- (1910 - 1946) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1910) Stage Play: The Concert. Written by Hermann Bahr. Book adapted by Leo Ditrichstein. Belasco Theatre: 4 Oct 1910- May 1911 (closing date unknown/264 performances). Cast: Adelaide Barrett, Janet Beecher, Margaret Bloodgood, Edith Cartwright, John W. Cope, Leo Ditrichstein, Elsie Glynn, Jane Grey, Edna Griffin, Mary Johnson, William Morris, Alice L. Pollock, Catherine Proctor, Belle Theodore, Kathryn Tyndall, Cora Witherspoon (as "Edith Gordon") [Broadway debut]. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Temperamental Journey. Written by Leo Ditrichstein. from "Pour Vivre Heureux" by Andre Rivoire and Yves Mirandeis. Belasco Theatre (moved to The Theatre Republic from 29 Sep 1913- close): 4 Sep 1913- unknown (124 performances). Cast: Leo Ditrichstein (as "Jacques Dupont"), Isabel Irving, Henry Bergman, Caree Clarke, Frank Connor, William Dixon, Edouard Durand, Dorothy Ellis, Earle W. Grant, Richie Ling, Julian Little, Anna McNaughton, Lee Millar, M. Daniel Schatts, Josephine Victor, Cora Witherspoon, Edwin R. Wolfe. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1914) Stage Play: Daddy Long Legs. Written by Jean Webster. Gaiety Theatre: 28 Sep 1914- May 1915 (closing date unknown/264 performances). Cast: Mabel Burt (as "Miss Pritchard"), Ruth Chatterton (as "Judy"), Harry Dodd, Maud Erwin, Edward Howard, Gilda Leary [Broadway debut], Ethel Martin, Edna McCauley, Daniel Pennell, Margaret Sayres, Charles Trowbridge (as "James McBride"), Charles Waldron (as "Jervis Pendleton"), Robert Waters, H. Conway Wingfield, Cora Witherspoon (as "Sallie McBride"), "Boots" Wooster.
- (1915) Stage Play: The Great Lover. Romantic comedy. Written by Leo Ditrichstein, Frederic Hatton and Fanny Hatton. Longacre Theatre: 10 Nov 1915- Jun 1916 (closing date unknown/245 performances). Cast: Virginia Fox Brooks (as "Ethel Warren, lyric soprano"), Leo Ditrichstein (as "Jean Paurel, star baritone"), Malcolm Fassatt (as "Carlo Sonio, baritone"), Alfred Kappeler (as "Carl Losseck, Wagnerian tenor"), Julian Little (as "Faranald, secretary to Stapleton"), Frederick Macklyn (as "Ward, house press agent"), Anna McNaughton (as "Madame Trellerbeinbrich, German soprano"), Lee Millar (as "Mr. Stapleton"), Alexis H. Polianov, William Ricciardi (as "Maestro Cereale, Italian conductor"), George E. Romain (as "Kartzag, stage manager"), Antonio Salerno, M.D. Shatts, Beverly Sitgreaves, Cora Witherspoon (as "Mrs. Van Ness"). Produced by Cohan & Harris.
- (1918) Stage Play: Three Faces East. Written by Anthony Paul Kelly. Cohan and Harris (moved to The Longacre Theatre from 17 Feb 1919- close): 13 Aug 1918- unknown (335 performances). Cast: Grace Ade, Emmett Corrigan (as "Valdar"), Herbert Evans (as "Thompson"), Fred J. Fairbanks, Marion Grey, Charles Harbury, Violet Heming, William Jeffrey, Harry Lambart, David L. Leonard, Mary Ilene Mack, Otto Niemeyer, Joseph Selman, Frank Sheridan, Frank H. Westerton, Cora Witherspoon (as "Miss Risdon"). Produced by Cohan & Harris. Note: Filmed by Cinema Corporation of America [distributed by Producers Distributing Corporation (PDC)] as Three Faces East (1926), and by Warner Bros. as Three Faces East (1930).
- (1918) Stage Play: The Matinee Hero. Written by Leo Ditrichstein and A.E. Thomas. Vanderbilt Theatre: 7 Oct 1918- Dec 1918 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Mary Boland, Leo Ditrichstein, Josephine Hamner, Robert McWade, Jessie Parnell, Catherine Proctor, William Ricciardi, Brandon Tynan, Cora Witherspoon. Produced by Cohan & Harris.
- (1918) Stage Play: Daddy Long Legs (Revival). Written by Jean Webster. Henry Miller's Theatre: 16 Nov 1918- Nov 1918 (closing date unknown/17 performances). Cast: Frances Goodrich Ames, Ruth Chatterton, Mary Fisk, Charles Lauton, Bessie Lea Lestina, Sydney Macy, Ethel Martin, Henry Miller, Helen Millington, L'Estrange Millman, Lucia Moore, Olive Moore, W.B. Reed, Nina Saville, Charles Trowbridge, Cora Witherspoon.
- (1919) Stage Play: She Would and She Did. Comedy. Written by Mark Reed. Directed by John Cromwell. Vanderbilt Theatre: 11 Sep 1919- Oct 1919 (closing date unknown/36 performances). Cast: John Adair, Edward Arnold (as "Charlie Vincent"), Ned Burton (as "Major Wilson") [final Broadway role], May Collins, John Cromwell (as "Frank Goward"), Lemist Esler, Grace George (as "Frances Nesmith"), Fletcher Harvey (as "Dr. Coburn"), Esther Howard (as "Pearl"), Arthur Keith, George MacQuarrie (as "Fisher Brigham"), John Stokes, Isabel West, Cora Witherspoon (as "Elsie Goward").
- (1921) Stage Play: Lilies of the Field. Drama. Written by William J. Hurlbut. Directed by Harry McRae Webster. Klaw Theatre: 4 Oct 1921- Feb 1922 (closing date unknown/169 performances). Cast: Alice Cavanaugh, Gertrude Clemens, Dan Day, Dorothy Day, Marie Doro, Josephine Drake, Evelyn Duncan, Elfin Finn, Pauline Garon, J. Cleneay Mathews, Y. Mimura, Mary Phillips, Alison Skipworth (as "Florette Ellwood"), Norman Trevor (as "Lewis Willing"), Roy Walling, Cora Witherspoon (as "Gertrude Ainlee"). Produced by Garrick Productions.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Awful Truth. Comedy. Written by Arthur Richman. Henry Miller's Theatre: 18 Sep 1922- Jan 1923 (closing date unknown/144 performances). Cast: Kyra Alanova, George K. Barraud, Ina Claire (as "Lucy Warriner"), Paul Harvey (as "Daniel Leeson"), Louise MacKintosh, Bruce McRae, Lewis Sealy [credited as Lewis A. Sealy], Raymond Walburn, (as "Rufus Kempster"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Josephine Trent"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (1924) Stage Play: Grounds for Divorce. Written by Guy Bolton. From the Hungarian of Ernest Vajda. Empire Theatre: 23 Sep 1924- Jan 1925 (closing date unknown/127 performances). Cast: Bertha Belmore (as "Henriette Deschamps"), Gladys Burgess (as "Denise Sorbier"), Philip Merivale (as "Maurice Sorbier"), Edward Reese, H. Reeves-Smith (as "Felix Roget"), Georges Renavent (as "Marquis Guido Longoni"), Gladys Wilson, Cora Witherspoon (as "Marianne Regnault"). Produced by Henry Miller. Note: Filmed by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as Grounds for Divorce (1925).
- (1925) Stage Play: The Fall of Eve. Comedy. Written by John Emerson and Anita Loos. Booth Theatre: 31 Aug 1925- Oct 1925 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Albert Albertson, Alonzo Fenderson, Ruth Gordon (as "Eva Hutton"), Doris Kemper, Claude King, Reginald Mason (as "Larry Webb"), Diantha Pattison (as "Enid Craig"), Nadine Winstan, Cora Witherspoon (as "Amy Parker"). Produced by John Emerson.
- (1926) Stage Play: Hush Money. Melodrama. Written by Alfred Jackson and Mann Page. Directed by William B. Friedlander. 49th Street Theatre: 15 Mar 1926- May 1926 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Frederick Burton, G. Davidson Clarke, Edward Charles Conway, Sam Galper, Richard Gordon, Justine Johnstone (as "Kathleen Forrest") [final Broadway role], Ruth Lee, Joseph Lertora, George E. Mack, Calvin Thomas, Kenneth Thomson, Gladys Wilson, Cora Witherspoon (as "Mrs. Rudolph Wurzman"). Produced by Charles K. Gordon.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Constant Wife. Comedy. Written by W. Somerset Maugham. Directed by Gilbert Miller. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 29 Nov 1926-13 Aug 1927 (296 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore (as "Constance Middleton"), Thomas Braidon [credited as Thomas A. Braidon] (as "Bentley, the Butler"), Frank Conroy (as "Bernard Kersal, a friend"), Walter Kingsford (as "Mortimer Durham, Marie-Louise's husband"), Jeannette Sherwin (as "Barbara Fawcett, a friend"), C. Aubrey Smith (as "John Middleton, FRCS, Constance's husband"), Verree Teasdale (as "Marie-Louise Durham, a friend"), Mabel Terry-Lewis, Cora Witherspoon (as "Martha Culver"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (1928) Stage Play: Olympia. Comedy. Written by Ferenc Molnár. Translated by Sidney Howard. Directed by Gilbert Miller. Empire Theatre: 16 Oct 1928- Nov 1928 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: Fay Compton (as "Olympia, Princess Orsolini"), Laura Hope Crews (as "Princess Eugenie Plata-Ettingen"), Ian Hunter (as "Captain Kovacs"), Arnold Korff (as "Prince Plata-Ettingen"), Richie Ling (as "Colonel Krehl"), Grant Stewart (as "Count Albert"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Countess Lina"). Produced by Gilbert Miller.
- (1929) Stage Play: Precious. Comedy/farce. Written by James Forbes. Directed by Melville Burke. Royale Theatre: 14 Jan 1929- Feb 1929 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Howard Benton, John Cumberland, Jules Epailly (as "Alvarez"), Dorothy Hall, Hale Hamilton (as "Luke Radcliffe"), Edward Leiter (as "Oliver Denton"), Frances McHugh (as "Alice"), Verree Teasdale (as "Sonia"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Stella Peck"). Produced by Rosalie Stewart.
- (1930) Stage Play: Waterloo Bridge. Drama. Written by Robert E. Sherwood. Directed by Winchell Smith. Fulton Theatre: 6 Jun 1930- Mar 1930 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Hannam Clark, Florence Edney (as "Mrs. Hobley"), William Evans, Allen Fagan, Alexander Frank, Douglas Garden, Eunice Hunt, Glenn Hunter, David Post, Herbert Saunders, Margaret Searls, George Spelvin, June Walker, George G. Wallen, Cora Witherspoon (as "Kitty"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1931) Stage Play: Philip Goes Forth. Comedy. Written and directed by George Kelly. Biltmore Theatre: 12 Jan 1931- Apr 1931 (closing date unknown/97 performances). Cast: Marion Barney, Harry Ellerbe (as "Philip") [Broadway debut], Madge Evans (as "Cynthia"), Mary Gildia (as "Hazel"), Harry Gresham, Thurston Hall (as "Mr. Eldridge"), Thais Lawton (as "Mrs. Randolph"), Donna Pasedeloup, Dorothy Stickney (as "Miss Krail"), Ralph Urmy, Harold Webster, Cora Witherspoon (as "Mrs. Oliver"). Produced by Laurence Rivers Inc.
- (1931) Stage Play: The Way of the World. Comedy (revival). Written by William Congreve. Directed by B. Iden Payne. Guild Theatre: 1 Jun 1931- 8 Jun 1931 (8 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Mrs. Millamant"), Eliot Cabot, Alan Campbell, Ernest Cossart (as "Sir Wilfull Whitwoud"), Alice Fischer, Gerald Hamer (as "Witwoud"), Walter Hampden (as "Mirabell"), Sheelagh Hayes, Moffat Johnston (as "Petulant"), Ben Lackland (as "A Messenger"), Gene Lockhart (as "Waitwell"), Kathleen Lockhart (as "Foible"), Charles McCarthy, Mary McCoy, Samuel Merwin, Paul Parks, William S. Rainey, Erna Rowan, Selena Royle (as "Mrs. Fainall"), Dorothy Stickney (as "Mincing"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Mrs. Marwood"). Produced by The Players Club.
- (1932) Stage Play: Jewel Robbery. Comedy. Written by Bertram Bloch, from the Hungarian of Ladislas Fodor. Directed by Paul Streger. Booth Theatre: 13 Jan 1932- Feb 1932 (closing date unknown/54 performances). Cast: Lionel Braham (as "Lenz"), 'Stuart Casey (I)' (as "Paul"), Clarence Derwent (as "Franz"), Mary Ellis, Harold Johnsrud, Hazel Nagley, Eugene Powers, Frederick Roland, Louis M. Simon, Basil Sydney, Robert Vivian, Cora Witherspoon (as "Marianne"). Produced by Paul Streger. Produced by Paul Streger. Note: Filmed by Warner Bros. as Jewel Robbery (1932).
- (1932) Stage Play: Camille. Drama (revival). Written by Alexandre Dumas. Book adapted by Edna Chappell, Delos Chappell and Robert Edmond Jones. Lighting Design and Directed by Robert Edmond Jones. Morosco Theatre: 1 Nov 1932- Nov 1932 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Leona Boytel, Lillian Bronson, Helen Freeman, Lillian Gish (as "Marguerite Gautier"), Raymond Hackett (as "Armand Duval"), Harriett Ingersoll, Edna James, William James, Moffat Johnston (as "M. Duval, The Doctor"), Richard Kendrick, Robert Le Seuer, Lewis Martin, Mary Morris, Bartlett Robinson, Paul Stephenson, Betty Upthegrove, Ian Wolfe (as "Count De Giray" and "Gustave"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Prudence"), Frederic Worlock. Produced by Delos Chappell, Inc. Note: First produced in 1853, this is likely the most revived work produced on Broadway. It has been revived 15 times (this production was the 14th revival), last produced in December, 1935. Oddly, none of the revivals have been particularly successful.
- (1933) Stage Play: Forsaking All Others. Comedy. Written by Edward Roberts and Frank Cavett. Directed by Thomas Mitchell. Times Square Theatre: 1 Mar 1933- Jun 1933 (closing date unknown/110 performances). Cast: Harry Anderson, Tallulah Bankhead (as "Mary Clay"), Harlan Briggs (as "Dent"), Ilka Chase (as "Elinor Branch"), Millicent Hanley, Robert Hudson, Fred Keating, Anderson Lawler (as "Dillon Todd"), George Lessey, Donald MacDonald, Barbara O'Neil, Nancy Ryan (as "Dottie Winters"), Roger Sterns, Cora Witherspoon (as "Mrs. Paula La Salle"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn.
- (1933) Stage Play: Shooting Star. Written by Noel Pierce and Bernard C. Schoenfeld. Directed by Bela Blau. Selwyn Theatre: 12 Jun 1933- Jun 1933 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Walter Baldwin (as "Hank Morrisey"), Oliver Barbour, Mathilde Baring (as "Second Maid"), Violet Barney, Mary Alice Collins, George Cowell, Helen Crane, Joseph Downing, Roland Drew, Robert C. Fischer, Robert Gleckler, Samuel Goldenberg, George Houston, Francine Larrimore, Van Lowe, Harriet E. MacGibbon (as "Hannah, Mrs. Mercer"), Barry Mahool, Gene Moore, Scott Moore, Barry O'Neill,Henry O'Neill (as "Carl Hoffman"), Lee Patrick (as "Flo Curtis"), William Sharpe, Edith Shayne, Beverly Sitgreaves, Gilbert Squarey, Engel Sumner, Forrest Taylor, Philip Van Zandt, Frank Wilcox (as "Leo Bennett"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Edna Judd"), Vincent York. Produced by Crosby Gaige and Kenneth Nash.
- (1933) Stage Play: Jezebel. Drama. Written by Owen Davis. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 19 Dec 1933- Jan 1934 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Laura Bowman, Ruth Boyd, Ida Brown, Reed Brown, Jr., Alston Burleigh, Helen Claire, Gage Clarke, Joseph Cotten (as "Dick Ashley"), Frances Creel, Leo Curley, Owen Davis, Jr., Miriam Hopkins (as "Julie Kendrick"), Anita Jackson, Blois Jackson, Romaine Johns, Bjorn Koefoed, Harold Martin, Joseph Maxwell, Henry May, Gilbert McKay, Rena Mitchell, Lew Payton, Henry Richards, William Richardson, James Waters, Crane Whitley (as "Joe Staley"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Miss Sally"), Frederic Worlock, Ray Yeates. Produced by Katharine Cornell and Guthrie McClintic.
- (1934) Stage Play: Mackerel Skies. Written by John Haggart. Directed by John Roche. Playhouse Theatre: 23 Jan 1934- Feb 1934 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Lillian Gahagan Corey, Glenn Coulter, Florence Edney (as "Anna"), Max Figman (as "Max Schurman"), John Griggs, Violet Kemble Cooper, Tom Powers, Carol Stone, Charles Trowbridge (as "David Gerard"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Sophie"). Produced by George Bushar. Produced in association with John Tuerk.
- (1934) Stage Play: Jigsaw. Comedy. Written by Dawn Powell. Directed by Philip Moeller. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 30 Apr 1934- Jun 1934 (closing date unknown/49 performances). Cast: Albert Bergh (as "Porter"), Spring Byington (as "Claire Burnell"), Eliot Cabot, Gertrude Flynn (as "Julie"), Mabel Kroman, Charles Richman, Shepperd Strudwick (as "Simpson"), Virginia Tracy, Ernest Truex (as "Del Marsh"), Helen Westley (as "Mrs. Finch"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Mrs. Letty Walters"), James York. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1934) Stage Play: Say When. Musical comedy. Music by Ray Henderson. Book by Jack McGowan. Lyrics by Ted Koehler. Musical Direction by Max Meth. Music orchestrated by Conrad Salinger. Musical numbers directed by Russell Markert. Directed by Bertram Harrison. Imperial Theatre: 8 Nov 1934- 12 Jan 1935 (76 performances). Cast: John Albert, Joanna Allen, Ronnie Beck, Donald Brown, Helen Buck, Helene Cambridge, Phyllis Cameron, Joe Carroll, Charles Collins, Gloria Cook, Betty Dell,Don Drew, Lois Eckhart, Lillian Emerson, Frances Foley, Marjorie Gayle, George B. Herman, Taylor Holmes, Bob Hope (as "Jimmy Blake"), Joan Igon, Lorraine Jannee, Aimee La Rue, Dick Langdon, Arlene Leahy, J. Elliott Leonard, Nick Long, Jr., Charlotte Lorraine, Fred Lyon, Frederick Manatt, Dennie Moore (as "Aimee Bates"), Mickey Moore, Ed Murray, M.O'Brien, Viola Paulson, Gedda Petry, Jack Richards, Harry Richman (as "Bob Breese")., Michael Romanoff, Etna Ross, Martin Sheppard, Edwina Steele, Sylvia Stone, Martha Tibbetts, Clyde Veaux, John Walsh, Linda Watkins, J.P. Wilson, Cora Witherspoon (as "Myra Palmer"), Frank Worden. Produced by Jack McGowan and Ray Henderson.
- (1935) Stage Play: It's You I Want. Farce. Written by Maurice Braddell. Material adapted by George Bradshaw. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Forrest C. Haring and Joshua Logan. Cort Theatre: 5 Feb 1935- Feb 1935 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Helen Chandler (as "Anne Vernon"), J. Malcolm Dunn (as "Paul Entwhistle"), Taylor Holmes, Earle Larrimore (as "Sheridan Delaney"), Leona Maricle, Karl Swenson, Cora Witherspoon (as "Constance Gilbert"). Produced by John H. Del Bondio and Forrest C. Haring. Note: Filmed as It's You I Want (1936).
- (1935) Stage Play: De Luxe. Drama. Written by Louis Bromfield and John Gearon. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Chester Erskine. Booth Theatre: 5 Mar 1935- Mar 1935 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Ann Andrews, Alan Bunce, "Peppy" D'Albrew, Pierre De Ramey, Melvyn Douglas (as "Pat Dantry"), Florence Edney (as "Lady Dextries"), Tom Elwell, Clyde Fillmore, Violet Heming, David Hughes, Robert Le Sueur, Elsa Maxwell, Claudia Morgan, Blanche Ring (as "Sophie Bashly"), Beverly Sitgreaves, Maurice Sommers, Ivy Troutman, Tibor von Janny, Cora Witherspoon (as "Fanny Altenus"). Produced by Chester Erskine.
- (1935) Stage Play: A Touch of Brimstone. Written by Leonora Kaghan and Anita Philips. Directed by Frank Craven. John Golden Theatre: 22 Sep 1935- Dec 1935 (closing date unknown/98 performances). Cast: Reed Brown, Jr., Bob Burton, Reginald Carrington, Hancey Castle, Jas. Dowd, Wheeler Dryden, Basil Hanbury, Ryder Keane, Malcolm Laing, Mary Philips, William Post, William Postance, Richard Sterling, Cora Witherspoon (as "Isabel Cobb"), Roland Young (as "Mark Faber"). Produced by John Golden.
- (1941) Stage Play: All Men Are Alike. Written by Vernon Sylvaine. Hudson Theatre: 6 Oct 1941- 1 Nov 1941 (32 performances). Cast: Lilian Bond (as "Frankie Marriott"), Bobby Clark, Reginald Denny (as "Alfred J. Bandle"), Geraldine Dvorak, Milton Karol, A.P. Kaye, Stapleton Kent, Ian Martin, Ethel Morrison, Mary Newnham-Davis, Velma Royton, Rolfe Sedan, William Valentine, Cora Witherspoon (as "Thelma Bandle"), Eustace Wyatt. Produced by Lee Ephraim.
- (1942) Stage Play: The Willow and I. Written by John Patrick. Directed by Donald Blackwell. Windsor Theatre: 10 Dec 1942- 2 Jan 1943 (28 performances). Cast: Francis Compton, Alec Englander, Robert S. Harrison, Pauline Myers, Barbara O'Neil, Edward Pawley (as "Theodore Sutro"), Gregory Peck (as "Kirkland Todd" and "Robin Todd"), Amanda Randolph, Martha Scott (as "Mara Sutro"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Millie Sutro"). Produced by Donald Blackwell, Raymond Curtis and David Merrick.
- (1944) Stage Play: Ramshackle Inn. Melodrama. Written by George Batson. Directed by Arthur Sircom. Royale Theatre: 5 Jan 1944- 8 Jul 1944 (216 performances). Cast: Zasu Pitts (as "Belinda Pryde"), Joseph Downing, Will H. Philbrick, Maurine Alexander, Mary Barthelmess, William Blees, Margaret Callahan, Mason Curry, Helene Heigh, John Lorenz, Richard Rober, Ralph Theadore, Robert Toms, Roy Dana Tracy, Cora Witherspoon (as "Mame Phillips"). Produced by Robert Reud.
- (1946) Stage Play: The Front Page. Comedy (revival). Written by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur. Directed by Charles MacArthur. Royale Theatre: 4 Sep 1946- 9 Nov 1946 (79 performances). Cast: Jack Arnold (as "Endicott, Post), Benny Baker, Rolly Beck, Fred Bemis, Isabel Bonner, Roger Clark, Joe De Santis, Olive Deering (as "Mollie Malloy"), Harold Grau (as "Mr. Pincus"), Pat Harrington Sr. (as "Kruger, Journal of Commerce"), Curtis Karpe (as "Woodenshoes Eichorn"), William H. Lynn (as "Sheriff Hartman"), George Lyons (as "Earl Williams"), Blanche Lytell (as "Jennie"), Bruce MacFarlane (as "Murphy, Journal") [final Broadway role], Arnold Moss (as "Walter Burns"), Lew Parker (as "Hildy Johnson, Herald Examiner"), Edward H. Robins, Ray Walston (as "Schwartz, Daily News"), Vic Whitlock, Cora Witherspoon (as "Mrs. Grant") [final Broadway role], Leonard Yorr (as "Tony"). Produced by Hunt Stromberg Jr. and Thomas Spengler.
- (1942) She acted in Mary Roberts Rinehart and Avery Hopwood's play, "The Bat," at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, Massachusetts with Dorothy Sands in the cast.
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