- (1936 - 1962) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1936) Stage Play: Sweet River. Drama.
- (1942) Stage Play: Jason. Drama. Written by Samson Raphaelson. Scenic Design by John Root. Directed by Samson Raphaelson. Hudson Theatre: 21 Jan 1942- 9 May 1942 (125 performances). Cast: Nicholas Conte (as "Messenger"), Raymond Greenleaf (as "George Bronson"), Ellen Hall (as "Miss Crane"), Abraham Knox (as "Nick Wiggins"), Alexander Knox, E.G. Marshall [Broadway debut], Eulabelle Moore (as "Violet"), William Niles (as "Bill Squibb"), Tom Tully (as "Mr. Kennedy"), Helen Walker (as "Lisa Otis"), Edna West (as "Mrs. Kennedy"). Produced by George Abbott.
- (1942) Stage Play: The Skin of Our Teeth. Comedy. Written by Thornton Wilder. Press Representative: Richard Maney and John L. Toohey. Stage Manager: B.D. Kranz. Assistant Stage Mgr: Stanley Prager. Directed by Elia Kazan. Plymouth Theatre: 18 Nov 1942- 25 Sep 1943 (359 performances). Cast: Tallulah Bankhead (as "Sabina"), Florence Eldridge (as "Mrs. Antrobus"), Fredric March (as "Mr. Antrobus"), Remo Bufano (as "Dinosaur"), Carroll Clark, Harry Clark, Montgomery Clift (as "Henry"), Stephan Cole, Ralph Cullinan (as "Homer"), Morton Da Costa, Viola Dean (as "Ivy"), Aubrey Fassett, Edith Faversham, Seumas Flynn, Arthur Griffin, Frances Heflin (as "Gladys"), Ralph Kellard (as "Professor/Mr. Tremayne") [final Broadway role], Emily Lorraine, E.G. Marshall (as "Mr. Fitzpatrick"), Eulabelle Moore (as "Hester"), Eva Mudge Nelson (as "Miss M. Muse"), Stanley Prager (as "Usher/Conveener/Fred Bailey"), Andrew Ratousheff (as "Mammoth"), Florence Reed, Patricia Riordan, Elizabeth Scott, Joseph Smiley, Earl Sydnor (as "Chair Pusher"), Dick Van Patten (as "Telegraph Boy") [credited as Dickie Van Patten], Stanley Weede (as "Conveener"). Produced by Michael Myerberg.
- (1945) Stage Play: You Can't Take It With You. Comedy/farce (revival). Written by Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman. Directed by Frank McCoy. City Center: 26 Mar 1945- 7 Apr 1945 (17 performances). Cast: Daisy Atherton (as "Penelope Sycamore"), Charles Benjamin (as "Donald"), Emma Bunting (as "Gay Wellington"), John Clubley (as "Mr. Kirby"), Charles Collins (as "Boris Kolenkhov"), Lance Cunard (as "Ed Carmichael"), Charles Foley (as "G-Man"), Ulla Kazanova (as "Olga"), Donald Keyes (as "Mr. DePinna"), Edward Kreisler (as "Wilbur C. Henderson"), Richard Maloy (as "Tony Kirby"), Lucille Marsh (as "Alice Sycamore"), George McLain (as "G-Man"), Eulabelle Moore (as "Rheba"), Spencer Sawyer (as "G-Man"), Dorothy Scott (as "Mrs. Kirby"), John Souther (as "Paul Sycamore"), Dorothy Stone (as "Essie"), Fred Stone (as "Martin Vanderhof/Grandpa") [final Broadway role]. Produced by Frank McCoy. Note: Was previously filmed by Columbia Pictures as You Can't Take It with You (1938).
- (1950) Stage Play: A Streetcar Named Desire. Drama (revival). Written by Tennessee Williams. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Costume Design by Lucinda Ballard. Directed by Elia Kazan. City Center: 23 May 1950- unknown (16 performances). Cast: Jorja Curtright (as "Stella Kowalski"), Arny Freeman (as "Pablo Gonzales"), Uta Hagen (as "Blanche Du Bois"), Harry Kersey (as "Steve Hubbell"), Wright King (as "Young Collector"), George Mathews (as "Harold Mitchell/Mitch"), Eulabelle Moore (as "Negro Woman"), Anthony Quinn (as "Stanley Kowalski"), Peggy Rea (as "Eunice Hubbell"), Edna Thomas (as "Mexican Woman"). Produced by Irene Mayer Selznick. Note: Filmed by Warner Bros. as A Streetcar Named Desire (1951).
- (1951) Stage Play: Four Twelves Are 48. Comedy. Written by Joseph Kesselring. Scenic Design by Raymond Sovey. Directed by Otto Preminger. 48th Street Theatre: 17 Jan 1951- 18 Jan 1951 (2 performances). Cast: Pat Crowley (as "Dorothy Bawke"), Royal Dano (as "Joe Hungry Horse"), Ludwig Donath (as "Anton"), Jane Du Frayne (as "Philippa Bawke"), Billy James (as "Jerry"), Rosetta LeNoire (as "Rose Bolton"), Doro Merande (as "Jane Dupre"), Eulabelle Moore (as "Calendula Watkins"), Mrs. Priestly Morrison (as "Mrs. Kelly"), Anne Revere (as "Nellie Bawke"), Joshua Shelley (as "Mischa Cogn"), Hiram Sherman (as "Philip Dupre"), Morton Stevens (as "Dr." Berrystone"), Ruth Taylor (as "Mary Bawke"), Ernest Truex (as "Uncle Snake Tooth"). Produced by Richard Aldrich, Richard Meyers, Otto L. Preminger and Julius Fleischmann.
- (1952) Stage Play: The Male Animal. Comedy (revival).
- (1953) Stage Play: A Girl Can Tell. Comedy.
- (1956) Stage Play: The Ponder Heart. Comedy.
- (1956) Stage Play: Debut. Comedy.
- (1959) Stage Play: Jolly's Progress.
- (1960) Stage Play: The Cool World. Written by Warren Miller and Robert Rossen. Based on the novel by Warren Miller. Directed by Robert Rossen [final Broadway credit]. Eugene O'Neill Theatre: 22 Feb 1960- 23 Feb 1960 (2 performances). Cast: Art Aveilhe (as "Lucky"), Ethel Ayler (as "Woman at the Beach"), Don Blakely (as "Savage"), Roscoe Lee Browne (as "Royal Baron"), Marvin Felix Camillo (as "Bebop"), Alice Childress (as "Mrs. Thurston"), Herb Coleman (as "Saint"), David Downing (as "Boy"), Clebert Ford (as "Foxy"), George Gatlin (as "Cowboy"), Maxwell Glanville (as "Pusher"), Martin Golar (as "Rod"), Lynn Hamilton (as "Mrs. Custis"), Philip Hepburn (as "Mau Mau"), James Earl Jones (as "Harrison Thurston"), Calvin Lockhart (as "Blood") [Broadway debut], Eulabelle Moore (as "Gramma Custis"), Jim Oyster (as "Old Man/First Policeman"), Raymond St. Jacques [credited as Ray Saint Jacques] (as "Priest") [final Broadway role], Wardell Saunders (as "Father Christmas"), Harold Scott (as "Chester"), P. Jay Sidney (as "Hurst"), Hilda Simms (as "Miss Dewpont"), Cheyenne Sorocki (as "Cherokee"), Melvin Stewart (as "Hermit"), Cicely Tyson (as "Girl"), Lamont Washington (as "Little Man"), Alease Whittington (as "Lu Ann"), Billy Dee Williams (as "Duke Custis"), Duke Williams (as "Second Policeman"). Produced by Lester Osterman Jr.
- (1962) Stage Play: Great Day in the Morning.
- (September 23, 1948) She played an African American woman in Tennessee Williams' play, "A Streetcar Named Desire," at the Harris Theater in Chicago, Illinois with Peggy Rea (Eunice Hubbel); Anthony Quinn (Stanley Kowalski); Russell Hardie (Harold "Mitch" Mitchell); Mary Welch (Stella Kowalski); Harry Kersey (Steve Hubbel); Uta Hagen (Blanche Dubois); Arny Freeman (Pablo Gonzalez); Wright King (a young collector); Sidonia Kapero (Mexican woman); Angela Jacobs (strange woman); and Arthur Row (strange man) in the cast. Jo Mielziner was scenic designer. Elia Kazan was director. Harold Clurman was tour director.
- (February 18, 1946) She acted in Patsy Ruth Miller's play, "Windy Hill," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Kay Francis, Roger Pryor, Eileen Heckart, Donald McClelland, Lawrence Fletcher, Ruth Conley, Grant Gordon, Earle Mayo, and James Hagan in the cast. Edward Gilbert was set designer. Ruth Chatterton was producer and director.
- (March 28 to April 4, 1949) She acted in Tennessee Williams' play, "A Streetcar Named Desire," in a National Tour production at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Uta Hagen (Blanche Dubois); Anthony Quinn (Stanley Kowalski); Russell Hardie; Mary Welch (Stella Kowalski); Peggy Rea; Harry Kersey; Arny Freeman; Wright King; Sidonie Espero; Angela Jacobs; and Arthur Row in the cast. Jo Mielziner was set designer. Lucinda Ballard was costume designer. Elia Kazan was director. Irene M. Selznick was producer.
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