- (1903 - 1941) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1903) Stage Play: The Evil That Men Do. Melodrama. Written by Theodore Kremer. American Theatre: 29 Aug 1903- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown. Produced by Sam Harris [earliest Broadway credit] and Frank E. Woods [earliest Broadway credit].
- (1904) Stage Play: The Errand Boy. Musical comedy. Book by George Totten Smith. Musical Director: Edwin L. Walker. Featuring songs with lyrics by Edward P. Moran. Haverly's 14th Street Theatre: 31 Oct 1904- 5 Nov 1904 (8 performances). Cast: M.J. Anderson, William Arcall, Rose Beaumont, Clem Bevans, May Bishop, Florence Brooks, Maud Cecil, W.S. Cetti, Charles Clovet, Marguerite Cogan, Dave Coogan, Helena DaNourie, Dave Davis, Abbot Davison, Sylvia Diamond, Frank C. Evans, Ida Gerard, Rose Gilday, Amy Gillette, Edith Hart, William S. Hart (as "R.T.D. Boggs"), Lola Hilton, Francis King, Blanche Latell, William Lawrence, Mary Lloyd, Marcia Loraine, Joe Mack, Agnes Marsh, Lilyan Marsh, J.A. Mullen, Pauline Pearl, Kitty Pope, Charles Saxon, E.R. Scrimshaw, Frankie Seymour, Lizzie Southwalk, Richard Stubbs, Florinne Sweetman, Mark Tomsen, Billie B. Van, Gladys Walker, Stella Warner, Nettie Wheeler, W.E. Whitehall. Produced by Sam Harris, Frank E. Woods and P.H. Sullivan.
- (1904) Stage Play: Little Johnny Jones. Musical. Music by George M. Cohan. Book by George M. Cohan. Lyrics by George M. Cohan. Directed by George M. Cohan. Liberty Theatre: 7 Nov 1904- 24 Dec 1904 (25 performances). Cast: Unknown. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1905) Stage Play: Little Johnny Jones. Musical (revival). Music by George M. Cohan. Book by George M. Cohan. Lyrics by George M. Cohan. Directed by George M. Cohan. New York Theatre: 8 May 1905- 26 Aug 1905 (128 performances). Cast: Unknown. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1905) Stage Play: Little Johnny Jones. Musical (revival). Music by George M. Cohan. Book by George M. Cohan. Lyrics by George M. Cohan. Directed by George M. Cohan. New York Theatre: 13 Nov 1905- 2 Dec 1905 (25 performances). Cast: Unknown. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1921) Stage: Produced "The Music Box Revue" on Broadway. Musical revue. Music by Irving Berlin (also in cast). Directed by Hassard Short. Music Box Theatre: 22 Sep 1921-30 Sep 1922 (closing date unknown/440 performances). Cast included: Aleta, Wilda Bennett, Sam Bernard, Hugh Cameron, William Collier, Ivy Sawyer.
- (1921) Stage: Produced "Captain Applejack" on Broadway (1921). Farce. Written / directed by Walter C. Hackett. Cort Theatre: 30 Dec 1921-Jun 1922 (closing date unknown/195 performances). Cast included: Ferdinand Gottschalk, Marie Wainwright.
- (1906) Stage: Produced (w/George M. Cohan, also writer) "Popularity" on Broadway. Comedy. Wallack's Theatre: 1 Oct 1906-Oct 1906 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast included: Harriet Ross, Edgar Selwyn, Howard Stevens. NOTE: This is the play somewhat satirized in Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) as being a "bad play."
- (1922) Stage: Produced "Music Box Revue" on Broadwlay. Music by Irving Berlin. Directed by Hassard Short. Music Box Theatre: 23 Oct 1922-4 Aug 1923 (330 performances).
- (1907) Stage: Produced (w/George M. Cohan, who also directed / wrote book / music / lyrics) "George Washington, Jr." on Broadway [return engagement]. Musical. New York Theatre (moved to The Grand Opera House from 18 Mar 1907-close): 11 Feb 1907-Mar 1907 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: George M. Cohan, Helen Cohan, Jerry Cohan, Joseph Butin, Mary Gildea, Frank McNish.
- (1907) Stage: Produced "The Honeymooners" on Broadway. Musical/farce. Written / directed by George M. Cohan. Aerial Gardens: 3 Jun 1907-24 Aug 1907 (72 performances). cast included: George M. Cohan, Helen Cohan, Jerry Cohan, Gertrude Hoffman, Liola Rhodes, Howard Stevens, Jack Webster.
- (1907) Stage: Produced (w/George M. Cohan) "The Talk of New York" on Broadway. Musical. Orchestra under the direction of Gus Kleinecke. Book / music / lyrics / directed by George M. Cohan. Music orchestrated by Charles J. Gebest. Knickerbocker Theatre (moved to the Grand Opera House on 20 Apr 1908 to close): 3 Dec 1907-27 Sep 1908 (173 performances). Cast included: Victor Moore, Gertie Vanderbilt.
- (1922) Stage: Produced "Secrets" on Broadway. Comedy/drama. Written by 'Rudolf Besier' (q) and 'Mary Eddington'. Directed by Sam Forrest. Fulton Theatre: 25 Dec 1922-May 1923 (closing date unknown/168 performances). Cast included: Norman Houston, Allen Jenkins, Beatrice Kay.
- (1923) Stage: Produced "Icebound" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Owen Davis. Directed by Sam Forrest. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 10 Feb 1923-Jun 1923 (closing date unknown/145 performances). Cast included: Edna May Oliver.
- (1908) Stage: Produced (w/George M. Cohan) "Cohan and Harris Minstrels" on Broadway. Musical/minstrel & burlesque. Written by George M. Cohan. New York Theatre: 3 Aug 1908-22 Aug 1908 (24 performances).
- (1908) Stage: Produced (w/George M. Cohan) "The American Idea" on Broadway. Based on a book by / directed by George M. Cohan. New York Theatre: 5 Oct 1908-28 Nov 1908 (64 performances).
- (1909) Stage: Produced (w/George M. Cohan) "The House Next Door" on Broadway. Written by J. Hartley Manners. Based on "Die Von Hochsatte" by Ludwig Weller and Leo Walther Stein. Directed by Felix Edwardes. Gaiety Theatre: 12 Apr 1909-Jun 1909 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Ruth Chester, Charles Dieam, J.E. Dodson, Thomas Findlay, A.T. Hendon, Regan Hughston, William J. Kelley, Fania Marinoff, Eleanor Moretti, Mabel Roebuck, W.H. Sams, Herbert Standing.
- (1909) Stage Play: Cohan and Harris Minstrels. Musical/minstrel. Featuring songs by George M. Cohan. New York Theatre: 16 Aug 1909- 28 Aug 1909 (16 performances). Cast: Arthur Alexander, Earl Benham, Vaughn Comfort, George Evans, John King, Sam Lee, Clarence Marks, Will Oakland, John P. Rogers, Thomas Scott, Harry Van Fossen. Produced by Sam Harris and George M. Cohan.
- (1909) Stage Play: The Fortune Hunter. Comedy. Written by Winchell Smith. Directed by Winchell Smith. Gaiety Theatre: 4 Sep 1909- Jul 1910 (closing date unknown/345 performances). Cast: Sidney Ainsworth [final Broadway role], John Barrymore (as "Nathaniel Duncan"), John Charles Brownell, Eda Bruna, Charles H. Crosby, Edward Ellis, Charles Fisher, Hale Hamilton (as "Henry Kellogg"), Walter Horton, Kathryn Marshall, James Montgomery, Edgar Nelson, Forrest Robinson (as "Mr. Graham"), David Rosenthal, Mary Ryan, John Sutherland, George Loane Tucker. Produced by Cohan & Harris [George M. Cohan and Sam Harris]. Notes: (1) One of the most successful pre-WWI Broadway productions. (2) Filmed as The Fortune Hunter (1927), The Fortune Hunter (1920), The Fortune Hunter (1914), Broadway Television Theatre: The Fortune Hunter (#1.7)" (1952)).
- (1909) Stage: Produced (w/George M. Cohan) "The Man Who Owns Broadway" on Broadway. Musical. New York Theatre: 11 Oct 1909-29 Jan 1910 (128 performances). Enormous cast included: Grace Beaumont, Beatrice Bertrand, Raymond Hitchcock.
- (1910) Stage Play: Get-Rich-Quick Wallingford.
- (1910) Stage Play: The Aviator. Written by James Montgomery. Astor Theatre: 6 Dec 1910- Jan 1911 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Cast: Ed Begley [credited as Edward Begley], Cantor Brown, William P. Connery, Robert Conness, Frank Currier, Jack Devereaux, Wallace Eddinger (as "Robert Street"), Ford Fenimore, Emily Lytton, Christine Norman, William Offerman, Frederick Paulding, Samuel Reed, Edythe Thorne, Oza Waldrop, Richard Webster. Produced by Cohan & Harris [George M. Cohan and Sam Harris]. Note: Filmed by Douglas MacLean Productions [distributed by Associated Exhibitors] as Going Up (1923), by Warner Bros. as The Aviator (1929) [presumed lost as of Jun 2014], by Warner Bros. as L'aviateur (1931) [French language version], and by Warner Bros. as Going Wild (1930).
- The Little Millionaire (1911). Musical/farce. Book/music/lyrics by George M. Cohan. Musical Director: Karl Weixelbaum. Ensembles and drills staged by James Gorman. Directed by George M. Cohan. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 25 Sep 1911- 9 Mar 1912 (192 performances). Cast: Maud Allen, Earl Benham, George M. Cohan (as "Robert Spooner"), Helen Cohan, Jerry Cohan, Donald Crisp (as "Edward Plumber/Rudolph"), William Ford, Sydney Jarvis, Jack Klendon, Tom Lewis, Amy Mortimer, George Parsons, Julia Ralph (as "Berdina Busby"), Lila Rhodes, Dore Rogers, Charles W. Weil, Josephine Whittell.
- The Only Son (1911). Written by Winchell Smith. Gaiety Theatre: 16 Oct 1911- Nov 1911 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Produced by Sam Harris and George M. Cohan.
- The Red Widow (1911). Produced by Sam Harris and George M. Cohan.
- Officer 666 (1912).
- Forty-five Minutes from Broadway (1912). (Revival).
- The Big Fight (1928). Drama. Written by Milton Herbert Gropper and 'Max Marcin'. Directed by David Belasco. Majestic Theatre: 18 Sep 1928- Oct 1928 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast included: Jack Dempsey, Victor Kilian, Harry Stubbs, 'Estelle Taylor', Shirley Wynne. Produced by Sam Harris and Albert Lewis.
- The Spider (1928). Melodrama (revival). Written by Fulton Oursler and Lowell Brentano. Directed by Albert Lewis. Century Theatre: 27 Feb 1928- Mar 1928 (closing date unknown/16 performances).
- The Jazz Singer (1927). Drama/comedy (revival). Written by Samson Raphaelson. Directed by Albert Lewis. Century Theatre: 18 Apr 1927-May 1927 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast included: Sam Jaffe, George Jessel [as "Jack Robin"), George Shafer. Produced by Sam Harris and Albert Lewis.
- The Spider (1927). Mystery/melodrama. Written by Fulton Oursler and Lowell Brentano. Directed by Albert Lewis. Chanin's 46th Street Theatre (moved to The Music Box Theatre on 13 Jun 1927 to close): 22 Mar 1927- Dec 1927 (closing date unknown/319 performances). Produced by Sam Harris and Albert Lewis.
- Chicago (1926). Comedy. Written by Maurine Dallas Watkins. Directed by George Abbott. Music Box Theatre: 30 Dec 1926- May 1927 (closing date unknown/172 performances). Cast: George W. Anspeak, Robert Barrat (as "Martin S. Harrison"), Charles Bickford (as "Jake"), Ferike Boros, Doan Borrup (as "Fred Casely"), George Cowell, Juliette Crosby, Carl De Mal, Edward Ellis, Edith Fitzgerald (as "Go-To-Hell Kitty"), Charles Halton (as "Amos Hart"), Eda Heinemann (as "Mary Sunshine"), Charles Kuhn, George Lanning, Francine Larrimore (as "Roxie Hart"), Al Milliken, James C. Pall, Thomas Poland, Charles Slattery, G. Albert Smith, Dorothy Stickney (as "Liz"), Wilma Thompson, Milano Tilden, Arthur Vinton (as "Babe"), Isabelle Winlocke, Vincent York.
- Loose (1926). Drama. Written and directed by Don Titheradge'. Ritz Theatre: 1 Nov 1926- Dec 1926 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast included: 'Stanley Logan (I)', Dion Titheradge. Produced by Sam Harris.
- Gentle Grafters (1926). Written by Owen Davis. Directed by Sam Forrest. Music Box Theatre: 27 Oct 1926- Nov 1926 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast included: Charlotte Granville, Robert Keith, Morgan Wallace. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1926) Stage: Produced "We Americans" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Milton Herbert Gropper and Max Siegel. Directed by Sam Forrest. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 12 Oct 1926-Jan 1927 (closing date unknown/118 performances). Cast included: Luther Adler, Jules Bennett, Morris Strassberg, Josephine When.
- The Cocoanuts (1925). Musical comedy. Music by Irving Berlin. Based on material by George S. Kaufman. Directed by Sammy Lee and Oscar Eagle. Lyric Theatre: 8 Dec 1925- Nov 1926 (closing date unknown/377 performances). Cast: Chico Marx, Groucho Marx, Zeppo Marx, Jack Barker, Margaret Dumont, Georgie Hale', Basil Ruysdael, Janet Velie, Henry Whittemore, Frances Williams, Mabel Withee. Produced by Sam Harris. Note: Filmed as The Cocoanuts (1929).
- Paid (1925). Written and directed by Sam Forrest. Booth Theatre: 25 Nov 1925- Dec 1925 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast included: Roger Pryor' (qv, Herbert Saunders, Katherine Wilson. Produced by Sam Harris.
- Animal Crackers (1928). Musical comedy. Material by George S. Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind. Music and lyrics by Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby. Musical Direction by Gus Salzer. Musical Direction by Russell Markert. Drected by Oscar Eagle. 44th Street Theatre: 23 Oct 1928- 6 Apr 1929 (191 performances). Cast: Bernice Ackerman, Albert Amato, Ivena Baker, Jack Bauer, Allan Blair, Billie Blake, Hazel Boffinger, William Bradley, Cleo Brown, Muriel Buck, Mildred Burkhardt, Helene Cambridge, Gertrude Cole, Annette Davies, Kay Donegan, Margaret Dumont (as "Mrs. Rittenhouse"), John Elliott, Walton Ford, Helen Fowble, Janice Glenn, Alyse Green, Robert Greig (as "Hives"), Mildred Hatfield, Gerry Hoffman, Gypsy Hollis, Margaret Irving, Genevieve Kent, Dorothy Knowlton, Jewel LaKota, Preston Lewis, Arthur Lipson (as "M. Doucet"), Serrita Lorraine, Dorothy Marmon, Maxine Marshall, Chico Marx (as "Emanuel Ravelli"), Groucho Marx (as "Captain Spalding"), Harpo Marx (as "The Professor"), Zeppo Marx (as "Jamison"), Bert Mathews, Eleanor McCabe, Florine Meyers, Virginia Meyers, Lucille Milam, Marcelle Miller, Louise Mills, Marie Musselle, Irma Nicholas, Pat O'Keefe, Mary O'Rourke, Hermes Pan (as "Ensemble"), Harry Pederson, Bobbie Perkins, Patricia Pursley, Marty Rhiele, Aileen Shaw, Helene Sheldon, Erma Shy, Louis Sorin, Virginia Stone, Audrey Volmer, Florence Wall, George Wallace, Milton Watson, Alpha Wellemkotter, Frances Wise, Thelma Witzig, Alice Wood, Jessica Worth. Produced by Sam Harris.
- Congai (1928). Written by Harry Hervey (based on his novel) and Carleton Hildreth. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 27 Nov 1928- Mar 1929 (closing date unknown/135 performances). Cast included: Frank De Silva, John T. Dwyer, Ara Gerald, Helen Menken, Charles Trowbridge, Harold Woolf. Produced by Sam Harris.
- The Marriage Bed (1929). Drama. Written by Ernest Pascal. Directed by Robert Milton. Booth Theatre: 7 Jan 1929- Mar 1929 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast included: Alan Dinehart, Harriet E. MacGibbon, Edwin Stanley, Ernest Wood. Produced by Sam Harris.
- Of Thee I Sing (1931). Musical comedy. Based on material by George S. Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind. Music by George Gershwin. Lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Musical Director: Charles Previn. Music orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett and William Daly. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Choreography by Chester Hale. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Music Box Theatre (moved to The 46th Street Theatre from 10 Oct 1932 to close): 26 Dec 1931- 14 Jan 1933 (441 performances). Cast: Ruth Adams, Dave Allman, Florenz Ames (as "The French Ambassador"), Kathleen Ayres, Bruce Barclay, Vivian Barry, Charles Bennett, Leslie Bingham (as "Nora"), Grace Brinkley, Bobbie Brodsley, Robert Burton, Martha Carroll, Mary Carroll, Ray Clarke, Dudley Clements (as "Matthew Arnold Fulton"), Charles Conklin, Tom Curley, Dorothy Donnelly (as "Ensemble"), Tom Draak, Leon Dunar, Ann Ecklund, Frank Erickson, Jack Fago, Michael Forbes, Olgene Foster, Virginia Franck, Frank Gagen, William Gaxton (as "John P. Wintergreen"), Dorothy Graves, Yvonne Gray, Peggy Greene, Sulo Hevonpaa, Walter Hinger, Milton Hollander, Georgette Lampsi, Terry Lawlor, David Lawrence, Martin Le Roy, Jack Linton, Lillian Lorray, George E. Mack (as "Senator Robert E. Lyons"), Martha Maggard, Sam Mann, Mary Mascher, John McCahill, Charles McClelland, Jake Vander Meulen, Frank Miller, Harold Moffet (as "Francis X. Gilhooley"), Victor Moore (as "Alexander Throttlebottom"), Lois Moran, George Murphy (as "Sam Jenkins"), Richard Neely, Hazzard Newberry, June O'Dea, Anita Pam, Jack Ray, Ralph Riggs, Edward H. Robins, Billie Seward, Pete Shance, Grenna Sloane, Adele Smith, Barbara Smith, Baun Sturtz, Peggy Thomas, Patricia Whitney, Jessica Worth. Produced by Sam Harris. Note: One of the few big hits of the dismal 1932 Broadway theatrical season.
- The Amorous Antic (1929). Farce. Written and directed by 'Ernest Pascal'. Theatre Masque: 2 Dec 1929- Dec 1929 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast included: Frank Morgan, Alan Mowbray. Produced by Sam Harris.
- June Moon (1928). Musical comedy. Written by Ring Lardner and George S. Kaufman. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Broadhurst Theatre: 23 Oct 1928- Apr 1929 (closing date unknown/273 performances). Cast included: Jean Dixon, Philip Loeb, Lee Patrick, Harry Rosenthal, Linda Watkins. Produced by Sam Harris.
- Once in a Lifetime (1930). Comedy. Written by Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Music Box Theatre: 24 Sep 1920- Sep 1931 (unknown closing date/406 performances). Cast: Frances E. Brandt (as "Mrs. Walker"), Jane Buchanan (as "A Voice Pupil"), Spring Byington (as "Helen Hobart"), George Casselberry (as "One of Three Scenario Writers"), Payson Crane (as "Bellboy"), Louis Cruger (as "Weisskopf"), Janet Currie (as "Phyllis Fontaine"), Jean Dixon (as "May Daniels"), Walter Dreher (as "Rudolph Kammerling"), Marie Ferguson (as "Miss Fontaine's Maid"), Stanley Fitzpatrick (as "Page"), Eugenie Frontai (as "Florabel Leigh"), Harold Grau (as "Mr. Flick"), Charles Halton (as "Herman Glogauer"), Virginia Hawkins (as "Miss Chasen"), John O. Hewitt (as "Electrician"), George S. Kaufman (as "Lawrence Vail"), Marc Loebell (as "Ernest"), Edward Loud (as "Miss Leigh's Chauffeur / Leading Man"), Charles Mack (as "Miss Fontaine's Chauffer"), Georgia MacKinnon (as "Script Girl"), Burton Mallory (as "One of Three Scenario Writers"), Leona Maricle (as "Miss Leighton"), William McFadden (as "Meterstein"), Edwin Mills (as "Page"), Grant Mills (as "Jerry Hyland"), Irving Morrow (as "Bishop"), Hugh O'Connell (as "George Lewis"), Sally Phipps (as "Susan Walker"), Oscar Polk (as "Porter"), Kempton Race (as "One of Three Scenario Writers"), Robert Ryder (as "George's Secretary"), Otis Schaefer (as "Coat Check Girl"), Dorothy Talbot (as "Miss Leigh's Maid"), Frances Thress (as "Bridesmaid"), Clara Waring (as "Cigarette Girl"), Jack Williams (as "Electrician"). Produced by Sam Harris.
- Just to Remind You (1931). Drama. Written by Owen Davis. Directed by Melville Burke. Broadhurst Theatre: 7 Sep 1931- Sep 1931 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast included: Jerome Cowan, Paul Kelly. Produced by Sam Harris.
- Oh, Promise Me (1930). Comedy/farce. Written and directed by Howard Lindsay and Bertrand Robinson. Morosco Theatre: 24 Nov 1930- Mar 1931 (closing date unknown/145 performances). Cast included: Donald Meek, Lee Tracy. Produced by Sam Harris.
- Here Today (1932). Comedy. Written by George Oppenheimer [earliest Broadway credit]. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 6 Sep 1932- Oct 1932 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: Sally Bates (as "Claire Windrew"), Charles D. Brown (as "Stanley Dale"), Geoffrey Bryant (as "Jeffrey Windrew"), Ruth Gordon (as "Mary Hilliard"), Charlotte Granville (as "Mrs. Windrew"), Donald MacDonald (as "Philip Graves"), Paul McGrath (as "Spencer Grant"), Elizabeth Taylor (as "Gertrude"). Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1932) Stage Play: Dinner at Eight. Comedy. Written by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber. Assistant Director: Robert B. Sinclair. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Music Box Theatre: 22 Oct 1932-May 1933 (closing date unknown/232 performances). Cast: George Alison, Ann Andrews, Clarence Bellair, Marguerite Churchill, Constance Collier, Margaret Dale (as "Hattie Loomis"), Malcolm Duncan, Austin Fairman, Janet Fox, Gregory Gaye, Robert Griffith, Paul Harvey, Vera Hurst, Ethel Intropidi, Sam Levene (as "Max Kane"), Frank Manning, William McFadden, Mary Murray, Hans Robert (as "Ed Loomis"), Cesar Romero (as "Ricci"), James Seeley (as "The Waiter"), Conway Tearle, Dorothy Waters, Judith Wood (as "Kitty Packard"), Olive Wyndham (as "Lucy Talbot") [final Broadway role]. Produced by Sam Harris. Note: Filmed as Dinner at Eight (1933), Dinner at Eight (1989), Dinner at Eight (2007).
- Face the Music (1932). Musical comedy revue. Book by Moss Hart. Lyrics and 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, 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 Van Noy, Mary Grace Van Noy, Dorothy Waller, Teddy West, Jack Wolfe, Dan Wyler.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content