- (1911 - 1933) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1911) Stage Play: The Balkan Princess. Musical. Music by Paul A. Rubens. Book by Frederick Lonsdale and Frank Curzon. Lyrics by Paul A. Rubens and Arthur Wimperis. Musical Director: John McGhie. Costume Design by Melville Ellis. Scenic Design by H. Robert Law. Directed by W.J. Wilson. Herald Square Theatre (moved to The Casino Theatre from 27 Feb 1911-close): 9 Feb 1911-13 Mar 1911 (108 performances). Cast: Percy Ames (as "Max Hein"), May Boley (as "Magda"), Alice Brady (as "Olga") [Broadway debut], Millie Bright (as "Chorus"), William T. Carleton, Sylvia Clark (as "Cashier at the Bohemian Restaurant"), Herbert Corthell (as "Henri"), Harold De Becker (as "Lounger at the Bohemian Restaurant/Chorus"), Mabel Ferry (as "Chorus"), Irving Finn (as "Chorus"), Rose Firestone (as "Paula"), Louise Gunning (as "Princess Stephanie of Balaria"), Olin Howland (as "Chorus"), Fred Hudler, Kenneth Hunter (as "Capt. Radomir"), Daisy James (as "Marguerita"), Samuel Keene (as "Chorus"), Grace Kimball (as "Chorus"), Harry Lewellyn (as "Emil"), Len Litchfield (as "Chorus"), Fritz Macklyn (as "Lt. Varna"), Peggy Merritt (as "Teresa"), Robert Milliken (as "Hermann" / "Chorus"), Bobby B. Nichols (as "Tessa"), Christine Nielson (as "Princess Stephanie of Balaria" [Alternate]), John H. Pratt (as "Count Boethy"), Carmen Romero (as "Carmen"), Marie Rose, Robert Warwick (as "The Grand Duke Sergius"), Teddy Webb (as "Blatz"), Nanon Welch (as "Chorus"), Vida Whitmore (as "Sofia"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Produced by arrangement with William A. Brady.
- (1911) Stage Play: H.M.S. Pinafore. Musical/operetta (revival). Written by W.S. Gilbert. Music by Arthur Sullivan. Directed by Lewis Morton. Casino Theatre: 29 May 1911- 8 Jul 1911 (48 performances). Cast: Arthur Aldridge, Marynia Apel (as "Chorus"), Frances Baviello (as "Chorus"), Alice Brady, Marie Cahill, Katherine Calle (as "Chorus"), John Cardini (as "Chorus"), Francis Clark (as "Chorus"), Patricia Clark (as "Chorus"), Eugene Cowles, Harold Crane, Henry E. Dixey, Frank Dowling (as "Chorus"), Harrison Fuller (as "Chorus"), Harriet Gottlieb (as "Chorus"), Louise Gunning, Mary Harper (as "Chorus"), DeWolf Hopper Sr., Marie Kelley (as "Chorus"), Lillian Koniver (as "Chorus"), Bernard Lane (as "Chorus"), Martin Lilienfield (as "Chorus"), George MacFarlane, Mary Joe Matthews (as "Chorus"), Bert Melrose (as "Chorus"), Frances Moore (as "Chorus"), Fank Murray (as "Chorus"), Felix Noonan (as "Chorus"), Isabel Norwood (as "Chorus"), Patrick Quinton (as "Chorus"), Rosa Rubenstein (as "Chorus"), Olga Schumacher (as "Chorus"), Rosalyn Shaw (as "Chorus"), Adele Story (as "Chorus"), Florence Tempest, Mabel Thompson (as "Chorus"), Gertrude Waldon (as "Chorus"), Allan Ware (as "Chorus"), Hobson Young (as "Chorus"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert and William A. Brady.
- (1912) Stage Play: Patience. Musical/operetta.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Pirates of Penzance. Musical/operetta (revival).
- (1912) Stage Play: H.M.S. Pinafore [The Lass That Loved a Sailor]. Musical operetta (revival). Written by W.S. Gilbert. Music by Arthur Sullivan. Directed by W.G. Stewart. Casino Theatre: 27 Jun 1912- 28 Jun 1912 (2 performances). Cast: Arthur Aldridge (as "Ralph Rackstraw"), Alice Brady (as "Hebe, Sir Joseph's First Cousin"), Eugene Cowles (as "Bill Bobstay, Boatswain"), Arthur Cunningham (as "The Right Honorable Sir Joseph Porter, K.C.B., First Lord of the Admiralty"), Blanche Duffield (as "Josephine, the Captain's Daughter"), Viola Gillette (as "Little Buttercup, Mrs. Cripps, a Portsmouth Bumboat Woman"), DeWolf Hopper Sr. (as "Dick Deadeye"), George J. MacFarlane (as "Captain Corcoran, Commander of H.M.S. Pinafore"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert and William A. Brady.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Mikado [The Town of Titipu]. Musical comedy (revival). Written by W.S. Gilbert. Music by Arthur Sullivan. Directed by by William G. Stewart. Casino Theatre: 29 Jun 1912 (2 performances). Cast: Arthur Aldridge (as "Nanki-Poo, son of the Mikado, disguised as a wandering minstr"), Louise Barthel (as "Peep-Bo, one of Three Sisters, ward of Ko-Ko"), Alice Brady (as "Pitti-Sing, one of Three Sisters, ward of Ko-Ko"), Kate Condon (as "Katisha, an Elderly Lady, in love with Nanki-Poo"), Eugene Cowles (as "Pooh-Bah, Lord High Everything Else"), Arthur Cunningham (as "Pish-Tush, a Noble Lord"), Blanche Duffield (as "Yum-Yum, one of Three Sisters, ward of Ko-Ko"), DeWolf Hopper Sr. (as "Ko-Ko, Lord High Executioner of Titipu"), George J. MacFarlane (as "The Mikado of Japan"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert and William A. Brady.
- (1912) Stage Play: Little Women. Drama. Written by Marian De Forest. Based on the story by Louisa May Alcott. Conceived by Jessie Bonstelle. Directed by Bertram Harrison and Jessie Bonstelle. Playhouse Theatre: 14 Oct 1912- Mar 1913 (closing date unknown/184 performances). Cast: Marie Pavey, Gertrude Berkeley, Alice Brady (as "Meg"), John Cromwell (as "John Brooke"), Carson Davenport, Lillian Dix, Mrs. E.A. Eberle, Howard Estabrook, Lynn Hammond, Gladys Hulette, Carl Sauerman, Beverly West. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Family Cupboard. Written by Owen Davis. Playhouse Theatre: 21 Aug 1913- Jun 1915 (closing date unknown/140 performances). Cast: Louise Aichel, Franklyn Ardell, Ruth Benson, Wallace Erskine, Irene Fenwick, Frank Hatch, Barney Johnson, Alice Lindahl, William Morris, Harry Redding, Irene Romaine, Olive Harper Thorne, Forrest Winant, Douglas J. Wood. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1929) Stage Play: Karl and Anna. Drama. Written by Leonhard Frank. Translated by Ruth Langner. Directed by Philip Moeller. Guild Theatre: 7 Oct 1929- Nov 1929 (closing date unknown/49 performances). Cast: Herbert J. Biberman (as "Sister's Husband"), Alice Brady (as "Anna"), Frank Conroy (as "Richard"), Larry Fletcher (as "Sister's Husband"), Ruth Hammond (as "Marie"), Otto Kruger (as "Karl"), Charles C. Leatherbee (as "A Guard"), Philip Leigh (as "Second Prisoner"), Robert Norton (as "Another Guard"), Claude Rains (as "First Prisoner"), Gale Sondergaard (as "Marie's Sister"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1928) Stage Play: A Most Immoral Lady. Written by Townsend Martin. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Directed by Dwight Wiman and Townsend Martin. Cort Theatre: 26 Nov 1928- Apr 1929 (closing date unknown/160 performances). Cast: Lawrence Adams, Kirk Ames (also assistant stage manager), Harry Barfoot (also stage manager), Sydney Booth, Alice Brady, Helen Brooks, Blythe Daly, Pauline Denton, Austin Fairman, Inger Ghika, Michael Hoffman, Guido Nadzo, Erik Rhodes [credited as Ernest Sharpe], Robert Strange. Produced by William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman. Note: Filmed as A Most Immoral Lady (1929).
- Bless You, Sister (1927). Written by John Meehan and Robert Riskin. Directed by John Meehan and George Abbott. Forrest Theatre: 26 Dec 1927- Jan 1928 (24 performances). Cast included: George Alison(as "Rev. Robert MacDonald"), Robert Ames (as "Freddy Gribble"), Charles Bickford (as "Timothy Bradley"), Alice Brady (as "Mary MacDonald"), Clark Bremer (as "Member of the Choir"), Marjorie Dalton (as "Miss Quigley"), Eugene Donovan (as "Tony Nazarro"), Anne Elliott (as "Member of the Choir"), Dorothy Estabrook (as "Esther Lewis"), Denis Gurney (as "George Hunter"), Marie Ilka (as "Miss Hyde"), Eloise Keeler (as "Daisy"), George Lessey (as "Senator Gribble"), Mildred MacLeod (as "Sandy MacDonald"), Edwin Marshall (as "Member of the Choir"), Olivia Martin (as "Choir Leader"), Bertha Rodgers (as "Member of the Choir"), Edwin Rogers (as "Member of the Choir"), Anton Teero (as "Member of the Choir"). Produced by A.E. Riskin and R.R. Riskin.
- (1927) Stage: Appeared (as "Marie-Louise Voysin") in "The Thief" on Broadway (revival). Written by Henri Bernstein. Book adapted by C. Haddon Chambers. Directed by Lionel Atwill. Ritz Theatre: 22 Apr 1927-Jul 1927 (closing date unknown/83 performances). Cast: Lionel Atwill (as "Richard Voysin"), Orlando Daly (as "M. Zambault"), Anthony Kemble-Cooper (as "Fernand Lagardes"), Mona Kingsley (as "Isabelle Lagardes"), William Leith (as "Butler"). Produced by William A. Brady. Produced in association with [error].
- (1927) Stage: Appeared in "Lady Alone", produced on Broadway.
- (1926) Stage: Appeared in "The Witch", produced on Broadway. Drama.
- (1928) Stage Play:
- (1926) Stage: Appeared in "Bride of the Lamb", produced on Broadway.
- (1925) Stage: Appeared in "Sunny", produced on Broadway. Musical comedy. Book and lyrics by Otto A. Harbach and Oscar Hammerstein II. Music by Jerome Kern. Musical Director: Gustave Salzer. Music arranged by Robert Russell Bennett. Scenic / Costume Design by James Reynolds. Dances arranged by Julian Mitchell and David Bennett. Marilyn Miller's Hunt Ball dance arranged by Alexis Kosloff. Eight Marilyn Miller Cocktails' dances arranged by Dorothy Tiller. Directed by Hassard Short. New Amsterdam Theatre: 22 Sep 1925-11 Dec 1926 (517 performances). Cast: Marilyn Miller, Charles Angelo, Alfred Arnold, Russell Ash, Jean Audree, William Bennett, Mary Brady, Elmer Brown, Irving Carter, Gordon B. Clarke, Virginia Clark, Joan Clement, Vera Colburn, May Cornes, Miriam Crosby, Elizabeth Darling, Beatrice De Shaw, Frank Doane, Jack Donohue, Nellie Douglas, Dorothy Durland, Walter Fairmont, Jeanne Fonda, Paul Frawley, Dean Freeman, Helene Gardner, Eddie Graham, Pauline Hall, Louis Harrison, Mary Hay, Grace Holt, Esther Howard, Wensley Johnston, Ray Justus, Pert Kelton, Julia Lane, Myrtle Lane, Helen McDonald, Trude Marr, Lucy Monroe, Lee Moore, Roy Moore, Bill O'Donnell, Donald Oltrash, 'Elsa Peterson', Nickie Pittell, Elva Pomfret, Richard Renaud, Phyllis Reynolds, Leila Riley, Minard Roosa, Don Rowen, Rita Royce, William Scholar Jr., Iris Smith, Peggy Soden, Harry Spencer, Hilda Wynn Stanley, Jet Stanley, Louise Starck, Marshall D. Sullivan, Marion Swords, Ward Tallman, Ayres Tavitt, Norma Taylor, Billy Walsh, Clifton Webb, Maxine Wells, Ted Wenning, Doris Wentworth, James Wilson, Louis Yaeckel. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1925) Stage: Appeared (as "Jacqueline La Garde") in "Oh Mama", produced on Broadway. Comedy/farce. Written by Louis Verneuil. Book adapted by Wilton Lackaye and Harry Wagstaff Gribble. Playhouse Theatre: 19 Aug 1925-Oct 1925 (closing date unknown/70 performances). Cast: Jean Burton, John Cromwell (as "Julien Rhenal"), Mildred Florence, William Leith (as "Adolph"), Kenneth McKenna (as "Georges La Garde"), Edwin Nicander, Paul Porcasi (as "Maitre de Hotel"), Edythe Shyne.
- (1924) Stage: Appeared (as "Chorus") in "Madame Pompadour", produced on Broadway. Music by Leo Fall. Book and lyrics by Rudolph Schanzer and Ernst Welisch. Book adapted by Clare Kummer. Musical Director: Oscar Radin. Directed by R.H. Burnside. Martin Beck Theatre: 11 Nov 1924-17 Jan 1925 (80 performances). Cast: Berte Alden, Richard Allen, Florenz Ames (as "Joseph Calicot"), John Barney, Wilda Bennett, Fred Burke, Zachary Caully, Eva Clark, Walter Costello, Raymond Cullen, Ursula Dale, Leonora Darcy, Oscar Figman, Florence Fitzwalters, Margery Flynn, Ivan Frank, John Fulco, Margot Greville, Pauline Hall, Louis Harriston, Alexis Havrilla, Christian Holton, Beatrice Hughes, Dorothy Irving, Irma Irving, Edgar Kent, Mabel Knight, Marie Lambert, Betty Lawrence, Frederick Lewis, Joan Lindsay, Wanda Lyon, Anne Makara, DeWitt Matthews, Rose Maynard, Pauline Miller, Mildred Mindell, Loe Moran, Margaret Morris, Elaine Palmer, Curt Peterson, Herbert Pickett, John Quinlan, Eileen Seymour, Elliott Stewart, Janet Stone, Rene Vanryha, Henry Vincent, Betty Wilson. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham and Martin Beck.
- (1923) Stage: Appeared in "Dew Drop Inn", produced on Broadway. Musical comedy.
- (1923) Stage Play: Zander the Great. Comedy. Written by Salisbury Field. Directed by David Burton. Empire Theatre: 9 Apr 1923- Jun 1923 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: George Abbott (as "Texas"), Joseph Allen (as "Good News"), Joseph Baird (as "Oliver Macy"), James S. Barrett (as "Jim Sawday"), Alice Brady (as "Mamie"), Edwin Mills (as "Zander"), Dan Moyles (as "Bill Price"), Jerome Patrick (as "Dan Murchison"), Joseph Spurin (as "Juan"), Raymond Van Sickle (as "Elmer Lovejoy"), William Wadsworth (as "Jackson Pepper"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (1922) Stage: Appeared in "The Yankee Princess" on Broadway. Musical comedy.
- (1922) Stage: Appeared (as "Ensemble") in "The Blushing Bride" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Book and lyrics by Cyrus Wood. Based on a libretto by Edward Clark. Music by Sigmund Romberg. Based on a play by Jocelyn Brandon and Frederick Arthur. Based on a play adapted by Mark Swan. Musical Director: George A. Nichols. Musical Staging by Jack Mason. Production Supervised by J.J. Shubert. Directed by Frank Smithson. Astor Theatre (moved to The 44th Street Theatre from 24 Apr 1922 to close): 4 Feb 1922-10 Jun 1922 (144 performances). Cast: Edythe Baker, John Barrott, David Belbridge, Mabel Blake, Fred Blyler, Virginia Calmer, Clara Carroll, Jane Carroll, Eva Cassanova, Harry Corson Clarke, George Craig, Adelaide DiNovaloff, Albert DiNovaloff, Georgia Empey, Kitty Flynn, The Glorias, Gene Gray, Harold Gwynne, William Holbrooke, Claire Hooper, Charles Layton, Cecil Lean, Anabelle Lewis, Tom Lewis, George Luman, Ma-Belle, Rena Manning, Cleo Mayfield, Margaret Morris, John Muccio, Gertrude Mudge, Clarence Nordstrom, Robert Emmett O'Connor (as "Paul Kominski"), Thelma Percy, Betty Ross, Miss Stoneburne, Violette Strathmore, Louise Strong, Beatrice Swanson, Marcella Swanson, Jean Woods. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1921) Stage: Appeared in "The Love Letter" on Broadway. Musical comedy.
- (1920) Stage: Appeared in "Anna Ascends" on Broadway.
- (1918) Stage: Appeared in "Forever After" on Broadway.
- (1915) Stage: Appeared in "Iolanthe" on Broadway. Musical/operetta (revival).
- (1915) Stage Play: The Pirates of Penzance [The Slave of Duty]. Musical comedy/operetta. Written by W.S. Gilbert. Music by Arthur Sullivan. Musical Director: Clarence West. Directed by Herbert Cripps. 48th Street Theatre: 7 Jun 1915- 18 Jun 1915 (4 performances/played in repertory with The Sorcerer, Trial by Jury, H.M.S. Pinafore). Cast: Arthur Aldridge (as "Frederic, the Pirate Apprentice"), Alice Brady (as "Mabel, General Stanley's Daughter"), Una Brooks (as "Kate, General Stanley's Daughter"), William Danforth (as "Major General Stanley"), DeWolf Hopper Sr. (as "Major General Stanley"), Marie Horgan (as "Ruth, Pirate 'Maid-of-all-Work'"), Alice McComb (as "Edith, General Stanley's Daughter"), Maude Mordaunt (as "Isabel, General Stanley's Daughter"), Herbert L. Waterous (as "The Pirate King"), John Willard (as "Samuel, The Pirate King's Lieutenant"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1915) Stage Play: The Yeomen of the Guard [The Merryman and His Maid]. Musical/operetta (revival/ played in repertory with The Mikado, The Sorcerer, Trial by Jury, H.M.S. Pinafore, Iolanthe). Written by W.S. Gilbert. Music by Arthur Sullivan. Musical Director: Clarence West. Directed by Herbert Cripps. 48th Street Theatre: 19 Apr 1915- 8 May 1915 (24 performances). Cast: George Abbott (as "Second Yeoman"), Arthur Aldridge (as "Colonel Fairfax"), Natalie Alt (as "Elsie Maynard"), May Arnold (as "Chorus"), Digby Bell (as "Chorus"), Alice Brady (as "Chorus"), Una Brooks (as "Chorus"), Gladys Caldwell (as "Phoebe Meryll"), Frank Clarke (as "First Yeoman"), William Danforth (as "Wilfred Shadbolt"), Hugh Dwyer (as "Leonard Meryll"), DeWolf Hopper Sr. (as "Jack Point"), Marie Horgan (as "Dame Carruthers"), James Hughes (as "The Headsman"), Alice McComb (as "Kate"), Maude Mordaunt (as "Chorus"), William Quimby (as "First Citizen"), Henry Smith (as "Second Citizen"), Richard Temple (as "Chorus"), Herbert Waterous (as "Sergeant Meryll"), John Willard (as "Sir Richard Cholmondeley"). Produced by William A. Brady and Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Company.
- (1915) Stage Play: H.M.S. Pinafore. Musical/operetta (revival/played in repertory with The Yeomen of the Guard, The Mikado, The Sorcerer, Trial by Jury, Iolanthe, The Pirates of Penzance). Written by W.S. Gilbert. Music by Arthur Sullivan. Musical Director: Clarence West. Directed by Herbert Cripps. 48th Street Theatre: 19 Apr 1915- 19 Jun 1915 (unknown performances). Cast: Arthur Aldridge (as "Ralph Rackstraw"), Alice Brady (as "Josephine, the Captain's Daughter"), William Danforth (as "The Right Honorable Sir Joseph Porter, K.C.B., First Lord of the Admiralty"), DeWolf Hopper Sr. (as "Dick Deadeye"), Marie Horgan (as "Little Buttercup, Mrs. Cripps, a Portsmouth Bumboat Woman"), George MacFarlane (as "Captain Corcoran, Commander of H.M.S. Pinafore"), Alice McComb (as "Hebe, Sir Joseph's First Cousin"), Herbert L. Waterous (as "Bill Bobstay, Boatswain"). Produced by William A. Brady and Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Company.
- (1915) Stage Play: Sinners. Written by Owen Davis. Playhouse Theatre: 7 Jan 1915- Jul 1915 (closing date unknown/220 performances). Cast: Alice Brady, John Cromwell, Gertrude Dallas, Emma Dunn, Robert Edeson, Frances McLeod, Florence Nash, Charles Richman, John Stokes, Walter Walker. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1914) Stage Play: What is Love? Written by George Scarborough. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 19 Sep 1914- Oct 1914 (closing date unknown/25 performances). Cast: Charles Balsar, Alice Brady, Nannette Comstock, Jennie Eustace, Ruth Findlay, Theodore Friebus, B.R. Graham, Lucia Moore, Jerome Patrick, Edward See. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1914) Stage Play: Sylvia Runs Away. Playhouse Theatre: 20 Aug 1914- Aug 1914 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Elmer Booth, Alice Brady, Albert Brown, Charles Homer, Edward Langford, Charles Lothian, Sidney Macey, Tom McMahon, Albert Moore, Geraldine O'Brien, Ned Sparks [credited as Ned A. Sparks]. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1913) Stage: Appeared in "School" on Broadway.
- (1913) Stage: Appeared in "The Things That Count" on Broadway.
- (1930) Stage Play: Love, Honor and Betray. Drama. Written by Fanny Hatton and Frederic Hatton. Adapted from the French of Andre Antoine. Directed by Donn Mullally. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 12 Mar 1930- Apr 1930 (closing date unknown/45 performances). Cast: Alice Brady (as "The Woman"), George Brent (as "The Chauffeur") [only Broadway role], Glenda Farrell (as "The Young Girl"), Clark Gable (as "The Lover") [final Broadway role], Wilton Lackaye (as "The Doctor"; final Broadway role), Mark Smith (as "The Husband"), Robert Williams (as "The Young Man") [final Broadway role]. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1926) Stage Play: Sour Grapes. Comedy. Written by Vincent Lawrence. Longacre Theatre: 6 Sep 1926- Oct 1926 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Alice Brady (as "Alice Overton"), John Halliday (as "John Overton"), Frank Conroy (as "James Milburn"), James Kearney (as "Phillips"), Flora Sheffield (as "Marjorie Lawson"). Produced by William H. Harris Jr.
- (1923) Stage Play: Dew Drop Inn. Musical comedy. Music by Alfred Goodman. Book by Walter DeLeon and Edward Delaney Dunn. Lyrics by Cyrus Wood. Featuring songs by Rudolf Friml, J. Fred Coots and Jean Schwartz. Featuring songs with lyrics by McElbert Moore. Ensemble music by Sigmund Romberg. Musical Director: Alfred Newman. Astor Theatre: 17 May 1923-25 Aug 1923 (production closed from 1 Jul 1923-29 Jul 1923/83 performances). Cast: Margaret Atherton, James Barton (as "Ananias Washington"), Alice Brady (as "Marion Stanley/Ensemble"), George Brown, Lester Brown, Jean Carroll, Evelyn Cavanaugh, Spencer Charters (as "Joseph Higgins"), Harry Clark, Daniel Dare (as "Bell Boy"), Billie Davis, Gladys Davis, Dorothy Deane, Richard Dore, Bernard Druce, Millie Dupree, Grace Ellsworth, Harry Ellsworth, Bob Gebhardt, Dale Grigsby, Raymond Hall, Sylvia Highton, Frank Hill, Claire Hodgson, William Holden (as "J.P. Rocksly"), Robert Holliday, Ben Jacklow, Thelma Johns, Bobby Kane, Lee Kelso, Mary Kissell, Katherine Manion, Rena Miller, Margaret Morris, Felicia Murelle, Helen O'Brien, Hal Peel, Mary Robson, Helen Rogier, Harry Rosedale, Jack Squire, Allen Stevens, Juliet Strahl, Beatrice Swanson, Marcella Swanson, Mabel Withee. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1922) Stage Play: Drifting. Melodrama. Written by John Colton and D.H. Andrews. Directed by John Cromwell. Playhouse Theatre: 2 Jan 1922- Feb 1922 (closing date unknown/63 performances). Cast: Allen Atwell, Frank Backus, Millie Beland, William Blaisdell, Humphrey Bogart (as "Ernie Crockett/Third Husband") [Broadway debut], Alice Brady (as "Cassie Cook"), Cornelius Bull, Leonard Cary, Jane Corcoran (as "Mrs. Cook/A Monger of Lost Dolls"), Burr Caruth [credited as Burr Curruth], Harry Davies, Marguerite de Marhanno, Maxwell Driscoll, Barry Fitz Patrick, Franklyn Fox, Master Jack Grattan, Lumsden Hare (as "Dr. Li Shen Kueng"), Olaf Laven, Winifred Lawshe, Geraldine McCreery, Leward Meeker, Florence Short, Edwin Thompson, Blanche Wallace, Eve Ware, Robert Warwick, H. Mortimer White. Produced by William A. Brady. Note: Filmed by Universal Pictures as Drifting (1923), and by Universal Pictures as Shanghai Lady (1929).
- (1931) Stage Play: Brass Ankle. Drama.
- (1931) Stage Play: Mourning Becomes Electra. Written by Eugene O'Neill.
- (1932) Stage Play: Mademoiselle. Written by Grace George. Based on the French of Jacques Deval. Directed by Clarence Derwent and Jacques Deval. Playhouse Theatre: 18 Oct 1932- Jan 1933 (closing date unknown/103 performances). Cast: Alice Brady (as "Madame Galvosier"), Grace George (as "Mademoiselle"), A.E. Matthews, Thomas Beck (as "Maurice Galvoiser"), Peggy Conklin (as "Christine Galvosier"), May Marshall (as "Juliette"), Garda Olesen (as "Therese"), Frank Rothe (as "Valentin"), Lillian Savin (as "Helene"), Kenneth Treseder (as "Edouard"), Harold West (as "Georges Boutin"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1932) Stage Play: Mademoiselle. Written by Grace George. Based on the French of Jacques Deval. Directed by Clarence Derwent and Jacques Deval. Playhouse Theatre: 18 Oct 1932- Jan 1933 (closing date unknown/103 performances). Cast: Alice Brady (as "Madame Galvosier") [final Broadway role], Grace George (as "Mademoiselle"), A.E. Matthews, Thomas Beck (as "Maurice Galvoiser"), Peggy Conklin (as "Christine Galvosier"), May Marshall (as "Juliette"), Garda Olesen (as "Therese"), Frank Rothe (as "Valentin"), Lillian Savin (as "Helene"), Kenneth Treseder (as "Edouard") [Broadway debut], Harold West (as "Georges Boutin"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1930) She acted in Gilda Varesi Archibald's play, "Enter Madame," at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, Massachusetts with Bette Davis and Spring Byington in the cast.
- (1930) She acted in Robert Emmet Sherwood's play, "The Road to Rome," at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, Massachusetts with Pedro DeCordoba in the cast.
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