- (1927 - 1946) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1927) Stage Play: Porgy. Written by Dorothy Heyward and DuBose Heyward. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian [earliest Broadway credit]. Guild Theatre: 10 Oct 1927- Aug 1928 (closing date unknown/367 performances). Cast: Jack Carter (as "Crown"), Peter Clark (as "Jim"), Stanley DeWolfe (as "A Dectective"), Evelyn Ellis (as "Crown's Bess"), Lloyd Gray, Georgette Harvey (as "Maria"), Wesley Hill (as "Jake"), Richard Huey (as "Mingo") [Broadway debut], Rose MacClendon (as "Serena"), Ella Madison, Maurice McRae (as "Policeman"), Garrett Minturn (as "The Coroner"), Dorothy Paul (as "Lily"), Hayes Pryor (as "Peter"), Hugh Rennie (as "Policeman"), Percy Verwayne (as "Sporting Life"), Leigh Whipper (as "The Crab Man"), Frank H. Wilson (as "Porgy"), Marie Young (as "Clara"). Produced by The Theatre Guild. Note: this was the original non-musical version.
- (1929) Stage Play: Porgy. (Revival). Written by Dorothy Heyward and DuBose Heyward. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian. Martin Beck Theatre: 13 Sep 1929- Oct 1929 (unknown closing date/34 performances). Cast: Jack Carter (as "Crown"), Peter Clark (as "Jim"), A.B. DeComathiere (as "Simon Frazier") [credited as A.B. Comatheire], Evelyn Ellis (as "Crown's Bess"), Georgette Harvey (as "Maria"), Wallace Hill (as "Scipio"), Wesley Hill (as "Jake"), Richard Huey (as "Mingo"), Felix Jacoves (as "Policeman"), Rose MacClendon (as "Serena"), Ella Madison, Morris McKenny, Garrett Minturn (as "The Coroner"), Dorothy Paul (as "Lily"), Hayes Pryor (as "Peter"), Wayland Rudd (as "Nelson"), Erskine Sanford (as "Alan Archdale"), Frederick Smith (as "A Dectective"), Edna Thomas, Percy Verwayne (as "Sporting Life"), Walter Warner, Leigh Whipper, Frank H. Wilson (as "Porgy"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1930) Stage Play: Solid South. Comedy-satire. Written by Lawton Campbell. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian. Lyceum Theatre: 14 Oct 1930- Nov 1930 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Richard Bennett, Bette Davis, Owen Davis Jr. (as "Rex"), Georgette Harvey (as "Patience"), Richard Huey (as "Elijah"), Moffat Johnston, Jessie Royce Landis (as "Leila Mae"), Elizabeth Patterson, Lew Payton. Produced by Alexander McKaig.
- (1930) Stage Play: Five Star Final. Melodrama. Written by Louis Weitzenkorn. Cort Theatre: 30 Dec 1930- Jun 1931 (closing date unknown/175 performances). Cast: Sydney Booth (as "Mr. Arthur Loveland Weeks"), Lillian Bronson (as "Exchange Operator"), Arthur Byron (as "Randall"), King Calder (as "Philip Weeks"), Berton Churchill (as "Hinchecliffe"), Frank Dae (as "Brannegan"), Kenneth (as "Dana Colby"), Mike D'Arcy (as "A Policeman"), Amy Dennis (as "Pearl"), Malcolm Duncan (as "Michael Townsend"), Frances Fuller (as "Jenny Townsend"), Georgette Harvey (as "Minerva"), Fred House (as "Undertaker"), Richard Huey (as "Harold"), Laurie Jacques (as "Luella Carmody"), Allen Jenkins (as "Ziggie Feinstein"), P.J. Kelly (as "Jerry"), Alvin Kerr (as "Arthur"), Kathryn Keyes (as "Mrs. Arthur Loveland Weeks"), Bruce MacFarlane (as "Rooney"), Merle Maddern (as "Nancy Voorhees Townsend"), Madeleine Marshall (as "Miss Edwards"), Dorothy McElhone (as "Trixie"), Alexander Onslow (as "Rev. T. Vernon Isopod"), Henry Sherwood (as "French"), Helen Sinnott [credited as Helene Sinnott] (as "Miss Taylor"). Produced by A.H. Woods. Note: Filmed by First National Pictures (Warner Bros.) as Five Star Final (1931) (directed by Mervyn LeRoy).
- (1932) Stage Play: Wild Waves. Comedy. Written by William Ford Manley. Directed by Worthington Miner. Times Square Theatre: 19 Feb 1932- Mar 1932 (closing date unknown/25 performances). Cast: Wallace Acton (as "Chauffeur") [Broadway debut], Violet Barney, St. Clair Bayfield, John Beal, Helen Blair, Stuart Brown, Maurice Cass (as "Dr. Hammerhoch"), Irene Cattell (as "Battle Sister"), Dan Charlier, Edward Craven, Gerald Davis, William Friend, George Graham, Jessie Graham, Edith Gravetta, Richard Huey (as "Harold"), Larry Jason, Mary Kemble, Alvin Kerr, Joseph King, Bruce MacFarlane, Fred Malcolm, Bertram Marburgh (as "Dr. Podmore"), Neil McFee, Horace McMahon (as "Gus"), Charles O'Connor (as "Potter, Ward Heeler"), Osgood Perkins (as "Mitch Gratwick"), Paul Porter (as "Brix"), Roger Ramsdell, Anne Revere, Jack Rigo, Mary Robinson, Robert Shayne, Frances Simon, Horace Sinclair (as "Mr. Thwacker"), Betty Starbuck, Charles Thompson, Virginia Tracy, Edith Van Cleve (as "Miss Croft"), Frank Verigun, Tallulah Wesley. Produced by Doran, Ray and Hewes.
- (1935) Stage Play: Three Men on a Horse. Comedy. Written by George Abbott and John Cecil Holm. Directed by George Abbott. Playhouse Theatre (moved to Fulton Theatre in Nov 1936- close): 30 Jan 1935- 9 Jan 1937 (835 performances). Cast: Joyce Arling, Shirley Booth (as "Mabel"), Frank Camp, Teddy Hart (as "Frankie"), Richard Huey (as "Moses"), Garson Kanin (as "Al"), James Lane, Sam Levene (as "Patsy"), William H. Lynn (as "Erwin Trowbridge"), Millard Mitchell (as "Charlie"), J. Ascher Smith, Susan Smithers, Edith Van Cleve, Fleming Ward (as "Clarence Dobbins"), Nick Wiger. Replacement actors: Jack Arnold (as "Al"), Gloria Blondell (as "Hotel Maid"), Louise Campbell (as "Hotel Maid"), Edward Craven (as "Frankie"), Len Doyle (as "Patsy"), Clifford Dunston (as "Clarence Dobbins"), Kathleen Fitz (as "Gloria"), Ross Hertz (as "Frankie"), Ruth Lee (as "Mabel"), Kay Loring (as "Audrey Trowbridge"), Horace McMahon (as "Charlie"), Katherine Squire (as "Audrey Trowbridge"), Ezra Stone (as "Al"). Produced by Alex Yokel. Note: Filmed by Warner Bros. as Three Men on a Horse (1936), Drei Mann auf einem Pferd (1957), Trois hommes sur un cheval (1969).
- (1937) Stage Play: Brown Sugar. Melodrama. Incidental music by Haven Johnson. Written by Bernie Angus. Directed by George Abbott. Biltmore Theatre: 2 Dec 1937- 4 Dec 1937 (4 performances). Produced by George Abbott.
- (1938) Stage Play: Sing Out the News. Musical revue. Music by Harold Rome. Lyrics by Harold Rome. Sketches by Charles Friedman (who also directed). Uncredited book doctoring by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart. Ballet music by Will Irwin. Musical Director: Max Meth. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Choreographed by Ned McGurn, Dave Gould and Charles Walters. "Peace and the Diplomat" staged by Charles Walters, Music Box Theatre: 24 Sep 1938- 7 Jan 1939 (105 performances). Cast included: June Allyson (as "Time-The Present", "The Performer", "Class of 1938/Minstrels") [Broadway debut], Bruce Barclay, John Barry, Add Bates, John Benton, Daisy Bernier, The Boys of Today, Ethel Brown, Lillyn Brown, Sibol Cain, Warren Coleman, Traverse Crawford, Fred Deming, Elizabeth Dozier, R. Dupler, Eleanor Eberle, Sally Ellis, Joey Faye, The Floradora Girls, Dorothy Fox, Miriam Franklin, Jane Fraser, Joel Friend, Chick Gagnon, Ortho Gaines, Ed Galloway, Will Geer, Rosalind Gordon, Ray Harrison, Ben Holmes, Richard Huey, Rex Ingram, Cecil Jackson, Georgia Jarvis, George Jones Jr., Gus Jones, Charles Lawrence, Kathryn Lazell, Thelma Lee, Carrington Lewis, Harry Lewis, Lewis and Van, James Lillard, Christina Lind, Leslie Litomy, Philip Loeb, Michael Loring, Henrietta Lovelace, Jimmy Lydon, Shirley Macy, Wanda Macy, Ginger Manners, Elizabeth McDowell, Estelle McDowell, Sadie McGill, Elmaurice Miller, Tomas Mitchell, Michael Moore, Fred Nay, B. Norris, Bernard Pearce, Jean Peters, Jackie Petty, Burton Pierce, Ethel Remey, Bruce Rogers, Ben Ross, Hazel Scott, Hiram Sherman, Maude Simmons, Edwin Smith, Herbert Sumpter, Grant Thomas, Sonny Timmons, Allen Tinney, William Tinney, The Virginians, Ben Walles, Mary Jane Walsh, Howard Warriner, Clarence Wheeler, Madelyn White, Louie Williams, Lucille Williams, Musa Williams, Mae Williamson, Maud Williamson, Lucille Wilson, Howard Woodford. Produced by Max Gordon, in association with George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart.
- (1941) Stage Play: Sunny River. Musical. Music by Sigmund Romberg. Book by Oscar Hammerstein II. Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. Supervised by John Murray Anderson. Choreographed by Carl Randall. Directed by Oscar Hammerstein II. St. James Theatre: 4 Dec 1941- 3 Jan 1941 (36 performances). Produced by Max Gordon.
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