- (1905 - 1947) Performed in the following Broadway productions:
- (1905) Stage Play: The Land of Heart's Desire/Kathleen ni Houlihan/The Hour Glass.
- (1905) Stage Play: The Countess Cathleen. Written by William Butler Yeats. Book adaption by Bayard Veiller. Hoyt's Theatre: 28 Mar 1905- 31 Mar 1905 (2 performances). Cast: Adelaide Alexander, John De Persia, Charles Gibney, Caryl Gillin, Carolyn Leavitt-Jones, Willard McKegney, Caroline Newcombe, Frederick Soltys, Florence Stewart, Bayard Veiller, Arthur Watson, Howard Wilson. Produced by Bayard Veiller.
- (1906) Stage Play: Cashel Byron (Revival). Written by Hugh Stanislaus Stange. Based on the novel by George Bernard Shaw. Directed by Hugh Stanislaus Stange. Daly's Theatre: 8 Jan 1906- 20 Jan 1906 (16 performances). Cast: James J. Corbett, Lionel Adams, Sydney Blow, John C. Dixon, Maude Giroux, Alice Leigh, Kate Lester, Marion Little, Luke Martin, Herbert McKenzie, Frank Opperman, Charles Sturgis, May Tulley, Margaret Wycherly. Produced by Henry B. Harris.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Primrose Path. Written by Bayard Veiller. Directed by Ferdinand Gottschalk and Charles Sinclair. Majestic Theatre: 6 May 1907- May 1907 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Helen Ashton, Edna Barbour, Minnette Barrett, Dolly Chester, Phoebe Creighton, Mabel Duffy, Caroline Harris, Vera Irving, Robert Jackson, John Kloville, Ralph Lewis, Sheldon Lewis, Charles Reigel, Sarah Whiteford, Margaret Wycherly (as "Joan Treghenna"). Produced by Bayard Veiller.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Shirkers. [repertory production]. Written by C.M.S. McLellan. Note: This production rotated in conjunction with a number of other plays, including "Washington's First Defeat" and "The Spy of the Government" that appeared on Broadway (actual venue unknown) from mid-October 1907 into early December 1907.
- (1907) Stage Play: Candida. Comedy (revival). Written by George Bernard Shaw. Berkeley Lyceum Theatre: 11 Dec 1907- Jan 1908 (closing date unknown/30 performances). Cast: Holbrook Blinn, Harold M. Cheshire, Arnold Daly, Herbert Standing, Helen Ware, Margaret Wycherly (as "Candida"). Produced by Arnold Daly Repertory.
- (1910) Stage Play: The Blue Bird. Written by Maurice Maeterlinck. New Theatre (moved to The Majestic Theatre from 8 Nov 1910- close): 1 Oct 1910- 21 Jan 1911 (unknown performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow, Ethel Brandon, Irene Brown, Claribel Campbell, Eleanor Carey, Louise Closser Hale, 'Pedro De Cordoba' (as "Fire"), Berta Donn, Claiborne Foster, Emmett Hampton, Robert E. Homans, Gladys Hulette, Giorgio Majeroni, Martha McGraw 'Robert McWade', Eleanor Moretti Jr., Nat Nazarro Gwendolyn Valentine, Elizabeth H. Von Sell, Jacob Wendell, Cecil Yapp, Margaret Wycherly (as "Light"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Lady of Dreams. Written by Edmond Rostand. Translated by Louis N. Parker. Hudson Theatre: 28 Feb 1912- Mar 1912 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: A.E. Anson, Charles E. Bunnell, Gordon Burby, F.L. Davis, George Farren, Charles Francis, Horace Greet, Herbert Grigsby, Homer Kidden, Julian L'Estrange, Johnstone May, Mme. Simone, Geoffrey Stein, Joseph Valtin, Horace Weeks, Margaret Wycherly.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Fight. Written by Bayard Veiller. Directed by Bayard Veiller. Fulton Theatre: 31 Oct 1912- Nov 1912 (closing date unknown/4 performances). Cast: Sydney Booth, Harrison Ford, Elene Foster, Edwin Holland, W.F. Jones, Frank Kirk, Ralph Lewis, Ellis Matin, William McVay, Mary Mersch, James Osgood, Beatrice Prentice, George Probert, Burt Robinson, Anna Walker, Thomas Wilson, Margaret Wycherly. Produced by Joseph M. Gaites. Note: Filmed by George W. Lederer Stage Filmotions Inc. [distributed by World Film] as The Fight (1915).
- (1913) Stage Play: Damaged Goods (Revival). Written by 'Eugene Brieux' and James Warbasse. Directed by Guy F. Bragdon. Fulton Theatre: 14 Mar 1913- May 1913 (closing date unknown/66 performances). Cast: Richard Bennett, Laura Burt, Grace Elliston, Amelia Gardner, Clarence Handyside (as "The Man"), Wilton Lackaye Jr., Adrienne Morrison [credited as Mabel Morrison], Roberta Taylor, John Warner, Margaret Wycherly (as "The Woman"). Produced by Richard Bennett and Wilton Lackaye Jr. Produced by Richard Bennett and Wilton Lackaye Jr.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Fight. Drama (revival). Written by Bayard Veiller. Hudson Theatre: 2 Sep 1913- Nov 1913 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Margaret Wycherly (as "Jane Thomas"), Ada Boshell , John Dugan, Malcolm Duncan, Margaret Gordon, William Holden, Robert Kegereis, Felix Krembs, Del Le Bar, Edward R. Mawson, William McVay, Clara Mersereau, Frances Stanford, Charles Sturgis, Raymond Van Sickle, Marjorie Wood. Produced by The Estate of Henry B. Harris.
- (1914) Stage Play: The Money Makers. Written by Charles Klein [final Broadway credit during lifetime]. Booth Theatre: 5 Oct 1914- Oct 1914 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Joseph Adelman, Lionel Bevans, Eva Condon, Emmett Corrigan, Alfred Fisher, Echlin Gayer, Walter Kingsford, Felix Krembs, Dodson Mitchell, Eugene O'Brien, Eugene Prazier, Calvin Thomas, Margaret Wycherly. Produced by Selwyn & Co.
- (1916) Stage Play: Caliban of the Yellow Sands. Musical. Written by Percy MacKaye. Directed by Joseph Urban and Richard Orynski. Lewisohn Stadium of City College of New York: 24 May 1916- Jun 1916 (closing date unknown/10 performances). Cast: Beatrice Beckley (as "Anne Page"), Eric Blind (as "Lorenzo/Antony"), Lionel Braham (as "Caliban"), Matthew Briggs (as "War"), Maurice Cass (as "Pandarus"), Viola Compton (as "Mistress Ford"), Cyril Courtney (as "The Banished Duke"), Clifford Devereaux (as "Eros"), John Drew (as "Shakespeare"), Augustin Duncan (as "Horatio"), Fred Eric (as "Romeo/Orlando"), Marion Evenson (as "Charmian/Perdita"), Edward Fielding (as "Death"), Etienne Girardot (as "Sir Hugh Evans"), Gladys Hanson (as "Cressida"), Gareth Hughes (as "Ariel"), Howard Kyle (as "Prospero"), Mary Lawton (as "The Spirit of Time"), Thais Lawton (as "Mistress Page"), Frederick Lewis (as "King Henry The Fifth"), Henry Ludlowe (as "Brutus"), Allan Ross MacDougall (as "Boy"), Clarence Major (as "Jessica/Attendant"), Robert Mantell (as "Hamlet"), Edith Wynne Matthison (as "Miranda"), Emanuel Reicher (as "Ghost of Caesar/Ghost of Hamlet's Father"), Hedwiga Reicher (as "Cleopatra") [final Broadway role], Brigham Royce (as "Lust"), John Sahlveck (as "Lucius"), William H. Sams (as "Marcelius/Jacques"), Margherita Sargent (as "St. Agnes"), George F. Smithfield (as "Adam"), Joseph Sterling (as "Troilus/Florizel"), Joseph Whitmore (as "Sycorax'), Thomas A. Wise' (as "Sir John Falstaff"), Margaret Wycherly (as "Juliet").
- (1916) Stage Play: The Thirteenth Chair. Written by Bayard Veiller. 48th Street Theatre (moved to The Fulton Theatre from 20 Aug 1917- close): 20 Nov 1916- unknown (328 performances). Cast: Rose Aiken (as "Grace Standish"), Eva Condon (as "Mary Eastwood"), Gardner Crane (as "Roscoe Crosby") [final Broadway role], Alice Claire Elliott (as "Elizabeth Erskine"), George Graham (as "Philip Mason"), A.T. Hendon (as "Pollock"), Harrison Hunter (as "Tim Donahue"), Katherine La Salle (as "Helen O'Neill"), Charles Laite (as "Braddish Trent"), Walter P. Lewis (as "Howard Standish"), Martha Mayo (as "Mrs. Crosby"), William Scott (as "Doolan"), Calvin Thomas (as "Will Crosby"), S.K. Walker (as "Edward Wales"), Sarah Whiteford (as "Helen Trent"), Margaret Wycherly (as "Rosalie La Grange"), Walter Young (as "Sergeant Dunn"). Produced by William Harris Sr. and William H. Harris Jr. Note: Filmed by Acme Pictures Corp. as _The Thirteenth Chair (1919 [distributed by Pathe], and remade more notably by MGM as The Thirteenth Chair (1929) [an early talkie].
- (1920) Stage Play: Jane Clegg. Drama. Written by St. John Ervine. Garrick Theatre: 23 Feb 1920- Sep 1920 (closing date unknown/112 performances). Cast: Jean Bailey, Dudley Digges (as "Henry Clegg"), Russell Hewitt, Erskine Sanford (as "Mr. Morrison"), Henry Travers (as "Mr. Munce"), Helen Westley (as "Mrs. Clegg"), Margaret Wycherly (as "Jane Clegg"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1920) Stage Play: Mixed Marriage. Tragedy (revival). Written by St. John Ervine. Bramhall Playhouse: 14 Dec 1920- Apr 1921 (closing date unknown/124 performances). Cast: Augustin Duncan (as "John Rainey"), Harmon MacGregor, Barry Macollum, Angela McCahill, Rollo Peters, Margaret Wycherly (as "Mrs. Rainey").
- (1921) Stage Play: Eyvind of the Hills. Tragedy. Written by Jóhann Sigurjónsson. Directed by Frank Conroy. Greenwich Village Theatre: 28 Feb 1921- Mar 1921 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Charles P. Bates, Byron Beasley, Ed Begley (as "Jon"), Gus Beuerman, Hallem Bosworth, Elfin Finn, Gene Raymond [credited as Raymond Guion] (as "A Shepherd Boy") [Broadway debut], Henry Herbert (as "Arnes"), Arthur Hohl (as "Karl"), Eleanor Johnson, Beatrice Moreland, Lloyd Neal, Helen Olcott, Edmond J. Pardy, Gwendolyn Piers, Helene Russell, Marguerite Tebeau, Margaret Wycherly (as "Halla"). Produced by Conroy and Meltzer.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Verge. Drama.
- (1922) Stage Play: Back to Methuselah. Comedy. Written by George Bernard Shaw. Garrick Theatre: 27 Feb 1922- Mar 1922 (closing date unknown/25 performances). Cast: Walter Abel (as "Acis"), Martha-Bryan Allen, Clelia Benjamin, Albert Bruning (as "Franklyn Barnabas/The Elderly Gentleman"), George Gaul (as "Adam/Napoleon/The Male Figure/The Ghost of Adam"), Stanley Howlett (as "Haslam/The Archbishop of York/Arjillax"), Moffat Johnston (as "Conrad Barnabas/Barnabas, the Accountant/General/The He-Ancient"), A.P. Kaye (as "Joyce-Burge/Burge-Lubin, President of the British Isles/The Envoy/Pygmalion"), Claude King (as "Lubin/Confucius, the Chief Secretary Zozim/Martellus"), Dennis King, Shirley King, Ernita Lascelles, Mary Lawton, Eleanor Woodruff, Margaret Wycherly (as "The Voice of The Serpent/The Parlor Maid/Mrs. Lutestring, the Domestic Minister/The Oracle/The She-Ancient"). Produced by The Theatre Guild. Note: Unusual production directed by different directors.
- (1922) Stage Play: Taboo. Drama.
- (1922) Stage Play: What the Public Wants. Comedy. Written by Arnold Bennett. Directed by Louis Calvert. Garrick Theatre: 1 May 1922- May 1922 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Harry Ashford (as "James Brindley"), Louis Calvert (as "Holt St. John"), Charles Dalton (as "Sir Charles Worgan"), Malcolm Dunn (as "Saul Kendrick"), Emily Fitzroy (as "Mrs. Downes"), George Frenger (as "Samuel Cleland"), Stanley Howlett (as "Simon Macquoid"), Marietta Hyde (as "Mrs. Worgan"), Moffat Johnston (as "John Worgan"), Claude King (as "Francis Worgan"), Shirley King (as "Annie Worgan"), Jane Wheatley (as "Mrs. Cleland"), Margaret Wycherly (as "Emily Vernon"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1922) Stage Play: Six Characters in Search of an Author. Comedy.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Adding Machine. Tragedy. Written by Elmer Rice. Garrick Theatre: 19 Mar 1923- Jul 1923 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: Lewis Barrington (as "Policeman"), Elise Bartlett (as "Judy O'Grady"), Edyth Burnett, Louis Calvert (as "Lieutenant Charles") [final Broadway role], Ruby Craven (as "Mrs. Five"), Dudley Digges (as "Mr. Zero"), Irving Dillon (as "The Boss"), William M. Griffith, Daniel Hamilton, Marcia Harris, Paul Hayes, Gerald Lundegard, Harry McKenna, Edward G. Robinson (as "Shrdlu"), George Stehli (as "Mr. Four"), Therese Stewart (as "Mrs. Two"), Louise Sydmeth (as "Mrs. Six"), Helen Westley (as "Mrs. Zero"), Georgiana Wilson (as "Mrs. Three"), Margaret Wycherly (as "Daisy Diana Dorothea Devore"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1923) Stage Play: Floriani's Wife. Drama. Written by Luigi Pirandello with book adaption by Anne Sprague MacDonald. Directed by Margaret Wycherly and Henry Stillman. Greenwich Village Theate: 13 Oct 1923- Oct 1923 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Marion Beckwith (as "The Widow Naccheri"), Gladys Clarke (as "Barberina/A Nurse"), Jennie A. Eustace (as "Signorina Ernestina Galiffi"), George Bergen George (as "Dr. Roberto Floriani"), Mary Hone (as "Livia Floriani"), Eleanor Hutchison (as "Betta"), Jacques Lebaudy (as "Marco Mauri"), Hamilton MacFadden (as "Roghi") [Broadway debut], Francis Sadtler (as "Don Cesarino"), Harold Webster (as "Don Camillo Zonchi"), Margaret Wycherly (as "Vanna Floriani"). Produced by Cornelia Penfield Lathrop.
- (1924) Stage Play: Six Characters in Search of an Author. Comedy (revival).
- (1925) Stage Play: The Blue Peter. Written by E. Temple Thurston. Directed by Edward Goodman. 52nd Street Theatre: 24 Mar 25- Apr 1925 (closing date unknown/38 performances). Produced by The Stagers. Produced by arrangement with Lumsden Hare.
- (1925) Stage Play: Rosmersholm (Revival).
- (1925) Stage Play: The Devil to Pay. Drama. Written by Herman Heijermans. Translated by Caroline Heijermans-Houwink and Lillian Saunders. Directed by Edward T. Goodman. 52nd Street Theatre: 3 Dec 1925- Dec 1925 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Edwin A. Brown, Margaret Douglass, Whitford Kane (as "Jasper"), Alexander Kirkland, Mary Ricard, Ethel Strickland, Alexander Tiers, Charles Wagenheim, Margaret Wycherly (as "Eva Bonheur"). Produced by The Stagers.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Unchastened Woman. Comedy (revival). Written by Louis K. Anspacher. Directed by Margaret Wycherly and Edward T. Goodman. Princess Theatre: 15 Feb 1926- Mar 1926 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Margaret Douglass, Morgan Farley (as "Lawrence Sanbury"), Arthur Hughes, Josephine Hutchinson (as "Emily Madden"), Violet Kemble Cooper (as "Caroline Knollys"), Henry Mortimer, Lou Ripley, Rita Romilly. Produced by The Stagers.
- (1926) Stage Play: A Proud Woman. Comedy. Written by Arthur Richman. Directed by John Hayden. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 15 Nov 1926- Nov 1926 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Percy Ames, Florence Eldridge (as "Marion Taylor"), Brandon Evans, Madeleine King, John Marston, Anne Morrison, Elisabeth Risdon (as "Julia Cates"), Margaret Wycherly (as "Mrs. Merritt"), Barry O'Moore (as "Wilbur Cates"). Produced by Edgar Selwyn.
- (1927) Stage Play: Set a Thief. Melodrama.
- (1928) Stage Play: Mr. Moneypenny. Comedy. Written by Channing Pollock. Directed by Richard Boleslawski. Liberty Theatre: 17 Oct 1928- Dec 1928 (closing date unknown/61 performances).
- (1929) Stage Play: The Jade God. Drama/mystery. Written by William E. Barry. Based on the novel by Alan Sullivan. Directed by Walter Greenough. Cort Theatre: 13 May 1929- Aug 1929 (closing date unknown/96 performances). Cast: Ronald Dexter, Gwyneth Gordon, Stanley Harrison (as "Inspector Burke"), Phyllis Joyce, Leslie King, H.H. McCollum, Richard Nicholls, Oscar Serlin (as "Peters"), Lyle Stackpole, Margaret Wycherly (as "Perkins"). Produced by Ben Stein.
- (1931) Stage Play: Getting Married. Comedy (revival).
- (1933) Stage Play: Another Language. Comedy. Written by Rose Franken.
- (1933) Stage Play: Another Language. Comedy (revival). Written by Rose Franken. Directed by Arthur J. Beckhard. Waldorf Theatre: 8 May 1933- Jul 1933 (closing date unknown/89 performances). Produced by Arthur J. Beckhard. Note: Produced by MGM as a Robert Montgomery vehicle in 1933 (Ms. Hamilton would reprise her role as Helen Hallam in the film version).
- (1933) Stage Play: Is Life Worth Living? Comedy.
- (1937) Stage Play: A Hero Is Born. Musical. Music by Lehman Engel [credited as A. Lehman Engel]. Written by Theresa Helburn. Based on a fairy tale by Andrew Lang. Lyrics by Agnes Morgan. Musical Director: Alexander Saron. Music orchestrated by Alexander Saron. Production Supervised by Edward Goodman. Directed by Agnes Morgan. Adelphi Theatre: 1 Oct 1937- 27 Nov 1937 (50 performances). Cast: Alfredo Allegro (as "A Courier from the Duke of Kinbabbles/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Hugh Banks (as "Gossiping Guest"), Eleanora Barrie (as "The Fairy of the Sword/Gossiping Guest"), Eleanor Benedikt (as "The Blue Fairy/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Mary Berkeley (as "Duchess of Kinbabbles"), Elizabeth Bilencova (as "The Purple Fairy/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Other Guest"), Doan Borrup [credited as Doan Borup] (as "Baron Grouchogg"), James Bradleigh (as "Gossiping Guest"), Ione Bright The Armored Fairy/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Ronald Brogan (as "First Young Buck/Gossiping Guest"), Marjorie Brown (as "Lady Kathleena"), Robert Bruce (as "Count Piffledown"), Walter Burke (as "A Gentleman of Uncertain Age, Time/William"), Peter Byrne (as "A Manservant"), Camelia Campbell (as "The Rainbow Fairy/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest/Other Guest"), John Christian (as "Antonio, a Page/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Delancey Cleveland (as "A Servant/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Clay Cody (as "Gaston's Chef"), James Coyle (as "First Under Cook/An Unexpected Vistior"), Louis Cruger (as "Another Servitor/Gaston's Waiter/Gossiping Guest"), Muni Diamond (as "A Gourmet/Gossiping Guest"), Jack Egan (as "Alfredo, a Page/Second Young Buck/Gossiping Guest"), David Enton (as "A Prankster"), John Farman (as "Gaston/The Proprietor/Singing Escort"), Elinor Flynn (as "The Gray Fairy/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Cour/A Guest Who Loves Dancing"), Edward Forbes (as "Chief Steward"), Tom Greenway as "Another Servitor/A Prankster"), Anthony Grey (as "Another Servant/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Mollie Hakim (as "Orchestral Trio"), Charles Henderson (as "An Inebriated Patron/Lord Chief Justice"), Paul Jachia [credited as Paul Jacchia] (as "Son/Gossiping Guest"), Jane Jonson (as "The Silver Fairy/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Clarence Kane (as "Second Under Cook/Gaston's Waiter/Gossiping Guest"), Toccoa Lauder (as "Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), George LeSoir (as "Lord Kelso"), Drue Leyton (as "Lady Rosalind"), Claire Lillis (as "Gossiping Guest"), Robert Lowe (as "Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court"), Seymour Malmude (as "Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Isabel Marlyn (as "The Fairy of Flame/Other Guest"), John McCormack (as "Another Servitor/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court"), Lewis McMichael (as "Another Servitor/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Other Guest"), John McNulty (as "A Retainer of Baron Grouchogg/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Other Guest"), Albert McWilliams (as "Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/A Footman"), Helen Morrow (as "Lady Molinda"), Beatrice Olson (as "The White Fairy/A Lady Who Does/Gossiping Guest"), William Phelps (as "Zoroaster/Visitor's Brother"), George Probert (as "A Gentleman Who Should Know Better"), Janet Rathbun (as "Lady Piffledown"), Harry Redding (as "Viscount Piffle"), David Resnikoff as "Nicolo/Page/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Duke of Kinbabbles"), Ethel Reynolds (as "Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Frances Ritchie (as "A Royal Nurse/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Mary Roth (as "The Bubble Fairy/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Charles MacLean (as "Savage Paterfamilias/Gossiping Guest"), Jack Shipman (as "Another Servitor/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Lillian Shrewsbury (as "Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Harry Sothern (as "Thomas Benson"), Raymond Southwick (as "Chief Cook/Gaston's Waiter/Gossiping Guest"), Sylvia St. John (as "Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Minnie Stanley (as "The Black Fairy"), Ben Starkie (as "H.R.H. Prince Prigio"), Lillian Steele (as "The Fairy of Le Rouge et Noir/Mater Familiar"), Donald Stewart (as "A Herald/Gossiping Guest"), Louise Swanson (as "The Star Fairy/Ladies and Gentlemen and Servants of the Court/Gossiping Guest"), Viola Swayne (as "Gossiping Guest"), Frederic Tozere (as "H.M. The King"), Marie Valdez (as "Orchestral Trio"), William Vaughan (as "Tony"), June Victor (as "Orchestral Trio"), Agnes Williams (as "A Royal Nurse/Gossiping Guest"), Sidney Williams (as "Gourmet's Crony/Other Guest"), Jennie Wren (as "The Golden Fairy/Daughter/Gossiping Guest"), Margaret Wycherly (as H.M. Queen of Pantouoflia"). Produced by Federal Theatre Project of The WPA.
- (1940) Stage Play: Liliom (Revival).
- (1945) Stage Play: Hedda Gabler. Drama (revival).
- (1945) Stage Play: The Glass Menagerie. Drama. Written by Tennessee Williams.
- (1947) Stage Play: Dear Judas. Drama.
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