Gargin (as "Ensemble"), Irene Hamlin (as "Ensemble"), Patty Hastings (as "Ensemble"), Frank Hatch (as "Mr. Burke"), Edna Hopper (as "Ensemble"), Mildred Keats (as "Miss Wendel"), Ruth Kelly (as "Ensemble"), Ruth Laird (as "Ensemble"), Arthur Lang (as "Dining Car Steward"), William Leith (as "The Night Clerk"), Nick Long (as "Philip Dennison"), Gene McVey (as "Ensemble"), Aileen Meehan (as "Lulu/Ensemble"), William Neeley (as "Ensemble"), Frances Nevins (as "Ensemble"), George O'Brien (as "Ensemble"), Cheri Pelham (as "Ensemble"), Joe Sargent (as "Ensemble"), Leonard Scott (as "Pullman Conductor"), Kenneth Shutts (as "Conductor"), Mark Smith (as "Richard Dennison"), Georgina Tilden (as "A Country Girl"), Ruth Warren (as "The Telephone Girl"), William Wayne (as "The Day Clerk"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1926) Stage Play: George White's Scandals. Musical revue. Music by Ray Henderson. Book by George White and Billy K. Wells. Lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva and Lew Brown. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh. Musical Director: William Daly. Featuring songs by George Gershwin. Costume Design by Erté. Scenic Design by Gustave Weidhaus and W. Oden Waller. Directed by George White. Apollo Theatre: 14 Jun 1926- 18 Jun 1927 (432 performances).
- (1926) Stage Play: Criss Cross. Musical comedy. Book and lyrics by Otto A. Harbach and Anne Caldwell. Musical Director: Victor Baravalle. Music orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett and Maurice De Packh. Choreographed by Dave Bennett. Sunshine Girls' dances devised by Mary Read. Scenic Design by James Reynolds. Costume Design by James Reynolds. Directed by R.H. Burnside. Globe Theatre: 12 Oct 1926- 9 Apr 1927 (210 performances). Cast: M. Ambark, Auguste Aramini, Phyllis Barnacle, Dorothy Bate, Charles Baum, Thomas Bell, Bobby Breslau, Phyllis Brown, Violet Bryant, Kathryn Burnside, Elsie Burton, Noreen Callow, Doris Carter, Primrose Caryll, Elizabeth Childs, Alice Donahue, Pearl Eaton, Josie Elton, Goldie Flynn, Cynthia Foley, Dorothy Francis, Virginia Franck, Danzie Goodell, Violet Hale, A. Hamid, Walter Harris, Kathryn Hereford, George Herman, Margaret Himes, Alma Hookey, Roy Hoyer, Ruth Hurst, Sallie Hurst, Genevieve Kent, William Kerschell, Margaret Kollock, Frank Lambert, John Lambert, Jane Lane, Marjorie Leet, Edward Mack, Jessie Madison, Muriel Marlowe, Emily Martin, Beth Meakins, A. Mohamed, H. Mohamed, Lucie Monroe, Dolly Mosley, P. Motcelt, Vera O'Brien, Phyllis Pearce, Gladys Pender, Oscar Ragland (as "Abanazar/Ilphrahim Benani"), Ethel Ramsden, Florence Rice, A. Riffle, Betty Roche, Helen Roche, Dorothy Sabin, Joseph Schrode (as "Susie/Coachman"), Lydia Scott, Rhoda Sewell, Jack Shannon, Doris Smith, Florence Stack, Jane Stafford, Allene Stone, Dorothy Stone, Fred Stone, Marietta Sullivan, Mabel Sunderland, Ralph Thomson, Peggy Timmons, Willie Torpey, Gwen Tremble, Mark Truscott, Lillian White, Star Woodman, Alice Wright, Doris Yates. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1927) Stage Play: Bye, Bye, Bonnie. Musical comedy.
- (1927) Stage Play: Judy. Musical comedy.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Cocoanuts. Musical comedy (revival). Music/lyrics by Irving Berlin. Additional text by Morrie Ryskind. Musical Director: Frank Tours. Music orchestrated by Frank Tours, Maurice De Packh, Stephen Jones and Louis Katzman. Scenic Design by Woodman Thompson. Costume Design by Charles Le Maire. Musical Staging by Sammy Lee. Directed by Oscar Eagle. Century Theatre: 16 May 1927-28 May 1927 (16 performances). Cast: Harold Abbey (as "Ensemble"), Jack Barker (as "Robert Adams"), Hazel Barnes (as "Ensemble"), Vivian Bartlett (as "Ensemble"), Anna Bell (as "Ensemble"), Marion Benda (as "Ensemble"), David Breen (as "Eddie"), The Brox Sisters (as "Specialty Act"), Muriel Buck (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Caldwell (as "Ensemble"), Rita Carita (as "Ensemble"), Edna Caton (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Clark (as "Ensemble"), Phyllis Cleveland (as "Polly Potter"), Gertrude Cole (as "Ensemble"), Warren Crosby (as "Ensemble"), Margaret Dumont (as "Mrs. Potter"), Betty Frisby (as "Ensemble"), Fred Greggor (as "Ensemble"), Mildred Hamilton (as "Ensemble"), Lebanon Hoffa (as "Ensemble"), Eleanor Hopkins (as "Ensemble"), Virginia Huff (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Knight (as "Ensemble"), Rosita Kyle (as "Ensemble"), Lotti Lee (as "Ensemble"), Lucille Lee (as "Ensemble"), Frances Mallory (as "Ensemble"), Philip Mann (as "Ensemble"), Jerry Marlow (as "Ensemble"), Juan Marlow (as "Ensemble"), Chico Marx (as "Willie the Wop"), Groucho Marx (as "Henry W. Schlemmer"), Harpo Marx (as "Silent Sam"), Zeppo Marx (as "Jamison"), Mat Matus (as "Ensemble"), Mary Meys (as "Ensemble"), Verdi Miller (as "Ensemble"), Essie Moore (as "Ensemble"), Crystal Moray (as "Ensemble"), Mary Nesi (as "Ensemble"), Philip Porterfield (as "Ensemble"), Beverly Raynor (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Riley (as "Ensemble"), Jerome Robertson (as "Ensemble"), Basil Ruysdael (as "Hennessey"), Wilfred Shepard (as "Ensemble"), Sybil Steward (as "Ensemble"), Ethel Sweatman (as "Ensemble/The DeMarcos Specialty"), Louise Thompson (as "Ensemble"), Emma Tuerfs (as "Ensemble"), Janet Velie (as "Penelope Martin"), Hazel Vernon (as "Ensemble"), Henry Whittemore (as "Harvey Yates"), Jerry Whyte Ensemble"), Frances Williams (as "Frances Williams"). Produced by Sam Harris. Note: Filmed by Paramount Pictures as The Cocoanuts (1929).
- (1927) Stage Play: Manhattan Mary. Musical comedy. Music by Ray Henderson. Book by Billy K. Wells and George White. Lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva and Lew Brown. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh. Musical Director: William Daly. Costume Design by Max Weldy. Scenic Design by William Oden Waller. Additional Costumes by Schneider-Anderson Company and Juliette. Directed by George White. Apollo Theatre: 26 Sep 1927- 12 May 1928 (264 performances). Cast: Ed Wynn (as "Crickets"), Ona Munson (as "Mary Brennan"), George White (as "Himself"), Vada Alexander, Mae Clark (as "Viola Fay"), Harland Dixon (as "Bob Sterling, Stage Manager of Scandals"), Sue Elliott, Mary Farley, Suzanne Fleming, Paul Frawley (as "Jimmy Moore, Mary's Sweetheart"), Messrs. Goff, Kerr and Barth (as "Embassy Boys"), Lou Holtz (as "Sam Platz, a Bond Salesman"), Ray Hunt, Sam Ledner, Doree Leslie, The McCarthy Sisters, Victor Munro (as "Micky, A Hudson Duster"), Harry Oldridge (as "Police Sergeant/His Honor, the Mayor of New York City"), Amy Revere (as "Helen King, Premiere Danseuse of Scandals"), Marcel Rousseau (as "M. Max Duval, of the Folies Bergere, Paris"), The Scott Sisters, James Scott, Adele Smith, Paul Stanton (as "R.C. "Arcy" Black, a Bond Broker"), Dorothy Walters. Produced by George White.
- (1927) Stage Play: Just Fancy. Musical/romance.
- (1928) Stage Play: Rosalie. Musical. Music by George Gershwin and Sigmund Romberg. Material by William Anthony McGuire and Guy Bolton. Lyrics by P.G. Wodehouse and Ira Gershwin. Vocal arrangements by Arthur Johnston. Music orchestrated by Emil Gerstenberger, William Daly, Maurice De Packh, Hans Spialek, Max Steiner and Hilding Andersson. Choreographed by Seymour Felix. Directed by William Anthony McGuire. New Amsterdam Theatre: 10 Jan 1928- 27 Oct 1928 (335 performances). Cast: Joan Adaire, Bobbe Arnst, Frank Atwell, Jeanne Audree, Colette Ayers, Mabel Baade, Berkman Bauer, Jack Bauer, Elsie Behrens, Marion Benda, Joey Benton, Caryl Bergman, Claudia Dell, Harry Donaghy, Jack Donahue, Lewis Dower, George Eising, Walter Fairmont, Anne Fallon, Hazel Forbes, Betty Garst, Mary Gassman, Gladys Glad, Carlos Gomez, Charles Gotthold, Dolores Grant, Yvonne Grey, Bernard Hazzert, Henri Jackin, A.P. Kaye, Ethel Kriston, David Labris, Antonina Lalaew, Leon Leshay, Preston Lewis, Phyllis Loft, Martha Mackay, Virginia Magee, Edith Martin, Doris Maye, John McCahill, Oliver McLennan, Gene McVey, William McVey, Marilyn Miller, Frank Morgan, Wilma Novak, Patsy O'Day, Clarence Oliver, Lucille Osborne, Lillian Ostrom, Howard Phillips, Ethel Raye, Gladys Redmond, Fielden Reed, Addie Rolfe, Beatrice Shaw, Rose Shaw, Mark Shull, Beatrice Smith, Leslie Storey, Frank Subers, Ruth Tara, Gladys Turner, Edgar Welch, Diana White, Paulette Winston, Star Woodman, Halfred Young, Marion Young. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1928) Stage Play: Cross My Heart. Musical comedy. Music by Harry Tierney [final Broadway credit]. Book by Daniel Kusell. Lyrics by Joseph McCarthy. Musical Director: Louis Gress. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh. Choreographed by Sammy Lee. Directed by John Harwood. Knickerbocker Theatre: 17 Sep 1928- 10 Nov 1928 (64 performances). Cast: Bill Antonius, Franklyn Ardell, Amy Atkinson, Arvil Avery, Ann Ayres, Joey Benton, Antoinette Boots, Dorothy Bow, Ann Brown, Dowell Brown, Bobbe Campbell, Hal Clyne, Eddie Conrad, Warren Crosby, Bill Drewes, Geneva Duker, Doris Eaton (as "Elsie Gobble"), Harry Evans, Edgar Fairchild, Grace Fleming, Helene Gardner, Elvira Giersdorf, Irene Giersdorf, Rae Giersdorf, Bob Gilbert, Ona Hamilton, Bernard Hassert, Helen Hermes, Beth Holt, Topsy Humphrey, Harriet Ingersoll, Madeline Janis, Genevieve Kent, Lillian Lamonte, Mary Lawlor, Martin Le Roy, Stanley Lewis, Marie Marceline, Edith Martin, Charles McClelland, Lulu McConnell, Nesha Medwin, Muriel Moore, Florence Murray, Clarence Nordstrom, Dorothy Patterson, Elsie Pedrick, Charles Peters, Ralph Rainger (as "Member of the Rialto Trio"), Ramon Rameau, Anna Rex, Wilburn Riviere, Ruth Savoy Miller, Daniel Sparks, Cora Stephens, Frances Stone, Wynn Terry, Peggy Udell, Bobby Watson (as "Charles Graham"), Jerry White. Produced by Sammy Lee.
- (1928) Stage Play: Hello Yourself!!!! Musical comedy.
- (1928) Stage Play: Hello, Daddy. Musical comedy. Book by Herbert Fields. Lyrics by Dorothy Fields. Music by Jimmy McHugh. Based on a farce adapted from the German by Frank Mandel. Principal Dance Routines arranged by Buddy Bradley. Harmony arrangements of the Giersdorf Sisters' songs by Arthur Johnston. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh, Stephen Jones, Fod Livingston and Hans Spialek. Musical Numbers Directed by Busby Berkeley. Costume Design by Charles Le Maire. Scenic Design by Hermann Rosse. Entire Production Under the Supervision of John Murray Anderson. Book Directed by Alexander Leftwich. Lew Fields' Mansfield Theatre (moved to George M. Cohan's Theatre from 21 Jan 1929- May 1929, then moved to Erlanger's Theatre 6 May 1929- 15 Jun 1929): 26 Dec 1928- 15 Jun 1929 (198 performances). Cast: Lew Fields (as "Henry Block"), Ethel Allen (as "Eloise, Student at Cedarhurst"), Annette Atherton (as "Girl of the Chorus"), James Bradleigh (as "Boy of the Chorus"), Bobby Brodsley (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Donald Brown (as "Boy of the Chorus"), Shirley Buford (as "Singer"), Bob Burk (as "Singer"), Harriet Carling (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Donn Carney (as "Singer"), Wilfred Clark (as "Anthony Bennett"), Elizabeth Crandall (as "Ellen, Student at Cedarhurst/Singer"), Dorothy Croyle (as "Edna, Student at Cedarhurst"), Florence Earle (as "Miss Prichard, Principal at Cedarhurst"), Jean Egan (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Alice Fischer (as "Emma Block"), Helen Fried (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Wanda Gall (as "Helen"), Elvira Giersdorf (as "Gertrude"), Irene Giersdorf (as "Helene"), Rae Giersdorf (as "Marguerite"), Carroll Glucas (as "Godfrey Burnham"), Madeline Grey (as "Mathilde Burnham"), Edward Hackett (as "Boy of the Chorus"), George Hassell (as "Edward Hauser"), Albert Hewitt (as "Singer"), Doris Jay (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Henrietta Kay (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Allen Kearns (as "Lawrence Tucker"), Mary Lawlor (as "Mary Block"), George C. Lehrian (as "Singer"), Betty Lockwood (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Marjorie-May Martin (as "Grace, Student at Cedarhurst"), Jerome Maxwell (as "Boy of the Chorus"), David Morton (as "Boy of the Chorus"), Mae Muth (as "Singer"), Frances Norton (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Emmy Lou Petri (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Valerie Petri (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Larry Regan (as "Boy of the Chorus"), Patricia Ross (as "Singer"), Dorothy Roy (as "Dot, Student at Cedarhurst"), Paula Sands (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Charles Scott (as "Boy of the Chorus"), Jane Sherman (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Betty Starbuck (as "Betty Hauser, Student at Cedarhurst"), Billy Taylor (as "Noel Burnham"), Peggy Tebbs (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Inez Tremble (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Jae Voll (as "Girl of the Chorus"), Jack Waldron (as "Boy of the Chorus"). Produced by Lew M. Fields.
- (1929) Stage Play: George White's Scandals. Musical revue.
- (1930) Stage Play: Mystery Moon. Musical comedy. Music by Monte Carlo and Alma M. Sanders. Book by Frederik Herendeen. Lyrics by Monte Carlo and Alma M. Sanders. Musical Director: Ernie Valle. Music orchestrated by Hilding Andersson, Maurice De Packh, Hans Spialek and Joe Weiss. Choreographed by Bunny Weldon. Juliana's routines devised and staged by Bert Angeles. Production Supervised by Paul M. Trebitsch. Directed by Victor Morley. Royale Theatre: 23 Jun 1930 (1 performance). Cast: Kay Apgar, Louise Baldwin, Winifred Barry (as "Queenie North"), Harrison Brockbank, Maud Brooks (as "May Delight"), Arthur Campbell, Vera Clarke, Virginia Dawe, Dorothy Dawn, Pauline Dee, Doris deLanti, Gene Fontaine, Marjorie Gaines, Ruth Hatch, Faith Hope (as "Chorus"), Juliana, Curtis Karpe (as "Lee Foo"), Kitty Kelly, Charles Lawrence, Nat Nazarro Jr., Frank J. Marshall Jr., Vivian Roscoe, Frank Shannon, Frances Shelley, Harry Short, Lenore Simone, Ellen Sparks, Helen Swift, Jane Taylor, Leonra Theodra, Elsie Thorne, Rosalie Trego, Arthur Uttry, Ernie Valle, Dorothy Waller, Bee Walz, Virginia Watts, Larry Woods. Produced by James M. Graf. Produced in association with Paul M. Trebitsch.
- (1931) Stage Play: Ziegfeld Follies of 1931. Musical revue. Sketches by Mark Hellinger, J.P. Murray and Gene Buck. Lyrics by Gene Buck, Joseph McCarthy, Charles Farrell, Mack Gordon, J.P. Murray, Barry Trivers, E.Y. Harburg, Jack Norworth and Noël Coward. Dialogue staged by Edward C. Lilley. Dances directed by Bobby Connolly and Albertina Rasch. Music by Harry Revel, Ben Oakland, Dave Stamper, Dimitri Tiomkin, Noël Coward, Nora Bayes, James Monaco, Chick Endor, Walter Donaldson, Jay Gorney and Hugo Riesenfeld. Music for "Pink Lady Waltz" by Ivan Caryll. Music for "(Shine On) Harvest Moon" by Jack Norworth. Music for "(Who Paid the Rent for Mrs.) Rip Van Winkle" by Al Bryan. Lyrics for "(Who Paid the Rent for Mrs.) Rip Van Winkle" by Fred Fisher. Music for "You Made Me Love You" Dance by Mack Gordon. Lyrics for "I'm With You" by Walter Donaldson. Musical Director: Oscar Bradley. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh, Will Vodery, Howard Jackson and Joe Jordan. Featuring songs by Powell and Stevens. Assembled by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. Directed by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. and Gene Buck. Ziegfeld Theatre: 1 Jul 1931- 21 Nov 1931 (165 performances). Cast: Iris Adrian, The Albertina Rasch Dancers, Thomas Arace, Jack Arthur, Jean Audree, Faith Bacon, Robert Baldwin, Virginia Bethel, Virginia Biddle, Ethel Borden, Mildred Borst, Frank Britton, Milt Britton, Jack Bruns, John Bubbles, Buck & Bubbles, Joan Burgess, Katherine Burke, Alice Burrage, Arthur Campbell, Tito Carol, Gordon Carper, Albert Carroll, Helen Carson, Emmita Casanova, Catherine Clark, The Collette Sisters, Dorothy Dell, Netta Deuschateau, Dorothy Dodge, David Drollet, Betty Dumbris, Marguerite Durand, Marguerite Eisele, Georgia Ellis, Kay English (as "Hazel Dawn" and "Pink lady Waltz" performer) [final Broadway role], Caja Eric, Clayton Estes, Ruth Etting (as "Nora Bayes"), Dorothy Flood, Rosa Fromson, Rose Gale, Gladys Glad, Gene Gory, Yvonne Grey, John Gurney, Paul Gursdorff, Cliff Hall, Cassie Hanley, Helen Hannan, Pearl Harris, Eunice Holmes, Jean Howard, Billy Hughes, Russell Johns, Tom Kendall, George Lamar, Frank Lang, Hal Le Roy (as "Alphonso Smith"), Milton Le Roy, Marjorie Levoe, Boots Mallory, Christine Maple, Herschel Martin, Mitzi Mayfair, Lorelle McCarver, Ernest McChesney, Frank McCormack, Dennis McCurtin, Marjorie McLaughlin, Olive McLay, Frieda Mierse, Vera Milton, Grace Moore, Jim Moore, Helen Morgan, John Daly Murphy, Dorissa Nelova, Pat O'Day, Pearl Osgood, Earl Oxford, Anne Lee Patterson, Ruth Patterson, Jack Pearl, Vivian Porter, Betty Real, Mary Alice Rice, Harry Richman, Bernice Roberts, William Royal, A. Samish, Blanche Satchell, Billie Seward, Barbara Smith, Conrad Sparin, Marie Stevens, Leonard Stokes, Lena Thomas, Joseph Toner, Synny Trowbridge, Robert Walker, Helen Walsh, Eileen Wenzel, Robert White. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1932) Stage Play: Face the Music. Musical comedy revue. Book by Moss Hart. Lyrics by Irving Berlin. Music by Irving Berlin. Musical Director: Frank Tours. Music orchestrated by Frank Tours, Robert Russell Bennett and Maurice De Packh. Scenic Design by Albert R. Johnson. Costume Design by Kiviette and Weld. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Staged by Hassard Short. Directed by George S. Kaufman. New Amsterdam Theatre: 17 Feb 1932- 9 Jul 1932 (165 performances). Cast: Thomas Arace, Ward Arnold (as "Postman"), Jack Barnes, Virginia Bethel, Mary Boland (as "Mrs. Meshbesher"), Mary Brooks, Dave Burns, Charles Burrows, Katherine Carrington, Dorothy Claire, Charles Coleman, Aida Conkey, Leslie Cornell, Ed Crosswell, Guy Daly, Maxine Darrell, Peggy Dell, Martin Dennis, Nancy Dolan, Bert Doughty, Elsie Duffy, Clyde Fillmore, George Ford, Edward Gargan (as "Mr. O'Rourke"), Jack Good, Frances Halliday, Rita Horgan, Elizabeth Houston, Valerie Huff, Jay Hunter, Vernon Jayson, Alice Kellerman, Irene Kelly, Mary Kennedy, Phil King, Dorothy Lamb, Jeanette Lea, Betty Lee, Margaret Lee, Clark Leston, Bob Long, Helen Lyons, Joseph Macauley (as "Rodney St. Clair, Prosecuting Attorney"), Ruth Martin, Vida McLain, Howard Morgan, J. Harold Murray (as "Pat Mason, Jr."), Fred Nay, Dorissa Nelova, Evelyn Nielson, Chester O'Brien, Emmett O'Brien, Mortimer O'Brien, Hugh O'Connell (as "Martin van Buren Meshbesher"), Pat O'Keefe, Oscar Polk (as "Rivington"), Wilma Roeloff, Etna Ross, Jack Ross, Jimmy Ryan, Jean Sargent, Peter Sargent, Martin Shepard, Stuart Steppler, Helen Thompson, Andrew Tombes (as "Hal Reisman"), Kathleen VanNoy, Mary Grace Van Noy, Dorothy Waller, Teddy West, Jack Wolfe, Dan Wyler. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1932) Stage Play: George White's Music Hall Varieties.
- (1933) Stage Play: George White's Music Hall Varieties [Return engagement]. Book by George White and Billy K. Wells. Music by Irving Caesar and Harold Arlen. Lyrics by Irving Caesar. Musical Director: Al Goodman. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh. Featuring songs by Carmen Lombardo, Sam H. Stept, Herman Hupfeld, Cliff Friend, George Gershwin and George White. Featuring songs with lyrics by Herman Hupfeld, Herb Magidson, Ted Koehler and George White. Musical Staging by Russell Markert. Directed by George White. Casino Theatre: 2 Jan 1933- 21 Jan 1933 (24 performances). Cast: Connie Alderson, Betty Allen, Margorie Baglin, Pearl Bradley, Alice Carleton, Dorothy Daly, Helen Dell, Edna Eustace, Myra Gerald, Herr Al Gordon, Beverly Gordon, Helen Gordon, Julia Gorman, Marie Graham, Roger Gray, Pearl Harris, Florence Healy, Eugene Howard, James Howard, Willie Howard, Chic Jordan, Bert Lahr, Madeline Lawson, Loomis Sisters, Rita Mackin, Lela Manor, Lila Manor, Joan Marsh, Melissa Mason, Lenora McDermott, Kay Michels, Jewel Morse, Nancy Nelson, Marion O'Day, Lucille Osborn, Tom Patricola, Edna Pence, Barbara Pepper, Dorothy Phillips, Thomas Phillips, Eleanor Powell, Harry Richman, Peggy Seal, Zynaid Spencer, Betty Sundmark, Gwen Tremble, Joseph Vitale, Amy Weber, Eleanor Witt. Produced by George White.
- (1933) Stage Play: Face the Music. Musical comedy revue (revival). Music by Irving Berlin. Book by Moss Hart. Lyrics by Irving Berlin. Music orchestrated by Russell Bennett, Frank Tours and Maurice De Packh. Scenic Design by Albert R. Johnson. Lighting Design by Hassard Short. Costume Design by Kiviette and Weld. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Production staged by Hassard Short. Book directed by George S. Kaufman. 44th Street Theatre: 31 Jan 1933- 25 Feb 1933 (31 performances). Cast: Mary Boland (as "Mrs. Meshbesher"), Joan Abbey (as "Girl"), Margot Adams (as "Miss Eisenheimer/Girl"), George Anderson (as "Mr. O'Rourke"), Kay Apgar (as "Girl"), Thomas Arace (as "Detective"), James Babbitt (as "Boy"), Bob Baldwin (as "Bartender"), John Barker (as "Pat Mason, Jr."), Janet Biesantz (as "Girl"), Alice Brent (as "Girl"), Janet Carver (as "The Albertina Rasch Dancers"), Carol Clyde (as "Girl"), Frank Conway (as "Boy"), Don Costello (as "Louis/Mr. O'Ryan"), Ed Crosswell (as "Boy"), Guy Daly (as "Boy"), Peggy Dell (as "The Albertina Rasch Dancers"), Martin Dennis (as "Boy"), Frank Dobson (as "Sheriff"), Bert Doughty (as "Boy"), Dorothy Drum (as "Mme. Elise"), John W. Ehrle (as "Rodney St. Clair, Prosecuting Attorney"), Betty Eisner (as "The Albertina Rasch Dancers/Leading Dancer"), Margaret Fitzpatrick (as "Girl"), Vera Fredericks (as "The Albertina Rasch Dancers/Captain"), Marie Gale (as "Girl"), Inez Goetz (as "A Sister Team/Girl"), Jack Good (as "Joe"), Bob Grey (as "Boy"), E.D. Howell (as "Boy"), Robert Emmett Keane (as "Hal Reisman"), Charles Lawrence (as "Martin van Buren Meshbesher"), Margaret Lee (as "Pickles"), Bob Long (as "Boy"), Virginia Mandracia (as "Girl"), George Marshall (as "Stage Doorman"), Nancy McCord (as "Kit Baker"), Martha Merrill (as "The Albertina Rasch Dancers"), Howard Morgan (as "Boy"), Ed Murray (as "Boy"), Fred Nay (as "Boy"), Pat O'Keefe (as "May/Girl"), Oscar Polk (as "Rivington"), Thomas Reynolds (as "Judge Furioso"), Marty Rhiele (as "Boy"), Jack Richards (as "Boy"), Vivian Roscoe (as "Girl"), Ray Santos (as "Boy"), Peter Sargent (as "Mrs. Meshbesher's Footman"), Daniel Sullivan (as "Postman"), Louise Taylor (as "Girl"), Martha Tibbetts (as "Mme. Elise's Assistant/Girl"), Colleen Ward (as "A Sister Team/Girl"), Dolly Widell (as "Girl"), Jack Wolfe (as "Boy"). Produced by Producing Associates, Inc. Produced by arrangement with Sam Harris.
- (1937) Stage Play: Right This Way. Musical comedy. Music by Brad Greene. Ballet music and interludes by Fabian Storey. Book by Marianne Brown Waters. Additional dialogue by Parke Levy and Alan Lipscott. Additional music by Sammy Fain. Additional lyrics by Irving Kahal. Lyrics by Marianne Brown Waters. Musical Director: Max Meth. Music orchestrated by Hans Spialek, Maurice De Packh and Claude Austin. Choreographed by Marjery Fielding. Directed by Bertram Robinson. 46th Street Theatre: 5 Jan 1938- 15 Jan 1938 (15 performances). Cast: Henry Arthur (as "Phil Doane"), Nelson Barclift (as "Gentleman of the Ensemble"), Christine Bromley (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), Maude Carroll (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), Violet Carson (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), William Cope (as "Gentleman of the Ensemble"), Charles Curran (as "Gentleman of the Ensemble"), James Cushman (as "Gentleman of the Ensemble"), Ginger Dixon (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), Leonard Elliott (as "Bomboski"), Hugh Ellsworth (as "Leland/Gentleman of the Ensemble"), Jack Gilchrist (as "Rich Traveler/Butler"), Robert Gompers (as "Gentleman of the Ensemble"), Virginia Grimes (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), Frances Holmes (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), Dorothea Jackson (as "Mimi's Assistant/Lady of the Ensemble"), Clark Leston (as "Gentleman of the Ensemble"), Joe E. Lewis (as "Spaulding"), Dorothy Maris (as "Comptesse De Marco"), Catherine O'Neal (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), Milton Parsons (as "James Withington"), Leona Powers (as "Flora Baldwin"), Joey Ray (as "Ship's Captain/Butler"), Jack Riley (as "Gentleman of the Ensemble"), Blanche Ring (as "Josie Huggins"), Guy Robertson (as "Jeff Doane"), Dorothy Speicher (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), Zynaid Spencer (as "The Girl/Lady of the Ensemble"), Leona Stephens (as "Lissa/Peasant Vendor"), Charlotte Stoll (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), Edith Stromberg (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), Tamara (as "Mimi Chester"), Florence Ward (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), Thelma White (as "Judy March"), Jack Williams (as "An American, An American in Paris"), Harris Woodford (as "Gentleman of the Ensemble"). Produced by Alice Alexander.
- (1938) Stage Play: You Never Know. Musical comedy. Music by Cole Porter. Lyrics by Cole Porter. Book by Rowland Leigh. Based on the play "By Candlelight" by Siegfried Geyer. Adapted from the Viennese operetta "Bei Kerzenleicht" by Robert Katscher and Karl Farkas. Music orchestrated by Hans Spialek. Additional orchestrations by Don Walker, Maurice De Packh and Minati Salta. Additional lyrics by Rowland Leigh, Edwin Gilbert and Robert Katscher. Additional music by Alexander Fogarty and Dana Suesse. Musical Director: John McManus. Choreographed by Robert Alton. Uncredited script doctoring by George Abbott. Directed by Rowland Leigh. Winter Garden: 21 Sep 1938- 26 Nov 1938 (78 performances). Cast: Libby Holman, Rex O'Malley, Lupe Velez and Toby Wing. Note: Despite the seemingly sure-fire talent involved, the show was poorly reviewed and proved a test of wills between Holman (a close personal friend of Webb) and Velez, who despised each other. Webb flatly refused to consider touring with the production after it closed on Broadway. Also notable as the play Cole Porter was working on when he suffered a severe leg injury (ultimately requiring amputation after numerous operations) while riding horseback.
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