- (1925 - 1949) Active on Broadway [shifted from acting to stage direction in 1936] in the following productions:
- (1925) Stage Play: Dearest Enemy. Musical comedy. Book by Herbert Fields. Music by Richard Rodgers. Lyrics by Lorenz Hart. Music orchestrated by Emil Gerstenberger. Dances and Ensembles Directed by Carl Hemmer. Orchestra under the direction of Richard Rodgers. Libretto Directed by Charles Sinclair and Harry Ford. Scenic Design by Clark Robinson. Costume Design by Mark Mooring (Costumes for Act One), Hubert Davis (Costumes for Act One) and James Reynolds (Costumes for Acts Two and Three). Directed by John Murray Anderson. Knickerbocker Theatre: 18 Sep 1925- 22 May 1926 (286 performances). Cast: Flavia Arcaro (as "Ms. Robert Murray"), Peggy Bancroft, Charles Bennington, Arthur Brown, Walter Burke, Rachel Chester, Harold Crane, Roberta Curry, James Cushman, Marian Dabney, Marita Dennis, H.E. Eldridge, William Eville (as "General Henry Clinton"), Gloria Faye, Helen Ford, Percy French, Alden Gay, Louis Gomez, Conrad Gordon, George Harold, Don Knobloch, Frank Lambert, Edward Larkin, Andrew Lawlor Jr. (as "Jimmy Burke"), Joy Leitch, Betty Linn, Mildred Mann, Burton McEvilly (as "Ensemble") [Broadway debut], Elizabeth North, Jane Overton, Josephine Payne, Detmar Poppen (as "General John Tryon"), Geneva Price, Charles Purcell (as "Captain Sir John Copeland"), Eugenia Renon, John Seymour, Jack Shannon, Lucille Smyser, Helen Spring, Mark Truscott, John Valentine, Marian Williams, Polly Williams, Percy Woodley, Devah Worrell, Mabel Zoeckler. Produced by George Ford.
- (1926) Stage Play: Oh, Kay! Musical comedy. Book by Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse. Music by George Gershwin. Lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Scenic Design by John Wenger. Directed by John Harwood. Imperial Theatre: 8 Nov 1926- Jun 1927 (closing date unknown/256 performances). Cast: Gertrude Lawrence (as "Kay"), Victor Moore (as "Shorty" McGee"), Oscar Shaw (as "Jimmy Winter"), Adrienne Armond (as "Ensemble"), Sascha Beaumont (as "Constance Appleton"), Marcia Bell (as "Ensemble"), Bonnie Blackwood (as "Ensemble"), Dowell Brown (as "Ensemble"), Constance Carpenter (as "Mae"), Grace Carroll (as "Ensemble"), Jean Carroll (as "Ensemble"), Melville Chapman (as "Ensemble"), Betty Compton (as "Molly Morse"), Ted Daniels (as "Ensemble"), Eugene Day (as "Ensemble"), Frances DeFoe (as "Ensemble"), Harland Dixon (as "Larry Potter"), Ann Ecklund (as "Ensemble"), Madeline Fairbanks (as "Dolly Ruxton"), Marion Fairbanks (as "Phil Ruxton"), Kappie Fay (as "Ensemble"), Al Fisher (as "Ensemble"), Jack Fraley (as "Ensemble"), Amy Frank (as "Ensemble"), Elsie Frank (as "Ensemble"), Frank Gardiner Judge Appleton"), Bob Gebhardt (as "Ensemble"), Janette Gilmore (as "Peggy"), Anita Gordon (as "Ensemble"), Sara Jane Heliker (as "Ensemble"), Peggy Johnstone (as "Ensemble"), Grace Jones (as "Ensemble"), Dot Justin (as "Ensemble"), Lionel MacLyn (as "Ensemble"), Pansy Maness (as "Ensemble"), Maxine Marshall (as "Ensemble"), Tom Martin (as "Ensemble"), Burton McEvilly (as "Ensemble"), Gloria Murray (as "Ensemble"), Elsie Neal (as "Ensemble"), Blanche O'Donahue (as "Ensemble"), Marie Otto (as "Ensemble"), Caroline Phillips (as "Ensemble"), Peggy Quinn (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Saunders (as "Ensemble"), Harry T. Shannon (as "Revenue Officer Jansen"), Gerald Oliver Smith (as "The Duke"), Alan Stevens (as "Ensemble"), Frances Stone (as "Ensemble"), Jacques Stone (as "Ensemble"), May Sullivan (as "Ensemble"), Betty Vane (as "Ensemble"), Betty Waxton (as "Ensemble"), Claire Wayne (as "Ensemble"), Jean Wayne (as "Ensemble"), Amy Weber (as "Ensemble"), Justine Welch (as "Ensemble"), Ted White (as "Ensemble"), Polly Williams (as "Ensemble"), Paulette Winston (as "Daisy"). Produced by Alex Aarons and Vinton Freedley.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Letter. Written by W. Somerset Maugham. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Morosco Theatre: 26 Sep 1927- Dec 1927 (closing date unknown/104 performances). Cast: J.W. Austin (as "Robert Crosbie"), John Buckler, Katharine Cornell, Lady Chong Goe, Allan Jeayes, Sam Kim, B. Landon, Eva Leonard Boyne (as "Mrs. Joyce"), Burton McEvilly (as "Geoffrey Hammond"), Mary Scott Seton, James Vincent, M. Wada. Produced by Messmore Kendall. Note: Filmed by Warner Bros. as The Letter (1940) [most notable film adaption]. Others: The Letter (1931), Woman in the Jungle (1931), The White Woman (1931), The Letter (1931), The Letter (1929), The Letter (1982), The Letter (1956))
- (1930) Stage Play: Volpone. Comedy (revival). Written by Ben Jonson. Directed by Philip Moeller. Liberty Theatre: 10 Mar 1930- Mar 1930 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Lucille Banner (as "Maid to Colomba"), Alan Blaine (as "Sbirri"), George Cotton (as "Sbirri"), Walter Coy (as "Sbirri"), John C. Davis (as "Corbaccio's servant/Priest"), Fred DeVeau (as "Sbirri"), Sylvia Field (as "Colomba"), Philip Foster (as "Captain of the Sbirri"), Walter Franklyn (as "Singer"), Sydney Greenstreet (as "Volpone"), John Henry (as "Slave to Volpone"), Edgar Kent, Earle Larrimore (as "Mosca"), Thomas Mackay (as "Sbirri"), Sydney Little Mansfield (as "3rd Servant"), Burton McEvilly (as "1st Servant"), Sanford Meisner, Harry Mestayer (as "Corvino"), Clifford Odets (as "Sbirri") [Broadway debut], Frederick Roland (as "Voltore"), Lucian Scott (as "Clerk of the Court"), Vincent Sherman (as "Singer/Court Attendant"), Donald Smith (as "Singer"), Don Sylvester (as "Sbirri"), Helen Tilden, Albert Dekker [credited as Albert Van Dekker] (as "Leone"), Francis Ward, Harry Wise, Martin Wolfson (as "2nd Servant"), Paul Yost (as "Singer"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1930) Stage Play: The Truth Game. Comedy. Written by Ivor Novello. Directed by G. Hamilton Gay. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 27 Dec 1930- Mar 1931 (closing date unknown/107 performances). Cast: Albert G. Andrews (as "Sir Joshua Grimshaw"), Dorothie Bigelow (as "Vera Crombie"), Billie Burke (as "Evelyn Brandon"), Gwen Day Burroughs (as "Harris"), Forbes Dawson (as "Lord Straffield"), Phoebe Foster (as "Rosine Browne"), Jean Fullarton (as "Atkins"), Gerald McCarthy (as "Sir George Kelvin"), Burton McEvilly (as "James Hubbard"), Ivor Novello (as "Max Clement"), Viola Tree (as "The Lady Joan Culver"). Produced by Lee Shubert. Note: Filmed by MGM as -But the Flesh Is Weak (1932), and again by MGM as Free and Easy (1941).
- (1931) Stage Play: Hamlet. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Norman Bel Geddes. Broadhurst Theatre: 5 Nov 1931- Nov 1931 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Jerome Andrews (as "Poisoner"), Gloria Braggiotti (as "Lady"), Gladys Burch (as "Lady"), George Carr (as "First Gravedigger"), Guy Collins (as "Gentleman"), George Cotton (as "Francisco, an Officer"), Tom Dougall (as "Gentleman"), James Duffus (as "Gentleman"), Helene Frederic (as "Lady"), John Glenn (as "Page"), Edith Gresham (as "Lady"), Ilse Gronau (as "Player Queen"), Clifford Heckinger (as "Second Gravedigger"), John Holmes (as "Player King"), David Horne (as "Claudius, King of Denmark"), Ernest Howard (as "Gentleman"), Stanley Howard (as "Gentleman"), Irving Jackson (as "Gentleman"), Celia Johnson (as "Ophelia, daughter to Polonius"), Wyman Kane (as "Page") [Broadway debut], Colin Keith-Johnston (as "Laertes, son to Polonius"), Leopold Lane (as "Gentleman"), Charles T. Lewis (as "Priest"), Marcia Linya (as "Lady"), Robert Lowing (as "Rosencrantz, a Courtier"), Raymond Massey (as "Hamlet, son to the late, and nephew to the present King"), H.H. McCollum (as "Marcellus, an Officer"), Burton McEvilly (as "Ghost"), Catherine Meredith (as "Lady"), John Daly Murphy (as "Polonius, Lord Chamberlain"), Leon Quartermaine (as "Horatio, friend to Hamlet"), Herbert Ranson (as "Player"), Kitty Reese (as "Lady"), Frank Rothe (as "Guildenstern, a Courtier"), Bernard Savage (as "Bernardo, an Officer"), Mary Servoss (as "Gertrude, Queen of Denmark and mother to Hamlet"), Sydney Smith (as "Page"), Edmund Tabell (as "Gentleman"), Felicia Terry (as "Lady"), L.M. Tice (as "Lady"), Anne Wessman (as "Lady"), Jack White (as "Page"), Edward Wright (as "Gentleman"). Produced by New York Producing Association Inc.
- (1934) Stage Play: Lost Horizons. Fantasy. Written by Harry Segall. Directed by John Hayden. St. James Theatre: 15 Oct 1934- Dec 1934 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Ruth Carl, Lyster Chambers, Gage Clarke, Kathleen Comegys (as "Mrs. Condos"), Robert Conness, Vernon Crane, Brenda Dahlen, Joseph Doncourt, John Gallaudet (as "Paul Duttine"), Walter Gilbert, Kathryn Givney (as "Rita Rogers"), Harry Hanlon, Alf Helton, Edwin Hodge, Jonathan Hole (as "David Prescott"), Charles Laite (as "A Doctor"), Betty Lancaster, Ruth Lee, Francesca Lenni, Lex Lindsay, Thomas Louden, Burton McEvilly (as "First Actor"), William Norton, Forrest Orr (as "Eddie Lewis"), Mabel Paige, Arthur Pierson (as "Ralph Bondley"), Grandon Rhodes, Clarence Rock, Cynthia Rogers, Irene Shirley, Robert Smith, Fred Sutton, Sally Washington, Wallace Widdicombe (as "Wormser"), Jane Wyatt (as "Janet Evans"), Oswald Yorke (as "Oliver Reynolds"), J. Arthur Young. Produced by Rowland Stebbins.
- (1935) Stage Play: Porgy and Bess. Musical-opera. Music by George Gershwin. Libretto by DuBose Heyward. Lyrics by DuBose Heyward and Ira Gershwin. Based on the play "Porgy" by DuBose Heyward and Dorothy Heyward. Scenic Design by Sergei Soudeikin. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian. Alvin Theatre: 10 Oct 1935- 25 Jan 1936 (124 performances). Cast: Anne Wiggins Brown (as "Bess"), Todd Duncan (as "Porgy"), John W. Bubbles (as "Sportin' Life"), Ruby Elzy (as "Serena"), Olive Ball (as "Annie"), Ford L. Buck (as "Mingo"), Alexander Campbell (as "Detective"), George Carleton (as "Coroner"), Jack Carr (as "Jim"), Warren Coleman (as "Crown"), Henry Davis (as "Robbins"), Helen Dowdy (as "Lily/Strawberry Woman"), John Garth (as "Undertaker"), Georgette Harvey (as "Maria"), The Eva Jessye Choir (Eva Jessye, Choral Conductor), J. Rosamond Johnson (as "Frazier"), George Lessey (as "Mr. Archdale"), Edward Matthews (as "Jake"), Burton McEvilly (as "Policeman"), Abbey Mitchell (as "Clara") [credited as Abbie Mitchell], Gus Simons (as "Peter/The Honey Man"), Harold Woolf (as "Policeman"), Ray Yeates (as "Crab Man"). Produced by the Theatre Guild.
- (1936) Stage Play: White Horse Inn. Musical comedy. Music by Ralph Benatsky. Book by Hans Müller [final Broadway credit]. Suggested by Oskar Blumenthal and G. Kandelburg. Lyrics by Irving Caesar. Book adapted by David Freedman. Musical Director: Victor Baravalle. Additional music by Robert Stolz, Irving Caesar, Norman Zeno, Will Irwin, Richard Fall, Jara Benes, Vivian Ellis and Eric Coates. Music orchestrated by Hans Spialek. Musical Advisor: Adam Gelbtrunk. Scenic Design by Ernst Stern. Stage Manager: Charles Mather. Assistant Stage Mgr: Burton McEvilly, Richard Whale, Jack Voeth and Hal Voeth. Modern Dress designs by Irene Sharaff. Costume Design by Ernst Stern. Lighting and Special Lighting Effects by Eugene Braun. Stage Manager: Charles Mather. Choreographed by Max Rivers. Directed by Erik Charell. Center Theatre: 1 Oct 1936- 10 Apr 1937 (223 performances). Cast: Kitty Carlisle (as "Katarina Vogelhuber, Proprietress of the White Horse Inn"), William Gaxton (as "Leopold, the Head Waiter"), Robert Halliday, John Albert, Marvin Atkin, James Babbitt, Penny Banks, Jack Barnes, John Barry, Eleanor Bauman, Evan Beatty, Betsy Berkeley, Thomas Blayney, Evelyn Bonefine, Geraldine Bork, Edward Brown, Joe Brown Jr., Klara Buestr, William Bull, Phyllis Cameron, Maurice Carr, Maude Carroll, Bill Chandler, Diana Chase, Charles Chavez, Nelson Clifford, Floyd Cornaby, Carol Crowell, Ruth Dawson, Arthur de Voss, Eleanor De Witte, Helene Dernelle, Alfred Drake (as "Singing Ensemble"), Valerie Eaton, Sonia Efron, Audrey Elliott, Walter Elliott, Esta Elman, Billy Entenmann, Margie Evans, Dionne Farrelle, Anne Francis (as "Singing Ensemble"), Leo Freedman, Edwin Gale, Gene Gally, Tommy Gavin, Tilda Getze, Milton Gill, Sidney Gordon, George Gorst, Frederick Graham, Myra Green, Wendy Greene, Edwin Hackett, Billy Hale, Ed Hall, Gertrude Hamilton, Lorraine Harris, Marion Harvey, Gladys Haverty, Frances Hayes, Buddy Hertelle, Billy House (as "William McGonigle"), Frances Hyatt, Mel Kacher, Gene Kavanaugh, Florence Keezel, Maurice Kelly, Arnold Korff (as "The Emperor"), Gratia Landley, Flora Laney, Lorraine Latham, Martin Le Roy, Clark Leston, Billy Lichtenberger, Willi Lichtenberger, Fred Locke, Dorothy Lodge, Marguerite Lodge, Virginia Lodge, Anton Lonek, Velma Lord, Charlotte Lorraine, Albert Mahler, Jules Mann, Marie Marion, Emily Marsh, Maxine Martin, Patricia Martin, Anthony Marvin, Melissa Mason, Luba Matiuk, Joseph McCarthy, June Meier, Florence Menges, Jack Millard, Mickey Moore, Paul Moore, Harry Murray (as "Boy in the Ensemble"), Mae Muth, Dorothy Palmer, Mildred Patterson, Bill Pillick, Betty Pope, Harry Quinn, Oscar Ragland (as "Head Forester"), Adelaide Raleigh, Mme. Reverelly, Dorothy Richel, Herbert Rissman, Ernst Robert, Ruth Roberts, Jack Rogers, Babs Rossiter, Ruth Rostyn, Evelyn Sather, Olga Schwenker, Winton Sears, Almira Sessions, Joseph Shaughnessy, Ruth Shaw, Paul Shobat, Morrie Siegel, Edwin Sims, Ed Smith, Sonia Sorel, Carol Stone, Lillian Sullivan, Mary Sutherland, Carl Trees, Norman Van Emburgh, Arthur Vann, Nina Verde, Hal Voeth, Harold Voeth (as "Honeymooner"), Jack Voeth (as "Boy in the Ensemble"), Howard Warriner, Kenneth Weaver, Buster West, Grover White, Gloria Whitney, Robert Williamson, Janice Winter, Joseph Wirag, Georgina Yaeger. Produced by Laurence Rivers Inc. and Erik Charell.
- (1937) Stage Play: Virginia. Musical/romance. Book by Laurence Stallings and Owen Davis. Music by Arthur Schwartz. Lyrics by Al Stillman. Music orchestrated by Ardon Cornwell, Hans Spialek, Phil Wall, Will Vodery, Maurice Baron. Vocal arrangements by Lee Montgomery and Kenny Christie. Book directed by Edward C. Lilley. Choreographed by Florence Rogge. Costume Design by Irene Sharaff. Stage Manager: Paul Porter. Assistant Stage Mgr: Burton McEvilly, William Torpey and Richard Whale. Technical Director: Frank Hall. Scenic Design by Lee Simonson. Directed by Leon Leonidoff. Center Theatre: 2 Sep 1937-23 Oct 1937 (60 performances). Cast: Martha Adamson, Ajax, James Allison, Nelson Ames, Viola Anderson, Avis Andrews, Elizabeth Andrews, Gene Archer, Bruce Barclay, Milton Barnette, Mona Barrie, John Barry, George Beach, Clarence Beasley, Bertha Belmore, Max Benson, Margaret Benton, Alice Berwald, Anne Booth, Geraldine Bork, Patricia Bowman, Virginia Browning, Nigel Bruce (as "His Excellency, Governor of the Colony"), John W. Bubbles, Ford L. Buck, Boris Butleroff, Jack Carr, Helen Carroll, Tania Clell, G. Congreve, Don Cortez, Henry Davis, John Diggs, Mable Downs, Janice Dremann, Laura Duncan, Ranolds Dupler, John Eldon, Maurice Ellis, Sally Ellis, Esta Elman, James Evans & Co., Gordon Felts, Doris Fischer, Leon Fokine, Marie Fox, Ed Galloway, Herbert Garstin, Margo Gavin, Ray Giles, Herbert Goff, Ronald Graham, Gail Grant, Marie Grimaldi, Val Gueral, Katie Hall, Lansing Hatfield, Gladys Haverty, Hermoine Hawkins, Lola Hayes, Margaret Hayness, Dennis Hoey (as "Sir Guy Carleton"), Bruce Howard, Louisa Howard, Mabel Howard, Polly Iuen, Lo Iven, Norman Jackson, Eleanor James, Charlotte Junius, Nora Kaye, George Kiddon, Karl Kohrs, Leona Krauss, Robert Landine, Anna Lazarevich, Bubblesette Leacock, Linn Ledford, James Lillard, Gene Lockhart (as "Fortesque of Drury Lane"), Thalia Mara, Anthony Marvin, Joseph Meyer, Margaret Miller, Doris Moore, Charlotte Mount, Mae Muth, Fyodor Nazinoff, Doris Newcomb, Eunice Northup, Martha Pacina, Muriel Pack, George Prentice, David Preston, Marion Raber, Robert Raines, John Ravold (as "A Patriot"), 'William Redfield (I)' (billed as "Billy Redfield"), Gordon Richards, Bruce Rogers, Margaret Rogers, Peggy Romano, Rosa Rubenstein, Nina Sabatini, Joseph Scandur, Tom Scott, Winton Sears, Zelda Shelton, Morrie Siegel, Maude Simmons, Gus Simons, Ed Smith, Irene Soussanin, Sylvia Stone, Tatyanna, Harold Taub, Tom Tempest, Charles Timpson, Adrienne Toner, Valia Valentinoff, Gladys Vincent, Grace Walsh, Howard Warriner, Charles Welch, Alma Wertley, Lewis White, W.W. Whitfield, Katherine Wilson, David Worth, Irene Zambelli. Produced by The Center Theatre (John Kenneth Hyatt: Managing Director).
- (1941) Stage Play: The Ballet Theatre [production was composed of the following shows: Gizelle, Three Virgins and a Devil, Gala Performance]. Special production/ballet. Stage Manager: Charles Mather and Burton McEvilly. Majestic Theatre: 11 Feb 1941- 9 Mar 1941 (unknown performances).
- (1948) Stage Play: Howdy, Mr. Ice. Special production. Music by Al Stillman and Alan Moran. Lyrics by Albert Stillman and Alan Moran. Music arranged by Paul Van Loan. Choreographed by Catherine Littlefield. Assistant Choreographer: Dorothie Littlefield. Skating Director: May Judels. Stage Director: Burton McEvilly [final Broadway credit]. Directed by Catherine Littlefield. Center Theatre: 24 Jun 1948- 23 Apr 1949 (406 performances). Cast: Lloyd "Skippy" Baxter, The Bruises, Paul Castle, Jinx Clark, Buster Grace, John Kasper, Buck Pennington, Mickee Preston, Paul Preston, Rudy Richards, Eileen Seigh, James Sisk, Harrison Thomson, Cissy Trenholm, Tixie, John Walsh, Dick Craig, Bill Douglas, Arthur Erickson, Nola Fairbanks, Fred Martell, Eileen Thompson, Margaret Barry, Peggy Bauer, Josephine Belluccia, Dorothy Bergman, Eddie Berry, Evelyn Biderman, Grace Blackman, Ray Blow, Ann Boykin, Charles Caminiti, Nick Dantos, Bernice Deane, Gerry Decker, Helen Dutcher, Kurt Fischman, Louis Glessman, Walli Hackman, Pat Harrington, Gloria Haupt, Ray Hendrickson, Dan Hurley, Lynne Immes, Joan King, George Kramser, Gene Leff, Pat Lemaire, Kenneth Leslie, Robert Lewis, Ann Liff, Marjorie Mahne, Ernest Mann, Mickey Meehan, John Melendez, Marvette Mosic, Doris Nelson, Ken Parker, Gus Patrick, James Paul, Priscilla Paulson, The Prestons, Sandy Quitne, Ragna Ray, Gerri Richardson, Rusty Rodgers, Lela Rolontz, Theresa Rothacker, Betty Smith, Beth Stevens, Leonard Stofka, Stephen Stofka, William Taft, Eileen Thompson, James Toth, Wally Van Sickle, William Waldren, Catherine Webber, Harvey Weber. Produced by Sonja Henie, Arthur M. Wirtz and Sonart Productions Inc. (William H. Burke, Production Director, Arthur M. Wirtz, Executive Director).
- (1944) Stage Play: Hats Off to Ice. Special. Music by James Littlefield and John Fortis. Lyrics by James Littlefield and John Fortis. Musical Director: David Mendoza. Music arranged by Paul Van Loan. Choreographed by Catherine Littlefield. Assistant Choreographer: Dorothie Littlefield. Skating Directed by May Judels. Stage Director: Burton McEvilly. Directed by William H. Burke and Catherine Littlefield. Center Theatre: 22 Jun 1944- 2 Apr 1946 (889 performances/on hiatus from 6 May 1945- 29 May 1945). Cast: Nancy Adamack, Everett Anderson, Julian Apley, Katherine Arnaiz, Bob Ballard, Margaret Barry, James Black, Brandt Sisters, James Caesar, William Campbell, Helen Carter, James Carter, William Carvel, Paul Castle, Elouise Christine, Jean Conrad, Kay Corcoran, Jeanne Crystall, Jere Decker, Manuel Del Toro, Joachim Dietl, Helen Dutcher, Alice Farrar, Bernard Feldman, Harper Flaherty, Fred Griffith, Gordon Harris, Janet Hester, Gordon Holley, Barbara Johnson, May Judels, Edith Kandel, Fred Kaufman, James Kenny, Garry Kerman, Billy Kling, Andrei Kristopher, Alfred Kutchy, Annette Lawrence, Alex Lindgren, Virginia Litz, Marion Lulling, Carol Lynne, Pat Marshall, Arthur Meheen, Sharlee Munster, Ruth Noland, Bernice O'Dell, Lucille Page, John Patterson, Robert Payne, Bert Pegram, Jane Petri, Robert Petrillo, Jack Raffloer, Ragna Ray, Rudy Richards, Lucille Risch, John Roach, Don Rogers, Lela Rolontz, Theresa Rothacker, Jane Sakovich, Caley Sisters, Geoffe Stevens, Charlie Storey, Bing Stott, Jean Sturgeon, Sally Tepley, Dorothy Thomas, Eileen Thompson, Helen Thompson, Tom Travers, Freddie Trenkler, Gretle Uksila, Robert Uksila, George Wagner, Peggy Whight, Claire Wilkins, Michelle Winters, Harvey Wolfers. Produced by Sonja Henie and Arthur M. Wirtz.
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