- (1949 - 1979) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1949) Stage Play: The Biggest Thief in Town. Comedy. Written by Dalton Trumbo. Scenic Design by Leo Kerz. Costume Design by Eleanore Goldsmith. Lighting Design by Leo Kerz. Directed by Herman Shumlin. Mansfield Theatre: 30 Mar 1949- 9 Apr 1949 (13 performances). Cast: Walter Abel (as "Dr. Jay Stewart"), Russ Brown, Charity Grace, William J. Kelly, Alexander Lockwood, Ben Metz, Thomas Mitchell (as "Bert Hutchins"), Lois Nettleton (as "Laurie Hutchins") [Broadway debut], Robert Readick, Fay Roope (as "Col. Jared Rumley"), Brent Sargent, Rhys Williams (as "Sam Wilkins"). Produced by Lee Sabinson [final Broadway credit].
- (1951) Stage Play: Darkness at Noon. Drama. Written by Sidney Kingsley. Based on the novel by Arthur Koestler. "Moscow" composed by Dan and Dm. Pokras. Directed by Sidney Kingsley. Alvin Theatre (moved to The Royale Theatre from 26 Mar 1951 to close): 13 Jan 1951- 23 Jun 1951 (186 performances). Cast: Claude Rains (as "Rubashov"), Kim Hunter (as "Luba"), Jack Palance [credited as Walter J. Palance] (as "Gletkin"), Tony Ancona, Geoffrey Barr, Henry Beckman (as "Pablo"), Philip Coolidge, Robert Crozier, Maurice Gosfield, Johnson Hayes, Virginia Howard, Robert Keith, Jr., Will Kuluva (as "Luigi"), Adams MacDonald, Lois Nettleton (as "Secretary"), Daniel Polis, Herbert Ratner (as "Richard"), Allan Rich, Norman Roland, Alexander Scourby (as "Ivanoff"), Richard Seff. Produced by The Playwrights' Company. Associate Producer: May Kirshner.
- (1959) Stage Play: God and Kate Murphy. Drama.
- (1959) Stage Play: Silent Night, Lonely Night. Written by Robert Anderson. Lighting and Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Peter Glenville. Morosco Theatre: 3 Dec 1959- 19 Mar 1960 (124 performances). Cast: Barbara Bel Geddes, Henry Fonda, Bill Berger, Peter De Vise, Eda Heinemann, Lois Nettleton. Produced by The Playwright's Company (Maxwell Anderson, S.N. Behrman, Elmer Rice, Robert E. Sherwood, Sidney Howard).
- (1966) Stage Play: The Wayward Stork. Comedy.
- (1973) Stage Play: A Streetcar Named Desire. Drama (revival).
- (1976) Stage Play: They Knew What They Wanted. Comedy (revival).
- (1979) Stage Play: Strangers. Written by Sherman Yellen. Scenic Design by David Jenkins. Directed by Arvin Brown. John Golden Theatre: 4 Mar 1979- 11 Mar 1979 (9 performances + 12 previews). Cast: Bruce Dern (as "Sinclair Hal Lewis"), Lois Nettleton (as "Dorothy Thompson") [final Broadway role], William Newman (as "German Guest/Waiter/Russian Commissar/Hotel Manager/Swedish Reporter/American Reporter/Psychiatrist"), Ellen Parker (as "German Guest/Dancer/Russian Commissar/Moira/Crista/American Reporter/Corinna"), Jean-Pierre Stewart (as "German Guest/Dancer/German Pilot/Russian Commissar/Josef/S.S. Man")[final Broadway role]. Standby: Jacqueline Coslow (as "Dorothy Thompson"). Understudies: Dan Hild (as "Dancer/German Guest/German Pilot/Josef/Russian Commissar/S.S. Man"), William Newman (as "Sinclair 'Hal' Lewis") and Jean-Pierre Stewart (as "American Reporter/Hotel Manager/Psychiatrist/Swedish Reporter/Waiter"). Produced by Mike Merrick and Bill Wilson. Produced in association with Peter Owens.
- (1972) She acted in the play, "The Rainmaker," at the Arlington Park Theatre in Chicago, Illinois.
- (April 18 to June 30, 1991) She acted in the musical, "A Little Night Music," presented by Center Theatre Group/Ahmanson at the James A. Doolittle (University of California) Theatre in Los Angeles, California with John McMartin and Glynis Johns in the cast. Gordon Davidson was director. Stephen Sondheim was composer and lyricist. Hugh Wheeler wrote the book.
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