- (1919 - 1985) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1919) Stage Play: At 9:45. Melodrama. Written by Owen Davis. Directed by John Cromwell. Playhouse Theatre: 28 Jun 1919- Oct 1919 (closing date unknown/139 performances). Cast: George Backus (as "Judge Robert Clayton"), Idalene Cotton (as "Margaret Clancy"), Clifford Dempsey (as "Captain Dixon"), Marie Goff (as "Ruth Jordan"), Harry Green (as "Jack Grover"), Nedda Harrigan (as "Molly") [Broadway debut], John Harrington (as "Tom Daly"), Frank Hatch (as "Doane"), Frank Hilton (as "Doyle"), Madeleine King (as "Mary Doane"), Peter Lang (as "Mack"), Leo Mielziner (as "Jim Everett"), Gustave Rolland (as "Gillaini"), Edith Shayne (as "Mrs. Clayton"), Noel Tearle (as "Howard"), Robert Thorne (as "Dr. Norton"). Produced by William A. Brady Ltd.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Children's Tragedy. Tragedy.
- (1926) Stage Play: Treat 'em Rough. Comedy. Written by Frederic Hatton and Fanny Hatton. Directed by Alan Dinehart. Klaw Theatre: 4 Oct 1926- Oct 1926 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Beppo (as "Beppo"), Walter Connolly (as "Marco"), Alan Dinehart (as "Tony Barudi"), Robert Dye (as "Gus"), Marguerite Forrest (as "Mimi La Verne"), Nedda Harrigan (as "Lisa Toselli"), May Hopkins, Helen Landis (as "Trixie Colette"), Thomas MacLarnie (as "Father Flynn"), James Manning (as "Sergeant Burns"), Myrtle Miller (as "Pansy La Motte"), M. Charles Palazzi (as "Joe"), William Ricciardi (as "Tomasso Salvatore"), Jack Rigo (as "Demetrius"), John Shanks (as "Buff"), Lois Shore (as "Susi"), Helen Sinnott [credited as Helene Sinnott] (as "Lola Carson"), Genevieve Tobin, George Torrence (as "Dan Carson"). Produced by Richard Herndon.
- (1927) Stage Play: Dracula. Drama. Written by Hamilton Deane and John L. Balderston. Based on the novel by Bram Stoker. Directed by Ira Hards. Fulton Theatre: 5 Oct 1927- May 1928 (closing date unknown/261 performances). Cast: Herbert Bunston (as "Dr. Seward"), Alfred Frith (as "Butterworth"), Nedda Harrigan (as "Miss Wells, a maid"), Bernard Jukes (as "R.M. Renfield"), Bela Lugosi (as "Count Dracula"), Terence Neill (as "Jonathan Harker"), Dorothy Peterson (as "Lucy Seward"), Edward Van Sloan (as "Abraham Van Helsing"). Produced by Horace Liveright. Note: Filmed by Universal Pictures as Dracula (1931), concurrently with the Spanish language version, Drácula (1931) (starring Carlos Villarías as "Count Dracula"), by Universal Pictures/The Mirisch Corporation as Dracula (1979), and by American Zoetrope/Columbia Pictures Corporation/Osiris Films as Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992).
- (1929) Stage Play: Merry Andrew. Comedy.
- (1929) Stage Play: Becky Sharp. Comedy (revival). Written by Langdon Mitchell. Directed by Dudley Digges. Knickerbocker Theater: 3 June 1929- June 1929 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: A.G. Andrews, Bruce Bairnsfather, Edith Barrett, Doan Borrup, Agnes Brady, Donald Brian, Etienne Girardot (as "Lord Bareacres"), Thomas Gomez, Helen Freeman, Nedda Harrigan, Gordon Hart, Roland Hogue, Arthur Hohl, Henry Mortimer, Basil Sydney, Raymond Thayer, Adele Walker, Genevieve Williams, Cecily Work, Mrs. Thomas Wise, Ida Mulle. Produced by the Players Club.
- (1931) Stage Play: The Great Man. Comedy. Written by Paul Hervey Fox. Directed by Jo Graham. Ritz Theatre: 7 Apr 1931- Apr 1931 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: John Bohn (as "Mr. Wick"), Madeline Grey (as "Senora Isabel Castano"), Nedda Harrigan (as "Donna Fernanda De Montorio"), Theodore Hecht (as "Don Carlos De La Zara"), Carla Hunter (as "Lisa De Montorio"), John Kearney (as "Belshazzar"), Gordon McCracken (as "Jeremy"), Edward F. Nannary (as "Commandant Lima"), William Norton (as "Darby Mullins"), Ralph Sanford (as "Mr. Jones"), Valerie Valaire (as "Miguela"), John Westley (as "Don Esteban De Montorio"), Walter Woolf (as "Captain O'Malley"). Produced by Lew Cantor.
- (1932) Stage Play: Monkey. 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.
- (1932) Stage Play: Bidding High. Comedy/drama. Written by Lois Howell. Directed by John Hayden. Vanderbilt Theatre: 28 Sep 1932- Oct 1932 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: King Calder (as "Jimmy Stevens"), Maud Edna Hall, Nedda Harrigan (as "Myra Crane"), Carleton Macy (as "Edward Crane"), Ivan Miller (as "Mark Ellis"), Sheila Trent [credited as Shelah Trent] (as "Sylvia Crane"). Produced by Joe De Mitt.
- (1934) Stage Play: A Hat, a Coat, a Glove. Drama. Written by William Absalom Drake. From the German of Wilhelm Speyer. Scenic Design by Aline Bernstein. Directed by Crosby Gaige and Robert C. Fischer. Selwyn Theatre: 31 Jan 1934- Feb 1934 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: George Alison (as "Judge Breed"), Isabel Baring (as "Ann Brewster"), Oscar Berlin (as "Tommy Harris"), Henry Brent (as "Court Stenographer"), D.J. Carew (as "Sergeant Whalen"), Horace Casselberry (as "James Gardiner"), Nedda Harrigan (as "Felicia Mitchell"), Boyd Irwin (as "Robert Ross"), Charles G. Johnson (as "Court Attendant"), A.E. Matthews (as "A Man"), Lester Vail (as "Jerry Hutchins"), Philip Van Zandt (as "John Walters"), George W. Williams (as "Clerk"), Clare Woodbury (as "Henrietta C. Jones"), Helen Wynn (as "Secretary"). Produced by Crosby Gaige and D.K. Weiskopf. Notes: (1) Filmed by Radio Pictures (RKO) as Hat, Coat, and Glove (1934). (2) Isabel Baring may be erroneously credited (she may be Isabel Bering (1884- 1962).
- (1935) Stage Play: Field of Ermine. Written by Jacinto Benavente. Book adaption by John Garrett Underhill. Directed by Ben Ali Haggin. Mansfield Theatre: 8 Feb 1935- Feb 1935 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Alice Alworth, St. Clair Bayfield (as "The Duke of Santa Olalla"), Lenore Chippendale (as "Carolina"), Gerald Cornell (as "Baltasar"), Clarence Derwent (as "Cesar Estavez"), Francis French, Nedda Harrigan (as "Natalia"), Alma Kruger (as "Felisa"), Janet Lelend, David Leonard, Mary Mason, Leonard Penn, Frank Ray, Frances Starr (as "Irene"), Harriett Sterling, Frances Tannehill (as "Beatriz"), Harmanus Van Wie, Harold West, Courtney White (as "Santiago Solana"). Produced by Crosby Gaige.
- (1935) Stage Play: Ceiling Zero. Written by Frank Wead [only Broadway credit]. Scenic Design by John Root. Directed by Antoinette Perry. Music Box Theatre: 10 Apr 1935- Jul 1935 (closing date unknown/104 performances). Cast: John Bohn (as "Les Bogan"), John Boruff, Geoffrey Bryant (as "Bob Wilkins"), Chester Clute (as "Baldy Wright") [final Broadway role], John Drew Colt (as "Dick Peterson"), Joseph Downing, Walter Greaza (as "Al Stone"), Gladys Griswold (as "Dodo Harvey"), Alan Hale Jr. (as "Tay Lawson"), John F. Hamilton (as Mike Owens"), Nedda Harrigan (as "Mary Lee"), John Huntington (as "Joe Allen"), Hope Lawder, John Litel, Osgood Perkins (as "Jake Lee"), Margaret Perry (as "Tommy Thomas"), Philip Remar (as "Jerry Stevens"), Grandon Rhodes (as "Fred Adams"), G. Albert Smith (as "Texas Clark"), Ben Starkie (as "Eddie Payson"), James Todd (as "Smiley Johnson"). Produced by Brock Pemberton. Note: Filmed by Cosmopolitan Productions [distributed by Warner Bros.] as Ceiling Zero (1936) and by Warner Bros. as International Squadron (1941).
- (1940) Stage Play: Charley's Aunt. Comedy/farce (revival). Written by Brandon Thomas. Scenic Design and Costume Design by John Koenig. Directed by Joshua Logan. Cort Theatre: 17 Oct 1940- 3 May 1941 (233 performances). Cast: Phyllis Avery (as "Amy Spettigue"), Richard Cowdrey [credited as Richard Cowdery] (as "Farmer"), Harold De Becker (as "Brassett") [final Broadway role], Reynolds Denniston (as "Stephen Spettigue"), José Ferrer (as "Lord Fancourt Babberley"), Nedda Harrigan (as "Donna Lucia d'Alvadorez"), Mary Frances Heflin (as "Maud"), J. Richard Jones (as "Charles Wykeham"), Arthur Margetson (as "Colonel Sir Francis Chesney"), Mary Mason (as "Kitty Verdun"), Thomas Speidel (as "Jack Chesney"), Katherine Wiman (as "Ela Delahay"). Produced by Day Tuttle and Richard Skinner. Notes: (1) One of the most successful pre-WW2 revivals on Broadway (original production debuted on 2 Oct 1893, this was the third revival). (2). Filmed by 20th Century Fox as Charley's Aunt (1941).
- (1985) Stage Play: Harrigan 'n Hart. Musical. Book by Michael Stewart. Music by Max Showalter. Lyrics by Peter Walker. Featuring songs of the period by Edward Harrigan and David Braham. Musical Director: Peter Howard. Based on material compiled by Nedda Harrigan (Logan). [final Broadway credit]. Based on "The Merry Partners" by E.J. Kahn Jr. Music orchestrated by John McKinney. Music arranged by John McKinney. Dance arrangements by John McKinney. Vocal arrangements by John McKinney. Choreographed by D.J. Giagni. Scenic Design by David Mitchell. Directed by Joe Layton. Longacre Theatre: 31 Jan 1985- 3 Feb 1985 (4 performances + 25 previews that began on 10 Jan 1985). Cast: Christine Ebersole (as "Gerta Granville"), Harry Groener (as "Edward Harrigan"), Mark Hamill (as "Tony Hart"), Armelia McQueen (as "Mrs. Annie Yeamons"), Tudi Roche (as "Annie Braham Harrigan"), Kenston Ames (as "Chester Fox/Photographer/Newsboy/Newspaperman"), Cleve Asbury (as "Old Colonel/Billy Gross/Nat Goodwin"), Clent Bowers (as "Archie White/Sam Nichols/Felix Barker/Uncle Albert"), Mark Fotopoulos (as "Stetson/Andrew LeCouvrier/Judge/Johnny Wild/Captain/William Gill"), Roxie Lucas (as "Eleanor/Ada Lewis"), Merilee Magnuson (as "Lily Fay/Adelaide Harrigan/Nurse"), Amelia Marshall (as "Jennie Yeamons/Newsgirl"), Barbara Moroz (as "The Colonel's Wife/Elsie Fay/Belle"), Christopher Wells (as "Alfred J. Dugan/Harry Mack/Judge Hilton/Doctor"), Oliver Woodall (as "Martin Hanley"). Swings: Michael Gorman (as "Swing") and Alison Mann (as "Swing"). Understudies: Michael Gorman (as "Archie White/Felix Barker/Martin Hanley/Sam Nichols/Uncle Albert"), Roxie Lucas (as "Mrs. Annie Yeamons"), Merilee Magnuson (as "Gerta Granville"), Barbara Moroz (as "Annie Braham Harrigan") and Christopher Wells (as "Edward Harrigan/Tony Hart"). Produced by Elliot Martin, Arnold Bernhard and The Shubert Organization (Gerald Schoenfeld: Chairman. Bernard B. Jacobs: President). Note: One of the most notable flops of the 1985 Broadway season.
- (October 2, 1939) She played Mrs. Kirby in a Lux Radio Theater broadcast of Kaufman and Hart's "You Can't Take it With You".
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