- (1927) Stage: "The Banshee" on Broadway. Melodrama/mystery. Written by W.D. Hepenstall and Ralph Cullinan. Directed by Charles J. Mulligan. Daly's 63rd Street Theatre: 5 Dec 1927-Jan 1928 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Joseph Brennan (as "Peter Adair"), Kitty Collins (as "Mrs. Grimes"), Edward M. Favor (as "Sheriff Abner Heckenshell"), Edmund George (as "Clem Durward"), Dan Kelly, Marion Kerby, Barry Macollum (as "Tom Scott"), Frank Peters (as "Walter Payne"), Herbert Ranson (as "Dr. Neville Lacey"), Michael Rice (as "Jim Sprague"), Lillian Walker (as "Joan Walker"), Richard Whorf (as "Yuru"; Broadway debut), H. Conway Wingfield (as "Dr. Morrison"). Produced by Banshee Inc.
- (1932) Stage: "Monkey", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Sam Janney. Directed by Robert Sparks. Mansfield Theatre: 11 Feb 1932-Mar 1932 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Charlotte Denniston, John T. Dwyer, Nedda Harrigan (as "Estelle Fenley"), Roland Hogue (as "Bracker"), Clifford L. Jones, Wright Kramer, George Lessey (as "Dr. Edward Pomeroy Nichols"), Dann Malloy, Edward McNamara, Randall O'Neill, Jeff Richards, Richard Whorf (as "Insp. Monkey Henderson"), Frank Wilcox (as "Dr. George Hollins"). Produced by Robert Sparks (I).
- (1932) Stage: Appeared in "Red Planet" on Broadway. Written by John L. Balderston and J.E. Hoare. Directed by Burk Symon and Chester Erskine. Cort Theatre: 17 Dec 1932-Dec 1932 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Walter Armin (as "The Count de Reinach"), Ethel Ashby, Wallace Banfield, Marshall Brown, Charles Burroughs, Wilbur Cox, Beryl Douglas, Joy Douglas, Bramwell Fletcher (as "Ray Fanshawe"), Harry Green, Louis Hector, Henry Herbert (as "Herbert Calder"), Dorothy Howard, David Hughes, Alistaire Johnson, Walter King, Thomas Louden, Tucker McGuire, Beatrice Miller (as "Kate"), Bertram Miller, Percy Moore, E. Norris, Marie Pape, Eugene Powers, Frederick Raymond, William Reinecker, Wilfred Seagram, C.E. Smith, Valerie Taylor, Edward Trevor, Madelaine Vaughn, Tod Waller, Richard Walsh, John Wheeler, Richard Whorf (as "The Right Hon. A.D. Randall, P.C."), Wallace Widdicombe, Leonard Willey, Helen Wynn, Oswald Yorke (as "The Prime Minister"). Produced by Laurence Rivers.
- (1933) Stage: Appeared (as "Lunatic") in "Foolscap" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Gennaro Curci and Eduardo Ciannelli. Directed by Geoffrey Kerr. Times Square Theatre: 11 Jan 1933-Jan 1933 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Harold Bolton (as "Another Lunatic"), Diane Bori (as "Martina"), Arthur Bowyer (as "Pierce"), Charles S. Brown (as "Electrician"), Francis Carter (as "Assistant Photographer"), Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Luigi Pirandello"), Frank Coulan (as "Property Man"), William Dorbin (as "Orderly"), Katherine Hastings (as "Helen of Troy"), Peggy Hovenden (as "Francesca da Rimini"), Geoffrey Kerr (as "Shakespeare"), Cynthia Latham (as "Nurse"), Alan Marshall (as "The Stranger"), Rosamund Merivale (as "Eve"), Gorris Nels (as "Menelaus"), Allen Nourse (as "Servant"), Henry O'Neill (as "Dr. Harrold"), William Orville (as "Second Orderly"), Arnold Preston (as "Photographer"), Alice Reinheart (as "Cleopatra"), Bennett Southard (as "Prof. Bluttner"), George Tawde (as "Octavius"), Robert Wallsten (as "Marc Antony"), Frederick Worlock (as "George Bernard Shaw"). Produced by John R. Sheppard Jr. and Frank A. Buchanan.
- (1933) Stage: "Three-Cornered Moon" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Gertrude Tonkonogy [earliest Broadway credit]. Scenic Design by Arthur P. Segal. Directed by Alfred De Liagre Jr. Cort Theatre: 16 Mar 1933-May 1933 (closing date unknown/76 performances). Cast: Paula Bauersmith (as "Jenny"), Elisha Cook Jr. (as "Ed Rimplegar"), (as "Dr. Alan Stevens"), John Eldredge, Ruth Gordon (as "Elizabeth Rimplegar"), Ben Lackland (as "Kenneth Rimplegar"), Cecilia Loftus (as "Mrs. Rimplegar"), Eunice Stoddard (as "Kitty"), Richard Whorf (as "Donald"). Produced by Richard Aldrich and Alfred De Liagre Jr.
- (1934) Stage: Appeared (as "Pboenix Greggs") in "Whatever Possessed Her" on Broadway. Farce. Written by Hardwick Nevin. Scenic Design by Eugene C. Fitsch. Directed by Arthur Sircom. Mansfield Theatre: 25 Jan 1934-Jan 1934 (closing date unknown/4 performances). Cast: Dorothy Adams (as "Ensemble"), Caroline Allen (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Allen (as "Henry"), Richard Allen (as "Ensemble"), Gertrude Augarde (as "Ensemble"), Joan Barbee-Lee (as "Ensemble"), Peter Barrik (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Bayley (as "Ensemble"), Flora Campbell (as "Genevieve Trubee"), Richard Dana (as "Ensemble"), Catherine Doucet (credited as Catherine Calhoun Doucet; as "Millicent Bangs"), Alice Dowd (as "Ensemble"), Ronald Drew (as "Hastings McElway"), Frederic Forman (as "Wiley"), Edward Fuller (as "McElway's Secretary"), Richard Glyer (as "Ensemble"), Jacqueline Green (as "Ensemble"), Barbara Heggie (as "Ensemble"), Lyn Howe (as "Ensemble"), Otto Hulett (as "Jerome Mortimer"), Philip Huston (as "A Young Reporter"), Harry Hutchinson (as "Ensemble"), John Kelsey (as "Ensemble"), Stapleton Kent, Percy Kilbride (as "Eddie"), Charles Koren (as "Ensemble"), Constance McKay (as "May Moss"), Ruth Miller (as "Ensemble"), Betty Parsons (as "Ensemble"), Gordon Richards (as "Arthur Strong"), Edward Ryan (as "Ted"), Lois Scales (as "Ensemble"), Ellen Spencer (as "Ensemble"), William Tobin (as "Ensemble"), George Henry Trader (as "Mr. Hallett"), Robert Warfield (as "Ensemble"), Pierre Watkin. Produced by Raymond Moore.
- (1934) Stage: Appeared (as "Lyngstrand") in "The Lady from the Sea" on Broadway. Drama (revival). Written by Henrik Ibsen. Scenic Design by Donald Oenslager. Directed by John Houseman. Little Theatre: 1 May 1934-May 1934 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Roman Bohnen (as "Prof. Arnholm"), Margaret English (as "Hilda"), Mary Hone (as "Ellida"), Moffat Johnston, Rose Keane(as "Boletta"), Crane Whitley (credited as Clem Wilennchick; as "The Stranger"). Produced by Nathan Zatkin.
- (1934) Stage: "Spring Freshet" on Broadway. Written / directed by Owen Davis. Scenic Design by Rollo Wayne. Plymouth Theatre: 4 Oct 1934-Oct 1934 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Lionel Adams (as "Rev. Dr Brewster"), Lynn Beranger (as "Myrtle Hodge"), Francesca Bruning (as "Sylvia Merrill"), Margaret Callahan (as "Sue Colby"), Alexander Clark Jr. (as "Wade Hamlin"), Esther Dale (as "Isabel Levenseller"), Owen Davis Jr. (as "Wesley Levenseller"), Viola Frayne (as "Betty Eldridge"), Thurston Hall (as "Judge Ira Levenseller"), Leona Hogarth (as "Miss Ella"), Julia MacMahon (as "Miss Abbie"), Elizabeth Patterson (as "Clementina Lynch"), Eleanor Powers (as "Lydia Mundy"), Sidney Shields (as "Miss Minnie"). Produced by Lee Shubert.
- (1934) Stage: "Fools Rush In" on Broadway. Musical revue. Book by Norman Zeno [earliest Broadway credit], Will Irwin, Viola Brothers Shore, Richard Whorf, June Carroll [credited as June Sillman] and Richard Lewine. Choreographed by Edwin Strawbridge and Arthur Bradley. Scenic Design by Russell Patterson and Eugene B. Dunkel. Directed by Leonard Sillman. Playhouse Theatre: 25 Dec 1934-4 Jan 1935 (14 performances). Cast: Cliff Allen [Broadway debut], Miriam Battista, Betzi Beaton, Lee Brody, Robert Burton, Imogene Coca, Ellen Howard, Teddy Lynch, Billy Milton, Edward Potter, Rinaldo Quigley, Leonard Sillman, Cyrena Smith, Charles Walter, O.Z. Whitehead, Albert Whitley, Richard Whorf. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1935) Stage: "Panic", produced on Broadway. Drama. Written by Archibald Macleish. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by James Light. Imperial Theatre: 14 Mar 1935 15 Mar 1935 (2 performances). Cast: Wesley Addy (as "Unemployed" / "Male Chorus"), Osceola Archer (as "Female Chorus"), Amelia Barleon, Elaine Basil, Robin Batcheller, Abner Biberman (as "Unemployed"), William Challee (as "Unemployed"), Russell Collins (as "A Man"), Walter Coy, Margaret Craven, Joseph Eggenton, Paul Genge, George Glass, Clifford Heckinger, Dierdre Hurst, Zita Johann (as "Ione"), Harold Johnsrud (as "Blind Man"), Tony Kraber (as "A Man"; credited as Gerrit Kraber), Eva Langbord (as "A Young Girl"), Albert Lewis, Yisrol Libman, Margot Loines, Edward Mann (I), Rose McClendon (as "An Old Woman"), Harold McGee, Elizabeth Morison, Gordon Nelson, John O'Shaughnessy, LaVerne Pine, Beatrice Pons, Joanna Roos, Arthur Singer, Lucille Strudwick, Karl Swenson (as "A Young Man"), Mary Tarcai, Jerome Thor, Paula Trueman, Eric Walz, Orson Welles (as "McGafferty"), Virginia Welles (as "Female Chorus"; Broadway debut), Richard Whorf (as "Griggs"), Dane Clark (as "A Young Man"; Broadway debut). Produced by Phoenix Theatre Inc.
- (1935) Stage: Appeared (as "Christopher Sly") in "The Taming of the Shrew" on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Stage Manager: George Greenberg. Assistant Stage Mgr: Elizabeth Chester and Phyllis Connard. Scenic Design by Carolyn Hancock. Costume Design by Claggett Wilson. Directed by Harry Wagstaff Gribble. Guild Theatre: 30 Sep 1935-Jan 1936 (closing date unknown/129 performances). Cast: Lynn Fontanne, Alfred Lunt, John Ballas, John Balmer, Stuart Barlow, Harry Be Gar, Alice Belmore (billed as "Alice Belmore Cliffe"), Gilmore Bush, Arthur Chester, William Clifford, Thomas Coley, Ernestine De Becker, Jacqueline DeWit, Lowell Gilmore, David Glassford, Thomas Gomez, Freddie Goodrow, George Graham, Franklin Gray, Sydney Greenstreet, Alan Hewitt, Ray Holgate, Dorothy Mathews, George Meader, LeRoi Operti, Doris Rich, Roy Rognan, Winston Ross, Stephen Sandes, Ray Schultz, Horace Sinclair, George Snare, Robert Vivian, Bretaigne Windust. Produced by The Theatre Guild. Produced in association with John C. Wilson.
- (1936) Stage: "Idiot's Delight", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Robert E. Sherwood. Production Supervised by Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne. Dances Directed by Morgan Lewis. Assistant Stage Manager: LeRoi Operti. Directed by Bretaigne Windust. Shubert Theatre: 24 Mar 1936-Dec 1936 (closing date unknown/300 performances). Cast: Alfred Lunt, Lynn Fontanne, Margorie Baglin, Edgar Barrier, Gilmore Bush, Francis Compton, Connie Crowell, Ernestine De Becker, Frances Foley, Thomas Gomez, Sydney Greenstreet, Alan Hewitt, Jean MacIntyre, George Meader, Murry O'Neill, LeRoi Operti (as "Signor Rossi"), Jacqueline Paige, Edward Raquello, Edna Ross, Winston Ross, Stephen Sandes, Barry Thomson, Ruth Timmons, Tomasso Tittoni, Una Val, Richard Whorf, Bretaigne Windust (as "Mr. Cherry"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1937) Stage: Appeared (as "Mercury") in "Amphityron 38" on Broadway. Comedy. Music by Samuel L.M. Barlow. Written by Jean Giraudoux. Book adapted by S.N. Behrman. Scenic Design by Lee Simonson. Costume Design by Valentina. Directed by Bretaigne Windust. Shubert Theatre: 1 Nov 1937-Mar 1938 (closing date unknown/153 performances). Cast: Lynn Fontanne, Alfred Lunt, Ernestine De Becker, Sydney Greenstreet, Alan Hewitt, Edith King, George Meader, Jacqueline Paige, Kathleen Roland, Barry Thomson. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1938) Stage: "The Seagull", produced on Broadway. Drama/comedy (revival). Written by Anton Chekhov. Translated by Stark Young. Scenic Design / Costume Design by Robert Edmond Jones. Directed by Robert Milton. Shubert Theatre: 29 Mar 1938-May 1938 (closing date unknown/41 performances). Cast: Lynn Fontanne (as "Madame Arkadina"), Alfred Lunt (as "Trigorin"), John Barclay (as "Dr. Dorn"), Ernestine De Becker (as "A Housemaid"), S. Thomas Gomez' (as "The Cook"), Sydney Greenstreet (as "Sorin"), Uta Hagen (as "Nina"; Broadway debut), Alan Hewitt (as "Yakov"), Edith King (as "Polina"), Harold Moffet (as "Shamrayev"), Jacqueline Paige (as "A Housemaid"), Margaret Webster (as "Masha"), O.Z. Whitehead (as "Medvedenko"), Richard Whorf (as "Konstantin Treplev"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1940) Stage: Appeared (as "Dave Corween") in "There Shall Be No Night" on Broadway). Drama. Written by Robert E. Sherwood. Costume Design by Valentina. Directed by Alfred Lunt. Alvin Theatre: 29 Apr 1940-9 Aug 1940 (115 performances). Cast: Charles Ansley (as "Joe Burnett"), Charva Chester (as "Ilma"), Montgomery Clift (as "Erik Valkonen"), Maurice Colbourne (as "Dr. Ziemssen"), Robert Downing (as "Photographer"; Broadway debut), Lynn Fontanne (as "Miranda Valkonen"), Elisabeth Fraser (as "Kaatri Alquist"), Thomas Gomez (as "Ben Gichner"), Sydney Greenstreet (as "Uncle Waldemar"), Claude Horton (as "Sgt. Gosden"), William LeMassena (as "Frank Olmstead"), Alfred Lunt (as "Dr. Kaarlo Valkonen"), Ralph Nelson (as "Photographer"), Edward Raquello (as "Maj. Rutkowski"), Phyllis Thaxter (as "Lempi"), Brooks West (as "Gus Shuman"). Produced by The Playwrights' Company (Maxwell Anderson, S.N. Behrman, Elmer Rice, Robert E. Sherwood, Sidney Howard). NOTE: This is the only one of Sherwood's well-known plays that was never filmed.
- (1940) Stage: Appeared (as "Dave Corween") in "There Shall Be No Night" on Broadway. Drama [return engagement]. Written by Robert E. Sherwood. Scenic Design by Richard Whorf. Costume Design by Valentina. Stage Manager: Charva Chester. Assistant Stage Mgr.: Ralph Nelson and Robert Downing. Directed by Alfred Lunt. Alvin Theatre: 9 Sep 1940-2 Nov 1940 (66 performances). Cast: Lynn Fontanne (as "Miranda Valkonen"), Alfred Lunt (as "Dr. Kaarlo Valkonen"), Charles Ansley (as "Joe Burnett"), Charva Chester (as "Ilma"), Montgomery Clift (as "Erik Valkonen"), Maurice Colbourne (as "Dr. Ziemssen"), Donald Fox (as "Photographer"), Elisabeth Fraser (as "Kaatri Alquist"), Thomas Gomez (as "Ben Gichner"), Sydney Greenstreet (as "Uncle Waldemar"), Claude Horton (as "Sgt. Gosden"), William LeMassena (as "Frank Olmstead"), Ralph Nelson (as "Photographer"), Edward Raquello (as "Maj. Rutkowski"), Phyllis Thaxter (as "Lempi"), Brooks West (as "Gus Shuman"). Produced by The Playwrights' Company (Maxwell Anderson, S.N. Behrman, Elmer Rice, Robert E. Sherwood, Sidney Howard).
- (1940) Stage: Set Designer for "Fledgling" on Broadway. Written by Charles Chilton (based on his novel) and Philip Lewis. Directed by Heinrich Schnitzler. Hudson Theatre: 27 Nov 1940-7 Dec 1940 (13 performances). Cast: Lora Baxter (as "Stella Berrick"), Frederick Bradlee (as "Andrew Linton"), Norma Chambers (as "Grace Linton"), Margaret Clifford (as "Miss Harper"), Walter Coy (as "John Forbes"), Harry Hanlon (as "Bartholomew"), [link=nm0398466; credited as John Hoysradt; as "Kenneth Brede"), Ralph Morgan (as "Hugh Linton"), Tom Powers (as "Richard Dennis"), Sylvia Weld (as "Barbara Linton"). Produced by Otis Chatfield-Taylor.
- (1940) StageP: "Old Acquaintance" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by John Van Druten. Scenic Design by Richard Whorf. Directed by Auriol Lee [final Broadway credit]. Morosco Theatre (moved to The Broadhurst Theatre from 8 Apr 1941-close): 23 Dec 1940-17 May 1941 (170 performances). Cast: Jane Cowl (as "Katherine Markham"), Peggy Wood (as "Mildred Watson Drake"), Kent Smith (as "Rudd Kendall"), Anna Franklin, Hunter Gardner, Adele Longmire, Edna West. Produced by Dwight Wiman. NOTE: Filmed as "Old Acquaintance" (1943), ]link=tt0082992].
- (1944) Stage: Scenic Designer for / Diected "But Not Goodbye" on Broadway. Written by George Seaton. 48th Street Theatre: 11 Apr 1944-29 Apr 1944 (23 performances). Cast: Harry Carey (as "Sam Griggs"), John Conway, Wendell Corey (as "Howard Baker"), Hal K. Dawson (as "Ralph Humphrey"), Sylvia Field, Raymond Largay, Harold McGee, J. Pat O'Malley (as "Benjamin Griggs"; Broadway debut), Elizabeth Patterson, Frank Wilcox (I). Produced by John Golden.
- (1948) Stage: Appeared (as "Mosca") in "Volpone", produced on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Written by Ben Jonson. Book adapted by José Ferrer, Richard Whorf and Richard Barr. Written by Ben Jonson. Scenic Design by Herbert Brodkin. Directed by Richard Barr (V). City Center: 8 Jan 1948-18 Jan 1948 (14 performances). Cast: Capt. Sidney Bassler, Bobby Busch, Marjorie Byers, Frank Campanella (as "Commendatori, a Court Officer"), John Carradine (as "Voltore"), Susan Center, Leonardo Cimino, Walter Coy, Lou Gilbert, Bob Harrison, Phyllis Hill, Earl Jones, Paula Laurence, Richard McMurray, Charles Mendick (as "Ca Strone"), LeRoi Operti (as "Corvino"), Fred Stewart, Victor Thorley, Leigh Whipper (as "The Judge"). Produced by New York City Theatre Company. Co-operation by Theatre Incorporated (Richard Aldrich, Managing Director).
- (1948) Stage: Appeared (as "Rough") in "Angel Street" on Broadway. Thriller (revival). Written by Patrick Hamilton. Directed by Richard Barr. City Center: 22 Jan 1948-1 Feb 1948 (14 performances). Cast: José Ferrer (as "Mr. Manningham"), Uta Hagen (as "Mrs. Manningham"), Phyllis Hill, Nan McFarland, Ralph Roberts, Victor Thorley". Produced by New York City Theatre Company.
- (1949) Stage: Costume Designer for "King Richard III" on Broadway. Historical drama (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Scenic Design by Richard Whorf. Directed by Richard Barr. Booth Theatre: 8 Feb 1949-26 Feb 1949 (23 performances). Cast: Philip Bourneuf (as "Henry Stafford, Duke of Buckingham"), Grace Coppin, Frances Reid (as "Lady Anne, Widow of Edward, Son to King Henry VI; afterward married to Richard"), Polly Rowles (as "Elizabeth, Queen to Edward IV, Walter F. Appler (as "Lord Mayor of London"), Warren Burmeister (as "Sir Thomas Vaughan, cousin to Queen Elizabeth"), Robert Carricart (as "Tressel"), David Clive, Joseph Foley, Alan Frost (as "Sir Robert Brackenbury, Lieutenant of the Tower"), Robert H. Harris, Ed Hoffman, Will Kuluva (as "George, Duke of Clarence, brother to the King"), Connie Lessard (as "Citizen"), Charles Nahabedian, William Nichols, Nehemiah Persoff (as "Sir James Tyrrel"), Orrin Redfield (as "Lord Stanley, Earl of Derby"), Milton Selzer (as "Berkeley"), Michael Sivy (as "Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond, afterwards King Henry VII"), Ray Walston (as "Sir Richard Ratcliffe"), Douglass Watson (as "Marquis of Dorset. son to Queen Elizabeth by her first marriage to John Grey"), Glenn Wilson (as "Anthony Woodville, Earl Rivers, brother to Queen Elizabeth"). Produced by Herman Levin. NOTE: This version first presented by the Boston Repertory Association at the Copley Theatre.
- (1950) Stage: Appeared (as "George Crane") in "Season in the Sun" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Wolcott Gibbs. Scenic Design / Lighting Design by Boris Aronson. Costume Design by Natalie Barth Walker. Directed by Burgess Meredith. Cort Theatre (moved to The Booth Theatre from 14 May 1951 to close): 28 Sep 1950-11 Aug 1951 (367 performances). Cast: Nancy Kelly (as "Emily Crane"), King Calder (as "John Colgate"), Kathy Chapman [Broadway debut], Joan Diener, Maggie Gould, George Ives, Doreen Lang, Paula Laurence, Stanley Martin, Eddie Mayehoff (as "Paul Anderson"), Anthony Ross, Eugene Steiner, Charles Thompson, Grace Valentine, Jack Weston (as "Michael Lindsey"). Produced by Courtney Burr and Malcolm Pearson.
- (1951) Stage: Directed "The Royal Family" on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Written by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber. Scenic Design by Ben Edwards. Costume Design by Emeline Roche. City Center: 10 Jan 1951-21 Jan 1951 (15 performances). Cast: Olive Blakeney, J. Edward Bromberg (as "Oscar Wolfe"), Ossie Davis (as "Jo"), Evelyn Ellis, John Emery, Chris Gampel, Peggy Ann Garner, Ethel Griffies, Ruth Hussey (as "Julie Cavendish, Fanny's daughter"), Morris Miller, Bernard Nedell, Theodore Newton, Marjorie Redmond, Tom Hughes Sand, Robert Webber (as "Perry Stewart"), Wendell Whitten, Walt Witcover. Produced by New York City Theatre Company. Executive Producer: George Schaefer.
- (1951) Stage: "Seventeen" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Walter Kent. Lyrics by Kim Gannon. Book by Sally Benson. Based on the novel by Booth Tarkington. Music arranged by Ted Royal. Musical Director: Vincent Travers. Choral arrangements by Crane Calder. Assistant to Miss Krupska: Rex Cooper. Dances / Musical Numbers by Dania Krupska. Dance Musical Arrangements by Jesse Meeker. Scenic Design by Stewart Chaney. Costume Design by David Ffolkes. Directed by Hassard Short. Book Directed by Richard Whorf. Broadhurst Theatre: 21 Jun 1951-24 Nov 1951 1951 (182 performances). Cast: Frank Albertson (as "Mr. Baxter"), Robert Bakanic (credited as Bob Bakanic; as "Don"; Broadway debut), Penny Bancroft, Margaret Baxter, Alonzo Bosan, Joan Bowman, Bonnie Brae, King Calder (as "Mr. Parcher"; final Broadway role], Carol Cole, Ann Crowley, Doris Dalton, Maurice Ellis, Richard France, Stan Grover, Joseph James, Dick Kallman (as "Joe Bullitt"), Henry Lawrence, Dorothy Manko, Ellen McCown, Sherry McCutcheon, Jim Moore, Harrison Muller, Kenneth Nelson, Darrell Notara, Bill Nuss, Greg O'Brien, Elizabeth Pacetti, Bill Reilly, Betty Jane Seagle, John Sharpe, Jeanne Shea, Paula Stewart, Ray Thomas, Helen Wood. Produced by Sammy Lambert and Bernie Foyer and Milton Berle.
- (1951) Stage: Directed "Faithfully Yours" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Leslie Bush-Fekete and Maria Fagyas. Based on the play by Jean Bernard-Luc. Coronet Theatre: 18 Oct 1951-15 Dec 1951 (68 performances). Cast: Philip Bourneuf (as "Dr. Peter Wilson"), Robert Cummings (as "Thomas O. Harding"), Eileen Erskine, Marguerite Gould, Doreen Lang (as "Miss Parker"; final Broadway role), Barbara Barondess (credited as Barbara Barondess MacLean; as "Vera"), Ann Sothern (as "Vivian Harding"), Florence Sundstrom (as "Gracie"), Beverly Whitney, Victor Wood. Produced by Richard W. Krakauer.
- (1953) Stage: Appeared (as "Johnny Goodwin") in "The Fifth Season" on Broadway. Comedy/farce. Written by Sylvia Regan. Stage Manager: Nicholas Saunders. Assistant Stage Manager: John Cassavetes (only Broadway credit). Scenic Design by Sam Leve. Directed by Gregory Ratoff. Cort Theatre: 23 Jan 1953-23 Oct 1954 (654 performances). Cast: Menasha Skulnik (as "Max Pincus"), Carolyn Block (as "The Brunette Model"), John Griggs (as "Miles Lewis"), Phyllis Hill (as "Lorraine McKay"), Dick Kallman (as "Marty Goodwin"), John Kullers (as "Ruby D. Prince"), Dorian Leigh (as "Dolores"), Augusta Roeland (as "Frances Goodwin"), Norman Rose (as "Ferelli"), Nita Talbot (as "Shelly"), Midge Ware (as "The Redhead Model"), Lois Wheeler (as "Miriam Oppenheim"). Standbys: John Boruff (as "Johnny Goodwin" / "Miles Lewis"), John Cassavetes (as "Marty Goodwin/Ruby D. Prince"), David Kurlan (as "Ferelli" / "Max Pincus"), Gedda Petry (as "Frances Goodwin" / "Miriam Oppenheim"), Midge Ware (as "Lorraine McKay" / "Shelly"; Broadway debut). Replacement actors: Helen Alexander (as "The Brunette Model"), Helen Anderson (as "The Blond Model"), Dorothea Biddle (as "The Blond Model"), Cynthia Douglas (as "The Brunette Model"), Bill Penn (as "Marty Goodwin"), Bill Sargent (as "The Brunette Model"), Teddy Tavenner (as "The Redhead Model"), Midge Ware (as "Dolores"). Understudy: Helen Alexander (as "Shelly"). Produced by George Kondolf. Associate Producer: Sherman S. Krellberg.
- (1953) Stage: "Cyrano de Bergerac" on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Written by Edmond Rostand. Book adapted by Brian Hooker [posthumous credit]. Incidental music by Paul Bowles. Scenic Design by Richard Whorf. Directed by José Ferrer. City Center: 11 Nov 1953-22 Nov 1953 (15 performances). Cast: Carl Albertson (as "A Musketeer"), Toby Allen (as "Cadet of Gascoyne"), Carmen Alvarez Block (as "A Flower Girl"), Jacques Aubuchon (as "Ragueneau, a pastry cook"), Leopold Badia (as "Montfleury, a tragic actor"), Betty Bartley (as "Lise, Ragueneau's wife"), Linda Berlin (as "Sister Claire"), Peter Brandon (as "A Cavalier"), Peter Buchan (as "A Cut Purse" / "Cook"), Bill Butler (as "A Meddler"), Sandy Campbell (as "Citizen's Son" / "Cook"), Stanley Carlson (as "Bellerose, leader of the acting company"), Dean Cetrulo (as "Vicomte de Valvert"; final Broadway role), Ann Chisholm (as "A Nun"), Ralph Clanton (as "Comte de Guiche"), Tamar Cooper (as "A Soubrette"), Richard Cowdery (as "A Lackey"), Garry Cowen (as "Cadet of Gascoyne"), Arlene Dahl (as "Roxane, Cyrano's cousin"), Lee Danna (as "Cadet of Gascoyne"), Jarmila Daubek (as "Sister Marthe"), Vincent J. Donahue (as "A Poet"), Muriel Dooley (as "Ensemble"), José Ferrer (I) (as "Cyrano de Bergerac, a Gascon"), Jack Fletcher (as "A Marquis"), John Glennon (as "Another Poet"), Peter Harris (as "Cadet of Gascoyne"), Philip Huston (as "Le Bret"), Jill Kraft (as "A Comedienne"), Robert Lansing (as "Cadet of Gascoyne"), Paula Laurence (as "Roxane's Duenna"), Lily Lodge (as "Ensemble"), Roberta MacDonald (as "Ensemble"), Benedict MacQuarrie (as "A Porter" / "Another Poet"), Lori March (as "An Orange Girl"), Marijane Maricle A Nun"), Jill McAnney (as "Ensemble"), Gordon Nelson (as "Lignière, the poet"), Louise de la Parra (as "Ensemble"), Philip Prindle (as "Cook"), Viola Roache (as "Mother Marguerite"), Eva Rubinstein (as "Ensemble"), Robinson Stone (as "Jodelet, the comedian" / "A Capuchin"), Charles Summers (as "A Guardsman"), Tom Tryon (as "Another Lackey"), Honey Waldman (as "Ensemble"), Arthur Walsh (as "Cadet of Gascoyne"), Douglas Watson (as "Christian De Neuvillette"), Albert Whitley (as "Brisaille"), Wallace Widdicombe (as "A Citizen"), G. Wood (as "Carbon de Castel Jaloux, Captain of the Gascony Cadets"). Produced by New York City Theatre Company. NOTES: (1) One of the most revived works on Broadway (originally produced in 1898); this was its ninth revival). (2) Filmed as Cyrano de Bergerac (1950), Roxanne (1987), Cyrano de Bergerac (1990).
- (1953) Stage: "Richard III" on Broadway. Historical drama (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Music by Alex North. Production Design by Richard Whorf. Directed by Margaret Webster (I). City Center: 9 Dec 1953-20 Dec 1953 (15 performances). Cast: James Arenton, Leopold Badia, Paul Ballantyne, Jay Barney, Dehl Berti, Jack Bittner, Bill Butler, Sandy Campbell, Stanley Carlson, Kendall Clark, John Connoughton, Staats Cotsworth, Will Davis, José Ferrer (as "Richard III, Afterwards Duke of Gloucester and Richard III"), Jack Fletcher, John Glennon, Peter Harris, Philip Huston, Martin Kingsley, Jessie Royce Landis, Robert Lansing, Benedict MacQuarrie, William Post, Vincent Price (as "Duke of Buckingham"), Florence Reed, Viola Roache, Norman Roland, Maureen Stapleton (as "Lady Anne, Daughter-in-law of Henry VI"), Robinson Stone, John Straub, Eugene Stuckmann, Charles Summers, Charles Taylor, Tom Tryon, Wallace Widdicombe [credited as Wallace Widdecombe], G. Wood. Produced by New York City Theatre Company.
- (1954) Stage: Costume Designer for "Ondine" on Broadway. Romance. Written by Jean Giraudoux, as adapted by Maurice Valency. Settings by Peter Larkin. Lighting by Jean Rosenthal. Costume Design by Richard Whorf. Directed by Alfred Lunt. 46th Street Theatre: 18 Feb 1954-3 Jul 1954 (157 performances). Cast: Mel Ferrer (as "Ritter Hans"), Audrey Hepburn, John Alexander (as "Auguste"), Peter Brandon (as "Bertram"), Lloyd Gough (as "Forst Fisherman" / "Superintentent of the Theatre"), Alan Hewitt (as "Lord Chamberlain"), Gaye Jordan (as "Angelique"), Edith King (as "Eugenie"), James Lamphier (as "Trainer of Seals" / "A Servant"), William LeMassena (as "A Lord" / "Second Judge"), Anne Meacham (as "Violante"), Robert Middleton, Barry O'Hara (as "Matho"), Lily Paget (as "Salammbo"), William Podmore (as "The King"), Dran Hamilton (credited as Dran Seitz; as "One of The Ondines"), Tani Guthrie (credited as Tani Seitz; as "One of The Ondines"), Marian Seldes (as "Bertha"), Jan Sherwood (as "Venus"), Sonia Torgeson (as "One of The Ondines"). Produced by The Playwrights' Company (Maxwell Anderson, S.N. Behrman, Elmer Rice, Robert E. Sherwood, Sidney Howard), by arrangement with Schuyler Watts. NOTE: Whorf won a Tony Award as Best Costume Designer.
- (1957) Stage: Directed "The Genius and the Goddess" on Broadway. Written by Aldous Huxley and Beth Hendel. Henry Miller's Theatre: 10 Dec 1957-14 Dec 1957 (7 performances). Cast: Olga Fabian, Nancy Kelly (as "Katy Maartens"), Billy Quinn, Nina Reader, Michael Tolan, Alan Webb. Produced by Courtney Burr. Produced in association with Liska March. Produced by arrangement with Malcolm Pearson.
- (1961) Stage: "Julia, Jake and Uncle Joe" on Broadway. Written by Howard Teichmann. Based on "Over at Uncle Joe's" by Oriana Atkinson. Directed by Richard Whorf [final Broadway credit]. Booth Theatre: 28 Jan 1961 (1 performance). Cast: Miles Baker, Maurice Brenner, Claudette Colbert (as "Julia Ryan"), Don Briggs, Lynne Charnay, Tony Cichoke, Alexander Clark, Myles Eason, F.S. Fisher, John Garner, Grant Gordon [final Broadway role], Jim Holder, Herbert Jones, Laryssa Lauret, Joseph Leon, R.K. Lowry, Boris Marshalov, Kelly McCormick, Eigil Silju, Ludmilla Tchor. Produced by Roger L. Stevens and John Shubert. Produced in association with Sherman S. Krellberg.
- (3/15/37) Stage: Appeared in Robert E. Sherwood (I)'s play, "Idiot's Delight," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, OH, with Alfred Lunt, Lynn Fontanne, George Meader, Stephen Sandes, Barry Thomson, S. Thomas Gomes, Edgar Barrier, Edward Raquello, Sydney Greenstreet, Bretaigne Windust (also director), Jean MacIntyre, Jacqueline Paige, Connie Crowell, Frances Foley, Etna Ross, Marjorie Baglin, Ruth Timmons, Charles Ansley, Winston Ross, Gilmore Bush, David Selva, LeRoi Operti, Ernestine De Becker, Gordon Nelson, Una Val and Francis Compton in the cast. Lee Simonson was set designer. Morgan Lewis was choreographer.
- (10/25/37) Stage: Appeared in S.N. Behrman's adaptation of Jean Giraudoux's play, "Amphitryon 38," in a Theatre Guild production at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, OH, with Alfred Lunt, Lynn Fontanne, Edith King, George Meader, Sydney Greenstreet, Alan Hewitt, Barry Thomson, Kathleen Roland, Jacqueline Paige and Ernestine De Becker in the cast. Samuel L.M. Barlow was composer. Lee Simonson was set designer. Valentine was costume designer. Bretaigne Windust was director.
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