- (1893 - 1933) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1893) Stage Play: Charley's Aunt. Comedy [Original production]. Written by Brandon Thomas. Standard Theatre: 2 Oct 1893- unknown (unknown performances). Cast (as known): Etienne Girardot (as "Lord Fancourt Babberley") [Broadway debut].
- (1897) Stage Play: Miss Francis of Yale. Farce. Written by Michael Morton. Manhattan Theatre: 8 Nov 1897- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Raymond Capp, Etienne Girardot (as "Frank Staynor"), Sarah McVicker, May Monte Donico.
- (1899) Stage Play: The Purple Lady. Farce. Written by Sydney Rosenfeld. Bijou Theatre: 3 Apr 1899- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Sydney Booth, Etienne Girardot, Maud Harrison.
- (1900) Stage Play: Mam'selle 'Awkins. Musical comedy. Music by Herman Perlot and Alfred E. Aarons. Victoria Theatre: 26 Feb 1900- Mar 1900 (closing date unknown/35 performances). Cast: Will Armstrong, Nellie Beaumont, Rose Beaumont, George Boniface, Georgiana Carhart, Richard Carle, Jeanne Caskie, Maude Creighton, Charles Danby, Madge Dean, Hattie Delaro, Snitz Edwards, Elfie Fay, Mamie Gilroy, Etienne Girardot (as "Fitzroy Cavendish"), Josephine Hall, Ethel Moore, Mrs. McKee Rankin, Marjorie Relyea, Elaine Selover, Marguerite Sylva, Lucille Verna, Larry Wheat [Broadway debut]. Produced by Alfred Aarons.
- (1901) Stage Play: Miranda of the Balcony. Drama. Written by Anne Crawford Flexner [earliest Broadway credit]. Based on the novel by A.E.W. Mason. Directed by Harrison Grey Fiske and Max Figman. Manhattan Theatre: 24 Sep 1901- Nov 1901 (62 performances). Cast: Burton Adams, Victoria Addison, Frank Alliston, Frederick Bertrand, Claus Bogel [Broadway debut], Edward Davis, Louise Delmar, J.E. Dodson (as "Mr. Warriner"), Max Figman, Mrs. Fiske (as "Miranda Warriner"), Etienne Girardot, Bertram Godfrey, Robert T. Haines, H. Hartweil Sleight, James Henderson, Annie Irish, Katharine Kaye, Edward Lester, Mary Maddern, J. Cleneay Mathews, Frank McCormack, Ella Miller, Kate Pattison-Selten, Jessica Penn, W.C. Raue, Charles O. Shaw, Phillips Smalley [Broadway debut], Dorothy Stanton, Emily Stevens [Broadway debut], Edward Stockton, Jefferson Winter, Marion Wolsey Cate, Josephine Wyndham. Produced by Harrison Grey Fiske. Note: Filmed by Stoll Picture Productions [UK] as Slaves of Destiny (1924).
- (1902) Stage Play: The Diplomat. Comedy. Written by Martha Morton. Directed by Jacob Litt. Hoyt's Theatre: 20 Mar 1902- May 1902 (closing date unknown/76 performances). Cast: Edward Abeles, Louise Allen, Charles Arthur, S. Broughton, William Collier, Morgan Coman, Nanette Comstock, Noira Dyer, Etienne Girardot, Roderic Harrison, Bessie Heaton, M.L. Heckert, Edward Krauser, Richie Ling, George W. Parsons, John Saville, William E. Shay, Lizzie Strachen, David Torrence, Isabelle Urguhart, Virginia Warren.
- (1903) Stage Play: My Lady Peggy Goes to Town. Romantic comedy with music. Written by Frances Aymar Mathews. Revised by Eugene W. Presbrey. Featuring songs by Roy Newton Hair, William Jerome and Jean Schwartz. Musical Director: Roy Newton Hair. Directed by Eugene Wiley Presbrey. Daly's Theatre: 4 May 1903- 23 May 1903 (24 performances). Cast: Etienne Girardot (as "Sir Robin McTart"), Walter Hale (as "Sir Percy de Bohun"), Edward Locke, Cecil Spooner, Edgar Allen, Lillian Avann, Catherine Belle, Jeffrey Blaine, Charles F. Blair, Comer W. Breedlove, Clara Coleman, Edwin H. Curtis, Lee Daniel, Ethel Dwyer, Earl Ford, Charles Gibson, Frederick Guest, Robert Kosciusko, Mildred Lawrence, Frances Lloyd, Ashley Miller, Marion Miller, J.H. Montgomery, Katherine Morgan, Cora Morlan, Charles C. Palmer, Lynn Pratt, Edward C. Rooney, C. Russell Sage, Frank Stanton, Florence Sweeney, Gray B. Towler, Reta Villiers, Mortimer Weldon, Ogden S. Wright. Produced by Cecil Spooner [earliest Broadway credit].
- (1903) Stage Play: A Midsummer's Night Dream. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Herbert Gresham and Edmund D. Lyons. New Amsterdam Theatre: 2 Nov 1903- Nov 1903 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Arthur Barry (as "Snug, A joiner"), F. Bayly (as "Robin Starveling, A tailor"), Ida Conquest (as "Helena"), Margaret Crawford (as "Oberon"), Gilbert Douglas (as "Philostrate"), Thelma Fair (as "First Fairy"), William Farnum (as "Demetrius"), R. Kaufman, Mayme Kelso, Edmund D. Lyons, Neil O' Brien, Etienne Girardot (as "Francis Flute"), Nat C. Goodwin (as "Nick Bottom, A weaver"), A. Heerman (as "Mustardseed"), T. Heerman (as "Moth"), Kathryn Hutchinson (as "Titania"), I. Kaufman (as "Cobweb"), R. Kaufman (as "Peaseblossom"), Mayme Kelso (as "Second Fairy"), Helene Lackaye (as "Hippolyta"), Edmund D. Lyons (as "Peter Quince, A carpenter"), Neil O'Brien (as "Egeus"), Boyd Putnam (as "Theseus"), Florence Rockwell (as "Hermia, Daughter of Egeus"), William T. Sampson (as "Tom Snout, A tinker"), Lillian Swain (as "Puck/Robin Goodfellow"), Etta Weir (as "Third Fairy"), White Whittlesey (as "Lysander"). Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1904) Stage Play: Leah Kleschna. Drama. Written by C.M.S. McLellan. Directed by Harrison Grey Fiske. Manhattan Theatre: 12 Dec 1904- Apr 1905 (closing date unknown/131 performances). Cast: George Arliss (as "Raoul Berton"), Charles Cartwright (as "Kleschna"), Edward Donnelly (as "General Berton"), Marie Fedor (as "Frieda"), Robert V. Ferguson (as "Herr Linden"), Minnie Maddern Fiske [credited as Mrs. Fiske] (as "Leah Kleschna"), H. Chapman Ford (as "Johann"), Etienne Girardot (as "Valentine Favre"), William B. Mack (as "Schram"), Mary Maddern (as "Charlotte"), John Mason (as "Paul Sylvaine"), James Morley (as "Baptiste"), Cecilia Radclyffe (as "Madame Berton"), Monroe Salisbury (as "Reichmann"), Emily Stevens (as "Claire Berton"), Charles Terry (as "Anton Pfaff"), Frances Welstead (as "Sophie Chaponniere"). Produced by Minnie Maddern Fiske [credited as Mrs. Fiske], Harrison Grey Fiske and Manhattan Company. Note: Filmed by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as The Girl Who Came Back (1918).
- (1905) Stage Play: The Rose. Written by Minnie Maddern Fiske [credited as Mrs. Fiske] . Manhattan Theatre: 27 Mar 1905- Apr 1905 (closing date unknown/3 performances). Cast: George Arliss, Edward Donnelly, Etienne Girardot, Gertrude Graham, Lucy Spencer.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Crossing. Drama. Adapted from the novel by Winston Churchill. Written by Louis Evan Shipman and Winston Churchill. Daly's Theatre: 1 Jan 1906- 7 Jan 1906 (8 performances). Cast: G. H. Benerman, John Blair, Mabel Burt, Laura Clement, F.S. Coe, J.B. Delamater, Ralph Delmore, Edward Donnelly, J.H. Gilmour, Etienne Girardot, Jane Gordon, Fred Hardy, Violet Houk, Shelly Hull, Arthur Lawrence, Sidney Mansfield, E.J. McGuire, F. Richter, Andrew Stephens, Stokes Sullivan, Lillian Ward, W. Wood.
- (1906) Stage Play: Charley's Aunt. Comedy/farce (revival). Written by Brandon Thomas. Manhattan Theatre: 19 Mar 1906- May 1906 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Sol Aiken, William Elliott, Robert Peyton Carter, Etienne Girardot (as "Lord Fancourt Babberley"), Nina Herbert, Frank Hollins, Ala Mara, Ernest Elton, Charles H. West.
- (1913) Stage Play: A Good Little Devil. Written by Rosemonde Gerard and Maurice Rostand. Material adapted by Austin Strong. Theatre Republic: 8 Jan 1913- May 1913 (closing date unknown/133 performances). Cast: Mary Pickford (as "Juliet"), Ernest Truex (as "Charles MacLance"), Augusta Anderson, Wilda Bennett, Raymond J. Bloomer, Claire Burke, Charles Castner, Dennis Cleugh, Edward Connelly, Edward Dolly, Louis Esposit, Amy Fitzpatrick, Georgia Mae Fursman, Gerard Gardner, Etienne Girardot (as "Old Nick, Jr."), Lillian Gish, (as "Morganie"), Laura Grant, Edna Griffin, Arthur Hill, Edna M. Holland, Ernest Lawford, Iva Merlin, Harold Meyer, Katherine Minihan, Adrian Morgan, William Norris, Lauren Pullman, David Ross, Conway Shaffer, Henry Stanford, Norman Taurog (as "Allan"), Jeanne Towler, Robert Vivian, Reggie Wallace, Roland Wallace, Pat Walshe, Joseph A. Wilkes. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1916) Stage Play: Caliban of the Yellow Sands. Musical. Written by Percy MacKaye. Directed by Joseph Urban and Richard Orynski. Lewisohn Stadium of City College of New York: 24 May 1916- Jun 1916 (closing date unknown/10 performances). Cast: Beatrice Beckley (as "Anne Page"), Eric Blind (as "Lorenzo/Antony"), Lionel Braham (as "Caliban"), Matthew Briggs (as "War"), Maurice Cass (as "Pandarus"), Viola Compton (as "Mistress Ford"), Cyril Courtney (as "The Banished Duke"), Clifford Devereaux (as "Eros"), John Drew (as "Shakespeare"), Augustin Duncan (as "Horatio"), Fred Eric (as "Romeo/Orlando"), Marion Evenson (as "Charmian/Perdita") [Broadway debut], Edward Fielding (as "Death"), Etienne Girardot (as "Sir Hugh Evans"), Gladys Hanson (as "Cressida"), Gareth Hughes (as "Ariel"), Howard Kyle (as "Prospero"), Mary Lawton (as "The Spirit of Time"), Thais Lawton (as "Mistress Page"), Frederick Lewis (as "King Henry The Fifth"), Henry Ludlowe (as "Brutus"), Allan Ross MacDougall (as "Boy"), Clare Tree Major (as "Jessica/Attendant"), Robert Mantell (as "Hamlet"), Edith Wynne Matthison (as "Miranda"), Emanuel Reicher (as "Ghost of Caesar/Ghost of Hamlet's Father"), Hedwiga Reicher (as "Cleopatra") [final Broadway role], Brigham Royce (as "Lust"), John Sahlveck (as "Lucius"), William H. Sams (as "Marcelius/Jacques"), Margherita Sargent (as "St. Agnes"), George F. Smithfield (as "Adam"), Joseph Sterling (as "Troilus/Florizel"), Joseph Whitmore (as "Sycorax'), Thomas A. Wise (as "Sir John Falstaff"), Margaret Wycherly (as "Juliet").
- (1918) Stage Play: Her Honor, the Mayor. Written by Arlien Van Hines. Fulton Theatre: 20 May 1918- Jun 1918 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Arthur Cornell, Edward Fielding, Ruth Garland, Margalo Gillmore, Ada Gilman, Etienne Girardot, Laura Nelson Hall, Brandon Hurst, Marion Kerby, Auriol Lee, Olive May, Charles H. Meredith, Florence Pendleton, Julia Reinhardt, Amelia Summerville, Zolya Talma [Broadway debut]. Produced by Actors' and Authors' Theatre Inc.
- (1918) Stage Play: Remnant. Written by Dario Niccodemiand Michael Morton. Morosco Theatre: 19 Nov 1918- Jan 1919 (closing date unknown/63 performances). Cast: Corinne Barker, Marie Bruce, Dorothy Cheston, George Gaul, Etienne Girardot, Ben R. Graham, Orrin Johnson, Florence Nash. Produced by Charles Emerson Cook.
- (1919) Stage Play: Aphrodite. Romance. Music by Henri Fevrier and Anselm Goetzl. Written by Pierre Frondaie and George Cochran Hazelton [credited as George C. Hazelton]. Based on the novel by Pierre Louys. Lyrics by Arthur A. Penn and E. Lyall Swete. Musical Director: William Axt. Choreographed by Michel Fokine. Directed by Lyall Swete. Century Theatre: 24 Nov 1919- 3 Apr 1920 (148 performances). Cast: Hazel Alden (as "Berenike"), Robert Ayrton (as "Theoxenes"), Annette Bade, Clara T. Bracy (as "Chimeris"), Guy Collins (as "High Priest"), Dorothy Dalton (as "Chrysis"), Mlle. Dazie (as "Aphrodasia"), Genevieve Dolaro (as "Eunike"), Claude Forrest (as "Jester"), Etienne Girardot (as "Naukrates"), Rota Gold, Richard Hale (as "Phrasilas"), Edward Howell (as "A Youth"), Mayne Linton (as "Horatius"), Marc Loebell (as "Harhingif Khyam"), Frederick Macklyn (as "Timon"), William McNeal (as "A Snake Peddler/Old Sailor"), William McNeill (as "Bubastic"), McKay Morris (as "Demetrios"), Nita Naldi (as "Touni"), Carolyn Nunder (as "Rhodocleia"), Maude Odell (as "Bacchys"), Clarence Redd (as "Chief Butler"), Renwick Roget (as "A Beggar"), Richard Schwendler (as "A Young Sailor"), Basil Smith (as "A Donkey Boy"), Lester Sweyd (as "Fish Peddler"), Arnold Van Leer (as "Fruit Peddler"), Mildred Wallker (as "Aphrodite"), Hazel Woodhull (as "Melitta's Mother"). Produced by F. Ray Comstock and Morris Gest.
- (1921) Stage Play: Two Little Girls in Blue. Musical comedy. Music by Paul Lannin and Vincent Youmans. Lyrics by Arthur Francis. Book by Fred Jackson. Musical Director: Charles Previn. Music orchestrated by Stephen Jones and Paul Lannin. Directed by Ned Wayburn. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 3 May 1921- 27 Aug 1921 (135 performances). Cast: Patricia Clarke, Daisy Daniels, Edith Decker, Carolyn Erwin, Madeleine Fairbanks, Marion Fairbanks, Helen Gates, Etienne Girardot (as "Dudley La Fleur"), Ellwood Gray, Frank Hall, Fred Hall, Otis Harper, Dorothy Harrison, Kay Harrison, Vanda Hoff, Olin Howland, Jacquelyn Hunter, Emma Janvier, Stanley Jessup (as "Captain Morrow"), Julie Kelety, Edith Kessler, Evelyn Law, Muriel Lodge, Leonora Lukens, George Mack, Gayle Mays, Beulah McFarland, Margery Morrison, Paul Porter, Jobyna Ralston (as "Ensemble") [only Broadway appearance], Fred Rogers, Fred Santley, Oscar Shaw, Rosemary Sill, Taylor, Harold Thompson, Jack Tomson, Tommy Tomson, Peggy Underwood, Fay West. Produced by Abraham L. Erlanger.
- (1922) Stage Play: The World We Live In. Comedy. Written by Josef Capek and Karel Capek. Book adapted by Owen Davis. Directed by John Cromwell. Jolson's 59th Street Theatre: 31 Oct 1922- Feb 1923 (closing date unknown/111 performances). Cast: Lola Adler, Seldon Bennett, Mary Blair, Orrin Burke, Scott Cooper, Jane Corcoran, Vinton Freedley, Robert Edeson, Jasper Deeter, Etienne Girardot (as " As "Otakar"), N. St. Clair Hales, May Hopkins, Grace Dougherty, John Ward, Harold McGee, Beatrice Maude (as "Apatura Iris"), Logan Paul, Susan Steele, Mabel Withee. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Exile. Comedy/drama. Written by Sidney Toler. Directed by José Ruben. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 9 Apr 1923- May 1923 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Tiny Allen, Aubrey Beattie, Wallis Clark, Etienne Girardot (as "Baptsiste"), Leonard Ide, Rikel Kent, Eleanor Painter, Sidney Riggs, José Ruben. Produced by Joseph Sidney.
- (1923) Stage Play: The School for Scandal. Comedy (revival). Written by Richard B. Sheridan. Lyceum Theatre: 4 Jun 1923- Jun 1923 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Albert G. Andrews (as "Moses"), Ethel Barrymore, Albert Bruning, John Craig, Henry F. Dixey, John Drew, Etienne Girardot (as "Mr. Crabtree"), Walter Hampden, Violet Kemble Cooper, Ernest Lawford (as "Trip"), Robert Mantell, Carroll McComas (as "Maria"), Grant Mitchell, McKay Morris, Charles Richman, Charlotte Walker (as "Mrs. Candour"), Reinald Warrenrath, Francis Wilson, Thomas A. Wise. Produced by the Players Company Inc.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Farmer's Wife. Comedy. Written by Eden Phillpotts. Directed by Charles Coburn and Walter Edwin. Comedy Theater: 9 Oct 1924- Jan 1925 (closing date unknown/120 performances). Cast: Barbara Allen, Leslie Barrie, Violet Blythe, Leonard Carey, Charles Coburn, Mrs. Charles Coburn, Frances Clarke, Shirley Gale, Walter Edwin, Etienne Girardot (as "Henry Croaker"), H.R. Hoffman, Rosiland Fuller. Produced by Lee Shubert.
- (1925) Stage Play: Arabesque. Music by Ruth White Warfield. Written by Cloyd Head and Eunice Tietjens. Scenic Design by Norman Bel Geddes and Cleon Throckmorton. Choreographed by Michi Itow. Directed by Norman Bel Geddes. National Theatre: 20 Oct 1925- 7 Nov 1925 (23 performances). Cast: Hortense Alden (as "Laila, A Bedouine from the desert"), Hamad Attab, Geraldine Ballard, Merlin Ballard, Mohammed Basher, Mohammed Ben Ali, Charles Berkley, Hamad Bisher, Clayton Braun, John Brewster, Florence Brinton, Earle Caddock, Conrad Cantzen (as "Baba Youssef"), Chief Whitehawk, Curtis Cooksey (as "Ahmed Ben Tahar"), Bus Daniels, Ruth Daniels, Boyd Davis (as "Tall Bedouin"), Claude Dougal, Anna Duncan, Rona Fray, B.A. Fripp, M. Garboat, James Gaylor, Etienne Girardot (as "The Caid of Nadour"), Lackaye Grant, Gladys Green, Ali Halel, Robert Halloway, Victor Hammond, Mustapha Hantoot, Ismut Hassen, Elsbeth Herbert, Mohammed Houssain, Yuji Itow, Larry Jason, Irene Joseph, Helen Judson, Raphael Kados, Helen Kim, Jacob Kingsbury (as "Chief Bedouin"), Naoe Kondo, Sarat Lahiri, Raise Lehassen, Mactar Lehedder, Bela Lugosi (as "Sheik of Hammam, a Minor Official"), Louise Mainland, Beine Makter, Yetta Malamude, Kay McKay, Hardwick Nevin, George Offerman Jr., Marie Offerman, Hamad B. Omar, Logan Paul, Nancy Pethbridge, Julia Ralph (as "The Sheik's Mother, Who Would Live in Tunis"), Edward Ray, Herman O. Roberts, Samuel Rosen, Prince Singh, William Skavlan, Sara Sothern, Philip Spector, George Thornton, Roland Twombley (as "Cobbler"), Ben Welden, Olive West, Elsie Winslow. Produced by Norman Bel Geddes and Richard Herndon.
- (1927) Stage Play: Merry-Go-Round. Musical comedy. Music by Henry Souvaine and Jay Gorney. Directed by Alan Dinehart [credited as Allan Dinehart]. Klaw Theatre (moved to The Sam H. Harris Theatre from 12 Sep 1927 to close): 31 May 1927- Sep 1927 (closing date unknown/136 performances). Cast: Don Barclay, Evelyn Bennett, Joyce Booth, Marie Cahill, William Collier, Maryon Dale, Blanche Fleming, Etienne Girardot, Daniel Higgins, Libby Holman, James Jolly, William Leibling, Arthur Lipson, Philip Loeb, Louise Richardson, Leonard Sillman, Mary Stills, Clifford Walker. Produced by Richard Herndon.
- (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.
- (1929) Stage Play: The Bonds of Interest. Comedy. Written by Jacinto Benavente. Directed by Claude Bragdon. Hampden's Theatre: 14 Oct 1929- 4 Nov 1929 (24 performances). Cast: Jeanne Clark, Francis Dears, Howard Gait, Etienne Girardot (as "Pantaloon"), Thomas Gomez, Evelyn Goodrich, C. Norman Hammond, Walter Hampden, Elinor Harriot, Gordon Hart, Stephen Irving, Caroline Meade, Mabel Moore, Louis Polan, Charles Quigley, Ernest Rowan, Gordon Hart. Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1930) Stage Play: Lysistrata. Comedy (revival). Written by Aristophanes. Material adapted by Gilbert Seldes. Music by Leo Ornstein. Choreographed by Doris Humphrey and Charles Weidman. Directed by Norman Bel Geddes. 44th Street Theatre: 5 Jun 1930- Jan 1931 (closing date unknown/252 performances). Cast: Hortense Alden (as "Myrrhine"), Lillian Ardell, Helen Blair Bailey, Ada Barbour, Gloria Braggiotti, Lionel Braham (as "President of the Senate"), Myra Brooks, Charles R. Burrows, Conrad Cantzen (as "Fifth Old Man"), Justine Chase, Virginia Chauvenet, John F. Clearman, 'Louise Closser Hale' (as "Dancer"), John C. Davis, Dave DeSin, Charles E. Douglas, Eric Dressler (as "A Herald from Sparta"), Hope Emerson (as "Lampito"), Consuelo Flowerton, Ruth Garland, May Gerald, Etienne Girardot (as "Third Old Man"), John Glenn, Ilse Gronau, Chester Hammond, Paul Haskle, Ernestine Henoch, Harry Henshaw, Doris Hesser, Mary Ann Holt, Ernest Howard, Letitia Ide, Clayton Irving, Bernard Jay, 'Violet Kemble-Cooper' (as "Lysistrata"), Elizabeth Kennedy, Ada Klein, Marie Lalloz, Charles Laskey, Jerome Lawlor, Jose Limon, James McCallion, Burton McEvilly, Nancy McKnight, Owen Meech, Gwendolyn Mervin, Thomas Moody, Morton Moore, Marion Morehouse, Mary Morris, Pauline Potter, Elsie Rand, Elizabeth Rechelle, Houston Richards, Albert Robinson, Miriam Schiller, Betty Schlaffer, Lucian Scott, Maud Sinclair (as "Old Women's Chorus"), Helen Strumlauf, Elliot Sullivan, Ernest Truex (as "Kinesias"), Neville Westman, Nydia Westman, Thornton Whitney, June Wilkinson (as "Dancer"), George J. Williams, Howard Wilson, Ian Wolfe (as "First Old Man"). Produced by Philadelphia Theatre Association, Inc.
- (1931) Stage Play: I Love an Actress. Comedy. Material adapted by Chester Erskine. Adapted from the Hungarian of Ladislas Fodor. Directed by Chester Erskin. Times Square Theatre: 17 Sep 1931- Oct 1931 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Cast: Walter Abel (as "George"), Gail Barrington, Alice Belmore (as "Caroline"), Robert Bowen, John Dunn, William Franklin, Etienne Girardot (as "The Nervous Gentleman"), Ernest Glendinning (as "Willie Strauss"), Jane Hamilton, Lora Hays, Louise Kay, Muriel Kirkland, David Leonard, Ellen Lowe, Jean Mann, Dorothy Mathews, Fuller Mellish (as "The Doctor"), Maude Nolan, Gene Powell, Beatrice Punsly (as "Ensemble"), Bernard Punsly (as "Page"), Frank Ross, Lillian Ross, Herbert Schwartz, Augusta B. Scott, Albert Sherwin, Maude Sinclair, Fred Steinway, Ernest A. Treco, Edward Van Danaker, Charlotte Weinstein, John Williams, Jackie Winston, Percy Woodley. Produced by Chester Erskin.
- (1932) Stage Play: The House of Doom. Drama. Written by Charles K. Champlin. Theatre Masque: 25 Jan 1932- Feb 1932 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Robert Brister, Frank Brooks, Charles K. Champlin, Willard Dashiell (as "Silas Manning"), Walter Deluna (as "Oscar Small"), Ray Earles, Ruth Edell, Etienne Girardot (as "Paul"), Edward Keane, June Justice, Francesca Hill, William Melville. Produced by J.J. White.
- (1932) Stage Play: Twentieth Century. Comedy [original production]. Written by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur. Scenic Design by Cirker & Robbins. Directed by George Abbott. Broadhurst Theatre: 29 Dec 1932- 20 May 1933 (152 performances). Cast: Frank Badham (as "Porter"), Granville Bates (as "Conductor"), Matt Briggs (as "Oliver Webb"), Joseph Crehan (as "First Detective"), Florence Edney (as "Sadie"), William Frawley (as "Owen O'Malley"), Etienne Girardot (as "Matthew Clark") [final Broadway role], Hans Hamsa (as "First Beard/Cristus"), Ross Hertz (as "Train Secretary"), Ernest Hunter (as "Waiter"), Cliffman Jewel (as "Reporter"), Moffat Johnston (as "Oscar Jaffe"), Edward La Roche (as "Second Beard/Judas"), Eugenie Leontovich (as "Lily Garland"), Dennie Moore (as "Anita Highland"), Roy Roberts (as "George Smith"), Henry Sherwood (as "Max Jacobs"), Robert Sloane (as "Gateman"), J. Ascher Smith (as "Second Detective"), James Spottswood (as "Grover Lockwood"), Charles Wagenheim (as "Photographer"), Alfred Webster (as "Flannagan"), Clare Woodbury (as "Dr. Johnson"), William Worth (as "Pullman Conductor"). Replacement actor: Robert Brill (as "Gateman"). Produced by George Abbott and Philip Dunning. Note: Filmed as Twentieth Century (1934). Note: Mr. Girardot reprised his role in the film version.
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