- (1901 - 1927) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1901) Stage Play: Nell Gwyn. Written by Mrs. Charles A. Doremus. Murray Hill Theatre: 21 Jan 1901- unknown (unknown performances). Cast [as known]: Dorothy Donnelly (as "Nell Gwyn") [Broadway debut], Frances Starr (as "Frances Stuart") [Broadway debut]. Note: Filmed by Sawyer Pictures as Nell Gwynne (1911) and by British National Films (distributed in Europe by First National and in the U.S. by Paramount Pictures) as Nell Gwyn (1926) (UK production starring Dorothy Gish) and by British & Dominions Films (distributed worldwide by United Artists) as Nell Gwyn (1934) (UK production starring Anna Neagle).
- (1901) Stage Play: New England Folks. Drama. Written by Eugene Wiley Presbrey. Haverly's 14th Street Theatre: 21 Oct 1901- Dec 1901 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Charles Abbott, Mr. Collins, Frank L. Davis, Maud Hoffman, Thomas MacLarnie, Harry Mordaunt (as "Consider Morton/Sid"), Samuel Reed, Grayce Scott, Mr. Stanfield, Walter Thomas, Blanche Weaver, Henry West. Replacement actors: Dorothy Donnelly [from 11 Nov 1901- ?], Frederick Mower [from 18 Nov 1901- ?]. Produced by J. Wesley Rosenquest.
- (1902) Stage Play: Soldiers of Fortune. Drama. Written by Augustus Thomas, from a story by Richard Harding Davis. Savoy Theatre: 17 Mar 1902- 31 May 1902 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Charles Abbott, Edwin Brandt General Mendoza(as "General Mendoza"), Marie Derickson, Dorothy Donnelly (as "Madame Alvarez"), Edward Dresser (as "Weimer"), Wallace Eddinger (as "Ensign Macauley"), Robert Edeson (as "Robert Clay"), Ira Hards (as "Captain Burke"), Macy Harlam, Harry Harwood, Thomas W. Lawrence, Gretchen Lyons, E.W. Morrison, Byron Ongley (as "General Rojas/Fileo"), Charles Ongley (as "Sandro/First Soldier"), Guy Bates Post (as "Captain Stuart"), Gabriel Ravenelle (as "First Soldier/Manuel"), Thomas W. Ross, E.V. Whitty (as "Colonel Garcia/Carlos"). Produced by Henry B. Harris.
- (1902) Stage Play: Soldiers of Fortune. Drama [return engagement]. Written by Augustus Thomas, from a story by Richard Harding Davis. Savoy Theatre: 30 Aug 1902- Oct 1902 (closing date unknown/41 performances). Cast: Frank Aiken, Edwin Brandt (as "General Mendoza"), Ellen Burg, Dorothy Donnelly (as "Madame Alvarez"), Wallace Eddinger (as "Captain Stuart"), Robert Edeson, Ira Hards, Macy Harlam, Harry Harwood, Thomas W. Lawrence, John Meehan, Guy Bates Post, Gabriel Ravenelle, Lawrence Sheehan, Richard Sterling, Dorothy Tennant (as "Alice Langham") [Broadway debut], E.V. Whitty. Produced by Henry B. Harris.
- (1903) Stage Play: The Land of Heart's Desire/A Pot of Broth/Kathleen ni Houlihan.
- (1903) Stage Play: Candida. Comedy. Written by George Bernard Shaw. Musical Director: Frederick W. Ecke. Princess Theatre (during it's run the show moved to Hoyt's Theatre on 4 Jan 1904 and to the Vaudeville Theatre on 11 Jan 1904 until close): 9 Dec 1903- Apr 1904 (closing date unknown/133 performances). Cast: Herbert Carr (as "Mr. Burgess"), Louise Closser Hale [credited as Louise Closser] (as "Miss Proserpine Garnett") , Arnold Daly (as "Eugene Marchbanks"), Dorothy Donnelly (as "Candida"), Dodson Mitchell (as "The Reverend James Mavor Morell"), F. Newton-Lindo (as "The Reverend Alexander Mill"). Replacement actor: Herbert Standing (as "Mr. Burgess"). Produced Arnold Daly. House Manager: Charles Frohman.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Man of Destiny (Revival).
- (1904) Stage Play: The Man of Destiny/How He Lied to Her Husband. (Revival).
- (1905) Stage Play: Friquet. Drama. Written by Pierre Berton. Directed by William Seymour. Savoy Theatre: 31 Jan 1905- Feb 1905 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Marie Doro (as "Friquet"), Orme Caldara, C.B. Chester, William Courtleigh, Dorothy Donnelly, Laurence Eddinger, W.J. Ferguson, Eugenie Flagg, Ernest Glendinning, John Heron, Wright Kramer, Frank Losee, Frederick Perry, Florida Pier, Alison Skipworth, Virginia Staunton, George Henry Trader, Flossie Wilkinson, Edgar Allan Woolf. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1905) Stage Play: When We Dead Awake. Drama. Written by Henrik Ibsen. Knickerbocker Theatre (moved to The Princess Theatre from 27 Mar 1905- close): 7 Mar 1905- Apr 1905 (closing date unknown/27 performances). Cast: Dorothy Donnelly (as "Mrs. Maia Rubek"), Florence Kahn (as "Strange Lady"), Frederick Lewis [credited as Frederick Lewis] (as "Prof. Arnold Rubek'), J.H. Lewis [credited as James H. Lewis] (as "The Inspector"), Frank Losee (as "Ulfheim"), Evelyn Wood (as "Sister of Mercy"). Replacement actor: Robert Lowe (as "Ulfheim"). Produced by Maurice Campbell.
- (1905) Stage Play: Mrs. Battle's Bath.
- (1905) Stage Play: The Proud Laird.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Little Gray Lady. Melodrama.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Daughters of Men. Drama. Written by Charles Klein. Astor Theatre: 19 Nov 1906- Jan 1907 (closing date unknown/59 performances). Cast: Joseph Adelman, Carl Ahrendt, Edwin Brandt, Frank Brownlee, Ralph Delmore, George W. Deyo, Dorothy Donnelly (as "Louise Stolbeck"), Grace Filkins, J.H. Howland, Orrin Johnson (as "John Stedman"), Herbert Kelcey, Kate L. McLaurin [Broadway debut], E.W. Morrison, George Parsons, Lynn Pratt, Effie Shannon (as "Grace Crosby"). Produced by Henry B. Harris.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Movers. Drama. Written by Martha Morton. Hackett Theatre: 3 Sep 1907- Sep 1907 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Myra Brooks, Mary Leslie Cahill, Robert Conness, Dorothy Donnelly (as "Marion Manners"), Malcolm Duncan, Laurence Eddinger, W.J. Ferguson, Joseph Kilgour, Desiree Lazard, Edward See, Vincent Serrano, Abner H. Symmons, Nellie Thorne, Ida Waterman, Stanhope Wheatcroft. Produced by Henry B. Harris.
- (1909) Stage Play: Disengaged.
- (1910) Stage Play: Madame X. Melodrama. Written by Alexandre Bisson. Book adapted by John Raphael, from "Americanized" by William Henry Wright. New Amsterdam Theatre: 2 Jan 1910- Apr 1910 (closing date unknown/125 performances). Cast: Christine Blessing (as "Rose"), Harry C. Bradley (as "Victor"), Charles Brandt (as "President of the Court"), Floyd K. Brown (as "Foreman of the Jury"), W.H. Denny (as "Parissard"), Dorothy Donnelly (as "Jacqueline"), Deirdre Doyle (as "Marie"), Robert Drouet (as "Louis Floriot"), William Elliott (as "Raymond Floriot"), Robert Paton Gibbs [credited as Robert Peyton Gibbs] (as "Noel"), B.S. Higgins (as "Fontaine"), Cecil Kern (as "Helene") [Broadway debut], L. Rogers Lytton (as "Dr. Chesnel"), Walter F. Tuley (as "Usher of the Court"), Charles E. Verner (as "Merivel"), Malcolm Williams (as "Laroque"). Produced by Henry W. Savage. Note: Filmed by MGM as Madame X (1929), by MGM as Madame X (1937), and by Universal Pictures/Ross Hunter Productions as Madame X (1966).
- (1912) Stage Play: The Right to Be Happy. Written by Henry K. Chambers. Hudson Theatre: 26 Mar 1912- Apr 1912 (closing date unknown/31 performances), Cast: Edmund Breese (as "James Morehouse"), Dorothy Donnelly (as "Janet Van Roof"), Leslie Faber (as "John Forrester"), Louise Galloway, Arthur T. Hendon, George Le Guere, Grace Morrissey. Produced by Henry B. Harris
- (1914) Stage Play: Maria Rosa.
- (1914) Stage Play: A Woman Killed with Kindness/Granny Maumee.
- (1914) Stage Play: The Song of Songs.
- (1915) Stage Play: Candida. Comedy (revival).
- (1915) Stage Play: The Bargain. Written by Herman Scheffauer. Comedy Theatre: 6 Oct 1915- Oct 1915 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Blanche Burns, Louis Calvert, Dorothy Donnelly, John Flood, Charles Mather, Eugene O'Brien, Josephine Victor Forrest Winant. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1916) Stage Play: Flora Bella. Musical/operetta. Book adapted by Dorothy Donnelly.
- (1917) Stage Play: Johnny, Get Your Gun. Written by Edmund Lawrence Burke [credited as Edmund Laurence Burke]. Revised by Dorothy Donnelly. Criterion Theatre: 12 Feb 1917- Jul 1917 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Louis Bennison, Everett Butterfield, Jane Carlton, Roy Cochrane, Tom K. Corliss, Harry Cuscadon, Howard Fay, Lorraine Frost, Robert E. Homans, John Ivan, Carl Massey, Kate Mayhew, M.A. Meyer, Ralph Nairn, Billie Scott, Barton Williams, Rose Winter. Produced by John Cort.
- (1917) Stage Play: Six Months' Option. Produced by Dorothy Donnelly.
- (1918) Stage Play: Fancy Free. Book by Dorothy Donnelly.
- (1918) , Stage Play: The Riddle: Woman. Written by Dorothy Donnelly.
- (1919) Stage Play: Forbidden. Romance. Written by Dorothy Donnelly. Manhattan Opera House: 20 Dec 1919- Jan 1920 (closing date unknown/18 performances). Cast: Walter Abel (as "Second Lieut. Vincent Moretti") [Broadway debut], William Bailey, Richard Barbee (as "First Lieut. John Booth Lawrence/Boots"), John Burkell, George Connor, Joseph Dunn, Henry George, Herman Gerold, William Harcourt (as "Brigadier General Slocum"), Martha Hedman, Nolan Leary, John McKenna, Claire Mersereau, Georgia Lucille Mooser, Arden Page, David Proctor, Jack Rutherford [credited as John Rutherford] (as "Captain Tottenham Knowles"), Harold Salter, Hermione Shone, Harry Shutan, Ben Taggart, Annette Westbay. Produced by George Mooser.
- (1921) Stage Play: Blossom Time. Musical comedy. Book by Dorothy Donnelly. Music by Franz Schubert and Sigmund Romberg. Lyrics by Dorothy Donnelly. Based on the Viennese original by Dr. A.M. Willner and Heinz Reichert. Based on the novel by Rudolf H. Bartsch. Music arranged by Heinrich Berte. Musical Director: Oscar Radin. Choreographed by Frank M. Gillespie. Directed by J. C. Huffman. Ambassador Theatre (on hiatus from 1 Jul 1922- 6 Aug 1922, then moved to Jolson's 59th Street Theatre from 2 Oct 1922- circa Oct 1922, then moved to The Century Theatre from 23 Oct 1922- close): 29 Sep 1921- 27 Jan 1923 (516 performances). Cast: Perry Askam (as "Erkmann"), Zoe Barnett (as "Bella Bruna"), Howard A. Berman (as "Waiter"), Ethel Brandon (as "Mrs. Kranz"), Olga Cook (as "Mitzi"), Roy Cropper (as "Vogel"), William Danforth (as "Kranz"), Burtress Deitch (as "Dancer"), Florence Elmore (as "Chorus"), Marie Gary (as "Chorus"), Robert Paton Gibbs [credited as Robert Peyton Gibbs] (as "Novotny"), The Gotham City Four (as "Four Guests"), Norma Gould (as "Chorus"), Frances Halliday (as "Kitzi"), Edith Holloway (as "Chorus"), Claire Hooper (as "Chorus"), Dorothy Jackson (as "Chorus"), Mildred Kay (as "Rose"), Paul Kerr (as "Kuepelweiser"), Howard Marsh (as "Baron Franz Schober"), Eugene Martinet (as "Von Schwind"), Bobbie McCree (as "Chorus"), Irving Mels (as "Hansy"), Lucius Metz (as "Binder"), Dorothy Newell (as "Chorus"), Emmy Niclas (as "Greta"), Bertram Peacock (as "Franz Schubert"), Erba Robeson (as "Mrs. Coberg"), Yvan Servais (as "Count Sharntoff"), Mildred Soper (as "Chorus"), Juliet Strahl (as "Chorus"), Dorothy Whitmore (as "Fritzi"), Lyola Whyte (as "Chorus"), Billie Williams (as "Chorus"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1923) Stage Play: Poppy. Musical comedy. Book by Dorothy Donnelly. Music by Stephen Jones and Arthur Samuels. Book by Dorothy Donnelly. Lyrics by Dorothy Donnelly. Additional music by John Egan. Featuring songs with lyrics by Howard Dietz and Irving Caesar. Music orchestrated by Stephen Jones. Musical Director: Gus Salzer. Directed by Dorothy Donnelly and Julien Alfred. Apollo Theatre: 3 Sep 1923- 28 Jun 1924 (346 performances). Note: Filmed as Poppy (1936).
- (1924) Stage Play: Blossom Time. Musical comedy (revival). Book by Dorothy Donnelly.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Student Prince.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Call of Life. Written by Arthur Schnitzler. Translated by Dorothy Donnelly. Directed by Dudley Digges. Comedy Theatre: 9 Oct 1925- Oct 1925 (closing date unknown/19 performances). Cast: Katharine Alexander, Egon Brecher, Thomas Chalmers, Douglass Dumbrille, Rosalinde Fuller [credited as Rosalind Fuller], Derek Glynne, Alice John, Stanley Kalkhurst, Eva Le Gallienne (as "Marie"), Hermann Lieb, Leete Stone. Produced by The Actors Theatre.
- (1926) Stage Play: Hello, Lola. Musical comedy. Music by William Kernell. Material by Dorothy Donnelly. From "Seventeen" by Booth Tarkington. Lyrics by Dorothy Donnelly. Musical Director: Charles Sieger. Based on the stage adaptation of "Seventeen" by Hugh Stanislaus Stange and Stannard Mears. Directed by Seymour Felix. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: (moved to Maxine Elliott's Theatre from 8 Feb 1926 to close): 12 Jan 1926- 20 Feb 1926 (47 performances). Cast: Avis Adair, Earl Atkinson, Edythe Baker, Sylvia Carol, Dorothy Casey, Kittye Casey, Lillian Clerke, Cullen Clewis, Elisha Cook Jr. (as "Joe Bullitt"), George Crouch, Don DeFrancis, Nanette Flack, Jay C. Flippen (as "Genesis"), Ben Franklin, Bert Gardner, Ben Hendricks Jr. (as "Mr. Baxter"), Richard Keene, Constance Lahleet, Nancy Lea, Frances Mildern, Albert Miller, Betty Noi, Dorothy Palmer, Virginia Ray, Diddie Read, Beatrice Reiss, Wyn Richmond, Howard Shea, Cora Stephens, Wally Stewart, Georgie Stone, Margaret Brooke Sullivan, Larry Vale, Katherine Vercelle, Louise Vercelle, Marjorie White, Harry Wood, Emma Wyche. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1926) Stage Play: Blossom Time. Musical comedy/operetta (revival). Music by Franz Schubert and Heinrich Berte. Book by Dorothy Donnelly. Adapted from the original of Dr. A.M. Willner and Heinz Reichert. Lyrics by Dorothy Donnelly. Music arranged by Heinrich Berte. Based on a novel by Rudolf H. Bartsch. Music by Sigmund Romberg. Production Supervised by J.J. Shubert. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Directed by J. C. Huffman. Jolson's 59th Street Theatre: 8 Mar 1926- 20 Mar 1926 (16 performances). Cast: Robert Lee Allen (as "Kranz"), James Bardin (as "Vogel"), Peggy Beck (as "Chorus"), Beulah Berson (as "Mitzi"), Bonnie Bonner (as "Chorus"), Dorothea Clegg (as "Chorus"), Leeta Corder (as "Bella Bruna"), Alexandra Dagmar (as "Mrs. Kranz"), Alex Drew (as "Domeyer"), Jules Epailly (as "Count Sharntoff"), Warren Foster (as "Baron Franz Schober"), Millie Freeman (as "Mrs. Coberg"), Cecilia Grayce (as "Chorus"), Estelle Hellers (as "Chorus"), Norman Johnston (as "Kuepelweiser"), Patrick J. Kelly (as "Baron Franz Schober"), Lea Lake (as "Chorus"), Myra Lee (as "Greta"), Knight MacGregor (as "Franz Schubert"), Mary McBirney (as "Chorus"), Oliver T. McCormick (as "Erkmann"), Genevieve Naegele (as "Kitzi"), Sioux Nedra (as "Fritzi"), Mack Ponch (as "Hansy"), Louise Rothacker (as "Dancer"), Dorothy Schamm (as "Chorus"), Paula Sherra (as "Chorus"), Robert Tait (as "Binder"), Marie Verba (as "Chorus"), Margaret Walker (as "Chorus"), Betty Walters (as "Chorus"), John E. Wheeler (as "Novotny"), Harrison Wilson (as "Von Schwind"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1927) Stage Play: My Maryland. Musical/romance.
- (1927) Stage Play: My Princess. Musical/operetta. Music by Sigmund Romberg. Based on a play by Edward Sheldon and Dorothy Donnelly [final Broadway credit during lifetime]. Music orchestrated by Emil Gerstenberger. Musical Direction by Charles Prince. Choreographed by Dave Bennett and Albertina Rasch. Directed by Samuel Kay Forrest. Shubert Theatre: 6 Oct 1927- 22 Oct 1927 (20 performances). Cast: Luis Alberni (as "The Ambassador"), Jane Alden, Mlle. Amerique, Fleurette Andre, Granville Bates (as "Mitchell"), Virginia Bennett, Christine Bernsman, Dorothy Blese, Dulcie Bond, Helen Bourne, Ruth Brady, Hela Brandes, Dorothy Button, Lee Byrne, Dorothy Campbell, Rita Carita, Buddy Carmin, Leonard Ceeley, Betty Chay, Gordon Clark, George Clidd, Clinton Corwin, Jeanette Creagan, Evelyn Darville, Carl Deis, Eugene Demady, Marion Dickson, Jack Douglas, William Douglas, Peggy Driscoll, Nadja Dubinsky, Vladimir Dubinsky, Madelyn Eubanks, George Fisher, Robert F. Ford, Gregory Frisch, Anita Furman, Peggy Gallimore, Betty Garon, Alvera Gomez, Charles Gomez, Anita Gordon, Robert Gray, Hope Hampton, John Emerson Haynes, Jack Irwin, Helen Johnston, Elizabeth Kelly, Margaret Kelly, Vernon Kelso (as "Lord Barchester"), George Koenig, Mary Landon, Henry Levey, Zayda Lord, Richard Lynn, Hughie Mack, Florence Mahoney, Audrey Maple, Olga Marie, Olivia Martin, Donald Meek (as "Darwin P. Johnson"), Frances Michele, Wilma Miller, Robert Milliken, Boris Millman, James Moore, Murray Morrissey, Neville, Phyllis Newkirk, Patricia O'Connell, Frank Pandolphi, Clifford Patterson, Frank Paudolfi, Melvin Redden, Gladys Redmond, Etna Ross, Theodore Schoof, Henry Schween, Mae Selden, Geraldine Spencer, Jean Spiro, Beatrice Squire, Leo Stark, Marie Stoddard, Anton Teero, Regina Tushinska, Betty Veronica, Eda Vitolo, Florence Wall, Madeleine Ward, Lillian White, Martha Wilbert, Elizabeth Wilson, Paulette Winston, Robert Woolsey (as "Augustus Tonks"), Miriam Wootton. Produced by Alfred E. Aarons.
- [Posthumous] The Student Prince (1931).
- (1931) Stage Play: [Posthumous] Blossom Time. Musical comedy/operetta (revival). Music by Sigmund Romberg. Material by Dorothy Donnelly, from the original of A.M. Willner and Heinz Reichert. Directed by Edward Scanlon. Ambassador Theatre: 4 Mar 1931- Mar 1931 (closing date unknown/29 performances). Cast: Robert Lee Allen, Greta Alpeter, Peggy Baldwin, Gladys Baxter, Marice Christie, Marie Craigin, Gerry Dean, Stella Doyle, Dorothy Drum, Millie Freeman, Trueman Gaige, John Charles Gilbert, Inez Goetz, Ann Johnson, Joseph Lertora, Eleanor Lewis, Georgia MacTaggart, Clifford Newdahl, Robert Emmett O'Connor (as "Novotny") [final Broadway role], Agatha Phillips, Harry Rabke, Evelyn Reide, Herta Rittell, Howard Samples, Peggy Scevioure, Marie Starner, Joseph Toner, Maurice Tyler, Walter Wahl, Joseph Wilkins, Mary Wilkins. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- [Posthumous] Blossom Time (1938). Musical comedy/operetta (revival). Music by Sigmund Romberg. Material by Dorothy Donnelly, from the original of A.M. Willner and Heinz Reichert.
- [Posthumous] The Student Prince [In Heidelberg] (1943). Musical/operetta (revival). Music by Sigmund Romberg. Libretto by Dorothy Donnelly. Based on "Alt Heidelberg" by Wilhelm Meyer-Foerster. Choreographed by Ruthanne Boris and Alexis Dolinoff. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Costume Design by Stage Costumes Inc. Lighting Design by John Davis. Directed by Jacob J. Shubert. Broadway Theatre: 8 Jun 1943- 2 Oct 1943 (153 performances). Cast: In Heidelberg"). Cast: Everett Marshall (as "Dr. Engel, the Prince's Tutor"), Helene Arthur (as "Princess Margaret, fiancée of Prince Karl Franz"), Frank Hornaday (as "Prince Karl Franz"), Ann Pennington (as "Gretchen, Maid at the Inn"), Detmar Poppen (as "Lutz, valet to the Prince") [final Broadway role], Barbara Scully (as "Kathie, niece of Ruder"), Roy Barnes (as "Detlef, a student leader"), Stanton Barrett (as "Ensemble"), Eden Burrows (as "Ensemble"), Paul Campbell (as "Ensemble"), Fred Catania (as "Ensemble"), Jesse M. Cimberg (as "Hubert, the valet's valet"), Marvel Conheeny (as "Ensemble"), Lyndon Crews (as "Von Asterberg, another student leader"), Daniel De Paolo (as "Lucas, another student leader"), Warren Dunning (as "Ensemble"), Eugene Gadol (as "Ensemble"), Shirley Gordon (as "Ensemble"), James Growner (as "Ensemble"), Colin Harvey (as "First Lackey/Ensemble"), Elaine Haslett (as "Ensemble"), Gloria Hope (as "Ensemble"), Carol Hunter (as "Ensemble"), Raymond Jacquemont (as "Captain Tarnitz"), Walter Johnson (as "Ruder, Landlord of Inn of Three Gold Apples"), Robert Laurer (as "Ensemble"), Helena Le Berthon (as "Countess Leyden, lady-in-waiting to the Princess/Ensemble"), Herman Magidson (as "Rudolph/Ensemble"), Phyllis Manning (as "Ensemble"), Jacqueline Max (as "Ensemble"), John McCarthy (as "Fourth Lackey/Ensemble"), Marilyn Merkt (as "Ensemble"), George T. Miller (as "Ensemble"), Merrill Moorman (as "Sixth Lackey/Ensemble"), Page Morton (as "Ensemble"), Larry O'Dell (as "Second Lackey/Ensemble"), Chas. M. Perry (as "Ensemble"), Lewis Pierce (as "Ensemble"), Roland Power (as "Ensemble"), William Pringle (as "Prime Minister Von Mark"), Jonathan Reed (as "Third Lackey/Ensemble"), Jack Richards (as "Captain of the Guard/Ensemble"), Nathaniel Sack (as "Toni/a waiter"), Dale Spangler (as "Ensemble"), Gale Sterling (as "Ensemble"), Andrew Thurston (as "Ensemble"), Judy Turnbull (as "Ensemble"), Stanley Turner (as "Fifth Lackey/Ensemble"), Nina Varela (as "Grand Duchess Anastasia"), James Wharton (as "Von Asterberg, another student leader"), Harriet Williams (as "Ensemble"), Steve Wilson (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- [Posthumous] Blossom Time (1943). Musical comedy/operetta (revival). Music by Sigmund Romberg. Material by Dorothy Donnelly, from the original of A.M. Willner and Heinz Reichert.
- (July 1980) She wrote the book and lyrics for the musical, "The Student Prince," at the Ogunquit Playhouse in Ogunquit, Maine. Sigmund Romberg was composer.
- (Summer 1979) Sigmond Romberg and her musical, "Blossom Time," was performed in a Kenley Players production at the Memorial Hall in Dayton and in Akron, Ohio with Kitty Carlisle Hart and Allan Jones in the cast. John Kenley was artistic director.
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