- (1912 - 1956) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1912) Stage Play: The Drone. Comedy. Written by Rutherford Mayne. Daly's Theatre: 30 Dec 1912- 31 Dec 1912 (2 performances). Cast: John Campbell, Joseph Campbell, Robert Forsyth, Stanley Gresley, Whitford Kane [Broadway debut], Margaret Moffat, Margaret O'Gorman, A.E. Thompson, Nellie Wheeler. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1914) Stage Play: Uncle Sam's Money. Written by I.K. Friedman. 48th Street Theatre: 27 Apr 1914 (1 performance). Cast: Amy Ames, F. Cecil Butler, Agnes Dorntee, Whitford Kane. Produced by Dixie Hines and United Theatrical Association.
- (1914) Stage Play: Lonesome Like. Written by Harold Brighouse. 48th Street Theatre: 27 Apr 1914 (1 performance). Cast: Whitford Kane, Alvin Kaufman, Maude Leslie, Kate Morgan. Produced by Dixie Hines and United Theatrical Association.
- (1915) Stage Play: The Critic. Comedy (revival). Written by Richard B. Sheridan. Princess Theatre: 25 Jan 1915- Feb 1915 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Dallas Anderson, F. Cecil Butler, Wallis Clark, Lawrence Grant, John Hodder, Elvin Hodges, Gareth Hughes, Whitford Kane, Edward Le Hay, Marie Leonhard, Thomas Louden, Mario Majeroni, B. Iden Payne, Howard Plinge, Emilie Polini. Produced by B. Iden Payne.
- (1915) Stage Play: Hobson's Choice. Written by Harold Brighouse. Princess Theatre (moved to The Comedy Theatre from 8 Nov 1915 to close): 2 Nov 1915- unknown (135 performances). Cast: A.G. Andrews, Harry J. Ashford, Olive Wilmot Davis, Harold De Becker, Agnes Dorntee, Robert Forsyth, Walter Fredericks, Marie Hudspeth, Whitford Kane, Barnett Parker, Molly Pearson, Viola Roache. Produced by F. Ray Comstock.
- (1918) Stage Play: Muggins. Written by Frank J. Gregory. Fulton Theatre: 10 Jun 1918- 29 Jun 1918 (unknown performances). Cast: Harrison Brockbank, Betty Daintry, Gertrude Dallas, Rene Delting, Hal Forde, James Harrod, Whitford Kane, Marion Kerby, Auriol Lee, Edward Martindel, Charles Meredith, Agnes Patterson, Elisabeth Risdon, Edith Taliaferro, Jean Webb, Mrs. Thomas A. Wise. Produced by Actors' and Authors' Theatre, Inc.
- (1918) Stage Play: Tiger! Tiger! Written by Edward Knoblock. Belasco Theatre: 12 Nov 1918- Apr 1919 (closing date unknown/183 performances). Cast: Lionel Atwill (as "Clive Cooper, M.P."), Daisy Belmore (as "Mrs. Wix"), Dorothy Cumming, Wallace Erskine (as "Stephen Greer"), O.P. Heggie (as "Freddie Staunton"), Whitford Kane (as "Sam Tullidge"), 'Auriol Lee' (as "Lizzie"), Thomas Louden, Frances Starr. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1919) Stage Play: Dark Rosaleen. Written by W.D. Hepenstall and Whitford Kane. Belasco Theatre: 22 Apr 1919- Jul 1919 (closing date unknown/87 performances). Cast: Charles Bickford, John Carmody, Robert Cummings, Henry Duffey, Walter Edwin, George Fitzgerald, Eileen Huban, P.J. Kelly, Charles F. McCarthy, Beryl Mercer, Dodson Mitchell, Thomas Mitchell, Dan Moyles, John Daly Murphy, Seumas O'Brien, Farrell Pelly. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Madras House. Drama. Written by Harley Granville-Barker. Neighborhood Playhouse: 29 Oct 1921- Dec 1921 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Katherine Brook, Evelyn Carter Carrington, Albert Carroll, Dennis Cleugh, Marie De Becker, Warburton Gamble (as "Philip Madras"), Whitford Kane (as "Henry Huxtable"), Ernita Lascelles, Margaret Linden (as "Jessica Madras"), Aline MacMahon (as "Laura Huxtable") [Broadway debut], Esther Mitchell, Agnes Morgan, Marie Pinckard, Eugene Powers, John Roche, Montague Rutherford, Beatrice Sackett, Catherine Sayre, Eugenia Woodward.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Idle Inn. Book by Peretz Hirshbein. Book adapted by Isaac Goldberg and Louis Wolheim. Plymouth Theatre: 20 Dec 1921- Jan 1922 (closing date unknown/25 performances). Cast: Shirley Albert, Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Eisik"), Julius Bliech, Juliet Brenon, A.M. Bush, George Casselberry, Lucy English, Margaret Fareleigh, Frohman Foster, Anton Grubman, Lionel Hogarth, Stanley Howlett, Elizabeth Hunt, Sam Jaffe (as "Leibush"), Whitford Kane (as "Schakne"), Alice Kiesler, Jacob Kingsbury (as "Guest"), Ellen Larned, Andrey Lensky, David Leonard, Eva MacDonald, Gertrude Mann, Bella Nodell, Daisy Rieger, Gregory Robbins, Edward G. Robinson (as "Mendel"), Joanna Roos, Philip Scherman, William Schukin, Leon Seidenberg, Henry Sharp, Mary Shaw, Henry Simons, Maud Sinclair, Bennie Wagschall, Boris Weiner, Ottie Wetter, Leo Witko, Louis Wolheim (as "Bendet"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Pigeon. Fantasy (revival).
- (1922) Stage Play: Fanny Hawthorn. Drama. Written by Stanley Houghton. Vanderbilt Theatre: 11 May 1922- Jun 1922 (closing date unknown/36 performances). Cast: Gordon Ash, Alice Belmore, Walter Edouin, Nellie Graham-Dent, Nannie Griffin, Eileen Huban, Whitford Kane (as "Christopher Hawthorn"), Gilda Leary, Herbert Lomas. Produced by Vanderbilt Producing Company.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Grand Street Follies. Musical revue. Music arranged by Lily M. Hyland. Lyrics by Albert Carroll. Costume Design by Alice Beer and Polaire Weissmann. Piano: Lily M. Hyland. Violin: Mr. Ocko. Saxophone: Mr. Evans. Drums: Mr. Hagar. Choreographed by Albert Carroll. Neighborhood Playhouse: 13 Jun 1922- 25 Jun 1922 (12 performances). Cast: Helen Arthur, Michel Barroy, George Bratt, Albert J. Carroll, Eleanor Carroll, Sol Friedman, Whitford Kane, Irene Lewisohn, Lily Lubell, Aline MacMahon, Philip Mann, Junius Matthews, Esther Mitchell, Agnes Morgan, Adrienne Morrison, John Roche, Anne Schmidt, John Scott, Blanche Talmud, Paula Trueman, Dan Walker, Polaire Weissmann. Produced by Neighborhood Players.
- (1922) Stage Play: Dolly Jordan. Romance. Written by B. Iden Payne. Daly's 63rd Street Theatre: 3 Oct 1922- Oct 1922 (closing date unknown/5 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott (as "Mrs. Bland"), Langhorn Burton [credited as Langhorne Burton] (as "H.R.H. The Duke of Clarence"), Reginald Carrington (as "Mr. John Barton"), Denise Corday (as "Jeanette"), Catherine Doucet [credited as Catherine Calhoun Doucet] (as "Mrs. Smith"), Charles Esdale (as "Captain the Hon. William Bailey"), Alphonse Ethier (as "Mr. Tate Wilkinson"), Shirley Gale (as "Miss Sketchley"), Amelia Gardner (as "Mrs. Robinson"), Whitford Kane (as "Mr. Swan"), Burdette Kappes (as "Mr. Edward March"), Vernon Kelso (as "Mr. Richard Ford"), Kevitt Manton (as "A Bow Street Runner"), Jill Middleton (as "Ellen"), Hartley Power (as "George Inchbald") [Broadway debut], Walter Ringham (as "Mr. Richard Daly"), John Rogers (as "Mr. Hobbes"), Georgie Ryan (as "A Call-boy"), Harold Schaughency (as "Landlord"), Josephine Victor (as "Dorothy Bland, Known as Dolly Jordan"). Produced by John Cort.
- (1922) Stage Play: Hamlet. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Incidental music by Robert Russell Bennett. Musical Director: Maurice Nitke. Directed by Arthur Hopkins. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 16 Nov 1922- Feb 1923 (closing date unknown/101 performances). Cast: John Barrymore (as "Hamlet, son to the late, and nephew to the present King"), Lowden Adams (as "Fortinbras, Prince of Norway"), E.J. Ballantine (as "Marcellus, an Officer"), Frank Boyd (as "King's Messenger"), Lawrence Cecil (as "Guildenstern, a Courtier"), Cecil Clovelly (as "Gravedigger"), Paul Huber (as "Rosencrantz, a Courtier"), Frederick Lewis (as "Horatio, a friend to Hamlet"), Rosalind Fuller (as "Ophelia, daughter to Polonius"), John S. O'Brien (as "Polonius, Lord Chamberlain"), Whitford Kane (as "Gravedigger"), Burnel Lundee (as "Player King"), Sydney Mather (as "Laertes, son to Polonius"), Reginald Pole (as "Ghost/Priest"), Tyrone Power Sr. (as "Claudius, King of Denmark"), Richard Skinner (as "Player Queen"), Edgar Stehli (as "Osric, a Courtier"), Lark Taylor (as "Bernardo, an Officer/Player"), Vadini Uraneff (as "Lucianus"), Blanche Yurka (as "Gertrude, Queen of Denmark and mother to Hamlet"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1923) Stage Play: Children of the Moon. Drama. Written by Martin Flavin. Comedy Theatre: 17 Aug 1923- Nov 1923 (closing date unknown/117 performances). Cast: Henrietta Crosman (as "Madame Atherton"), Paul Gordon (as "Major John Bannister"), Florence Johns (as "Jane Atherton"), Whitford Kane (as "Thomas"), Albert Perry (as "Judge Atherton"), Grant Stewart (as "Dr. Wetherell'), Beatrice Terry' (as "Laura Atherton"), Harold Winston (as "Walter Higgs"). Produced by Jacob A. Weiser. Produced in association with A.L. Jones and Morris Green.
- (1923) Stage Play: Hamlet. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Incidental music by Robert Russell Bennett. Musical Director: Maurice Nitke. Directed by Arthur Hopkins. Manhattan Opera House: 26 Nov 1923- Dec 1923 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: John Barrymore (as "Hamlet, son to the late, and nephew to the present King"), John Boyd (as "Francisco, an Officer"), Lawrence Cecil (as "Guildenstern, a Courtier"), Boyd Clark (as "Rosencrantz, a Courtier"), John Connery (as "Marcellus, an Officer"), J. Colvin Dunn (as "Horatio, a friend to Hamlet"), Rosalind Fuller (as "Ophelia, daughter to Polonius"), Kenneth Hunter (as "Claudius, King of Denmark"), Moffat Johnston (as "Polonius, Lord Chamberlain"), Whitford Kane (as "First Gravedigger"), Burnel Lundee (as "Player King"), Sydney Mather (as "Laertes, son to Polonius"), Russell Morrison (as "Second Gravedigger"), Richard Morton (as "Fortinbras, Prince of Norway"), Reginald Pole (as "Ghost/Priest"), Jose Ruiz (as "Player"), Winifred Salisbury (as "Lady"), H. Charles Smith (as "King's Messenger"), Edgar Stehli (as "Osric, a Courtier"), Lark Taylor (as "Bernardo, an Officer/Player"), Vadini Uraneff (as "Lucianus"), Blanche Yurka (as "Gertrude, Queen of Denmark and mother to Hamlet"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Outsider. Drama. Written by Dorothy Brandon. 49th Street Theatre: 3 Mar 1924- Jun 1924 (closing date unknown/104 performances). Cast: Lionel Atwill (as "Anton Ragatzy"), John Blair, Katharine Cornell (as "Lalage Sturdee"), Florence Edney (as "Pritchard"), Fernanda Eliscu (as "Madame Klost"), Kenneth Hunter, Whitford Kane (as "Mr. Frederick Ladd, F.R.C.S."), Lester Lonergan,T. Wigney Percyval, Pat Somerset. Produced by William H. Harris, Jr.
- (1925) Stage Play: Loggerheads. Comedy. Written by Ralph Cullinan. Cherry Lane Theatre: 9 Feb 1925- Apr 1925 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: Earle House, Gail Kane, Whitford Kane (as "Corny Halpin"), Barry Macollum, Joanna Roos (as "Norah Halpin"). Produced by Whitford Kane and Barry Macollum.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Critic. Comedy (revival). Written by Richard B. Sheridan. Directed by Agnes Morgan and Ian Maclaren. Neighborhood Playhouse: 8 May 1925- May 1925 (closing date unknown/17 performances). Cast: Vera Allen (as "Justice's Lady"), William Beyer, George Heller, Otto Hulett, Whitford Kane (as "Mr. Dangle"), Adele Klaer, Marc Loebell, Ian Maclaren (as "Mr. Puff"), Philip Mann, Junius Matthews, Harold Minjir, Dorothy Sands, Anne Schmidt, Blanche Talmud, Paula Trueman, Charles Warburton, Charles Webster, Martin Wolfson (as "Sir Christopher Hatton").
- (1925) Stage Play: Grand Street Follies. Musical revue. Music by Lily Hyland. Book by Agnes Morgan. Lyrics by Agnes Morgan. Featuring songs with lyrics by Marc Loebell and Dan Walker. Featuring songs by Dan Walker. Choreographed by Albert Carroll. Neighborhood Playhouse: 18 Jun 1925- 29 Nov 1925 (148 performances). Cast: Vera Allen, Helen Arthur, Michel Barroy, William Beyer, George Bratt, Albert Carroll, Edla Frankau, George Heller, George Hoag, Otto Hulett [credited as Otto Hulicius], Zita Johann, Whitford Kane, Edgar Kent, Irene Lewisohn, Marc Lobell, Lily Lubell, Helen Mack, Ian Maclaren, Philip Mann, Junius Matthews, Lewis McMichael, Harold Minjir, Esther Mitchell, Mae Noble, Madeline Ross, Dorothy Sands, Ann Schmidt, J. Blake Scott, Lois Shore, Sadie Sussman, Blanche Talmud, Thomas Tilton, Paula Trueman, Allen Vincent, Dan Walker, Polaire Weissmann. Produced by The Neighborhood Playhouse.
- (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.
- (1930) Stage Play: Elizabeth the Queen. Historical drama. Written by Maxwell Anderson. Stage Manager: Leonard Loan. Assistant Stage Mgr: Bretaigne Windust and Jerome Mayer. Directed by Philip Moeller. Guild Theatre: 3 Nov 1930- Mar 1931 (closing date unknown/147 performances). Cast: Lynn Fontanne (as "Elizabeth"), Alfred Lunt (as "Lord Essex"), Mab Anthony, Curtis Arnall, Royal Beal, Michael Borodin, James A. Boshell, Phoebe Brand, Charles Brokaw (as "A Courier"/"Heming"), Robert Caille, Morris Carnovsky (as "Francis Bacon"), Robert Conness, John Ellsworth, Thomas Eyre, George Fleming, Philip Foster, Edla Frankau, Arthur Hughes, Louise Huntington, Whitford Kane (as "Burbage"), Anita Kerry, Perry King, Henry Lase, Barry Macollum, Guy Moore, Edward Oldfield, Stanley Ruth, Vincent Sherman (as "A Herald"), Percy Waram (as "Sir Walter Raleigh"), Nick Wiger, James Wiley, Annabelle Williams. Produced by The Theatre Guild. Note: Filmed by Warner Bros. as The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939), starring Bette Davis and Errol Flynn.
- (1931) Stage Play: The Merchant of Venice. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by George Vivian. Royale Theatre: 16 Nov 1931- Nov 1931 (closing date unknown/6 performances). Cast: France Bendtsen, John Bryan, Gordon Burby, John Burke, Pedro de Cordoba (as "Bassanio, friend of Antonio"), William Faversham (as "Antonio, a merchant of Venice"), John Forrest, Lionel Ince, Hart Jenks, Whitford Kane (as "Launcelot Gobbo, servant to Shylock"), Fritz Leiber, Dorothy Martin, Helen Menken, Ralph Menzing, Claudius Mintz, Frank Peters, Tyrone Power Sr. (as "Duke of Venice"), Viola Roache, Thayer Roberts, Virginia Stevens. Produced by Chicago Civic Shakespeare Society.
- (1932) Stage Play: Cyrano de Bergerac. Comedy (revival). Written by Edmond Rostand. Book adapted by Brian Hooker. Directed by Walter Hampden. New Amsterdam Theatre: 26 Dec 1932- Jan 1933 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Walter Hampden (as "Cyrano de Bergerac, a Gascon"), Laura Barrett, Bessie Beatty, W. Messenger Bellis, Pickering Brown, Guy Collins, Eliza Connolly, Alice Dalton, Murray D'Arcy, Joseph V. De Santis, Mary Alice Dill, Joanna Dorman, Reynolds Evans (as "Le Comte de Guiche"), Howard Galt, Wanda Gelb, Evelyn Goodrich, Edward Everett Hale (as "A Guardsman, Cadet of Gascoyne"), C. Norman Hammond (as "Carbon de Castel Jaloux, Captain of the Gascony Cadets"), Gordon Hart, Wilfred Jessop, Whitford Kane (as "Ragueneau, a pastry cook"), P.J. Kelly, Spencer Kimbell, Robert B. Mantell, Jr., John P. Marquand (as "D'Artagnan, Cadet of Gascoyne"), Lewis McMichael, Esther Mitchell, Mabel Moore, Helen O'Connor, Gerald O'Neill, Frank Terry (as "Bertrandou, the fifer"), James R. Pray, Edwin Ross, Ernest Rowan, Phyllis Sallee, William Sauter, Harvey Sayers, Robert C. Schnitzer, John D. Seymour, Cyrus H. Staehle, Arthur Stenning, George Thorp, Mildred Vail, Evelyn Venable, Katherine Warren (as "Roxane, Cyrano's cousin"), Henry Warwick, Margaret Watson, Harold Williams, J.P. Wilson. Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1933) Stage Play: Is Life Worth Living? Comedy. Written by Lennox Robinson. Directed by Lennox Robinson. Theatre Masque: 9 Nov 1933- Nov 1933 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Ralph Cullinan, Whitford Kane (as "Mr. John Twohig"), Octavia Kenmore, Jerome Lawlor, John Mackesy, Mary Maddock, John McCarthy, Lawrence C. O'Brien, Neill O'Malley, Mary Ricard, Byron Russell, Margaret Wycherly (as "Constance Constantina"). Produced by Harry Moses.
- (1934) Stage Play: Yellow Jack. Written by Sidney Howard and Paul De Kruif. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Martin Beck Theatre: 6 Mar 1934- May 1934 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Eddie Acuff, Wylie Adams, Jack Carr, Eduardo Ciannelli, Francis Compton, Charles Gerard, Lloyd Gough, Harold Hoffat, Colin Hunter, Bernard Jukes, Whitford Kane (as "Dr. Carlos Finlay"), Robert Keith, Geoffrey Kerr, Kim, Sam Levene, Richie Ling (as "Colonel Tory"), Barton MacLane (as "James Carroll") [final Broadway appearance], Myron McCormick (as "Brinkerhof"), John Miltern (as "Walter Reed"), Millard Mitchell (as "William H. Dean, Private U.S.A."), Jock Munro, George Nash, Robert Shayne, James Stewart (as "O'Hara"), Frank Stringfellow, Clyde Walters, Katherine Wilson. Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1934) Stage Play: The First Legion. Drama. Written by Emmett Lavery. Directed by Anthony Brown. 46th Street Theatre: 1 Oct 1934- Jan 1935 (closing date unknown/112 performances). Cast: Lester Atwell (as "Novices and Choir"), Robert Barrett (as "Novices and Choir"), Charles Coburn (as "Rev. Edward Quarterman, S.J."), Charles Danforth (as "Novices and Choir"), Pedro de Cordoba (as "Rev. José Maria Sierra, S.J") [final Broadway role], Tom Ewell (as "Novices and Choir"), Thomas Findlay, Joe Fitzmaurice (as "Novices and Choir"), John Foster (as "Novices and Choir"), William Ingersoll (as "Rev. Paul Duquesne, S.J."), Whitford Kane (as "Rt. Rev. Monsignor Michael Curry"), Harry Lane (as "Novices and Choir"), John Litel (as "Rev. Thomas Rawleigh"), Bert Lytell (as "Rev. Mark Ahern, S.J."), Joseph Mitchell (as "Novices and Choir"), Tom Monahan (as "Novices and Choir"), Harold Moulton (as "Rev. John Fulton, S.J."), Wayne Nelson (as "Novices and Choir"), Bruce Parish (as "Novices and Choir"), Robert Payson (as "Novices and Choir"), Frank Ray (as "Novices and Choir"), Jules Schmidt, Frankie Thomas, Jerome Thor(as "Novices and Choir") [Broadway debut], Harland Tucker (as "Dr. Peter Morell"), John J. Williams (as "Novices and Choir"), Donald Wilson (as "Novices and Choir"), Raymond Wolber (as "Novices and Choir"), Philip Wood (as "Rev. Charles I. Keene, S.J."), Rob Wood (as "Novices and Choir"), Arthur Zwerling (as "Novices and Choir"). Produced by Bert Lytell and Phil Green. Note: Filmed as The First Legion (1951).
- (1936) Stage Play: Searching for the Sun. Written by Dan Totheroh. Directed by Julius Evans and Joan Hathaway. Cort's 58th Street Theatre: 19 Feb 1936- Feb 1936 (closing date unknown/5 performances). Cast: Walter Beck, Paul Birris, Roger Blankenship, Vernon Crane, Joseph Curtin, Olive Deering, Thomas Fisher, Charles Henry, Richard Hunter, J. Richard Jones, Whitford Kane (as "Fletch"), Lewis Luke, Charles Niemeyer, Edwin Philips, Leona Roberts, Happy Robinson, Georgia Simmons, Emerson Treacy, Jack Warren, Eleanor Wendall, Jazzbo Williams. Produced by Albert Ingalls, Jr.
- (1936) Stage Play: Parnell. Written by Elsie T. Schauffler. Directed by Robinson Smith and Frederick Ayer. 48th Street Theatre: 4 May 1936- Jun 1936 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Edith Barrett, Hugh Bigelow, Gordon Burby, Gage Clarke, Phyllis Connard, Enid Cooper, John Emery (as "Captain William Henry O'Shea"), Alexander Frank, Whitford Kane (as "Michael Davitt"), Denis King (as "Parnell"), Barry Macollum, Winston O'Keefe (as "Timothy Healy"), Clement O'Loghlen, Harry Redding, Effie Shannon (as "Mrs. Benjamin Wood"), William Swetland, Charles Trexler. Produced by Pierce Power-Waters. Note: Filmed by MGM as Parnell (1937) as a Clark Gable vehicle.
- (1936) Stage Play: St. Helena. Drama. Written by R.C. Sherriff and Jeanne De Casalis. Scenic Design and Costume Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Robert B. Sinclair. Lyceum Theatre: 6 Oct 1936- Nov 1936 (closing date unknown/63 performances). Cast: Paul Adams, Robert Ansteth, Stephen Ker Appleby, Harry Bellaver (as "The Abbe Vignali"), Stephen Courtleigh, Samuel Danzig, Lewis Dayton, Joseph De Santis, Jules Epailly (as "Cipriani"), Maurice Evans (as "Napoleon"), Edward Fielding, Whitford Kane (as "Dr. O'Meara"), Jack Kelly, Marc Loebell, Joseph Macaulay, Reginald Mason (as "General Count Betrand"), Charles F. O'Connor, Francis Pierlot (as "The Abbe Buonovita"), Rosamond Pinchot, Paul Porter, Edward Ryan, Jr., Kay Strozzi (as "Countess Montholon"), Barry Sullivan (as "St. Denis"), Joyce Walsh, Percy Waram (as "Sir Hudson Lowe"), Alan Wheatley. Produced by Max Gordon.
- (1937) Stage Play: King Richard II. Historical drama. Written by William Shakespeare (I)'. Incidental music by Herbert Menges and Rupert Graves. Costume Design by David Ffolkes. Directed by Margaret Webster and Charles Alan. St. James Theatre: 5 Feb 1937- Jun 1937 (closing date unknown/133 performances). Cast: Robert K. Adams (as "Green, Favorite of King Richard/Servant to Exton"), Neal Berry (as "Ensemble"), Stephen Courtleigh (as "Lord Willoughby"), Charles Dalton (as "Earl of Northumberland"), Samuel Danzig (as "Ensemble"), Olive Deering (as "Queen to King Richard"), Augustin Duncan (as "John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, Uncle to the King"), Randolph Edhols (as "Henry Percy, Surnamed Hotspur, son to Northumberland Maurice Evans (as "King Richard the Second"), Reynolds Evans (as "Lord Marshal/Bishop of Carlisle"), John Halloran (as "Bushy, Favorite of King Richard"), Lionel Hogarth (as "Duke of York, Uncle to the King"), William Howell (as "Ensemble"), Lionel Ince (as "Earl of Salisbury/Keeper of the Prison"), Betty Jenckes (as "Lady attending on the Queen"), Whitford Kane (as "Gardener"), Ian Keith (as "Henry Bolingbroke, Duke of Hereford, afterwards Henry IV"), Julia Lathrop (as "Lady attending on the Queen"), Lawrence Murray (as "First Herald/Duke of Surrey"), Bram Nossen (as "Lord Ross"), Sherling Oliver (as "Duke of Aumerle, Son to the Duke of York"), Alfred Paschall (as "Ensemble"), William Post (as "Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk"), Donald Randolph (as "Sir Stephen Scroop/Sir Pierce of Exton"), Everett Ripley (as "Bagot, Favorite of King Richard"), Irene Tedrow (as "Duchess of Gloucester"), Philip Truex (as "Second Gardener/Ensemble"), Rhys Williams (as "Second Herald/Captain of a band of Welshmen/Groom of the King's Stable"), Walter Williams (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Eddie Dowling and Robinson Smith.
- (1937) Stage Play: Robin Landing. Drama.
- (1938) Stage Play: The Shoemakers' Holiday. (Revival).
- (1938) Stage Play: Hamlet. Tragedy (revival).
- (1940) Stage Play: The Man Who Killed Lincoln. Drama.
- (1940) Stage Play: Boyd's Daughter. Comedy.
- (1941) Stage Play: The Doctor's Dilemma.
- (1942) Stage Play: The Moon Is Down. Drama. Written by John Steinbeck. Directed by Chester Erskine. Martin Beck Theatre: 7 Apr 1942- 6 Jun 1942 (71 performances). Produced by Oscar Serlin.
- (1942) Stage Play: Lifeline.
- (1943) Stage Play: Land of Fame. Music by Joseph Wood. Written by Albert Bein and Mary Bein. Based on a story by Charles Paver and Albert Bein. Directed by Albert Bein. Belasco Theatre: 21 Sep 1943- 25 Sep 1943 (6 performances). Produced by Albert Bein and Frederick Fox.
- (1944) Stage Play: Thank You, Svoboda. Written by H.S. Kraft. Based on the novel by John Pen. Directed by H.S. Kraft and Moe Hack. Mansfield Theatre: 1 Mar 1944- 4 Mar 1944 (6 performances). Cast: Dehl Berti (as "Private Langheld"), Francis Compton, Francis Conlan, Louis Fabien, Adrienne Gessner, Sam Jaffe (as "Svoboda"), Whitford Kane (as "Hugo"), Donald Keyes (as "Mr. Novotny"), Arnold Korff (as "Colonel Fiala"), William Malten, John McGovern (as "Doctor Burian"), Len Mence, John Ravold (as "The Padre"), Michael Strong, Ronald Telfer. Produced by Milton Baron.
- (1944) Stage Play: Career Angel (Revival).
- (1944) Stage Play: Meet a Body.
- (1945) Stage Play: It's a Gift. Comedy. Written by Curt Goetz and Dorian Otvos. Directed by Robert Henderson. Playhouse Theatre (moved to The National Theatre from 26 Mar 1945 to close): 12 Mar 1945- 21 Apr 1945 (47 performances). Cast: Doris Brent, Elaine Carter, Suzanne Caubaye, Morton Da Costa, Evelyn Daly, Sally Ferguson, Curt Goetz, G. Swayne Gordon, Joan Gordon, Roland Green, David Greene, Julie Harris (as "Atlanta, their child"), Elsa Johnson, Whitford Kane (as "Rev. Endicott"), William Kinney, Hilda Laufkoetter, Winnie Mae Martin, Kevin Mathews, Hope Miller, Robert Muscat, Marjorie Peterson, Yvonne Pothen, Michael Strong, Valerie Van Martens, Victor Vraz. Produced by Goval Corp.
- (1946) Stage Play: The Winter's Tale. Comedy (revival).
- (1948) Stage Play: Kathleen. Written by Michael Sayers. Directed by Coby Ruskin. Mansfield Theatre: 3 Feb 1948- 10 Feb 1948 (7 performances). Cast: Anita Bolster (as "Lily, The Housekeeper"), Whitfield Connor (as "Lieutenant Aengus MacOgue, The Soldier"), Henry Jones (as "Seamus MacGonigal, The Rich Man's Son"), Whitford Kane (as "Father Keogh, The Priest"), James McCallion (as "Christy Hanafey, The Poor Man's Son"), Frank Merlin (as "Dr. Horatio Houlihan, The Doctor"), Jack Sheehan (as "Professor Jasper Fogarty, The Father"), Morton Stevens (as "Jamie MacGonigal, The Rich Boy's Father"), Andree Wallace (as "Kathleen Fogarty, The Daughter"). Produced by Bea Lawrence.
- (1950) Stage Play: As You Like It. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Incidental music by Robert Irving. Traditional Songs arranged by Robert Irving. Musical Director: Irving Owen. Conceived and Directed by Michael Benthall. Cort Theatre: 26 Jan 1950- 3 Jun 1950 (145 performances). Cast: Katharine Hepburn (as "Rosalind, daughter to the banished Duke"), William Prince, Ernest Thesiger, Kenneth Cantril, Patricia Englund, Michael Everett, Robert Foster, Everett Gammon, Ernest Graves, Richard Hepburn, Charles Herndon, Whitford Kane (as "Corin, a shepherd"), Cloris Leachman (as "Celia, daughter to Frederick"), Dayton Lummis, Burton Mallory, Aubrey Mather, Marylin Nowell, Bill Owen, Judy Parrish, Robert Quarry, Jay Robinson, Frank Rogier, Jan Sherwood, William Sutherland, Craig Timberlake, Robert Wark, John Weaver, Margaret Wright. Produced by The Theatre Guild (Theresa Helburn, Lawrence Langner: Administrative Directors).
- (1955) Stage Play: Red Roses for Me. Drama.
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