- (1908 - 1953) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1908) Stage Play: Irene Wycherley. Written by Anthony Wharton [credited as Anthony P. Wharton]. Astor Theatre: 20 Jan 1908- Feb 1908 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: Viola Allen, Edwin Arden, John Glendinning, Dorothy Hammond [final Broadway role], Walter Hampden [Broadway debut], Selene Johnson, Ffolliott Paget, Lillian Shirley, Mrs. Sam Sothern, Grant Stewart, Hodgson Taylor, Nellie Thorne, May Whitty [Broadway debut]. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1908) Stage Play: The Servant in the House. Drama. Written by Charles Kennedy. Scenic Design by H. Robert Law. Savoy Theatre: 23 Mar 1908-1 Jun 1908 [?] (80 performances). Cast: Charles Dalton, Galwey Herbert, Arthur Lewis, Edith Wynne Matthison, Mabel Moore (as "Mary"), Tyrone Power Sr. (as "Robert Smith"). Produced by Henry Miller.
- (1908) Stage Play: The Winterfeast. Music by William Furst. Written by Charles Kennedy. Savoy Theatre: 30 Nov 1908- Dec 1908 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Robert Cummings, Ben Field, Walter Hampden (as "Bjorn") Arthur Lewis, Edith Wynne Matthison (as "Herdisa"), Frank Mills, Gladys Wynne.
- (1909) Stage Play: The City. Written by Clyde Fitch. Directed by John Emerson. Lyric Theatre (moved to The Hackett Theatre from 9 May 1910 to close): 21 Dec 1909- Jun 1910 (closing date unknown/190 performances). Cast: Fred Courtenay, Edward Emery (as "Gordon Van Vranken"), Jane Gail, Walter Hampden (as "George Jr."), Helen Holmes, George Howell, John Jex, Tully Marshall (as "George Frederick Hannock"), Mary Nash, Eva Vincent, Lucile Watson. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1912) Stage Play: Cheer Up. Comedy. Written by Mary Roberts Rinehart. Directed by Cecil B. DeMille. Harris Theatre: 30 Dec 1912- Jan 1913 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Effingham Pinto, Billy Betts, Eric Blind, Alan Brooks, Sedley Brown, Charles Buckley, Royal Byron, William Evill, Walter Hampden (as "Alan Pierce"), George LeSoir, Lotta Linthicum, Selma Maynard, Nat Nazarro Jr., Frances Nordstrom, Fayette Perry, Sybilla Pope, Harold Salter, William Vaughn, Amy Veness. Produced by Cecil B. DeMille.
- (1913) Stage Play: Pariah. Written by August Strindberg. Translated by Edwin Bjorkman. 48th Street Theatre: 18 Mar 1913 (1 performance). Cast: Walter Hampden, Frank Reicher. Produced by Drama Committee of The MacDowell Club and Warner Oland.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Stronger. Written by August Strindberg. Translated by Edith Oland and Warner Oland. 48th Street Theatre: 18 Mar 1913 (1 performance). Cast: Marjorie Edmondson, Mabel Moore, Hedwiga Reicher. Produced by Drama Committee of The MacDowell Club and Warner Oland.
- (1918) Stage Play: Hamlet. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Plymouth Theatre (moved to The 39th Street Theatre fro 20 May 1919- close): 22 Nov 1918- Jun 1919 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Albert Bruning (as "Polonius, Lord Chamberlain"), Jerome Collamore [Broadway debut], Harold Franklin, Mary Hall (as "Gertrude, Queen of Denmark and mother to Hamlet"), Paul Hampden, Walter Hampden (as "Hamlet, son to the late, and nephew to the present King"), Ulysses Homer, Vici Ioucelli, J. Harry Irvine, Marc Loebell, Mabel Moore (as "Ophelia, daughter to Polonius"), Gloria Rollin, Maxwell Ryder, Harry Sothern, Charles A. Stevenson (as "Claudius, King of Denmark"), Allen Thomas, George Ward, Charles Webster. Replacement actor: 'Henry Herbert' (as "Claudius, King of King of Denmark").
- (1918) Stage Play: Macbeth. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Plymouth Theatre: 7 Dec 1918 (1 performance). Cast: Miss Beachum, Albert Bruning, Jerome Collamore, George Gaul, Paul Hampden, Walter Hampden (as "Macbeth"), Henry Herbert, J. Harry Irvine, P.J. Kelly, Helen Ludlam, Beatrice Rheinland, Allen Thomas, Gilda Varesi Archibald (as "Lady Macbeth"), Percival Vivian, James Ward, Charles Webster.
- (1920) Stage Play: George Washington. Historical drama. Written by Percy MacKaye. Scenic Design by Robert Edmond Jones. Lyric Theatre: 1 Mar 1920-Mar 1920 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Richard Abbott, Frank Arundel, Jerome Colamor, W. Donald DuTilly, Donald Foster, Coulter Gains, Katherine Haden, Gerald Hamer, G.F. Hannam-Clark (as "Zekiel"), J. Harry Irvine, Elsie Herndon Kearns, Paul Leyssac (as "Marquis de Lafayette"), Phyllis Loughton, George Marion (as "Quilloquon"), Beth Martin, Beatrice Maude, Bernard Merrick (as "A Virginia Soldier"), Walter Hampden (as "George Washington"), Elizabeth Milburn, LeRoi Operti (as "Capt. Van Bramm/Selectman") [Broadway debut], Albert Oswald, Beatrice Reinhardt (as "Martha Washington"), Ernest Rowan, Maxwell Ryder (as "Tom Paine"), Nellie Peck Saunders (as "Mammy Sal"), William Sauter. Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1921) Stage Play: Macbeth. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Walter Hampden. Broadhurst Theatre: 19 Apr 1921- Apr 1921 (closing date unknown/6 performances). Cast: Walter Hampden (as "Macbeth, a general of the Scottish army"), Mary Hall (as "Lady Macbeth"), Richard Abbott (as "Ross, a nobleman"), Roy Bucklee (as "Donalbain, son of Duncan"), Hannam Clark (as "Porter/Third Witch"), Edwin Cushman (as "First Murderer"), Arthur Fox (as "Lennox, a nobleman"), Sara Haden (as "Macduff's Son"), Geneva Harrison (as "Fleance, son of Banquo"), Richard Highley (as "Seyton, an officer attending on Macbeth/Second Murderer"), J. Harry Irvine (as "Macduff, a nobleman of Scotland"), Elsie Herndon Kearns (as "Gentlewoman, Second Witch"), P.J. Kelly (as "Sergeant"), LeRoi Operti (as "Menteith, a nobleman/First Witch"), Ernest Rowan (as "Malcolm, son of Duncan"), William Sauter (as "Banquo, a general of the Scottish army/Doctor"), Netta Sunderland (as "Lady Macduff"), Allen Thomas (as "Duncan, King of Scotland/Siward"). Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Servant in the House. Drama (revival).
- (1923) Stage Play: The School for Scandal. Comedy (revival). Written by Richard B. Sheridan. Lyceum Theatre: 4 Jun 1923- Jun 1923 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Albert G. Andrews (as "Moses"), Ethel Barrymore, Albert Bruning, John Craig, Henry F. Dixey, John Drew, Etienne Girardot (as "Mr. Crabtree"), Violet Kemble Cooper, Ernest Lawford, Robert Mantell, Carroll McComas (as "Maria"), Grant Mitchell, McKay Morris, Charles Richman, Charlotte Walker, Reinald Warrenrath, Francis Wilson, Thomas A. Wise. Produced by the Players Company Inc.
- (1923) Stage Play: Cyrano de Bergerac. Comedy (revival). Written by Edmond Rostand. Incidental music from the opera "Cyrano" by Walter Damrosch. Adapted in verse by Brian Hooker. Entire Production Designed and Supervised by Claude Bragdon. Directed by Walter Hampden. National Theatre: 1 Nov 1923- Jun 1924 (closing date unknown/232 performances). Cast: Walter Hampden (as "Cyrano de Bergerac, a Gascon"), John Alexander, Margaret Barnstead, Nina Bruning, Kenneth Burchfield, Ray T. Busch, Ruth Chorpenning (as "Roxane's Duenna"), Lawrence Chrow, Frank Colletti, Hope Coxhead, Miriam Cutler, Marcel Dill, Reynolds Evans (as "Le Vicomte de Valvert/Cadet of Gascoyne"), Jay Fassett (as "A Light Horseman/Cadet of Gascoyne"), Ethel Fisher, Henry Fitzgerald, Charles Francis, Isabel Garland, Henry Goff, William Goodrich, Paul Guilfoyle, Mary Hall, C. Norman Hammond (as "Montfleury, a tragic actor/A Capuchin"), H.E. Humphrey, Anthony Jochim, Stan Jones, Elsie Herndon Kearns, P.J. Kelly, Joseph Latham, Paul Leyssac (as "Le Comte de Guiche"), Margaret Low, Alfred Mack, Bernard Max, Carroll McComas (as "Roxane, Cyrano's cousin"), Fred McGuick, Mabel Moore (as "An Orange Girl/Sister Marthe"), Valentine Newmark, LeRoi Operti (as "Jodelet, the comedian/Poet"), Lou Polan, James R. Pray, Ernest Rowan, William Russell, Antonio Salerno, Franklin Salisbury, William Sauter (as "Lignière, the poet/A Spanish Officer"), Bernard Savage, Helena Simkhovitch, William H. Stevens, Allen Thomas, Anne Tonetti, Thomas F. Tracey (as "A Marquis"), John Trevor, Fred Verdi, Earl Weatherford, Cedric Weller, Albert G. West, Edith Barrett Williams, John Wilson, Cecil Yapp (as "Ragueneau, a pastry cook"), Frank Young. Produced by Claude Bragdon.
- (1925) Stage Play: Othello. Tragedy/drama (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Shubert Theatre: 10 Jan 1925- Feb 1925 (closing date unknown/57 performances). Cast: Frank Coletti, Murray Darcy, Marcel Dill, Reynolds Evans (as "Roderigo"), Jay Fassett (as "Messenger" / "Herald"), Charles Francis, Paul Guilfoyle (as "Sailor/Gentleman of Cyprus"), Mary Hall, Walter Hampden (as "Othello"), Baliol Holloway, Elsie Herndon Kearns, P.J. Kelly, Joseph Latham, Mabel Moore (as "Desdemona"), Lou Polan (as "a Gentleman of Cyprus"), Ernest Rowan, William Sauter, Jeannette Sherwin, Robert Thorne, Thomas F. Tracey.
- (1925) Stage Play: Hamlet. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Walter Hampden. Hampden's Theatre (moved to The National Theatre from Nov 1925 to close): 10 Oct 1925- Dec 1925 (closing date unknown/68 performances). Cast: Walter Hampden (as "Hamlet, son to the late, and nephew to the present King"), Ethel Barrymore (as "Ophelia, daughter to Polonius"), Albert Bruning (as "Polonius, Lord Chamberlain"), Mary Hall (as "Gertrude, Queen of Denmark and mother to Hamlet"), Kenneth Hunter, Ernest Rowan (as "Laertes, son to Polonius"), Edith Barrett, Marcel Dill, Reynolds Evans (as "Bernardo/Officer/Player King"), Thomas Gomez (as "Reynaldo, a Sailor"), Gordon Hart, Hart Jenks, P.J. Kelly, Max Montor (as "Ghost"), Mabel Moore (as "Player Queen"), LeRoi Operti (as "Osric, a Courtier"), Lou Polan (as "Captain"), William Sauter (as "Horatio, friend to Hamlet"), Thomas F. Tracey (as "Rosencrantz/Courtier/Priest"), J. Plumpton Wilson, Philip Wood, Cecil Yapp (as "First Gravedigger"). Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Merchant of Venice. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Walter Hampden. Hampden's Theatre: 26 Dec 1925- Feb 1926 (closing date unknown/54 performances). Cast: Edith Barrett (as "Jessica, Shylock's daughter"), Ethel Barrymore (as "Portia, a rich heiress"), Maurice Colbourne, Marcel Dill, Reynolds Evans (as "Solanio, friend of Antonio"), Walter Hampden (as "Shylock, a Jew of Venice"), Gordon Hart, Kenneth Hunter (as "Gratiano, friend of Antonio"), Hart Jenks, P.J. Kelly (as "Tubal, friend of Shylock/Court Clerk"), Mary Low, Mabel Moore (as "Nerissa, Portia's waiting gentle-woman"), LeRoi Operti (as "Prince of Aragon"), Ernest Rowan, Franklin Salisbury, William Sauter, Albert West, J. Plumpton Wilson, Philip Wood (as "Duke of Venice"), Cecil Yapp (as "Launcelot Gobbo, servant to Shylock").
- (1926) Stage Play: Cyrano de Bergerac. Comedy (revival). Written by Edmond Rostand. English version in verse by Brian Hooker. Directed by Walter Hampden. Hampden's Theatre: 18 Feb 1926- May 1926 (closing date unknown/96 performances). Cast: Walter Hampden (as "Cyrano de Bergerac, a Gascon"), Marie Adels, Charles Francis, John Alexander, Edith Barrett, Nancy Bevill, Ruth Chorpenning (as "Roxane's Duenna"), Maurice Colbourne, Frank Coletti, Edwin Cushman, Murray Darcy, Marcel Dill, Brice Disque Jr., Reynolds Evans (as "Le Vicomte de Valvert"), Howard Galt, Gordon Hart, Hart Jenks, P.J. Kelly, Mary Law, Parker Mills, Mabel Moore (as "An Orange Girl" / "Sister Marthe"), Grania O'Malley, LeRoi Operti (as "Jodelet, the comedian"), Lou Polan (as "D'Artagnan"), Ernest Rowan, Antonio Salerno, William Sauter, Bernard Savage, Ruth Seward, Thomas F. Tracey (as "A Marquis"), Cedric Weller, Albert West, Dot Willens, J. Plumpton Wilson, Philip Wood, Cecil Yapp (as "Ragueneau, a pastry cook").
- (1926) Stage Play: The Servant in the House. Drama (revival).
- (1926) Stage Play: The Immortal Thief. Drama. Written by Tom Barry. Hampden's Theatre: 2 Oct 1926- Oct 1926 (closing date unknown/25 performances). Cast: Marie Adels (as "Naomi"), Dallas Anderson (as "Ben Sarken"), Anthony Andre (as "An Old Boatman"), Edith Barrett (as "Merzah's Daughter"), Hope Cary (as "Greek Maiden"), Howard Claney (as "A Young Official"), F.R. Colton (as "An Ethiopian Prince"), Marcel Dill (as "One of the Three Thieves/A Camel Driver"), Adelaide Fitz-Allen (as "Marius' Old Nurse"), Howard Galt (as "An Egyptian King"), Robert Paton Gibbs (as "Keeper of the Bordello"), Thomas Gomez (as "One of the Three Thieves/A Beggar"), Basil Grant (as "A Peddler Spy"), C. Norman Hammond (as "Septimus Celsus"), Walter Hampden (as "Marius Rufinus"), Gordon Hart (as "A Phoenician/Son of a Widow"), Stanley Howlett (as "James the Less"), Eudora Hunner (as "Bordello Girl"), Suzanne Jackson (as "Merzah"), Hart Jenks (as "Asper"), P.J. Kelly (as "Old Thief of Bagdad/A Hasheesh Eater"), Caroline Meade (as "Bordello Girl"), Stuart Miller (as "A Syrian"), Mabel Moore (as "Marius' Mother"), Grace Morton (as "Bordello Girl"), Grania O'Malley (as "Pharaoh's Daughter"), Louis Polan (as "A Sailor Spy"), Ernest Rowan (as "Silenus Geta"), William H. Sams (as "An Old Official of the Law"), Dorothy Scott (as "A Wine Girl"), Ruth Seward (as "Greek Maiden"), J.P. Wilson (as "One of the Three Thieves/A False Prophet"), Cecil Yapp (as "Poetar"). Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1926) Stage Play: Caponsacchi. Drama. Written by Arthur Goodrich and Rose A. Palmer. Based on the poem "The Ring and the Book" by Robert Browning. Hampden's Theatre: 26 Oct 1926- Jun 1927 (closing date unknown/269 performances). Cast: Marie Adels, Dallas Anderson (as "Gherardi"), Anthony Andre, Edith Barrett (as "Pompilia"), Howard Claney, (as "Salvatore"), Edwin Cushman, Marcel Dill, Robert Paton Gibbs (as "Scalchi"), Tom Gomez, C. Norman Hammond (as "Governor of Arezzo"), Walter Hampden (as "Caponsacchi"), Gordon Hart, Stanley Howlett (as "Pope Innocent XII"), Eudora Hunner, Suzanne Jackson, Hart Jenks, P.J. Kelly, Grania O'Malley, Lou Polan (as "Montini"), Ernest Rowan, William H. Sams, Albert West, J.P. Wilson, Cecil Yapp (as "Canon Conti"). Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1927) Stage Play: An Enemy of the People.
- (1927) Stage Play: Out of the Sea. Written by Don Marquis. Directed by Walter Hampden. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 5 Dec 1927- Dec 1927 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "Hockin"), William Burnett, Thomas Coffin Cooke, Guy Cunningham, Lyn Harding, O.P. Heggie (as "Timbury"), Octavia Kenmore, Rollo Peters (as "John Marstin"), Claude Rains (as "Arthur Logris"), Richard Simson, Beatrix Thomson. Produced by George C. Tyler.
- (1928) Stage Play: King Henry V. Historical drama (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Claude Bragdon. Hampden's Theatre: 15 Mar 1928- Apr 1928 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Cast: Marie Adels, Dallas Anderson, Gage Bennett (as "Earl of Westmoreland, Cousin to King Henry V"), Randolph Carleton, Howard Claney, Andree Corday, Edwin Cushman, Murray Darcy, Reynolds Evans (as "Constable of France"), Jack Gilchrist, Thomas Gomez (as "Bardolph, French Soldier"), Norman Hammond, Walter Hampden (as "King Henry V"), Gordon Hart, Stanley Howlett (as "Archbishop of Canterbury, Gower"), P.J. Kelly, Joseph Latham, Jan Lindermann, Caroline Meade, Mabel Moore (as "Chorus"), Edwin Phillips, Lou Polan, Ben Probst, Ernest Rowan, Franklin Salisbury, W.H. Sams, William Sauter, Robert C. Schnitzer, Charles Wright, Cecil Yapp (as "Fluellen").
- (1928) Stage Play: The Light of Asia. Written by Georgina Jones Walton. Choreographed by Ruth St. Denis. Directed by Walter Hampden. Hampden's Theatre: 9 Oct 1928- Oct 1928 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Dallas Anderson (as "Kondanna"), Gage Bennett (as "King of Koli"), Norbert Cameron (as "Noble"), George Cotton (as "Merchant"), M. D'Arcy (as "A Hillman"), Francis Dears (as "Soldiers"), Forrest Gains (as "Noble"), Thomas Gomez (as "An Old Leper/Assaji"), Evelyn Goodrich (as "Radha/Purna"), C. Norman Hammond (as "Shivamangala"), Walter Hampden (as "Siddhartha"), Gordon Hart (as "Another Astrologer/Vappa"), Isabel S. Hill (as "Nautch Girl"), Harriet Ingersoll (as "Nautch Girl"), Stephen Irving (as "Water Bearer"), Philip Jones (as "Soldier"), Richard Lawrence (as "Water Bearer"), Omar Le Gant (as "A Page"), Jan Lindermann (as "A Hermit"), Judith Lowry (as "Prajapati"), Anna Lubow (as "Kisogatami"), Beatrice Maude (as "Gunga"), Kate Mayhew (as "An Outcaste Woman"), Caroline Meade (as "Draupadi"), Joseph Milton (as "Merchant/A Monk"), Eleanor Mish (as "Chitra"), Anne Mitchell (as "Nautch Girl"), Mabel Moore (as "Queen Maya/Sujata"), LeRoi Operti (as "Ormuzd"), Lou Polan (as "Devadatta, Prince of Koli"), Eugene Powers (as "King of the Sakyas"), Charles Quigley (as "Ananda"), Sri Ragini (as "Nautch Girl"), Edwin Ross Jr. (as "A Citizen"), Ernest Rowan (as "Channa"), Franklin Salisbury (as "Bhadya"), William Sauter (as "Asita/Mohanna"), Robert C. Schnitzer (as "Merchant"), Freddie Stange (as "Rahula"), William Thornton (as "An Attendant"), Ingeborg Torrup (as "Yashodara"), Cecil Yapp (as "Visvamitra"). Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1928) Stage Play: An Enemy of the People.
- (1928) Stage Play: Caponsacchi. Drama (revival). Written by Arthur Goodrich and Rose A. Palmer. Based on the poem "The Ring and the Book" by Robert Browning.
- (1928) Stage Play: Cyrano de Bergerac. Comedy (revival).
- (1929) Stage Play: The Bonds of Interest. Comedy.
- (1929) Stage Play: Caponsacchi. Drama (revival).
- (1929) Stage Play: Richelieu. Drama (revival).
- (1930) Stage Play: The Little Father of the Wilderness. Drama (revival).
- (1931) Stage Play: The Admirable Crichton. Comedy/fantasy/satire (revival).
- (1931) Stage Play: The Way of the World. Comedy (revival).
- (1932) Stage Play: Cyrano de Bergerac. Comedy (revival). Written by Edmond Rostand. Adapted in verse by Brian Hooker. Scenic Design by Claude Bragdon. Directed by Walter Hampden. New Amsterdam Theatre: 26 Dec 1932- Jan 1933 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1934) Stage Play: Hamlet.
- (1935) Stage Play: Seven Keys to Baldpate.
- (1935) Stage Play: Achilles Had a Heel. Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1936) Stage Play: Cyrano de Bergerac. Comedy (revival).
- (1937) Stage Play: An Enemy of the People. Drama (revival). Written by Henrik Ibsen. Directed by Walter Hampden. Hudson Theatre: 15 Feb 1937- Mar 1937 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Albert Allen, Richard Allen, Truman Bengali, Albert Bergh (as "Capt. Horster"), Richard Edward Bowler, Charles Brunswick, Conrad Cantzen, Hannam Clark (as "Aslaksen"), Murray D'Arcy, John C. Davis, John de Angelis, Elizabeth Farrar, Richard Freeman, Arthur Gilmour, Edward M. Grace, C. Norman Hammond, Walter Hampden (as "Dr. Thomas Stockmann"), Walter James, Marjorie Jarecki, Wyman Kane, Walter Kapp, Gaylord B. Kingston, Leslie Klein, James C. Malaidy, George Marsh, Dodson Mitchell (as "Morten Kill"), Mabel Moore (as "Mrs. Stockmann") [final Broadway role], Allen Nourse, Haakon Ogle, Sidney Palmer, Constance Pellissier (as "Lady"), Frank Phillips, Richard Ross, John Rustad, Harvey Sayers, Herbert Treitel, Paul Tripp, Boris Ulmar, Albert Dekker [credited as Albert Van Dekker], (as "Hovstad"), Dick Wallace, Walter Ward, Mortimer Weldon, John E. Wheeler. Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1940) Stage Play: Love for Love. Comedy (revival).
- (1942) Stage Play: The Rivals.
- (1942) Stage Play: The Strings, My Lord, Are False. Drama. Written by Paul Vincent Carroll. Directed by Elia Kazan. Royale Theatre: 19 May 1942-30 May 1942 (15 performances). Cast: Frances Bavier (as "Sarah"), Philip Bourneuf (as "Jerry Hoare"), Ralph Cullinan (as "Alec"), Constance Dowling (as "Maisie Gillespie "), Reynolds Evans (as "Monsignor Skinner"), Ruth Gordon (as "Iris Ryan"), Margot Grahame (as "Sadie O'Neill"), Walter Hampden (as "Canon Courtenay"), Hurd Hatfield (as "Religious Man"), Colin Keith-Johnston, Will Lee (as "Louis Liebens"), Sherman MacGregor, Alice MacKenzie, John McKee, Anna Minot, Gordon Nelson, Hale Norcross (as "Provost Grahamson"), Joan H. Shepard, Art Smith, Tom Tully, Ruth Vivian (as "Ma Morrisey"), Anna Minot Warren. Produced by Edward Choate. Produced in association with Alexander Kirkland and John R. Sheppard Jr.
- (1943) Stage Play: The Patriots.
- (1946) Stage Play: And Be My Love. Comedy. Written by Edward Caulfield. Scenic Design by Raymond Sovey. Directed by Arthur J. Beckhard. National Theatre: 21 Feb 1945- 3 Mar 1945 (14 performances). Cast: Charles Colby, Esther Dale (as "Martha Webster"), Viola Dean, Sydney Grant, Walter Hampden (as "Henry"), Violet Heming, Ruth Homond, Edmonia Nolley, Jed Prouty, Lotus Robb, Graham Velsey. Produced in association with Victor Hugo-Vidal. Produced by Arthur J. Beckhard.
- (1946) Stage Play: King Henry VIII. Historical drama (revival/played in repertory with What Every Woman Knows, John Gabriel Borkman, A Pound on Demand/Androcles and the Lion). Written by William Shakespeare. Choreographed by Felicia Sorel. Scenic Design and Costume Design by David Ffolkes. Directed by Margaret Webster. International Theatre: 6 Nov 1946- 21 Feb 1947 (40 performances). Cast: Don Allen (as "Ensemble"), Emery Battis (as "Sir Thomas Lovell"), John Becher (as "Lord Sands"), John Behney (as "Ensemble"), Philip Bourneuf (as "The Prologue/First Chronicler"), Angus Cairns (as "Lord Chamberlain"), Michel Corhan (as "Ensemble"), Will Davis (I) (as "Ensemble"), June Duprez (as "Ann Bullen"), Marion Evenson (as "Patience"), Thomas Grace (as "Ensemble"), Raymond Greenleaf (as "Duke of Norfolk"), Walter Hampden (as "Cardinal Wolsey"), Bart Henderson (as "Ensemble"), Cavada Humphrey (as "Ensemble"), Frederic Hunter (as "Ensemble"), Anne Jackson (as "Ensemble"), Victor Jory (as "Henry VIII"), Arthur Keegan (as "Sir Harry Guildford/Garter King of Arms"), Donald Keyes (as "Sir Nicholas Vaux/Griffith"), Eva Le Gallienne (as "Katherine of Aragon"), Robert Leser (as "Ensemble"), Gerald McCormack (as "Ensemble"), Mary Alice Moore (as "Duchess of Norfolk/Ensemble"), Ruth Neal (as "Lady in Waiting to Katherine/Ensemble"), Walter Neal (as "Ensemble"), James Rafferty (as "Ensemble"), Robert Rawlings (as "Lord Abergavenny/A Messenger"), John Straub (as "Cardinal Campeius"), Eugene Stuckmann (as "Second Chronicler/Capucius"), Theodore Tenley (as "Archbishop of Canterbury/Ensemble"), Eli Wallach (as "Cromwell"), Richard Waring (as "Duke of Buckingham"), Margaret Webster (as "An Old Lady"), William Windom (as "Sergeant of the Guard/Earl of Surrey"), Ed Woodhead (as "Surveyor/Ensemble"), Efrem Zimbalist Jr. (as "Duke of Suffolk"). Produced by The American Repertory Theatre.
- (1946) Stage Play: What Every Woman Knows. Comedy (revival).
- (1949) Stage Play: The Traitor. Melodrama. Written by Herman Wouk. Scenic Design by Raymond Sovey. Costume Design by Joseph Fretwell III. Directed by Jed Harris. 48th Street Theatre; 31 Mar 1949- 26 May 1949 (67 performances). Cast: Michael Abbott, Wesley Addy (as "Prof. Allen Carr"), Gene Blakely, Philip Coolidge (as "A Man"), James Davidson, Richard Derr, Don Doherty, Michael Dreyfuss, Jean Hagen (as "Eva McKeon"), Walter Hampden (as "Prof. Tobias Emanuel"), Maurice Manson, Louise Platt (as "Jane Bailey"), Larry Sherman, Georgia Simmons, William Thunhurst Jr., Lee Tracy (as "Capt. Gallagher"), James Van Dyk, John Wengraf (as "Another Man"). Produced by Jed Harris.
- (1949) Stage Play: The Velvet Glove. Comedy. Written by Rosemary Casey [earliest Broadway credit]. Scenic Design by Donald Oenslager. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Booth Theatre (moved to The John Golden Theatre from 13 Feb 1950- close): 26 Dec 1949- 13 May 1950 (152 performances). Cast: Barbara Brady (as "Mary Renshaw") [Broadway debut], Will Davis (as "Father Benton"), Jean Dixon (as "Sister Monica"), Grace George (as "Mother Hildebrand"), Walter Hampden (as "Monsignor Burke"), Ben Lackland (as "Mr. Barton"), James Noble (as "Professor Pearson"), Naomi Riordan (as "Sister Lucy"), Muriel Starr (as "Sister Athanasius"), John Williams (as "Bishop Gregor"). Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content