- Becky Sharp (1929). Comedy (revival). Written by Langdon Mitchell. Directed by Dudley Digges. Knickerbocker Theatre: 3 Jun 1929- Jun 1929 (unknown closing date/8 performances). Cast: [error] (as "General Tufto"), Bruce Bairnsfather, Edith Barrett, Doan Borrup (as "Bowles"), Agnes Brady, Donald Brian, Patricia Collinge, Ernest Cossart, Frazer Coulter, Mary Ellis, Jay Fassett, Helen Freeman, Etienne Girardot, Thomas Gomez, Evelyn Goodrich, Gerald Hamer, Nedda Harrigan, Gordon Hart, Roland Hogue, Arthur Hohl (as "Pitt Crawley"), Mary Hone, Haroldine Humphreys, Moffat Johnston, Elsie Keene, Wright Kramer, Cecilia Loftus, Edward McNamara (as "Admiral Sir John Hollingshead, K.C.B."), Julia McMahan, Owen Meech, Henry Mortimer, Ida Mulle, Jack O'Donnell, Alice Papo, James T. Powers, Herbert Ranson, Erna Rowan, Ernest Rowan, William Sams, John D. Seymour, J. Walter Smith, Marguerite St. John, Loren Stout, Pam Sweeny, Basil Sydney, Raymond Thayer, Lillian B. Tonge (as Lillian Brennard Tonge), Adele Walker, Clifford Walker, Leonard Willey, Genevieve Williams, Mrs. Thomas A. Wise, Cecily Work. Produced by The Players Club.
- (1933) Stage Play: Uncle Tom's Cabin. Melodrama. Written by G. L. Aiken. Musical program directed by Harry Gilbert. Revised by A.E. Thomas. Based on the novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe. Musical program prepared by Edward T. Emery. Directed by Earle Boothe. Alvin Theatre: 29 May 1933- Jun 1933 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Topsy"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Simon Legree"), Lyster Chambers (as "Haley"), Joseph Cummings Chase, George Christie (as "Mr. Wilson"), Russel Crouse (as "Ensemble"), Owen Culbertson, Francis H. Day, Pedro de Cordoba (as "George Harris"), Elizabeth Dewing, Malcolm Duncan, Mrs. Edward D. Dunn, Edward Delaney Dunn (as "Ensemble") [final Broadway role], Minnie Dupree (as "Aunt Ophelia"), Edwin T. Emery (as "Second Bidder"), Essie Emery, Sylvia Field (as "Marie"), William Fisher, Harry Gilbert, Ernest Glendinning (as "St. Clare"), Eleanor Goodrich, Harold W. Gould (as "Skeggs, the Auctioneer"), Harry Gresham (as "Quimbo"), Amy Groesbeck, Burford Hampden, Oswald Hering, Richard Hoffmann, Frederick Jagel, John C. King, John Knight, John Kramer, Wright Kramer, Ben Lackland (as "Sambo"), Roy Le May, Nancy Levering, Gene Lockhart (as "Gumption Cute"), Kathleen Lockhart (as "Ensemble"), Cecilia Loftus (as "Aunt Chloe"), Alice MacKenzie, Edward McNamara (as "Phineas Fletcher"), Oswald Marshall, Kate Mayhew (as "Aunt Hagar"), Harold McGee, Samuel Merwin, Earl Mitchell, T.H. Montgomery, John Daly Murphy (as "Marks"), Patricia O'Connell, Janice O'Connell, Patricia O'Connell, Paul Parks, George Riddell, Elisabeth Risdon (as "Eliza"), Lois Shore, Florence Short, Otis Skinner (as "Uncle Tom"), James Stanley, Harold Staton, W.B. Taylor, Raymond Thayer, Grenville Vernon, John Barnes Wells, Frank Wilcox (as "George Fisk"). Produced by The Players Club.
- Seven Keys to Baldplate (1935). Comedy (revival). Written by George M. Cohan from a novel by Earl Derr Biggers. Directed by Sam Forrest. National Theatre: 27 May 1935- Jun 1935 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: George M. Cohan, George Christie, Allen Delano, Ernest Glendinning (as "John Bland"), Walter Hampden, Josephine Hull, Zita Johann (as "Mary Norton"), James Kirkwood (as "Jiggs Kennedy"), Ben Lackland (as "Lou Max"), Edward McNamara (as "Jim Cargan"), Percy Moore, James T. Powers, Irene Rich, Ruth Weston. Produced by The Players.
- Parnell (1935). Historical drama. Written by Elsie T. Schauffler. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 11 Nov 1935- Feb 1936 (closing date unknown/99 performances). Cast: Gordon Burby, Phyllis Connard, George Curzon, John Emery, Alexander Frank, Walter Holbrook, Joseph Holland, Barry Kelly, Edward McNamara (as "Michael Davitt"), Barry Macollum (as "Thomas Murphy"), Ruth Matteson (as "Mrs. Steele"), Winston O'Keefe (as "3rd Leader"), Clement O'Loghlen (as "John Redmond"), Margaret Rawlings (as "Katharine O'Shea"), Harry Redding, Effie Shannon (as "Mrs. Benjamin Wood"), Charles Trexler, Ruth Yorke. Produced by Robinson Smith and Frederick W. Ayer. NOTE: Play sold to MGM for a Clark Gable vehicle, Parnell (1937). It became the biggest flop in that studio's history to date (possibly excluding the troubled inherited production of Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925), whose costs were not revealed). Gable regarded it as his worst film and it nearly led to his refusing Gone with the Wind (1939).
- Active on Broadway in the above productions:
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