- (1910) Stage: Appeared in "The International Cup, the Ballet of Niagra and the Earthquake" on Broadway. Musical revue.
- (1911) Stage: Appeared in "The Revue of Revues" on Broadway. Musical revue. Winter Garden Theatre: 27 Sep 1911-11 Nov 1911 (55 performances). Cast: Gaby Deslys, Lydia Barry, Raymond Bloomer, Doris Cameron, James B. Carson, Edgard Chatel, Harold Crane, Mabel De Young, Ernest Hare, Clarence Harvey, Dorothy Jardon, Harry Jolson, George Majeroni, Joseph Smith, Frank Tinney, Mr. Vermandere. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1925) Stage: Appeared in "George White's Scandals" on Broadway. Musical revue.
- (1927) Stage: Choreographd "Rio Rita" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Based on material by Guy Bolton and Fred Thompson. Music by Harry Tierney. Lyrics by Joseph McCarthy. Musical Director: Oscar Bradley. Music orchestrated by Frank Parry. Scenic Design by Joseph Urban. Choreographed by Sammy Lee and Albertina Rasch. Directed by John Harwood. Ziegfeld Theatre (moved to The Lyric Theatre from 26 Dec 1927 to 11 Mar 1928 then moved to The Majestic Theatre from 12 Mar 1928 to close): 2 Feb 1927-7 Apr 1928 (494 performances). Cast: Ada-May, Avis Adair, Mary Alter, Melba Alter, George Anez, Martha Ann, Alfred Arnold, Antonio Arreola, Mabel Baade, Margie Baily, Anita Banton, Pauline Bartlett, Elma Bayer, Elsie Behrens, Marion Benda, Carol Bergman, Jose Betancourt, Virginia Biddle, Peggy Blake, Victor Bragamonte, Alcides Briseno, Katherine Burke, George Butler, Camille, Al Clair, Helen C. Clive, Collette, Suzanne Conroy, Peggy Cornell, Jean Crittenden, Audrey Dale, Fred Dalton, Myrna Darby, Agatha DeBussy, Naomi deMusie, Helen Derby, Dorothy Dickerson, Jennie Dolova, Donald Douglas, Kay English, Rass Erickson, Carlos Estrada, Lucien Farland, Elaine Field, Janet Flynn, Noel Francis, Helene Gardner, Gladys Glad, Margaret Godsworthy, Portia Grafton, Ann Hardman, Mignon Hawkes, Josephine Hayes, Gabriel Herrera, Owen Hervey, Charles Holly, Harriet Hughes, Yvonne Hughes, Theresa Hyle, Alf James, Naomi Johnson, Ivanelle Ladd, Lavergne Lambert, Valerie Lennox, Mildred Lunnay, Cookie Lunsford, Lottie Marcy, Marjorie-May Martin, Earl Marvin, Robert Mathews, Dorothy May, Charles McClelland, Betty McHugh, Frances Mildern, Florence Miller, Alma Moore, Vivian Morgan, Franciska Mueller, Gladys Murphy, J. Harold Murray (as "Jim"), Vincente Murtado, Leo Nash, Henry Nelthropp, Bill Otero, Walter Palm, Dorothy Patterson, Molly Peck, Walter Petrie, Jack Phillips, Rita Pischel, Margaret Purple, Harry Ratcliffe, Louise Richardson, Joseph Rogers, Pedro Rubin, Rosemary Ryder, A. Safanow, Vincent Serrano, Madeline Sheldon, Lillian Shields, Al Small, Jack Spinelly, Douglas Stead, Marion Strasmick, Norma Taylor, Morris Tepper, Ethelind Terry (as "Rio Rita"), Edward Theopold, Jack Thompson, Raymond Toben, Francisco Torres, Peggy Udell, Manuel Valdespino, Bernice Varden, Richard Vernon, Juan Villasana, Rosemary Wallace, Florence Ware, Clarentine Wayne, Jean Wayne, Nondas Wayne, Dorothy Wegman, Maxine Wells, John Werner, Amy West, Bert Wheeler (as "Chick Bean"), Marion Wilson, Ann Woods, Robert Woolsey (as "Ed Lovett"), Philomena Yvsocka, M. Zaharia, Frank Zolt. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1927) Stage: Arranged ballets in "Lucky" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Based on material by Otto A. Harbach. Additional scenes / numbers by Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby. Music by Jerome Kern. Musical Direction by Gus Salzer. Music orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett. Lyrics by Otto A. Harbach. Additional music by Fred Fisher, Nora Bayes, Jack Norworth, Gus Edwards and George Gershwin. Additional lyrics by Fred Fisher, Jack Norworth, Edward Madden and Anne Caldwell. Directed by Hassard Short. New Amsterdam Theatre: 22 Mar 1927-21 May 1927 (71 performances). Cast: Walter Catlett (as "Charlie Simpson"), Bessie Allison, Alfred Arnold, Walter Arnold, Charles Bannister, Julia Brashkova, Dorothy Bell, Dick Bennett, Dulce Bentley, Martin Berkeley, Albert Birk, Leonore Blair, Betty Block, Pearl Bradley, Mary Brady, Billie Cain, Virginia Clark, Joan Clement, Hal Clovis, Charles Conkling, Emily Cote, Peggy Cunningham, Hyacinth Curtis, Jack de Lys, Maxine Demmler, Marian Dickson, Alma Drange, Charles Eaton, Mary Eaton, Eleanor Elden, Paul Everton, Rosemary Farmer, Richard Farrell, George Ferguson, Jeanne Fonda, Ethel Forrest, Rose Gaillaird, Richard 'Skeets' Gallagher (as "Teddy Travers"), Charles Gibney, Elvira Gomez, Bert Gould, Alfred Hall, Pauline Hall, Aili Halmenaa, Milton Halpern, Kathryn Hamill, Vivian Harris, Jack Hughes, Max Hugo, Ray Justus, Ruby Keeler (as "Mazie Maxwell"), Betty Keen, The Keller Sisters, Lily Kimari, Kathleen Krosby, Kathryn Lambly, Myrtle Lane, Donald Lee, Fred Lennox, Edna Locke, Al Lynch, Trude Marr, Olga Marye, Bob Maxwell, Stanley McClelland, Charles Mitchell, Lillian Morehouse, Bob Morris, Josephine Mostler, Henry Mowbray, Hugh Francis Murphy, Al Ochs (as "Long Ling"), Bill O'Donnell, Don Oltarsh, Cheri Pelham, Dorothy Phillips, Nickie Pittell, Patricia Preston, Anna Rex, Phyllis Reynolds, Nita Rosso, Elizabeth Ryder, Joseph Santley, Ivy Sawyer, Lenore Shearer, Kumara Singha, Emily Slater, Hugh Sorenson, Louise Starck, Jack Talbot, Ayres Tavitt, Archibald Thompson, Peaches Tortoni, Regina Tuahinska, George Vigouroux, Eda Vittollo, Teddy Ward, Elida Webb, Princess White Deer, Martha Wilbert, Fred Wilson, Albert Wyart, Dorothy Wyatt. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- Rufus LeMaire's Affairs (1927). Musical revue.
- (1927) Stage: Choreographed (w/David Bennett "My Princess" on Broadway. Musical operetta. Music by Sigmund Romberg. Based on a play by Edward Sheldon and Dorothy Donnelly. Book / Lyrics by Dorothy Donnelly. Music orchestrated by Emil Gerstenberger. Musical Director: Charles Prince. Costume Design by Charles Le Maire. Scenic Design by P. Dodd Ackerman. Directed by Sam Forrest. Shubert Theatre: 6 Oct 1927-22 Oct 1927 (20 performances).
- The Three Musketeers (1928). Musical drama. Music by Rudolf Friml. Lyrics by Clifford Grey and P.G. Wodehouse. Book by William Anthony McGuire. Based on the story by Alexandre Dumas. Musical Director: Gus Salzer. Musical Staging by Albertina Rasch. Staged by Richard Boleslawski. Directed by William Anthony McGuire. Lyric Theatre: 13 Mar 1928- 15 Dec 1928 (318 performances). Cast: Pirkko Ahlquist (as "Ensemble"), Lester Allen (as "Planchet"), Virginia Beardsley (as "Ensemble"), Yvonne Beaupre as "Ensemble"), Marye Bern (as "Ensemble"), Jeanette Bradley (as "Ensemble"), Harrison Brockbank (as "Innkeeper"), Eleanor Buffington (as "Ensemble"), Edna Bunte (as "Ensemble"), Robert D. Burns (as "Jussac"), Katherine Cavelli (as "Ensemble"), Margaret Clark (as "Ensemble"), John Clarke (as "The Duke of Buckingham"), Nancy Corrigan (as "Ensemble"), Dona Desne Curry (as "Ensemble"), Yvonne D'Arle (as "Anne, Queen of France"), Audrey Davis (as "Ensemble"), Helen Derby (as "Ensemble"), Sylvia Derby (as "Ensemble"), Clarence Derwent (as "Louis XIII"), William Dillon (as "Ensemble"), Marion Dodge (as "Ensemble"), L. Dumbadse (as "Ensemble"), Douglass Dumbrille (as "Athos"), Ernest Ehler (as "Ensemble"), Marguerite Eisele (as "Ensemble"), Byrdeatta Evans (as "Ensemble"), Rose Gale (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Greenley (as "Ensemble"), Evelyn Groves (as "Ensemble"), Emily Hadley (as "Ensemble"), Sally Hadley (as "Ensemble"), William Hagen (as "Ensemble"), Pauline Hall (as "Ensemble"), Libby Hanley (as "Ensemble"), Vida Hanna (as "Ensemble"), Catherine Hayes (as "Aubergiste"), Louis Hector (as "Comte De La Rochefort"), Eve Hellesness (as "Ensemble"), Harriet Hoctor (as "Premiere Danseuse of the Court"), Stanley Howard (as "Ensemble"), Ivan Ismailov (as "Ensemble"), Norman Ives (as "Ensemble"), Harry James (as "Ensemble"), Andy Jochim (as "Cardinal's Guard"), Naomi Johnson (as "Zoe"), Wilma Kaye (as "Ensemble"), Frances Kelly (as "Ensemble"), William Kershaw (as "Brother Joseph"), Dennis King (as "D'Artagnan"), Charles Kirby (as "Ensemble"), John Kline (as "M. De Treville"), Lydia Krushinsky (as "Ensemble"), Julia Lane (as "Ensemble"), Elaine Lank (as "Ensemble"), Randolph Leyman (as "Cardinal's Guard"), Eleanor Little (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Macaulay (as "Aramis"), Glenn Macauley (as "Ensemble"), Mary MacDonald (as "Ensemble"), Lottie Marcy (as Ensemble"), Joan Marren (as "Ensemble"), Marie Merrifield (as "Ensemble"), G. Moore (as "King's Attendant"), Ellen Moray (as "Ensemble"), Ann Moss (as "Ensemble"), Armundi Muzzi (as "Ensemble"), Raymond O'Brien (as "Patrick"), Lucille O'Connor (as "Ensemble"), Vivienne Osborne (as "Lady De Winter"), Nona Otero (as "Ensemble"), Reginald Owen (as "Cardinal Richelieu"), Ivy Palmer (as "Ensemble"), Esther Peters (as "Ensemble"), Detmar Poppen (as "Porthos"), Nora Puntin (as "Ensemble"), Louise Raymond (as "Ensemble"), Elsie Reign (as "Ensemble"), Lee Russell (as "Ensemble"), Vivienne Segal (as "Constance Bonacieux"), Martin Sheppard (as "Ensemble"), Robert Shields (as "Ensemble"), Hilda Steiner (as "Ensemble"), Miriam Stockton (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Sutton (as "Ensemble"), Richard Thornton (as "The Bo'sun"), Mildred Turner (as "Ensemble"), Regina Tushinska (as "Ensemble"), Margaret Valient (as "Ensemble"), A. Van Mueller (as "Ensemble"), Serge Vino (as "Ensemble"), Lillian White (as "Ensemble"), Gertrude Williams (as "Ensemble"), Helen Withers (as "Ensemble"), John Zak (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1929) Stage Play: Show Girl. Musical comedy. Music by George Gershwin. Book by William Anthony McGuire. Lyrics by Ira Gershwin and Gus Kahn. Based on the novel by J.P. McEvoy. Musical Director: William Daly. Additional lyrics by Thomas Malie, Sidney Skolsky, W.H. Farrell and Jimmy Durante. Additional music by W.H. Farrell and Jimmy Durante. Featuring songs by J. Little. Nusical Staging by Bobby Connolly. Directed by William Anthony McGuire. Ziegfeld Theatre: 2 Jul 1929-5 Oct 1929 (111 performances). Cast: Florence Allen, Virginia Allen, Jean Althan, Selma Althan, Jane Barry, Betty Bassett, Marcia Bell, Eddee Belmont, Caryl Bergman, Hazel Boffinger, Dorothy Bow, Bobby Brodsley, Pamela Bryant, Orine Bryne, Edna Bunte, Emily Burton, Dorothy Carrigan, Doris Carson, Peggy Carthew, Virginia Case, Lew Clayton, Blaine Cordner, Billie Cortez, Cleo Cullen, Dona Desne Curry, Gertrude Dahl, Dolores De Fina, Mildred Defina, Violet Dell, Katherine Downer, Doris Downes, Alma Drange, Sadie Duff, Jimmy Durante (as "Snozzle" / "Sombre Eyes"), Kay English, Caja Eric, Austin Fairman (as "John Milton"), Eddie Foy Jr. (as "Denny Kerrigan"), Noel Francis (as "Peggy Ritz"), Virginia Frank, Vera Frederick, Janet Gibbard, Dolores Grant, Viola Hage, Ruth Hayden, Althea Heinly, Kathryn Hereford, Harriet Hoctor, Maurine Holmes, Eddie Jackson, Andy Jochim, Agatha Johann, Juliette Jones, Ruby Keeler (as "Dixie Dugan"), Mildred Klaw, Renee Landeau, Ada Landis, Camille Lanier, Ruth Love, Nick Lucas, Joseph Macauley, Mary MacDonald, Lottie Marcy, Doris May, Patricia McGrath, Frank McHugh (as "Jimmy Doyle"), Dorothy Morgan, Howard Morgan, Barbara Newberry, Evelyn Nichols, Dore Nodine, Lucille O'Connor, Pat O'Keefe, Georgia Payne, Lois Peck, Leonia Pennington, Vivian Porter, Beatrice Powers, Dolores Ray, Louise Raymond, Dorothy Ryan, Blanche Satchell, Matthew Smith, Wanda Stevenson, Mildred Swunke, Calvin Thomas, Mildred Turner, Sunny Van, Claire Wayne, Jean Wayne, Virginia Whitmore. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- Mlle. Modiste (1929). Musical comedy/operetta (revival). Music by Victor Herbert. Book by Henry Martyn Blossom. Lyrics by Henry Martyn Blossom. Musical Director: Louis Kroll. Costume Design by Tams and Rose Mandel. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Directed by Milton Aborn. Jolson's 59th Street Theatre (moved to The Casino Theatre from 21 Oct 1929- close): 7 Oct 1929- 16 Nov 1929 (48 performances). Cast: Grace Alden (as "Ensemble"), Amy Alexander (as "Ensemble"), Frank Alexander (as "Ensemble"), Flavia Arcaro (as "Mme. Cecile, proprietress of a Parisian hat shop"), Edith Artley (as "Fanchette, Mme. Cecile's daughter/Ensemble"), Frances Baviello (as "Bebe, dancer at Folies Bergere"), Marion Blau (as "Ensemble"), Marjorie Booth (as "Ensemble"), Evelyn Brown (as "Ensemble"), William Burbank (as "Ensemble"), Arthur Burckley (as "Gaston, an artist, Mme. Cecile's son"), Maude Carleton (as "Ensemble"), James Carlin (as "Ensemble"), Florence Caselle (as "Nanette, Mme. Cecile's daughter"), Emma Curtis (as "Ensemble"), Lee F. Daly (as "Francois, porter at Mme. Cecile's"), Louis Diamond (as "Ensemble"), William Ellis (as "Ensemble"), Elizabeth Flannigan (as "Ensemble"), Sally Galbreaith (as "Ensemble"), Milton Gallagher (as "Ensemble"), Ida Goodrich (as "Ensemble"), Wee Griffin (as "Ensemble"), Marie Grimaldi (as "Premier Danseuse"), Peggy Guilbert (as "Ensemble"), Ione Haals (as "Ensemble"), Helen Held (as "Ensemble"), Betty Hines (as "Ensemble"), Ralph Hoyt (as "Ensemble"), Lucyle Keeling (as "Marie Louise de Bouvray, Etienne's sister"), Harry Knabenshue (as "Ensemble"), George Koenig (as "Ensemble"), Anna Koons (as "Ensemble"), Florine Lacluyze (as "Ensemble"), Florence Lamorer'e (as "Ensemble"), Mary Leavitt (as "Ensemble"), Ethel Lynne (as "Ensemble"), Theresa Masters (as "Ensemble"), William J. McCarthy (as "General Le Marquis de Villefranche"), Nell McCormick (as "Ensemble"), Eileen McGann (as "Ensemble"), Bert Melrose (as "Ensemble"), Bernice Mershon (as "Mrs. Hiram Bent"), Eleanor Meyer (as "Ensemble"), Roy Miller (as "Ensemble"), Gertrude Noble (as "Ensemble"), Helen Petrie (as "Ensemble"), Dolly Pierce (as "Ensemble"), Detmar Poppen (as "Henri de Bouvray, Comte de St. Mar"), Richard Powell (as "Hiram Bent, an American millionaire"), Robert Rhodes (as "Capt. Etienne de Bouvray, Comte de St. Mar's nephew"), Bernie Sager (as "Ensemble"), Pearl Saunders (as "Ensemble"), Fritzi Scheff (as "Fifi"), Ruth Sharpe (as "Ensemble"), Blanche Shock (as "Ensemble"), Helen Smythe (as "Ensemble"), Alexander Stock (as "Ensemble"), Cecelia Stockdale (as "Ensemble"), Edward Taylor (as "Ensemble"), Roland Tudor (as "Lieut. Rene La Motte, engaged to Marie Louise"), Dorothy Wadleigh (as "Ensemble"), Lillian Wallace (as "Ensemble"), Jane Walters (as "Ensemble"), Adeline White (as "Ensemble"), Homer Wright (as "Ensemble"), Bronek Wrobleski (as "Ensemble"), Francesco Yannelli (as "Ensemble"), Hobson Young (as "Ensemble"), Meredith Young (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Jolson Theatre Musical Comedy Company.
- (1929) Stage Play: Sons O' Guns. Musical comedy. Music by J. Fred Coots. Book by Fred Thompson and Jack Donohue [credited as Jack Donahue]. Lyrics by Arthur Swanstrom and Benny Davis. Musical Director: Max Steiner. Military Direction by Harry Holbrook, U.S.M.C. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Scenic Design by Joseph Urban. Costume Design by Charles Le Maire. Directed by Bobby Connolly. Imperial Theatre: 26 Nov 1929- 9 Aug 1930 (295 performances). Cast: Virginia Allen (as "Ensemble"), Russell Ash (as "Ensemble"), Millicent Bancroft (as "Ensemble"), Wallace Banfield (as "Ensemble"), Firley Banks (as "Ensemble"), Alfred Bardelang (as "Oswald/A German Prisoner"), Ida Berry (as "Ensemble"), Charles E. Bird (as "A British Officer"), Jeanette Bradley (as "Ensemble"), Leo Branson (as "Ensemble"), Paul Bristbois (as "Ensemble"), Edna Bunte (as "Ensemble"), Edna Burford (as "Ensemble"), Joe Carey (as "Ensemble"), Michael Cavanaugh (as "Ensemble"), Marion Chambers (as "Joan"), Gloria Clare (as "Ensemble"), Ann Constance (as "Ensemble"), Billie Cortez (as "Ensemble"), Guy Daly (as "Ensemble"), Lili Damita (as "Yvonne"), Del Daven (as "Ensemble"), Gordon Davis (as "Ensemble"), Raoul De Tisne (as "Pierre"), Charles Dodson (as "U.S.A. Bugler"), Robert Dohn (as "Parker/A German Prisoner"), Jack Donohue [credited as Jack Donahue] (as "Jimmy Canfield"), Russel Duncan (as "Ensemble"), William Dunn (as "Ensemble"), Byron Earle (as "Ensemble"), Richard Ellis (as "Ensemble"), June English (as "Ensemble"), Michael J. Forbes (as "Ensemble"), William Frawley (as "Hobson"), James Garrett (as "Ensemble"), Chris Gerard (as "Ensemble"), Anne Goddard (as "Ensemble"), Maerena Grady (as "Ensemble"), Ruth Grady (as "Ensemble"), Ethel Green (as "Ensemble"), Della Harkins (as "Ensemble"), Ruth Hayden (as "Ensemble"), Muriel Hayman (as "Ensemble"), John Heming (as "Ensemble"), Albert Henkel (as "Ensemble"), Eddie Hodge (as "Billswater"), Muriel Hoey (as "Ensemble"), Harry Holbrook (as "U.S.A. Captain"), Clare Hooper (as "Ensemble"), Mary Horan (as "Bernice Pearce"), Stanley Howard (as "Ensemble"), Topsy Humphrey (as "Ensemble"), David Hutcheson (as "Major Archibald Ponsonby-Falcke"), Lillian Jordan (as "Ensemble"), Ann Karyle (as "Marie"), Wilma Kaye (as "Ensemble"), Nora Kildare (as "Ensemble"), Efim Knoff (as "Ensemble"), Fred Kruger (as "Ensemble"), George Lamb (as "Ensemble"), Adrienne Lampel (as "Ensemble"), Benn K. Leavenworth (as "Ensemble"), Preston Lewis (as "Ensemble"), Jack Little (as "Ensemble"), Bill Mack (as "Ensemble"), John M. Malone (as "Ensemble"), Frances Markey (as "Colette"), Marcelle Miller (as "Ensemble"), Gwendolyn Milne (as "Jeanette"), Robert Milton (as "Ensemble"), Henry Mirshon (as "Ensemble"), Roderick Murray (as "Ensemble"), Evelyn Nichols (as "Ensemble"), Tuxie Ondex (as "Ensemble"), Merrill Oslin (as "Ensemble"), Ray Prescott (as "Ensemble"), Nora Puntin (as "Ensemble"), Sylvia Roberts (as "Ensemble"), George Rolland (as "Ensemble"), Carl Rose (as "Ensemble"), Robert Saidler (as "Ensemble"), Earle Sanford (as "Ensemble"), Roy Santor (as "Ensemble"), Marion Santre (as "Ensemble"), Daniel Sparks (as "Ensemble"), Iola Sparks (as "Ensemble"), Jack Spiegel (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Spree (as "A British Tommy"), Wanda Stevenson (as "Ensemble"), Adele Story (as "Ensemble"), Frank Strang (as "Ensemble"), Ray Stully (as "Ensemble"), Ward Tallman (as "Ensemble"), Richard Temple (as "General Harper"), Shirley Vernon (as "Mary Harper"), Lawrence Waite (as "Ensemble"), Gladstone Waldrip (as "Ensemble"), George Wallace (as "Ensemble"), Barry Walsh (as "Carl Schreiber"), Herbert Warren (as "Ensemble"), Milton Watson (as "Arthur Travers"), Tom Weldon (as "Ensemble"), Cliff Whitcombe (as "Ensemble"), Virginia Whitmore (as "Ensemble"), Frances Wise (as "Ensemble"), Josephine Wolfe (as "Ensemble"), Victor Young (as "Ensemble"), Isabel Zehner (as "Irene"). Produced by Connolly & Swanstrom.
- Sari (1930). Musical/operetta (revival). Book by C.S. Cushing and E.P. Heath. Music by Emmerich Kálmán. Lyrics by C.S. Cushing and E.P. Heath. Based on the Viennese original 'Der Zigeunerprimas' by Julius Wilhelm and Fritz Greenbaum. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Scenic Design by Ernest Gros and Ronsin. Costume Design by Albertine Randall Wheelan. Directed by George F. Marion [final Broadway credit]. Liberty Theatre: 29 Jan 1930- 8 Feb 1930 (15 performances). Cast: Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Count Estragon"), Pat Clayton (as "Pierre"), Marybeth Conoly (as "Juliska Fekete"), J. Humbird Duffey (as "Laczi"), Gloria Frey (as "Klari"), Mitzi Hajos (as "Sari"), Bernard Jukes (as "Cadeaux"), Boyd Marshall (as "Pali Racz"), David D. Morris (as "Joska Fekete"), Jack Suires (as "Gaston"). Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1930) Stage Play: Princess Charming. Musical/operetta. Music by Albert Szirmai [credited as Albert Sirmay] and Arthur Swartz. Lyrics by Arthur Swanstrom. Book by Jack Donohue [credited as Jack Donahue]. Based on the original of Franz Martos. Based on the original of Arthur Wimperis and Lauri Wylie. Musical Director: Alfred Goodman. Ballets by Albertina Rasch. Military direction by Harry Holbrook, U.S.M.C. Directed by Edward C. Lilley and Bobby Connolly. Imperial Theatre: 13 Oct 1930- 29 Nov 1930 (56 performances). Cast: Louise Allen (as "Ensemble"), Virginia Allen (as "Ensemble"), Walter Asmus (as "Ensemble"), Jeanne Aubert (as "Wanda Navarro"), Fred Barry (as "Ensemble"), Adeline Bendon (as "Ensemble"), Irene Bostick (as "Colette"), Thomas Bourke (as "Ensemble"), Jeanette Bradley (as "Ensemble"), Fred Brook (as "Ensemble"), Edna Bunte (as "Ensemble"), Kay Burnell (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Carey (as "Ensemble"), Ruth Cook (as "Ensemble"), Ray Covert (as "Ensemble"), Evelyn Dallas (as "Ensemble"), Erle Danley (as "Ensemble"), Brian Davis (as "Ensemble"), Ilus de Pongo (as "Ensemble"), Raoul De Tisne (as "Lord Chamberlain to the King"), Peggy Dolan (as "Ensemble"), James Dowling (as "Ensemble"), Douglass Dumbrille (as "Ivanoff"), Leon Dunar (as "Ensemble"), June English (as "Ensemble"), John Fulco (as "Ensemble"), Betty Gallagher (as "Marie"), Anne Goddard (as "Ensemble"), Donald Gordon (as "Ensemble"), Roy Gordon (as "Baron Sigman"), Portia Grafton (as "Ensemble"), Yvonne Grey (as "Veronique"), Marie Grimaldi (as "Ensemble"), Edouard Grobe (as "Ensemble"), George Grossmith (as "Christian II of Elyria"), William Hagen (as "Ensemble"), Robert Halliday (as "Captain Torrelli of the Cruiser Elyria"), Louise Hansen (as "Ensemble"), Ann Hardman (as "Ensemble"), Patty Hastings (as "Ensemble"), Ruth Hayden (as "Ensemble"), Evelyn Herbert (as "Princess Elaine of Novia"), Paul Huber (as "Attorney General"), Dorothea James (as "Lulu"), Jack James (as "Ensemble"), Agatha Johann (as "Ensemble"), Howard Johnson (as "Ensemble"), Elsie Kain (as "Ensemble"), John Kane (as "Lieutenant of the Elyria"), Wilma Kaye (as "Ensemble"), Stella Kehr (as "Ensemble"), Andor Keller (as "Ensemble"), Tom Kelly (as "Ensemble"), Regina Kovale (as "Ensemble"), John Krikoff (as "Ensemble"), Beatrice Lauri (as "Ensemble"), William Leon (as "Ensemble"), Albert Leroy (as "Ensemble"), Jack Lister (as "Ensemble"), John Mangum (as "Ensemble"), Robert Marco (as "Ensemble"), Frances Markey (as "Anastasia"), Ernest McChesney (as "Second Lieutenant"), Duke McHale (as "Page"), Evelyn Monte (as "Ensemble"), Lewis Moore (as "Ensemble"), Merrit Moore (as "Ensemble"), Victor Moore (as "Irving Huff"), Arduino Muzzie (as "Ensemble"), Leon Nash (as "Ensemble"), Norma Nash (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Nodine (as "Ensemble"), Lee Nugent (as "Ensemble"), Leslie Ostrander (as "Ensemble"), Nona Otero (as "Ensemble"), Joanna Parker (as "Ensemble"), Tessie Pearson (as "Ensemble"), Donald Plover (as "Ensemble"), Mabel Potter (as "Ensemble"), William Prevost (as "Ensemble"), Pat Quinton (as "Ensemble"), Basil Rallis (as "Ensemble"), Wynne Ralph (as "Ensemble"), William Ritter (as "Ensemble"), Wilma Roeloff (as "Marguerite"), William Ruppel (as "Ensemble"), Robert Saidler (as "Ensemble"), Billy Sallier (as "Ensemble"), Marion Santre (as "Ensemble"), Bart Schilling (as "Ensemble"), Peggy Sickle (as "Ensemble"), Maurice Siegel (as "Ensemble"), Marguerite Slattery (as "Ensemble"), Ruth Sproul (as "Ensemble"), Howard St. John (as "Aide de Camp to the King"), Jack Stevens (as "Ensemble"), Pam Sweeny (as "Ensemble"), Leo Tatzin (as "Ensemble"), Carola Taylor (as "Ensemble"), Mildred Turner (as "Ensemble"), Serge Ury (as "Ensemble"), Jack Var (as "Ensemble"), John Walsh (as "Ensemble"), Walter Wandell (as "Ensemble"), Israfel Weinstein (as "Ensemble"), Patricia Whitney (as "Ensemble"), Martha Wilbert (as "Ensemble"), Frances Wise (as "Ensemble"), Josephine Wolfe (as "Ensemble"), Edward Young (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Bobby Connolly and Arthur Swanstrom.
- Three's a Crowd (1930). Musical revue. Music by Arthur Schwartz. Book and lyrics by Howard Dietz. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. With sketches by Groucho Marx, Fred Allen, William B. Miles, Laurence Schwab, Corey Ford, Arthur Sheekman and Hazel Flynn. Direction and Lighting Design by Hassard Short. Selwyn Theatre: 15 Oct 1930- Jun 1931 (closing date unknown/272 performances). Cast: Fred Allen, Joan Clement, Marybeth Conoly, Wally Coyle, Rene Du Plessis, Tamara Geva, Libby Holman, Portland Hoffa, Alan Jones, Parcy Launders, Margaret Lee, Fred MacMurray (as one of 'The California Collegians"), Harold Moffet, Herb Montei, Earl Oxford, Amy Revere, Clifton Webb, Lou Wood. Produced by Max Gordon. Note: Show was one of the biggest hits of the dismal 1930-31 season, closing after 272 performances in June, 1931. Historically significant as introducing balcony spotlighting instead of footlights, a technique soon adopted universally on Broadway. Holman sang her signature song, "Body and Soul" while Webb danced.
- The Band Wagon (1931). Musical revue. Music by Arthur Schwartz. Lyrics by Howard Dietz. Book by George S. Kaufman and Howard Dietz'. Lighting Design by Hassard Short. Scenic Design by Albert R. Johnson. Costume Design by Kiviette and Constance Ripley. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Directed by Hassard Short. New Amsterdam Theatre: 3 Jun 1931- 16 Jan 1932 (260 performances). Cast: Adele Astaire,,Fred Astaire (in "Sweet Music"/For Good Old Nectar/"Hoops" as "Simpson Cater"/The Pride of Claghornes/"New Sun in the Sky"/"I Love Louisa"/"The Beggar Waltz"/Dance/"White Heat"/The Demonstrator/Pour La Bain), John Barker, Helen Broderick, Helen Carrington, Philip Loeb, Tillie Losch, Frank Morgan (as "Col. Jefferson Claghorne"), Francis Pierlot (as "Ely Cater"), Roberta Robinson, Jay Wilson. Produced by Max Gordon.
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1931 (1931). Musical revue. Sketches by Mark Hellinger, J.P. Murray and Gene Buck. Lyrics by Gene Buck, Joseph McCarthy, Charles Farrell, Mack Gordon, J.P. Murray, Barry Trivers, E.Y. Harburg, Jack Norworth and Noël Coward. Dialogue staged by Edward C. Lilley. Dances directed by Bobby Connolly and Albertina Rasch. Music by Harry Revel, Ben Oakland, Dave Stamper, Dimitri Tiomkin, Noël Coward, Nora Bayes, James Monaco, Chick Endor, Walter Donaldson, Jay Gorney and Hugo Riesenfeld. Music for "Pink Lady Waltz" by Ivan Caryll. Music for "(Shine On) Harvest Moon" by Jack Norworth. Music for "(Who Paid the Rent for Mrs.) Rip Van Winkle" by Alfred Bryan. Lyrics for "(Who Paid the Rent for Mrs.) Rip Van Winkle" by Fred Fisher. Music for "You Made Me Love You" Dance by Mack Gordon. Lyrics for "I'm With You" by Walter Donaldson. Musical Director: Oscar Bradley. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh, Will Vodery, Howard Jackson and Joe Jordan. Featuring songs by Powell and Stevens Assembled by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. Directed by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. and Gene Buck. Ziegfeld Theatre: 1 Jul 1931- 21 Nov 1931 (165 performances). Cast: Iris Adrian, Albertina Rasch Dancers, Thomas Arace, Jack Arthur, Jean Audree, Faith Bacon, Robert Baldwin, Virginia Bethel, Virginia Biddle, Ethel Borden, Mildred Borst, Frank Britton, Milt Britton, Jack Bruns, John Bubbles, Buck & Bubbles, Joan Burgess, Katherine Burke, Alice Burrage, Arthur Campbell, Tito Carol, Gordon Carper, Albert Carroll, Helen Carson, Emmita Casanova, Catherine Clark, The Collette Sisters, Dorothy Dell, Netta Deuschateau, Dorothy Dodge, David Drollet, Betty Dumbris, Marguerite Durand, Marguerite Eisele, Georgia Ellis, Kay English, Caja Eric, Clayton Estes, Ruth Etting (as "Nora Bayes"), Dorothy Flood, Rosa Fromson, Rose Gale, Gladys Glad, Gene Gory, Yvonne Grey, John Gurney, Paul Gursdorff, Cliff Hall, Cassie Hanley, Helen Hannan, Pearl Harris, Eunice Holmes, Jean Howard, Billy Hughes, Russell Johns, Tom Kendall, George Lamar, Frank Lang, Hal Le Roy (as "Alphonso Smith"), Milton Le Roy, Marjorie Levoe, Boots Mallory, Christine Maple, Herschel Martin, Mitzi Mayfair, Lorelle McCarver, Ernest McChesney, Frank McCormack, Dennis McCurtin, Marjorie McLaughlin, Olive McLay, Frieda Mierse, Vera Milton, Grace Moore, Jim Moore, Helen Morgan, John Daly Murphy, Dorissa Nelova, Pat O'Day, Pearl Osgood, Earl Oxford, Anne Lee Patterson, Ruth Patterson, Jack Pearl, Vivian Porter, Betty Real, Mary Alice Rice, Harry Richman, Bernice Roberts, William Royal, A. Samish, Blanche Satchell, Billie Seward, Barbara Smith, Conrad Sparin, Marie Stevens, Leonard Stokes, Lena Thomas, Joseph Toner, Synny Trowbridge, Robert Walker, Helen Walsh, Eileen Wenzel, Robert White. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1931) Stage Play: Everybody's Welcome. Musical comedy. Music by Sammy Fain [earliest Broadway credit]. Book by Lambert Carroll. Based on "Up Pops the Devil" by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett. Lyrics by Irving Kahal. Musical Director: Tom Jones. Additional music by Harry Revel, Herman Hupfeld and Manning Sherwin. Additional lyrics by Herman Hupfeld, Mack Gordon, Edward Eliscu, Arthur Lippmann and Milton Pascal. Choreographed by William Holbrook, under the supervision of Albertina Rasch. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Costume Design by Ernest Schrapps and Alison McLellan Hunter. Directed by William Mollison. Shubert Theatre: 13 Oct 1931- 13 Feb 1932 (139 performances). Cast: Spencer Barnes (as "Laundryman"), Jack Barratt (as "Ensemble"), Mary Brooks (as "Dora/Ensemble"), Andrew Carr (as "Buddy Hill/Specialty Dancer"), Louise Carr (as "Specialty Dancer"), Gladys Carter (as "Ensemble"), Ruth Cook (as "Albertina Rasch Girl"), Virginia Davis (as "Ensemble"), Carl Duart (as "Ensemble"), Elsie Duffy (as "Jane/Ensemble"), Charles Garland (as "Mr. Platt/Ensemble") [final Broadway role], Donald Gordon (as "Ensemble"), Louise Hansen (as "Premier Danseuse/Albertina Rasch Girl"), Thomas Harty (as "A Drunk"), Helen Hawkins (as "Ensemble"), Edna Hedin (as "Helen/Ensemble"), Dorothy Koster (as "Ensemble"), Ann Sothern [credited as Harriette Lake] (as "Ann Cathway"), Beatrice Lauri (as "Albertina Rasch Girl"), Cecil Lean (as "George Kent") [final Broadway role], Bernice Lee (as "Grace"), Clark Leston (as "Ensemble"), Sally Lynne (as "Ensemble"), Charles McClelland (as "Ensemble"), Jack Moore (as "Ensemble"), Edwin Murray (as "Ensemble"), Hazzard Newberry (as "Ensemble"), Jean Newcombe (as "Mrs. Geroge Kent"), Lucille Osborn (as "Mrs. Platt"), Naida Pahl (as "Trixie/Ensemble"), Tesha Pearson (as "Albertina Rasch Girl"), Ann Pennington (as "Louella Carroll"), Una Ralph (as "Albertina Rasch Girl"), Evan Ritter (as "Ensemble"), Roy Roberts (as "Gilbert Morrell"), Etna Ross (as "Ensemble"), Jack Ross (as "Kelly/Ensemble"), Oscar Shaw (as "Steve Merrick"), Jack Sheehan (as "Biny Hatfield"), Phoebe Wallace (as "Betty"), Frances Williams (as "Polly Bascom"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- The Cat and the Fiddle (1931). Musical/romantic comedy.
- The Laugh Parade (1931). Musical revue. Imperial Theatre: 2 Nov 1931- 21 May 1932 (231 performances).
- A Little Racketeer (1932). Musical comedy. Choreographed by Jack Donohue and Albertina Rasch. Music by Haskell Brown. Book by Harry Clarke. From the German of F. Kalbfuss and R. Wilde. Lyrics by Edward Eliscu. Additional music by Dimitri Tiomkin. Musical Director: Maury Rubens. Featuring songs by Lee Wainer and Berenece Kazounoff. Featuring songs with lyrics by Earle Crooker, Moe Jaffe and Lupin Fein. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Costume Design by Ernest Schrapps and Alison McLellan Hunter. Directed by William Caryl. 44th Street Theatre: 18 Jan 1932- 27 Feb 1932 (48 performances). Cast: Joan Abbey, Eleanor Arden, Julia Barker, Al Berl, Jimmy Corke, Marjorie Crane, George Del Rigo, Dorothy Drum, Madelyn Eubanks, John Garrick, Marion Gillon, Inez Goetz, Snookie Gordon, Bobby Hamilton, Kai Hansen, Hamtree Harrington, Grace Hayes, Walter Johnson, Billy Joy, William Kent, Stanley Ledman, Ned Lynn, George Marshall, Khalil Oglou Mazini, Gertrude Medwin, Steve Mikol, Barbara Newberry, Harold Offer, Martha Pacina, John Perkins, Agatha Phillips, Carl Randall, Evelyn Reide, Marty Rhiele, Jerry Rogers, Kay Simmons, Queenie Smith (as "Dixie"), Leone Sousa, Elsie St. Clair, Daniel J. Sullivan, Colleen Ward, Lorraine Weimar, Betty Wonder, Tommy Wonder, Yo-Hay-Tong. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- Face the Music (1932). Musical comedy revue. Book by Moss Hart. Lyrics by Irving Berlin. 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 VanNoy, Mary Grace Van Noy, Dorothy Waller, Teddy West, Jack Wolfe, Dan Wyler. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1932) Stage Play: Ballyhoo of 1932. Musical.
- (1932) Stage Play: Flying Colors. Musical revue.
- (1932) Stage Play: Walk a Little Faster. Musical revue.
- (1933) Stage Play: Face the Music. Musical comedy revue (revival). Music by Irving Berlin. Book by Moss Hart. Lyrics by Irving Berlin. Music orchestrated by Russell Bennett, Frank Tours and Maurice De Packh. Scenic Design by Albert R. Johnson. Lighting Design by Hassard Short. Costume Design by Kiviette and Weld. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Production staged by Hassard Short. Book directed by George S. Kaufman. 44th Street Theatre: 31 Jan 1933- 25 Feb 1933 (31 performances). Cast: Mary Boland (as "Mrs. Meshbesher"), Joan Abbey (as "Girl"), Margot Adams (as "Miss Eisenheimer/Girl"), George Anderson (as "Mr. O'Rourke"), Kay Apgar (as "Girl"), Thomas Arace (as "Detective"), James Babbitt (as "Boy"), Bob Baldwin (as "Bartender"), John Barker (as "Pat Mason, Jr."), Janet Biesantz (as "Girl"), Alice Brent (as "Girl"), Janet Carver (as "The Albertina Rasch Dancers"), Carol Clyde (as "Girl"), Frank Conway (as "Boy"), Don Costello (as "Louis/Mr. O'Ryan"), Ed Crosswell (as "Boy"), Guy Daly (as "Boy"), Peggy Dell (as "The Albertina Rasch Dancers"), Martin Dennis (as "Boy"), Frank Dobson (as "Sheriff"), Bert Doughty (as "Boy"), Dorothy Drum (as "Mme. Elise"), John W. Ehrle (as "Rodney St. Clair, Prosecuting Attorney"), Betty Eisner (as "The Albertina Rasch Dancers/Leading Dancer"), Margaret Fitzpatrick (as "Girl"), Vera Fredericks (as "The Albertina Rasch Dancers/Captain"), Marie Gale (as "Girl"), Inez Goetz (as "A Sister Team/Girl"), Jack Good (as "Joe"), Bob Grey (as "Boy"), E.D. Howell (as "Boy"), Robert Emmett Keane (as "Hal Reisman"), Charles Lawrence (as "Martin van Buren Meshbesher"), Margaret Lee (as "Pickles"), Bob Long (as "Boy"), Virginia Mandracia (as "Girl"), George Marshall (as "Stage Doorman"), Nancy McCord (as "Kit Baker"), Martha Merrill (as "The Albertina Rasch Dancers"), Howard Morgan (as "Boy"), Ed Murray (as "Boy"), Fred Nay (as "Boy"), Pat O'Keefe (as "May/Girl"), Oscar Polk (as "Rivington"), Thomas Reynolds (as "Judge Furioso"), Marty Rhiele (as "Boy"), Jack Richards (as "Boy"), Vivian Roscoe (as "Girl"), Ray Santos (as "Boy"), Peter Sargent (as "Mrs. Meshbesher's Footman"), Daniel Sullivan (as "Postman"), Louise Taylor (as "Girl"), Martha Tibbetts (as "Mme. Elise's Assistant/Girl"), Colleen Ward (as "A Sister Team/Girl"), Dolly Widell (as "Girl"), Jack Wolfe (as "Boy"). Produced by Producing Associates, Inc. Produced by arrangement with Sam Harris.
- The Bohemian Girl (1933). Musical comedy.
- Pure in Heart (1934). Drama. Written by John Howard Lawson. Incidental music by Richard Myers. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Directed by Edward Massey. Longacre Theatre: 20 Mar 1934- Mar 1934 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Joseph Allenton, James Bell, Larry Bolton, Ruth Bond (as "Albertina Rasch Girl"), C.H. Davis, Peggy Dell (as "Albertina Rasch Girl"), Peter Donald Jr., Ara Gerald, Michael Gray, Dorothy Hall, Patti Heaton (as "Albertina Rasch Girl"), Rita Horgan (as "Albertina Rasch Girl"), Charles S. Howard, Amalie Ideal (as "Albertina Rasch Girl"), Frances Langford (as "A Singer"), Charles C. Leatherbee, Owen Martin (as "Iceman/2nd Detective"), Mary Mascher (as "Albertina Rasch Girl"), Scott Moore, Mary Philips (as "Albertina Rasch Girl"), Tom Powers (as "Dr. Martin Goshen"), Joaquin Souther, Zelma Tiden, Harold Vermilyea (as "Matt Swann"), Janet Young. Produced by Richard Aldrich and Alfred De Liagre Jr.
- The Great Waltz (1934). Musical/operetta.
- The Great Waltz (1935). Musical/operetta.
- Jubilee (1935). Musical comedy.
- Very Warm for May (1939). Musical comedy. Music by Jerome Kern. Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. Music arranged by Russell Bennett. Book by Oscar Hammerstein II. Music orchestrated by Russell Bennett. Musical Director: Robert Emmett Dolan. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch and Harry Losee. Scenic Design by Vincente Minnelli. Costume Design by Vincente Minnelli. Book directed by Oscar Hammerstein II. Directed by Vincente Minnelli. Alvin Theatre: 17 Nov 1939- 6 Jan 1940 (59 performances). Cast: June Allyson (as "June"), Dolores Anderson (as "Dolores"), Eve Arden (as "Winnie Spofford"), Maxine Barrat (as "Honey"), Seldon Bennett (as "Schlesinger"), Beulah Blake (as "Beulah"), Helen Bliss (as "Helen"), Donald Brian (as "William Graham"), Virginia Card (as "Miss Wasserman"), Peter Chambers (as "Mr. Magee"), Andre Charise (as "Andre"), William Collins (as "Bill"), Sally Craven (as "Sally"), Milton DeLugg (as "O'Cedar/Accordion"), Helen Donovan (as "Helen II"), Eleanor Eberle (as "Eleanor"), Frank Egan (as "Mr. Pratt"), Vera-Ellen (as "Susan"), Bruce Evans (as "Electrician"), Marshal Fisher (as "Marshal/Guitar"), Miriam Franklyn (as "Miriam"), Kate Friedlich (as "Sylvia"), Ralph Hansell (as "Ralph/Drums"), Claire Harvey (as "Claire"), Louis Hightower (as "Louis") [Broadway debut], Avon Long (as "Jackson"), Walter Long (as "Walter"), Don Loper (as "Smoothy Watson"), Ethel Lynn (as "Ethel"), Matt Malneck (as "Alvin/Violin"), Charles Marlowe (as "Homer/Trumpet"), Ray Mayer (as "Kenny"), Grace McDonald (as "May Graham"), Len Mence (as "Beamish"), Frances Mercer (as "Liz Spofford") [Broadway debut], Rudy Miller (as "Rudy"), Russ Morhoff (as "Russ/Bass"), Kay Picture (as "Miss Hyde"), Jean Plummer (as "Jean/Piano"), Marie Louise Quevli (as "Alice"), Richard Quine (as "Sonny Spofford"), Joseph Quintile (as "Joseph/Harp"), Pamela Randell (as "Pam"), Jack Seymour (as "Jack"), Robert Shackleton (as "Raymond Sibley"), Hollace Shaw (as "Carroll"), Hiram Sherman (as "Ogdon Quiler"), Max Showalter (as "Lowell Pennyfeather"), Ralph Stuart (as "Charles"), Evelyn Thawl (as "Jane"), Webb Tilton (as "Webb"), William Torpey (as "Jethro Hancock"), Jack Whiting (as "Johnny Graham"), Jack Wilson (as "Peter"), Billie Wirth (as "Billie"). Produced by Max Gordon.
- (1940) Stage Play: Boys and Girls Together. Musical revue. Conceived by Ed Wynn and Pat C. Flick. Music by Sammy Fain. Lyrics by Jack Yellen and Irving Kahal. Music orchestrated by Hans Spialek. Additional Arrangements by Robert Russell Bennett and Don Walker. Musical Director: John McManus. Choral numbers by Al Siegal. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Choreography for the De Marcos by Tony De Marco. Directed by Ed Wynn. Broadhurst Theatre: 1 Oct 1940- 15 Mar 1915 (191 performances). Cast: Ed Wynn, Dave Apollon, Al Baron, Betty Bartley, Billie Bernice, Eleanor Brown, Trudy Burke, Maude Carroll, Phyllis Colt, Jack Connover, Jerry Cooper, Gloria Costa, Sally Craven, Renee De Marco, Tony De Marco, Patricia Deering, Helen Devlin, Adair Dollar, Florence Foster, Gloria Gaffey, Georgia Jarvis, Marjorie Knapp, Dorothy Koster, Frank La Varre, Paul La Varre, Lynn Lawrence, Walter Long, Lucienne and Ashour, Eleanore Marek, Iris Marshall, Mary Joan Martin, John McManus, Hazel Nevin, Dell Parker, Mary Ann Parker, Kay Paulsen, Jane Petri, Jane Pickens, Dick Remy, Dot Remy, Edna Sedgewick, The Six Willys, Ione Smith, Mira Stephans, Drucilla Strain, Davenie Watson, Ebe Willy, Ersilio Willy, Eugene Willy, Hermina Willy, Willie Willy. Produced by Ed Wynn.
- (1941) Stage Play: Lady in the Dark. Musical comedy. Book by Moss Hart. Music by Kurt Weill. Lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Musical Director: Maurice Abravanel. Music orchestrated by Kurt Weill. Vocal arrangements by Kurt Weill. Production Design by Hassard Short. Lighting Design by Hassard Short. Scenic Design by Harry Horner. Costume Design by Irene Sharaff. Gowns Designed by Hattie Carnegie. Assistant to Mr. Horner: Lester Polakov and Dick Bernstein. Assistant to Miss Sharaff: Brion. All musical sequences staged by Hassard Short. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Directed by Moss Hart. Alvin Theatre: 23 Jan 1941- 15 Jun 1941 (162 performances). Cast: Gertrude Lawrence (as "Liza Elliott"), Jerome Andrews, Nelson Barclift, Dorothy Bird, George Bockman, Anne Bracken, Macdonald Carey (as "Charley Johnson"), Kenneth Casey, Andre Charise, Catherine Conrad, Audrey Costello, Jean Cumming, Davis Cunningham, Margaret Dale, Patricia Deering, Carol Deis, Eleanor Eberle, Hazel Edwards, Max Edwards, Sally Ferguson, Len Frank, Gordon Gifford, Dan Harden, Fred Hearn, Manfred Hecht, Danny Kaye (as "Russell Paxton"), Yaroslav Kirov, Ellie Lawes, Joan Lawes, Ann Lee, Robert Lee, Bert Lytell (as "Kendall Nesbitt"), June MacLaren, Jacqueline MacMillan, William Marel, Victor Mature (as "Randy Curtis"), Robert Mills, Warren Mills, Beth Nichols, Virginia Peine, Gedda Petry, Donald Randolph, June Rutherford, Natalie Schafer (as "Alison Du Bois"), Jeanne Shelby, Larry Siegle, Harold Simmons, Ward Tallmon (as "Joe, an office boy"), Lois Volkman, George Ward, William Welch, Wana Wennerholm, Margaret Westberg, Parker Wilson, Evelyn Wyckoff (as "Miss Foster"), Florence Wyman. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1941) Stage Play: Lady in the Dark. Musical comedy. [return engagement]. Book by Moss Hart. Music by Kurt Weill. Lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Musical Director: Maurice Abravanel. Music orchestrated by Kurt Weill. Vocal arrangements by Kurt Weill. Production Design by Hassard Short. Lighting Design by Hassard Short. Scenic Design by Harry Horner. Costume Design by Irene Sharaff. Gowns Designed by Hattie Carnegie. Assistant to Mr. Horner: Lester Polakov and Dick Bernstein. Assistant to Miss Sharaff: Brion. All musical sequences staged by Hassard Short. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Directed by Moss Hart. Alvin Theatre: 2 Sep 1941- 30 May 1942 (305 performances). Cast: Gertrude Lawrence (as "Liza Elliott"), Jerome Andrews, Nelson Barclift, Dorothy Bird, George Bockman, Anne Bracken, Kenneth Casey, Andre Charise, Catherine Conrad, Audrey Costello, Jean Cumming, Margaret Dale, Patricia Deering, Carol Deis, H. Robert Edwards, Sally Ferguson, Len Frank, Dan Harden, Fred Hearn, Ann Lee, June MacLaren, Jacqueline MacMillan, William Marel, Beth Nichols, Virginia Peine, Gedda Petry, Donald Randolph, June Rutherford, Natalie Schafer (as "Alison Du Bois"), Jeanne Shelby, Ward Tallmon (as "Joe, an office boy"), Lois Volkman, George Ward, William Welch, Wana Wennerholm, Margaret Westberg, Evelyn Wyckoff (as "Miss Foster"). Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1943) Stage Play: Lady in the Dark. Musical (revival). Book by Moss Hart. Music by Kurt Weill. Lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Musical Director: Maurice Abravanel. Music orchestrated by Kurt Weill. Vocal arrangements by Kurt Weill. Production Design by Hassard Short. Lighting Design by Hassard Short. Scenic Design by Harry Horner. Costume Design by Irene Sharaff. Gowns Designed by Hattie Carnegie. Assistant to Mr. Horner: Lester Polakov and Dick Bernstein. Assistant to Miss Sharaff: Brion. All musical sequences staged by Hassard Short. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Directed by Moss Hart. Broadway Theatre: 27 Feb 1943- 15 May 1943 (83 performances). Cast: Gertrude Lawrence (as "Liza Elliott"), Adelaide Abbot, Lynn Alden, Robert Allen, Bonnie Baken, Bonnie Baker, Lee Bergere, Ken Black, Anne Bracken, Ingeborg Bransen, Eric Brotherson, Edward Browne, Rita Charise, Jack Collins, Jean Cumming, Margaret Dale (as "Maggie Grant"), Richard D'Arcy, Arthur Davies, Phyllis De Bus, Joyce Doncaster, Rose Marie Elliott, Matthew Farrugio, Nikolai Fatula, Sally Ferguson, Matthew Ferrugio, Margaret Gibson, Richard Hale, Anne Helm, Christine Horn, Jane Irving, Warren Jones, Ann Lee, Joan Lee, John Leslie, June MacLaren, Hugh Marlowe (as "Charley Johnson"), George Martin, Scott Merrill, Byron Milligan, Adrienne Moore, Willard Parker, Louise Pearl, Fred Perrone, Gedda Petry, Nicholas Saunders, John Scott, Jeanne Shelby, Alla Shishkina, Walter Stane, Edward Tappa, William Welch, Florence White, Florence Wyman, Helene Young, Edwin Ziegler. Replacement actors: Jane Davies (as "Barbara"), Wayne Walker, Geoffrey Warren, Lester Wolf. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1945) Stage Play: Marinka. Musical drama/romance. Music by Emmerich Kálmán. Lyrics by George Marion Jr. Book by George Marion, Jr. and Karl Farkas. Musical Director: Ray Kavanaugh. Music orchestrated by Hans Spialek'. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Scenic Design by Howard Bay. Costume Design by Mary Grant. Directed by Hassard Short. Winter Garden Theatre (moved to The Ethel Barrymore Theatre from 1 Oct 1945- close): 18 Jul 1945- 8 Ded 1945 (165 performances). Cast: Michael Barrett (as "Sergeant Negulegul"), Paul Campbell (as "Count Hoyos"), Ronnie Cunningham (as "Tilly"), Bob Douglas (as "Lieutenant Baltatzy"), Leonard Elliott (as "Francis"), Jack Gansert (as "Lieutenant Palafy"), Noel Gordon (as "Naval Lieutenant"), Adrienne Gray (as "Countess Huebner"), Taylor Holmes (as "Count Lobkowitz"), Jack Leslie (as "Waiter"), Ethel Levey (as "Madame Sacher"), Luba Malina (as "Countess Landovska"), Joan Roberts (as "Marinka"), Reinhold Schünzel (as "Emperor Franz Josef"), Harry Stockwell (as "Crown Prince Rudolph"), Romo Vincent (as "Bratfisch"), Elline Walther (as "Countess von Diefendorfer"), Ruth Webb (as "Nadine"). Replacement cast [during Winter Garden Theatre run]: Helene Arthur (as "Countess von Diefendorfer"), Edith Fellows (as "Marinka"), Taylor Holmes (as "Emperor Franz Josef"), Charles Laskey (as "Lieutenant Palafy"), Ethel Madsen (as "Nadine"), John McKee (as "Emperor Franz Josef"), Elline Walther (as "Countess Huebner"), Jerry Wayne (as "Crown Prince Rudolph"), Doodles Weaver (as "Francis") [final Broadway role]. [During Ethel Barrymore Theatre run]: None known. Produced by Jules J. Leventhal and Harry Howard.
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