- Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- Goodtime Charley (1975). Musical. Book by Sidney Michaels. Music by Larry Grossman. Lyrics by Hal Hackady. Music orchestrated by Jonathan Tunick. Incidental music by Arthur B. Rubinstein. Dance arrangements by Daniel Troob. Musical Director: Arthur Rubinstein. Choreographed by Onna White. Directed by Peter H. Hunt. Palace Theatre: 3 Mar 1975- 31 May 1975 (104 performances + 12 previews, that began on 20 Feb 1975). Cast: Joel Grey (as "Charley"), Ann Reinking (as "Joan of Arc"), Susan Browning (as "Agnes Sorel"), Jay Garner (as "Archbishop Regnault de Chartres"), Richard B. Shull (as "Minguet"), Louis Zorich (as "General George de La Tremouille"), Ed Becker (as "Pope/One of the Citizen, Soldier, Peasant and Hostile Trios/Singer"), Kenneth Bridges (as "Third English Captain/One of the Citizen, Soldier, Peasant and Hostile Trios/First Soldier/Singer"), Rhoda Butler (as "Queen Kate/Singer"), Peggy Cooper (as "Yolande/Singer"), Kathe Dezina (as "Estelle/Singer"), Andy Hostettler (as "Jester/Dancer"), Dan Joel (as "Louis/Dancer"), Grace Keagy (as "Isabella of Bavaria") [Broadway debut], Nancy Killmer (as "Marie/Singer"), Cam Lorendo (as "Servant/Dancer"), Glen McClaskey (as "Dancer"), Ross Miles (as "Servant/Dancer"), Tod Miller (as "Dancer"), Hal Norman (as "Charles VI/Second English Captain/Herald/Third Soldier/Singer"), Julie Pars (as "Dancer"), Sal Pernice (as "Dancer"), George Ramos (as "Servant/Dancer"), Kathleen Robey (as "Dancer"), Charles Rule (as "Phillip of Burgundy/First English Captain/Chef/Guard/Singer"), Jane Ann Sargia (as "Singer"), Patrick Swayze (as "Servant/Dancer"), Brad Tyrrell (as "Henry V/One of the Citizen, Soldier, Peasant and Hostile Trios/Second Soldier/Singer"), Gordon Weiss (as "Jester/Dancer"), Jerry Yoder (as "Dancer"). Standby: Austin Pendleton (as "Charley"). Produced by Max Brown and Byron Goldman. Produced in association with Robert Victor and Stone Widney.
- Minnie's Boys (1970). Musical.
- Ambassador (1972). Musical.
- Teddy & Alice (1987). Musical. Music by John Philip Sousa. Original Music by Richard Kapp. Lyrics by Hal Hackady [final Broadway credit]. Book by Jerome Alden. Music orchestrated by Jim Tyler. Vocal arrangements by Don Pippin. Dance arrangements by Gordon Lowry Harrell. Musical Director: Larry Blank; Assistant Musical Dir.: Jim May. Choreographed by Donald Saddler. Additional Musical staging by D.J. Giagni. Directed by John Driver. Minskoff Theatre: 12 Nov 1987- 17 Jan 1988 (77 performances + 11 previews that began on 3 Nov 1987). Cast: Len Cariou (as "Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt"), Beth Fowler (as "Edith Roosevelt"), Nancy Hume (as "Alice Roosevelt"), Ron Raines (as "Nick Longworth"), Ellyn Arons (as "Ensemble"), Richard H. Blake (as "Archie Roosevelt"), Ruth Bormann (as "Ensemble"), Robert D. Cavanaugh (as "Ted Roosevelt, Jr."), John Daman (as "Quentin Roosevelt"), Tony Floyd (as "James Amos"), Seth Granger (as "Kermit Roosevelt"), Kathleen Gray (as "Ensemble"), David Green (as "J.P. Morgan/Admiral Murphy"), Ken Hilliard (as "Elliot Roosevelt/Ensemble"), Mary Jay (as "Ida Tarbell"), Alex Kramarevsky (as "Franklin Roosevelt/Ensemble"), Mark Lazore (as "Ensemble"), Keith Locke (as "Ensemble"), Michael McCarty (as "William Howard Taft"), Pamela McLernon (as "Ghost/Ensemble"), Elizabeth Mozer (as "Ensemble"), Nancy Opel (as "Eleanor Roosevelt"), John Remme (as "Wheeler"), Sarah Reynolds (as "Ethel Roosevelt"), Keith Savage (as "Ensemble"), Jeff Shade (as "Ensemble"), Gordon Stanley (as "Elihu Root"), Raymond Thorne (as "Henry Cabot Lodge"), Christopher Wells (as "Officer O'Malley"), John Witham (as "Harriman/Samuel Gompers"), Karen Ziemba (as "Belle Hagner"). Swings: Kaylyn Dillehay, Travis Layne Wright. Understudies: Ellyn Arons (as "Ida Tarbell"), Ruth Bormann (as "Eleanor Roosevelt"), Tom Boyd (as "Admiral Murphy/Elihu Root/Harriman/Henry Cabot Lodge/J.P. Morgan/Samuel Gompers, William Howard Taft), Seth Granger (as "Ted Roosevelt, Jr."), Kathleen Gray (as "Belle Hagner"), Mary Jay (as "Edith Roosevelt"), Andrew Harrison Leeds (as "Archie Roosevelt/Kermit Roosevelt/Quentin Roosevelt"), Keith Locke (as "Officer O'Malley/Wheeler"), Diana Stadlen (as "Ethel Roosevelt"), Gordon Stanley (as "Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt"), Christopher Wells (as "Nick Longworth"), Travis Layne Wright (as "James Amos"), Karen Ziemba (as "Alice Roosevelt"). Produced by Hinks Shimberg. Produced in association with Jon Cutler. Associate Producer: Glen Cross, Clarice Swan Fitzgerald and Wilmor Four.
- (1983) Larry Grossman and his musical, "Snoopy, the Musical," was performed at the Duchess Theatre in London, England with Teddy Kempner, Anthony Best, Susie Blake, Zoe Bright, Nicky Croydon, Mark Hadfield, and Robert Locke in the cast. Arthur Whitelaw was director.
- Almost Crazy (1955). Musical revue. Sketches by James Shelton, Hal Hackady [earliest Broadway credit] and Robert A. Bernstein. Music by Portia Nelson, Raymond Taylor and James Shelton. Lyrics by Portia Nelson, Raymond Taylor and James Shelton. Musical Director: Al Rickey. Music arranged by Ted Royal. Entire production staged by Lew Kessler. Choreographed by William Skipper. Directed by Christopher Hewett [earliest Broadway credit]. Longacre Theatre: 20 Jun 1955- 25 Jun 1955 (16 performances). Cast: Kay Medford, James Shelton, Karen Anders, Alvin Beam, Vincent Beck, Ron Cecil, Betty Colby, Nick Dana, Lorna Del Maestro, Phyllis Dorne, Babe Hines, Mildred Hughes, Joan Morton, Fred Nay, Kevin Scott, William Skipper, Gloria Smith, Rita Tanno, Rochard Towers, Ann York. Produced by John S. Cobb.
- (November to December 10, 1989) Fred Stark and his musical, "Rhythm Ranch," was performed in a world premiere at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey with Robert Cuccioli, Christopher Durham, Liz Larsen and Nora Mae Lyng in the cast. Phillip Wm. McKinley was director. Susan Stroman was choreographer. Michael Anania was scenic designer. Jeff Davis was lighting designer. Lindsay W. Davis was costume designer.
- (October 4 & 5, 1988) He wrote the lyrics for the staged reading, "Rhythm Ranch," at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey. Fred Stark was composer. Doug Reed was musical director. Susan Stroman was director.
- (February 27 to March 4, 1989) He wrote the book and lyrics for the musical, "Rhythm Ranch,' in a LAB production at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey. Fred Stark composed the music. Pamela Hunt was director and choreographer. Ted Kociolek was musical director.
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