- (1919 - 1957) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1919) Stage Play: Just Around the Corner. Written by George V. Hobart and Herbert Hall Winslow. Longacre Theatre: 5 Feb 1919- Feb 1919 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders [Broadway debut], Lorin Baker, Eugenie Blair, Roy Briant, Marie Bryar, Marie Cahill, Margaret Hoffman, Clara Mackin, George MacQuarrie, Lulu McGuire, Charles Morrison, Wallace Owen, Wilson Reynolds. Produced by Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson (credited as G.M. Anderson).
- (1919) Stage Play: Civilian Clothes. Comedy. Written by Thompson Buchanan. Directed by Frank Underwood. Morosco Theatre: 12 Sep 1919- Jan 1920 (closing date unknown/150 performances). Cast included: Arthur Albertson, Glenn Anders (as "As "Billy Arkwright"), James K. Applebee, Millie Butterfield, Edward Colebrook, Bessie Eyton, Thurston Hall, William Holden, Isabel Irivng, Grace Kaber, Edward MacKay, Mary Melrose, Frank Sylvester, Olive Tell, Marion Vantine. Produced by Oliver Morosco.
- (1920) Stage Play: Scrambled Wives. Comedy. Written by Martha M. Stanley and Adelaide Matthews. Directed by Adolph Klauber. Fulton Theatre: 5 Aug 1920- Sep 1920 (closing date unknown/60 performances). Cast: Louis Albion (as "Benjamin Halsey") [final Broadway role], Glenn Anders (as "Larry McLeod"), Betty Barnicoat (as "Bessie Carlton"), Elise Bartlett (as "Connie Chiverick"), Marie Chambers (as "Beatrice Harlow"), Juliette Day (as "Lucile Smith"), Margaret Hutchins (as "Margaret Halsey"), William Lennox (as "Martin"), James Lounsbery (as "Dicky Van Arsdale"), Roland Young (as "John Chiverick"). Produced by Adolph Klauber.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Ghost Between. Comedy. Written by Vincent Lawrence. 39th Street Theatre: 22 Mar 1921- Jun 1921 (closing date unknown/100 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Richard Hunt"), W. Messenger Bellis, Walter Brown, Arthur Byron, Kathryn Keyes, Laura Walker.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Demi-Virgin. Farce. Written by Avery Hopwood. Directed by Charles Mather and Bertram Harrison. Times Square Theatre: 18 Oct 1921- Jun 1922 (closing date unknown/268 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Wally Dean"), Sascha Beaumont, Marjorie Clements, Peggy Coudray, Helen Cunningham, Hazel Dawn, Kenneth Douglas, Constance Farber, Helen Flint (as "Fay Winthrop") [Broadway debut], Ralph Glover, Alice Hegeman, John Maroni, Charles Mather, Mary Robinson, Charles Ruggles, Mary Salisbury, Mildred Wayne. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1923) Stage Play: Cold Feet. Farce. Written by Frederick J. Jackson and Pierre Gendron. Directed by Edgar J. MacGregor. Fulton Theatre: 21 May 1923- Jun 1923 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast included: Glenn Anders (as "Dr. Harry Nolles"), Annette Bade, John T. Doyle, Beth Martin, Steve Pendleton [credited as Gay Pendleton], Leighton Stark, May Vokes. Produced by Biltmore Producing Co., Inc.
- (1923) Stage Play: What's Your Wife Doing? Comedy/farce. Written by Herbert Hall Winslow and Emil Nyitray. 49th Street Theatre: 1 Oct 1923- Dec 1923 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Gerald Warner"), Joseph Bell, Shep Camp, Frank Emmett, Norman Hackett (as "Judge Somers"), Isabel Leighton, Harry Lillford, Dorothy MacKaye, Hal Munnis, J. Edward O'Malley, George Pauncefort, Louis Simon. Produced by Arthur Klein.
- (1924) Stage Play: Hell-bent Fer Heaven. Melodrama. Written by Hatcher Hughes. Klaw Theatre: 4 Jan 1924- May 1924 (closing date unknown/122 performances). Cast: George Abbott (as "Sid Hunt"), Glenn Anders (as "Andy Lowry"), Clara Blandick (as "Meg Hunt"), Margaret Borough (as "Jude Lowry"), Burke Clarke (as "Matt Hunt"), Augustin Duncan (as "David Hunt"), John F. Hamilton (as "Rufe Pryor"). Produced by Marc Klaw Inc. Notes: (1) Won Pulitzer Prize for Best Play. (2) Filmed by Warner Bros. as Hell-Bent fer Heaven (1926).
- (1924) Stage Play: So This is Politics (Stange Bedfellows). Comedy. Written by Barry Conners. Henry Miller's Theatre: 16 Jun 1924- Oct 1924 (closing date unknown/144 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "John Buckmaster"), William Courtleigh, Marion Dyer, Florence Earle, Alice Fleming, Dwight Frye (as "Willie Marsden"), Majorie Gateson, John S. Morrissey, Lolita Robertson. Produced by Carl Reed.
- (1924) Stage Play: Bewitched. Written by Edward Sheldon and Sidney Howard. National Theatre: 1 Oct 1924- Oct 1924 (closing date unknown/29 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "The Aviator"), Carol Benezet, Joseph Bingham, Edwin Caldwell, Willard Collins, Florence Eldridge (as "The Girl"), Robert Forsyth, Albert Hall, Stanley Landahl, José Ruben (as "The Marquis"), Joseph Sweeney (as "The Husband"), Herbert Westman, George Williams. Produced by John Cromwell.
- (1924) Stage Play: They Knew What They Wanted. Written by Sidney Howard. Garrick Theatre: 24 Nov 1924- Oct 1925 (closing date unknown/192 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Joe"), Allen Atwell (as "Ah Gee"), Richard Bennett, Alvah Bessie, Peggy Conway, Robert Cook, Cosette Faustine, Helen Fowble, Dorothy Greene, Edward Hogan, Frances Hyde, Charles Kennedy (as "Father McKee"), Pauline Lord, Peter Marsters, Sanford Meisner, Eleanor Mish, Hardwick Nevin, Catherine Scherman, Thomas Scherman, Arthur Sircom (as "Farm Hand"), Charles Tazewell, Audrey Thal, Ernest Thompson, Jacob Zollinger. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Constant Nymph. Written by Margaret Kennedy and Basil Dean. Incidental music by Eugene Goosens. Directed by Basil Dean. Selwyn Theatre: 9 Dec 1926- Apr 1927 (closing date unknown/148 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Lewis Dodd"), Percy Baverstock (as "Robert Mainwaring"), J.H. Brewer (as "Dr. Dawson"), Leo G. Carroll (as "Peveril Leyburn"), Harry Cooke (as "A Clerk"), Thomas Coffin Cooke (as "A Fireman"), Edward Emery (as "Charles Churchill"), William Evans (as "An Usher"), Loretta Higgins (as "Lydia Mainwaring/Katerina"), Louise Huntington (as "Paulina Sanger"), Gloria May Kelly (as "Susan"), Paul Ker (as "Kiril Trigorin"), Ruth Nugent (as "Antonia Sanger"), Sidney Paxton (as "Sir Bartlemy Pugh"), Olive Reeves-Smith (as "Kate Sanger/Erda Leyburn"), Lotus Robb (as "Florence Churchill"), Jane Saville (as "Millicent Gregory"), Louis Sorin (as "Jacob Birnbaum"), Harry Sothern (as "Roberto"), Katherine Stewart (as "Madame Marxse"), Beatrice Thomson (as "Teresa Sanger"), Marian Warring-Manley. Produced by George C. Tyler and Basil Dean. Note: Filmed by Gainsborough Pictures [UK] as The Constant Nymph (1928), and by Warner Bros. as The Constant Nymph (1943).
- (1927) Stage Play: Murray Hill. Farce. Written by Leslie Howard. Bijou Theatre: 29 Sep 1927- Oct 1927 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Worthington Smythe"), John Brewer, Florence Edney, Gaby Fay, Leslie Howard (as "Wrigley"), Genevieve Tobin, Alice May Tuck.
- (1928) Stage Play: Strange Interlude. Drama. Written by Eugene O'Neill. Directed by Philip Moeller. John Golden Theatre: 30 Jan 1928- Feb 1929 (closing date unknown/426 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Edmund Darrell"), John J. Burns (as "Gordon Evans, Nina's son"), Lynn Fontanne (as "Nina Leeds, the professor's daughter"), Earle Larrimore (as "Sam Evans"), Philip Leigh (as "Professor Henry Leeds"), Tom Powers (as "Charles Marsden"), Charles Walters (as "Gordon Evans, as a child"), Ethel Westley (as "Madeline Arnold"), Helen Westley (as "Mrs. Amos Evans, Sam's mother"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1929) Stage Play: Dynamo. Written by Eugene O'Neill. Production Design by Lee Simonson. Directed by Philip Moeller. Martin Beck Theatre: 11 Feb 1929- Mar 1929 (closing date unknown/50 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Reuben Light"), Claudette Colbert, Dudley Digges, Catherine Doucet, Ross Forrester, George Gaul, Edgar Kent, Helen Westley. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1930) Stage Play: Hotel Universe. Drama. Written by Philip Barry. Directed by Philip Moeller. Martin Beck Theatre: 14 Apr 1930- Jun 1930 (closing date unknown/81 performances). Cast: Katharine Alexander, Glenn Anders (as "Pat Farley"), Morris Carnovsky, Ruth Gordon, Earle Larimore, Phyllis Povah, Gustave Rolland, Ruthelma Stevens, Franchot Tone. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1930) Stage Play: A Farewell to Arms. Drama. Written by Laurence Stallings. From the novel by Ernest Hemingway. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian. National Theatre: 22 Sep 1930- Oct 1930 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Lieutenant Frederick Henry"), Ricardo Bengali (as "Medical Captain"), Antonio Berri, Alberto Calvo, Frank Coletti (as "Brundi"), Armand Cortes (as "Doctor"), Paul Cremonesi, C. Sager Czaja, Jules David, Hendryk De Paule, Ralph Desmond, Vati Don, Joseph Downing, Florence Earle, Frank Farrara, Albert Ferro, Albert Froom ]credited as Albert Froome] (as "Britisher"), John Genaro, Harold Huber (as "Officer of Carabinieri"), Joseph Kashioff, Helen Kim, Jack La Rue (as "Captain"), Elissa Landi (as "Catherine Barkley"), Carrie Lowe, Jane McKenzie, Dorothy Paule, Rene Roberti (as "Priest"), Joseph Scotti, Fritz Ulm, Louis Veda, Tino Valenti, Juan Villasana, Katherine Warren, Mortimer Weldon (as "Valentini"), Crane Wilbur (as "Rinaldi"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1930) Stage Play: Midnight. Drama. Written by Claire Sifton and Paul Sifton. Directed by Philip Moeller. Guild Theatre: 29 Dec 1930- Feb 1931 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Maud Allan, Glenn Anders (as "Bob Nolan"), Harold Bolton, Zena Colaer, Josephine Hull (as "Mrs. Weldon"), William R. Kane, Jack La Rue (as "Gar Boni"), Tom H.A. Lewis, Harriet E. MacGibbon (as "Ada Biggers"), Clifford Odets (as "Arthur Weldon"), James Parker, Frederick Perry, Francis Pierlot (as "Richard McGrath"), Charles Powers, Samuel Rosen, Neal Stone, Robert Strange, Fred Sullivan, Royal Dana Tracey, Louis Veda (as "Photographer"), Harold Vermilyea (as "Joe Biggers"), Linda Watkins. Produced by The Theatre Guild. Note: Produced on film twice to date (Midnight (1934) and Midnight (1939)).
- (1932) Stage Play: Another Language. Comedy. Written by Rose Franken. Directed by Arthur J. Beckhard. Booth Theatre: 25 Apr 1932- Feb 1933 (closing date unknown/344 performances). Cast: Maud Allan, Frieda Altman [Broadway debut], Glenn Anders (as "Victor Hallam"), John Beal, Wyrley Birch (as "Mr. Hallam"), Irene Cattell (as "Grace Hallam"), Hal K. Dawson, Herbert Duffy, Margaret Hamilton (as "Helen Hallam") [Broadway debut], William Pike, Dorothy Stickney (as "Stella Hallam"), Margaret Wycherly (as "Mrs. Hallam"). Produced by Arthur J. Beckhard. Note: Produced by MGM as Another Language (1933) as a Robert Montgomery vehicle (Ms. Hamilton would reprise her role as Helen Hallam in the film version).
- (1933) Stage Play: Another Language. Comedy (revival). Written by Rose Franken. Directed by Arthur J. Beckhard. Waldorf Theatre: 8 May 1933- Jul 1933 (closing date unknown/89 performances). Cast: Maud Allan, Glenn Anders (as "Victor Hallam"), John Beal, Wyrley Birch (as "Mr. Hallam"), Patricia Collinge (as "Stella Hallam"), Esther Dale (as "Helen Hallam"), Hal K. Dawson (as "Walter Hallam"), Herbert Duffy, Genevieve Frizzel, William Pike, Margaret Wycherly (as "Mrs. Hallam"). Produced by Arthur J. Beckhard.
- (1933) Stage Play: Love and Babies. Comedy. Written by Herbert P. McCormack. Directed by Frank McCoy. Cort Theatre: 22 Aug 1933- Aug 1933 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Carl"), Ernest Truex, Linda Watkins, Ruth Weston (as "Vera"). Produced by Morris Green and Frank McCoy.
- (1933) Stage Play: I Was Waiting for You. Comedy. Written by Melville Baker. Adapted from the French of Jacques Natanson. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Arthur J. Beckhard. Booth Theatre: 13 Nov 1933- Nov 1933 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Vera Allen (as "Madeleine Jadain"), Frieda Altman [erroneously credited as Freda Altman] (as "Maid"), Glenn Anders (as "Pierre Fromelin"), Clarence Bellair, Kenneth Berry, William E. Blake, Helen Brooks, Myra Brooks, Joshua Logan (as "Edouard"), Charles Maillard, Myron McCormick (as "Gaston Marchezais"), James Moreno, Frederick Roland, Harry Selby, Beverly Stigreaves, Margaret Swope, Iris Whitney (as "Young Girl") [Broadway debut], Bretaigne Windust (as "Jean Favieres"). Produced by Edward Choate.
- (1934) Stage Play: False Dreams, Farewell. Written by Hugh Stanislaus Stange. Directed by Frank Merin. Little Theatre: 15 Jan 1934- Feb 1935 (closing date unknown/25 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Eugene Cabot"), Adora Andrews (as "Miss Rhinebeck"), Homer Barton (as "Mr. Mackaye"), Lora Baxter (as "Eleanor Cabot"), Natasha Boleslavsky (as "Masha"), Robert Burtt (as "Ship's Officer"), Blaine Cordner (as "Bingham Baldy"), Ben Delano (as "Camera-Man"), Clarence Derwent (as "Edward Duncan"), Clyde Fillmore (as "Captain Sackett"), Edward Forbes (as "Palmerly Harte"), John Frederik (as "Ship News Reporter"), Harry Green (as "Steward Blythe"), Walter O. Hill (as "Mr. Sims"), Frieda Inescort (as "Faith Baldy"), Eric Kalkhurst (as "Dr. Hayden"), Henry Lase (as "Irving Silvers"), Frank Lawrence, Dave Leonard (as "Murray Fineman"), Dorothy Lowell (as "Passenger"), James McColl (as "Ship News Reporter"), Neil McFee, Millard Mitchell (as "Christopher Jarrett"), Claudia Morgan (as "Joan Arden"), Marianne Mosner (as "Passenger"), John Daly Murphy (as "Daniel T. Moore"), Ralph Nelson (as "Passenger"), Charles Quigley, Helen Raymond (as "Ida Jarrett"), Larry Regan (as "A Cabin Steward"), Arthur Stenning (as "Dr. Hartley"), Thyrza Sturges (as "Passenger"), Royal Dana Tracy (as "Bishop Bliss"), Sheila Trent (as "Josie"), Leslie Urbach (as "A Deck Steward"), Elizabeth Weston (as "Ship News Reporter"). Produced by Frank Merlin.
- (1934) Stage Play: Moor Born. Drama. Written by Dan Toheroh. Directed by Melvyn Douglas. Playhouse Theatre: 3 Apr 1934- May 1934 (closing date unknown/63 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Branwell Bronte"), Arling Alcine (as "Christopher"), Thomas Findlay, Grace Francis, Helen Gahagan, Beverly Sitgreaves (as "Tabby"), Frances Starr. Produced by George Bushar and John Tuerk.
- (1934) Stage Play: A Sleeping Clergyman. Written by James Bridie. Directed by Philip Moeller. Guild Theatre: 8 Oct 1934- Nov 1934 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Charles Cameron, the first/Charles Cameron, the second"), Florence Britton (as "Lady Katherine Helliwell"), Donald Campbell (as "A Constable"), J. Colville Dunn (as "Dr. Cooper"), J. Malcolm Dunn (as "Donovan"), Gertrude Flynn (as "Cousin Minnie"), Phoebe Gilbert, Ruth Gordon (as "Harriet Marshall/Wilhelmina Cameron/Hope Cameron"), Robert Haig (as "A Medical Student"), Frank Henderson, Alice John (as "Aunt Walker"), Harry Joyner (as "Wilkinson"), A.P. Kaye (as "Sir Douglas Todd Walker"), Frank Kingdon (as "A Sleeping Clergyman"), Walter Lawrence (as "A Sergeant"), Harry Mestayer (as "Dr. Coutts"), Theodore Newton (as "John Hannah"), Malcolm Soltan, John Taylor, Ernest Thesiger (as "Dr. William Marshall"), Sheila Trent (as "A Prostitute"), Elizabeth Valentine, Charlotte Walker (as "Lady Todd Walker"), Helen Westley (as "Mrs. Elspeth Hannah"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1935) Stage Play: On to Fortune. Written by Lawrence Langner and Armina Marshall [credited as Armina Marshall]. Directed by Worthington Miner. Fulton Theatre: 4 Feb 1935- Feb 1935 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Chester Digges"), Roy Atwell (as "Talbot Sloan"), Edward Broadley (as "Peters"), Ilka Chase (as "Eleanor Sloan"), Robert T. Haines (as "State Senator Parmelee"), Percy Helton (as "Grimm"), Martha Hodge (as "Ella"), Josephine Hull (as "Miss Hedda Sloan"), Myron McCormick (as "Donald Sloan"), Edward McNamara (as "Captain Halligan"), Worthington Miner (as "Tracy"), Hugh Rennie (as "Walter Sloan"), Mary Rogers (as "Anne"). Produced by Crosby Gaige and Charles P. Heidt.
- (1935) Stage Play: There's Wisdom in Women. Comedy. Written by Joseph Kesselring. Directed by Harry Wagstaff Gribble. Cort Theatre: 30 Oct 1935- Dec 1935 (closing date unknown/46 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Tony Cooke"), Jane Bancroft, Boyd Davis, Alfredo Hesse, Joseph Kallini, Betty Lawford, Frances Maddux, Mary Horne Morrison, Walter Pidgeon, Ruth Weston. Produced by D.A. Doran.
- (1936) Stage Play: Call it a Day. Comedy. Written by Dodie Smith. Directed by Tyrone Guthrie. Morosco Theatre: 28 Jan 1936- Jul 1936 (closing date unknown/194 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Paul Francis"), Gladys Cooper, Philip Merivale, John Buckmaster, Valerie Cossart, Jeanne Dante, Florence Edney, Lawrence Grossmith, Mary Mason, Esther Mitchell, Claudia Morgan, William Packer, Viola Roache, Lillian Brennard Tonge, Florence Williams, Frances Williams. Produced by The Theatre Guild Inc.
- (1936) Stage Play: The Masque of Kings. Written by Maxwell Anderson. Scenic/Costume Design by Lee Simonson. Directed by Philip Moeller. Shubert Theatre: 8 Feb 1936- Apr 1936 (closing date unknown/89 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Koinoff"), Edith Atwater, Wyrley Birch (as "Sceps"), Edward Broadley (as "Loschek"), Leo G. Carroll (as "Count Joseph Hoyos"), Pierre Chace (as "A Servant"), Dudley Digges (as "The Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria-Hungary"), Frank Downing (as "An Officer"), Bijou Fernandez (as "Marie"), Pauline Frederick (as "The Empress Elizabeth of Austria-Hungary") [final Broadway role], Alan Hewitt (as "Fritz von Bremer"), Charles Holden (as "A Soldier"), Joseph Holland (as "The Archduke John of Tuscany"), John Hoyt[credited as John Hoysradt] (as "Baron von Neustadt"), Henry Hull (as "The Crown Prince Rudolph of Austria-Hungary"), Henry Hull Jr. (as "Bratfish"), Catherine Lawrence, Margo (as "The Baroness Mary Vetsera") Benjamin Otis (as "D'Orsy"), Hobart Skidmore (as "A Soldier"), Barry O'Moore (as "Count Taafe"), Elizabeth Young (as "louise"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1937) Stage Play: Three Waltzes. Musical romance. Book by Clare Kummer and Rowland Leigh. Based on the play by Paul Knepler and Armin Robinson. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Costume Design by Connie De Pinna. Dances Staged by Chester Hale. Directed by Hassard Short. Majestic Theatre: 25 Dec 1937- 9 Apr 1938 (122 performances). Cast: Michael Bartlett (as "Count Rudolph von Hohenbrunn/Count Otto von Hohenbrunn Rudolph's Son/Count Max von Hohenbrunn, Rudolph's Grandson"), Gladys Baxter (as "Marie Hiller [Alternate]/Charlotte Hiller, Marie Hiller's Daughter [Alternate]/Franzi Corot Hiller, Grand-daughter of Marie Hiller [Alternate]"), Kitty Carlisle (as "Marie Hiller/Charlotte Hiller, Marie Hiller's Daughter/Franzi Corot Hiller, Grand-daughter of Marie Hiller"), Glenn Anders (as "Karl Brenner"), Ann Andrews (as "Baroness Delaunay"), John Barker (as "Viscount Rene Duval"), Rosie Moran (as "Steffi Castelli, Lilli's Daughter"), Victor Morley (as "Baron Delaunay"), Marion Pierce (as "Marchesa del Campo"), Anita Arden (as "Scandal Girls/The Ladies"), Charles Arnt (as "Leopold von Hohenbrunn"), Phyllis Avery (as "The Ballet Girls/The Can-Can Girls"), Milton Barnett (as "The Ballet Boys"), George Baxter (as "Field Marshall Count Maximilian von Hohenbrunn/Dr. Cavaneau/Sackville, a Film Director"), Marion Broske (as "The Ballet Girls/The Can-Can Girls"), Ralph Bunker (as "Herr Beltramini/Author"), Boris Butleroff (as "The Ballet Boys"), Wanda Cochran (as "The Ballet Girls/The Can-Can Girls"), Ted Daniels (as "Eight Men of Manhattan"), Richard D'Arcy (as "The Ballet Boys"), Dana Doran (as "Scandal Girls/The Ladies"), Wheeler Dryden (as "Herr Difflinger, a painter/Louis, a waiter at Maxime's/Musical Director"), Larry Douglas (as "Eight Men of Manhattan") [credited as Lipman Duckat], Joan Engel (as "The Ballet Girls/The Can-Can Girls"), Truman Gaige (as "Conductor/Leo, an Actor"), Roger Gerry (as "Eight Men of Manhattan"), Ellen Gibb (as "The Ballet Girls/The Can-Can Girls"), Gene Greenlaw (as "Eight Men of Manhattan"), Barry Gunn (as "The Ballet Boys"), Dorothy Hardy (as "The Ballet Girls/The Can-Can Girls"), Alfred Kappeler (as "Herbert von Hohenbrunn/Manager/Cameraman"), Paula Kaye (as "The Ballet Girls/The Can-Can Girls"), Walter Lewis (as "Eight Men of Manhattan"), Sylvia Liggett (as "Scandal Girls/The Ladies"), Ruth MacDonald (as "Lilli Castelli"), Ralph Magelssen (as "Andre Corot, a Baritone at the Theatre"), Michael Mann (as "The Ballet Boys"), Jayne Manners (as "Scandal Girls/The Ladies"), Earl McDonald (as "Felix von Hohenbrunn/Reporter/Trevor"), Alice McWhorter (as "Scandal Girls/The Ladies"), Len Mence (as "Sebastian/Counterman, at the Commissary"), Harry Mestayer (as "Egon von Hohenbrunn"), Dolly Miller (as "Scandal Girls/The Ladies"), William Newgord (as "Orderly/Page Boy"), William Parker (as "Eight Men of Manhattan"), Jack Phillips (as "Eight Men of Manhattan"), Mischa Pompianov (as "The Ballet Boys"), David Preston (as "Gendarme/The Ballet Boys"), Frances Rands (as "Scandal Girls/The Ladies"), Fred Ratliffe (as "Eight Men of Manhattan"), Adele Rich (as "Barmaid/Miss Waring/Script Girl"), Lila Royce (as "Scandal Girls/The Ladies"), Diana Rutherford (as "Scandal Girls/The Ladies"), Ivy Scott (as "Kalliwoda"), Jean Sharp (as "The Ballet Girls/The Can-Can Girls"), June Sharpe (as "The Ballet Girls/The Can-Can Girls"), Fred Sherman (as "Freddie"), Louis Sorin (as "W. Wagstaff Wolf, of Hollywood"), Marguerita Sylva (as "Countess von Hohenbrunn"), Harold Taub (as "The Ballet Boys"), Kay York (as "Scandal Girls/The Ladies"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1939) Stage Play: Skylark. Comedy. Written and directed by Samson Raphaelson. Morosco Theatre: 11 Oct 1939- 25 May 1940 (256 performances). Cast included: Glenn Anders (as "Bill Blake"), Gertrude Lawrence, Donald Cook, Vivian Vance. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1943) Stage Play: Get Away Old Man. Comedy. Written by William Saroyan. Directed by George Abbott. Cort Theatre: 24 Nov 1943- 4 Dec 1943 (13 performances). Cast: Mason Adams (as "Messenger"), Glenn Anders (as "Sam"), Ed Begley (as "Patrick Hammer"), Edwin Hodge (as "Correspondent of the N.Y. Times"), Sula Levitch, Joyce Mathews, Beatrice Pearson, Jerome Thor (as "Doctor"), Hilda Vaughn (as "Rose Schornbloom"), Richard Widmark (as "Harry Bird"). Produced by George Abbott.
- (1944) Stage Play: Career Angel. (Revival). Written by Gerard Murray. Directed by Don Appell. National Theatre: 23 May 1944- 10 Jun 1944 (44 performances). Cast included: Glenn Anders (as "Angel Guardian"), Mason Adams, Dorn Alexander, Alvin Allen, Charleton Carpenter, Michael Dreyfuss, Donald Foster, Whitford Kane, Allan Rich. Produced by Andrew Billings and Joseph Dicks.
- (1944) Stage Play: Soldier's Wife. Written and directed by Rose Franken. John Golden Theatre: 4 Oct 1944- 12 May 1945 (253 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders, Lili Darvas, Frieda Inescort, Myron McCormick, Martha Scott, Raymond Graham Swing [recorded voice only], Lowell Thomas [recorded voice only]. Production associates: Buford Armitage and Peter Davis. Produced by The Shubert Organization.
- (1948) Stage Play: Light Up Sky. Comedy. Written and directed by Moss Hart. Royale Theatre: 18 Nov 1948- 21 May 1949 (214 performances). Cast: Ronald Alexander, Glenn Anders (as "Carleton Fitzgerald"), Audrey Christie, Virginia Field, Sam Levene, Donald McClelland, Jane Middleton, Barry Nelson, S. Oakland, Philip Ober, Phyllis Povah, Bartlett Robinson, John D. Seymour. Produced by Joseph M. Hyman and Barnard Hart.
- (1952) Stage Play: One Bright Day. Drama. Written by Sigmund Miller. Directed by Michael Gordon. Royale Theatre: 19 Mar 1952- 12 Apr 1952 (29 performances). Cast included: Glenn Anders (as "Arthur Mitchell"), Howard Lindsay, Walter Matthau, Addison Richards, Bess Winburn. Produced by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse.
- (1953) Stage Play: The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker. Comedy. Written by Liam O'Brien. Directed by Alan Schneider. Coronet Theatre: 30 Dec 1953- 10 Jul 1954 (221 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Dr. Fifield"), Burgess Meredith, Martha Scott, Thomas Chalmers, Una Merkel, Joel Crothers, Roni Dengel, Nancy Devlin, Howard Fischer, Kathleen Gately, James Holden, Betty Lou Keim, William Lanteau, Phyllis Love, Billy Quinn, John Reese, Jackie Scholle, Roger Stevens, Michael Wager. Produced by The Producers Theare and Robert Whitehead and Roger L. Stevens.
- (1957) Stage Play: Time Remembered. Romantic comedy. Written by Jean Anouilh. English version by Patricia Moyes. Incidental music by Vernon Duke. Lyrics and Orchestrations by: Vernon Duke. Scenic Design by Oliver Smith. Costume Design by Miles White. Lighting Design by Feder. Directed by Albert Marre. Morosco Theatre: 12 Nov 1957- 28 Jun 1958 (248 performances). Cast: Richard Burton (as "Prince Albert"), Helen Hayes (as "The Duchess of Pont-Au-Bronc"), Susan Strasberg (as "Amanda, a milliner"), Glenn Anders (as "Lord Hector") [final Broadway role], Sig Arno (as "Ferdinand, a head waiter"), Emil Borsody (as "The Cellist"), George Ebeling (as "The Taxi Driver"), Truman Gaige (as "Germain, a ghilly"), Stanley Grover (as "The Singer"), Edmund Horn (as "The Pianist"), George Landolf (as "Footmen and Waiters"), Seymour Miroff (as "The Violinist"), LeRoi Operti (as "The Ice Cream Man"), Frederick Rolf (as "Theophilus, a butler"), Fred Starbuck (as "Footmen and Waiters"), E.W. Swackhamer (as "Footmen and Waiters"), Frederic Warriner (as "The Landlord"). Replacement actors: Urey Krasnopolsky (as "The Pianist"), Ellen Madison (as "The Coat Room Attendant"). Produced by The Playwrights' Company (Maxwell Anderson, Robert Anderson, Elmer Rice, Robert E. Sherwood, Roger L. Stevens, John F. Wharton). Produced in association with Milton Sperling.
- (October 5, 1959) He acted in Friedrich Durrenmatt's play, "The Visit," in a Producers Theatre production at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Alfred Lunt, Lynn Fontanne, Thomas Gomez, John Wyse, William Hansen, Myles Eason, David Clarke, Michael Lewis, and William Callan in the cast. Maurice Valency was adapter. Ted Otto was set designer. Castillo was costume designer. Peter Brook was director.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content