- (1913 - 1960) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1913) Stage Play: The Great Adventure. Written by Arnold Bennett. Booth Theatre: 16 Oct 1913- Nov 1913 (closing date unknown/52 performances). Cast: Roxane Barton, Janet Beecher, Cyril Biddulph, Erskholme Clive, Edward Connelly, Walter Creighton, Frank Goldsmith, Lyn Harding, Edgar Kent, Rupert Lumley, Edward Martyn, Walter Maxwell, Guthrie McClintic [Broadway debut], Thomas Wigney Percyval, Ina Rorke, Roland Rushton. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1914) Stage Play: The Truth. Drama (revival). Written by Clyde Fitch. Little Theatre: 14 Apr 1914- Jun 1914 (closing date unknown/55 performances). Cast: Sydney Booth (as "Warder"), Grace George (as "Becky Warder"), Ferdinand Gottschalk (as "Roland"), Fanny Hartz, Lionel Hogarth (as "Butler"), Isabel Irving, Guthrie McClintic (as "Milliner's Employee"), Zelda Sears (as "Mrs. Crespigny"), Conway Tearle (as "Lindon"). Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1915) Stage Play: The New York Idea (Revival). Written by Langdon Mitchell. Playhouse Theatre: 28 Sep 1915- unknown (unknown performances/played in repertory with "The Liars," "The Earth" and "Captain Brassbound's Conversion"). Cast: John Cromwell, Albert Reed, Conway Tearle, Eugenie Woodward, Anita Wood. Produced by Grace George (also starring as "Mrs. Cynthia Karslake") and The New York Playhouse Company.
- (1915) Stage Play: The Liars. [production played in repertory with "The New York Idea," "Major Barbara," "The Earth," "Captain Brassbound's Conversion"]. Written by Henry Arthur Jones. Playhouse Theatre: 9 Nov 1915- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Paul Bliss, Richard Clarke, John Cromwell (as "Archibald Coke"), Grace George (as "Lady Jessica Napean"), Lumsden Hare (as "Gilbert Nepean"), Alfred Hesse (as "Waiter"), Norah Lamison (as "Beatrice Ebernoe"), Ernest Lawford (as "Colonel Sir Christopher Deering"), Alexander Loftus, Josephine Lovett, Guthrie McClintic (as "George Nepean"), Mary Nash, Albert Reed, Conway Tearle (as "Edward Falkner"), Eugenie Woodward (as "Ferris"), Mary Worth. Produced by Grace George and The New York Playhouse Company.
- (1915) Stage Play: Major Barbara. Comedy [played in repertory with "The New York Idea," "The Liars", "The Earth" and "Captain Brassbound's Conversion"]. Written by George Bernard Shaw. Directed by Louis Calvert. Playhouse Theatre: 9 Dec 1915- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Paul Bliss, Louis Calvert (as "Andrew Undershaft, husband to Lady Britomart"), Margaret Calvert, Richard Clarke, John Cromwell (as "Charles Lomax, Sarah's fiancé"), Clarence Derwent (as "Stephen Undershaft"), Arthur Eldred, Grace George (as "Barbara Undershaft, Lady Britomart's daughter, Major of the Salvation Army"), Charlotte Granville (as "Lady Britomart Undershaft"), Norah Lamison, Ernest Lawford, Josephine Lovett, Guthrie McClintic (as "Morrisn"), Conway Tearle (as "Bill Walker"). Produced by Grace George and The New York Playhouse Company.
- (1916) Stage Play: The Earth (Revival). Written by James B. Fagan. Playhouse Theatre: 15 Feb 1916- unknown (unknown performances/This production played in repertory with The New York Idea, The Liars, Major Barbara, Captain Brassbound's Conversion). Cast: George Bangs, Louise Calvert, Richard Clarke, John Cromwell, Clarence Derwent, Daniel Eames, Arthur Eldred, Grace George, Charlotte Granville, Rexford Kendrick, Norah Lamison, Ernest Lawford, Guthrie McClintic, Conway Tearle. Produced by Grace George and The New York Playhouse Company.
- (1916) Stage Play: Captain Brassbound's Conversion. Comedy (revival). Written by George Bernard Shaw. Playhouse Theatre: 29 Mar 1916- unknown (unknown performances/repertory production; rotated with The New York Idea, The Earth, The Liars, Major Barbara). Cast: William Balfour (as "Sidi El Assif"), Richard Clarke (as "Johnson"), John Cromwell (as "Capt. Kearney, U.S.N."), Clarence Derwent (as "The Cadi"), Hubert Druce (as "Rankin"), Daniel Eames (as "Petty Officer"), Lewis Edgard (as "Drinkwater"), Grace George (as "Lady Cicely Waynflete"), Rexford Kendrick (as "Ossman"), George Kent (as "Hassan"), Ernest Lawford (as "Sir Howard Hallam"), Guthrie McClintic (as "Marzo"), Malcolm Morley (as "Redbrook") [Broadway debut], Robert Warwick (as "Captain Brassbound"). Produced by Grace George and The New York Playhouse Company.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Dover Road. Written by A.A. Milne. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Bijou Theatre: 23 Dec 1921- Jun 1922 (closing date unknown/204 performances).
- (1922) Stage Play: Gringo. Written by Sophie Treadwell. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Comedy Theatre: 12 Dec 1922- Jan 1923 (closing date unknown/35 performances). Cast: Arthur Albertson, Jorge Anez, Richard Barbee, Alcides Bricena, Manuel Carillo, Len Doyle [credited as Leonard Doyle], Olin Field, Harry Hahn, Jefferson Heath, Edna Hibbard, J. Andrew Johnson, Harold McKee, Frederick Perry, Justiniano Rosales, José Ruben, Manuel Valdispino, Edna Walton. Produced by Guthrie McClintic. NOTE: The 625-seat Comedy Theatre was built by the Shuberts in 1909 for the purpose of putting on small-scale productions. Like most theatres along Broadway, it went through several name changes (Collier's Theatre from 1910-13, reverting to The Comedy Theatre from 1913-37, The Mercury Theatre from 1937-40 and the Artef Theatre from 1940-42). By design it was rented out to smaller independent producers, including Cecil B. DeMille, actor-comedian William Collier Jr. and a troupe that would become the nucleus of The Theatre Guild. The economic reality of the Great Depression forced its closure between 1931-35. Producers Orson Welles and John Houseman re-opened it in 1937 as the home of their Mercury Players troupe and after their departure to Hollywood in 1940, it was managed as a Yiddish Theatre. It was torn down in 1942.
- (1923) Stage Play: A Square Peg. Tragedy. Written by Lewis Beach. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Punch and Judy Theatre 27 Jan 1923- Mar 1923 (closing date unknown/41 performances). Cast: Walter Abel (as "Eugene Huckins"), Len Doyle [credited as Leonard Doyle] (as "Arthur Ryan"), Leona Hogarth, William B. Mack (as "James T. Huckins"), Martin Malloy, Minnie Milne, Beverly Sitgreaves, Leighton Stark (as "Walter Fripp"), Richard Stevenson, Alice Bromley Wilson. Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1923) Stage Play: In the Next Room. Melodrama. Written by Eleanor Robson Belmont [credited as Eleanor Robson] (final Broadway credit) and Harriet Ford. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Vanderbilt Theatre: 27 Nov 1923- Apr 1924 (closing date unknown/159 performances). Cast: Arthur Albertson (as "James Godfrey"), Morris Ankrum (as "Rogers"), Edward Butler, Mary Kennedy, Claude King (as "Felix Armand"), William J. Kline, Wright Kramer (as "Philip Vantine"), Merle Maddern, George Riddell, Leighton Stark (as "Inspector Grady"), Olive Valerie. Produced by Winthrop Ames and Guthrie McClintic. Note: Filmed by Warner Bros. as The Case of the Black Parrot (1941).
- (1924) Stage Play: The Way Things Happen. Drama. Written by Clemence Dane. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Lyceum Theatre: 28 Jan 1924- Feb 1924 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Lillian Brennard (as "Mrs. Hanbury"), Katharine Cornell (as "Shirley Pride"), Augusta Haviland (as "Harness"), Tom Nesbitt (as "Martin Farren"), Thomas Wigney Percyval (as "Dr. Rodson"), Helen Robbins (as "Muriel Hanbury"), Reginald Sheffield (as "Chussie Hare"), Ivan F. Simpson (as "Bennett Lomax"), Orlando Smith (as "A Porter"), Zeffie Tilbury (as "Mrs. Farren"). Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1925) Stage Play: Mrs. Partridge Presents. Comedy. Written by Mary Kennedy and Ruth Hawthorne. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Belmont Theatre: 5 Jan 1925- Mar 1925 (closing date unknown/144 performances). Cast: Blanche Bates, Elliot Cabot, C. Havilland Chappell, Virginia Chauvenet, Edward Emery, Sylvia Field, Ruth Gordon (as "Katherine Everitt"), Ruth Gordon, Augusta Haviland, Edwin Morse, Charles Waldron, William Worthington. Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1925) Stage Play: All Dressed Up. Written by Arthur Richman. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 9 Sep 1925- Sep 1925 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Louis Bennison, Elliot Cabot, Lillian Kemble-Cooper, James Crane, Malcolm Duncan, Kay Johnson, Thomas Wigney Percyval, George Riddell, Norman Trevor. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Green Hat. Written by Michael Arlen. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Broadhurst Theatre: 15 Sep 1925- Feb 1926 (closing date unknown/231 performances). Cast: Gordon Ash, Harry Barfoot, John Buckler (as "An English Reporter") [Broadway debut], Katharine Cornell (as "Iris Fenwick"), Florence Foster, Margalo Gillmore (as "Venice Pollen"), Gwenyth Gordon, Paul Guilfoyle, Leslie Howard (as "Napier Harpenden"), A.P. Kaye, Harry Lillford, Antionette Parr, Eugene Powers, John Redmond, Gustave Rolland, Jane Saville, Anne Tonetti. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Shanghai Gesture. Melodrama. Written by John Colton. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Martin Beck Theatre (moved to Chanin's 46th Street Theatre from Sep 1926 to close): 1 Feb 1926- Sep 1926 (closing date unknown/206 performances). Cast: Joan Bourdelle, Langdon Bruce, Conrad Cantzen, C.Havilland Chappell, Mary Duncan, Louie Emery, C. Henry Gordon, Cyril Keightley, Eva Leonard Boyne (as "Lady Blessington"), McKay Morris, Margarita Orlova, Florence Reed, Vera Tomkins, Henry Von Rhau, Henry Warwick, Evelyn Wight, William Worthington. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1926) Stage Play: Glory Hallelujah. Written by Bertram Bloch and Thomas Mitchell. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Broadhurst Theatre: 6 Apr 1926- Apr 1926 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Morris Ankrum(as "Davis"), Charles Bickford (as "Winters"), George Blackwood, Edward Butler, Malcolm Duncan, Allen Jenkins (as "Whitey Adams"), Felix Krembs, Earl Mayne, Phillip M. Sheridan, Lee Tracy (as "Clerk"), Hilda Vaughn, June Walker, Olive West, Augustus Yorke. Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1927) Stage Play: Saturday's Children. Comedy. Written by Maxwell Anderson. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Booth Theatre (moved to The Forrest Theatre from 9 Apr 1928- close): 26 Jan 1927- Apr 1928 (closng date unknown/328 performances). Cast: Richard Barbee (as "Willie Sands"), Humphrey Bogart (as "Rims O'Neil"), Beulah Bondi (as "Mrs. Gorlik"), Ruth Gordon (as "Bobby"), Ruth Hammond, Grace Roth Henderson, Lucia Moore, Frederick Perry (as "Mr. Halevy"), Roger Pryor, Anne Tonetti. Produced by The Actors Theatre.
- (1927) Stage Play: Mariners. Drama. Written by Clemence Dane. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Plymouth Theatre: 28 Mar 1927- Apr 1927 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Madeline Barr, Beulah Bondi (as "Miss Pym"), Gilbert Douglas (as "Sir James Fowler"), George Fitzgerald (as "George Shepperley"), Ethel Griffies (as "Mrs. Bewley"), Evelyn Walsh Hall (as "Lady Sara Shepperley"), Emily Hammond (as "Violet Bewley"), Mary Kennedy (as "Joan Shepperley"), Geraldine Koerpel (as "Flo Sanders"), Pauline Lord, Thomas Wigney Percyval (as "Dr. Ludlow Bell"), Hugh Sinclair (as "Gerry Despard"), Arthur Wontner (as "Rev. Benjamin Cobb"), Haidee Wright (as "Miss Ann Shepperley"). Produced by The Actors Theatre.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Letter. Written by W. Somerset Maugham. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Morosco Theatre: 26 Sep 1927- Dec 1927 (closing date unknown/104 performances). Cast: J.W. Austin (as "Robert Crosbie"), John Buckler, Katharine Cornell, Lady Chong Goe, Allan Jeayes, Sam Kim, B. Landon, Eva Leonard Boyne (as "Mrs. Joyce"), Burton McEvilly (as "Geoffrey Hammond"), Mary Scott Seton, James Vincent, M. Wada. Produced by Messmore Kendall. Note: Filmed by Warner Bros. as The Letter (1940).
- (1927) Stage Play: John. Written by Philip Barry. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Klaw Theatre: 2 Nov 1927- Nov 1927 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: William Adams, Luther Adler (as "Old Man"), Jacob Ben-Ami (as "John"), Constance Collier (as "Herodias"), Anna Duncan, George Graham, Gordon Gunniss, Benjamin Hoogland, Donald Lee, Lawrence Leslie, Gordon McRae (as "Second Guard"), Richard Nicholls, Harry Redding, Ralph Roeder (as "Aaron Hanan"), Ben Smith, James Todd, Marshall Vincent, Albert West, George White. Produced by The Actors Theatre.
- (1927) Stage Play: Fallen Angels. Comedy. Written by Noël Coward. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. 49th Street Theatre: 1 Dec 1927- Jan 1928 (closing date unknown/36 performances). Cast: Luis Alberni (as "Maurice Duclos"), Gordon Ash, Fay Bainter (as "Julia Sterroll"), Eileen Beldon, Gerald Hamer (as "William Banbury"), Estelle Winwood (as "Jane Banbury"). Produced by The Actors Theatre.
- (1928) Stage Play: Cock Robin. Comedy/drama. Written by Philip Barry and Elmer Rice. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. 48th Street Theatre: 12 Jan 1928- Apr 1928 (closing date unknown/100 performances). Cast: Beulah Bondi (as "Maria Scott"), Edward Ellis (as "George McAuliffe"), Howard Freeman (as "Clarke Torrance"), Beatrice Herford (as "Alice Montgomery"), Moffat Johnston (as "Julian Cleveland"), Desmond Kelley (as "Helen Maxwell"), Muriel Kirkland (as "Carlotta Maxwell"), Wright Kramer (as "Dr. Edgar Grace"), Jo Milward (as "Henry Briggs"), Henry D. Southard (as "Hancock Robinson"), Richard Stevenson (as "Richard Lane"), James Toff (as "John Jessup"). Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Shanghai Gesture. Melodrama (revival).
- (1928) Stage Play: Jealousy. Written by Eugene Walter. From the French by Louis Verneuil. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 22 Oct 1928- Feb 1929 (closing date unknown/136 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Valerie"), John Halliday. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Age of Innocence. Written by Margaret Ayer Barnes. Based on the novel by Edith Wharton. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Empire Theatre: 27 Nov 1928- May 1929 (closing date unknown/207 performances). Cast: Katharine Cornell (as "Ellen Olenska"), Margaret Barker (as "Alice Fordyce") [Broadway debut], Frazer Coulter (as "Mr. Henry van der Luyden"), Giannina Gatti, Stanley Gilkey, Eden Gray, Jean Howard, Isabel Irving (as "Mrs. Henry van der Luyden"), Arnold Korff (as "Julius Beaufort"), Edouard La Roche, Rollo Peters (as "Newland Archer"), William Podmore, Henry Richard, Pierre Soupault, Peter Spencer, Katherine Stewart, Nora Stirling, Albert Tavernier (as "Stephen Letterblair"), Franchot Tone (as "Newland Archer Jr."). Produced by Gilbert Miller. Note: Filmed by RKO Radio Pictures as The Age of Innocence (1934).
- (1929) Stage Play: Skyrocket. Written by Mark Reed. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Lyceum Theatre: 11 Jan 1929- Jan 1929 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Dorothie Bigelow, Clara Blandick (as "Mrs. Ewing"), Humphrey Bogart (as "Vic Ewing"), William Broussard, 'Howard Freeman (I)', Gwyneth Gordon, Morris Lee, Lottie Linthicum, J.C. Nugent, Mary Phillips, Ian Wolfe (as "Frank Greer"). Produced by Guthrie McClintic in association with Gilbert Miller)
- (1929) Stage Play: Cross Roads. Drama. Written by Martin Flavin. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Morosco Theatre: 11 Nov 1929- Dec 1929 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Anna Borden, Orrin Burke (as "Cronin"), Eric Dressler (as "Michael"), Malcolm Duncan, Herbert Heywood, Dennie Moore (as "A Girl"), Mary Morris, Oscar Polk (as "Jep"), Irene Purcell, Peggy Shannon (as "Dora"), Sylvia Sidney (as "Patricia"), Franchot Tone (as "Duke"). Produced by Lewis E. Gensler.
- (1930) Stage Play: Dishonored Lady. Drama. Written by Margaret Ayer Barnes and Edward Sheldon. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Empire Theatre: 4 Feb 1930- May 1930 (closing date unknown/127 performances). Cast: Fortunio Bonanova (as "Jose Moreno"), Katharine Cornell (as "Madeleine Cary"), Brenda Dahlen, Jimmy Daniels, Ruth Fallows, Paul Harvey (as "Lawrence Brennan"), Francis Lister, Edwin Morse, Lewis Sealy [credited as Lewis A. Sealy] (as "Sims") [final Broadway role], Harvey Stephens, Fred Tiden [credited as Fred L. Tiden] (as "Rufus Cary") [final Broadway role]. Produced by Gilbert Miller and Guthrie McClintic. Note: Filmed by Hunt Stromberg Productions [distributed by United Artists] as Dishonored Lady (1947).
- (1931) Stage Play: The Barretts of Wimpole Street. Comedy. Written by Rudolph Besier. Scenic and Costume Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Empire Theatre: 9 Feb 1931- Dec 1931 (closing date unknown/370 performances). Cast: Katharine Cornell, Brian Aherne (as "Robert Browning") [Broadway debut], Margaret Barker (as "Henrietta Moulton-Barrett"), John Buckler (as "Captain Surtees Cook"), Joyce Carey (as "Arabel Moulton-Barrett"), Leslie Denison (as "George Moulton-Barrett"), Vernon Downing (as "Alfred Moulton-Barrett"), Flush (as "Flush"), Brenda Forbes (as "Wilson"), John Halloran (as "Octavius Moulton-Barrett"), Basil Harvey (as "Henry Moulton-Barrett"), Oswald Marshall (as "Doctor Ford-Waterlow"), Dorothy Mathews (as "Bella Hedley"), George Riddell (as "Doctor Chambers"), John D. Seymour (as "Henry Bevan"), Frederick Voight (as "Charles Moulton-Barrett"), Charles Waldron (as "Edward Moulton-Barrett"), William Whitehead (as "Septimus Moulton-Barrett"). Produced by Katharine Cornell. Note: Filmed by MGM as The Barretts of Wimpole Street (1934) starring Norma Shearer and again as The Barretts of Wimpole Street (1957) starring Gemma Jones in the role originated by Katharine Cornell.
- (1931) Stage Play: Brief Moment. Comedy. Written by S.N. Behrman. Production Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Belasco Theatre: 9 Nov 1931- Feb 1932 (closing date unknown/129 performances). Cast: Francine Larrimore, Louis Calhern (as "Cass Worthing"), Robert Douglas, Paul Harvey, Boris Marshalov, Edwin Morse, Frances Rich, Helen Walpole (as "Maid"), Alexander Woollcott (as "Harold Sigrift"). Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1932) Stage Play: Distant Drums. Drama. Written by Dan Totheroh. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Belasco Theatre: 18 Jan 1932- Feb 1932 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Beulah Bondi (as "Mrs. Pike"), Mabel Colcord (as "Mrs. Shaw"), Richard Cubitt, Leo Curley, Edward Ellis (as "Quincey Briddleman"), Thomas B. Findlay, Eda Heinemann (as "Mrs. Sawyer"), Arthur Hohl (as "Harris Wolfhill"), James P. Houston, Charles Kuhn, William Lawson, Pauline Lord, Maurice McRae, Mary Michael, Kate Morgan, Edward Pawley, Edward Potter, John Ravold, Margherita Sargent. Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1932) Stage Play: The Truth About Blayds. Comedy/tragedy (revival). Written by A.A. Milne. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Belasco Theatre: 11 Apr 1932- May 1932 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: John Griggs, Rachel Hartzell, O.P. Heggie, Ernest Lawford, Pauline Lord, Effie Shannon, Helen Walpole. Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1932) Stage Play: Criminal at Large. Mystery. Written by Edgar Wallace. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Belasco Theatre: 10 Oct 1932- Feb 1933 (closing date unknown/161 performances). Cast: St. Clair Bayfield, Alexandra Carlisle, David Glassford, William Harrigan, Walter Kingsford, Robert Middlemass, Scott Moore, Perry Norman, Neville Percy, James Vincent, Geoffrey Wardwell, Emlyn Williams, Katherine Wilson. Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1932) Stage Play: Lucrece. Music by Deems Taylor. From "Le Viol De Lucrece" by André Obey. Translated by Thornton Wilder. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Belasco Theatre: 20 Dec 1932- Jan 1933 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Brian Aherne (as "Tarquin"), Katharine Cornell (as "Lucrece"), Joyce Carey (as "Emilia"), Kathleen Chase, Pedro de Cordoba (as "Collatine"), Brenda Forbes, Harriet Ingersoll, Robert Loraine (as "Second Narrator"), George Macready (as "Second Soldier Valerius"), Barry Mahool, Francis Moran, William J. Tannen, Charles R. Thorne, 'Charles Waldron (I)' (as "Brutus"), Blanche Yurka (as "First Narrator"). Produced by Katharine Cornell.
- (1933) Stage Play: Alien Corn. Written by Sidney Howard. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Belasco Theatre: 20 Feb 1933- May 1933 (closing date unknown/98 performances). Cast included: Luther Adler, E.J. Ballantine, Sig Ruman, James Vincent, Charles Waldron. Produced by Katharine Cornell (also starring as "Elsa Brandt").
- (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 (as "Mammy Winnie"), Ruth Boyd, Ida Brown, Reed Brown Jr., Alston Burleigh (as "Bap"), Helen Claire, Gage Clarke, Joseph Cotten (as "Dick Ashley"), Frances Creel, Leo Curley (as "Sam Orton"), 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 (as "Uncle Billy"), Henry Richards, William Richardson, James Waters, Crane Whitley (as "Joe Staley"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Miss Sally"), Frederic Worlock, Ray Yeates. Produced by Guthrie McClintic and Katharine Cornell. Note: Ms. Hopkins replaced ill Tallulah Bankhead during rehearsals.
- (1934) Stage Play: Yellow Jack. Written by Sidney Howard and Paul De Kruif. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Martin Beck Theatre: 6 Mar 1934- May 1934 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Eddie Acuff, Wylie Adams, Jack Carr, Eduardo Ciannelli, Francis Compton, Charles Gerard, Lloyd Gough, Harold Hoffat, Colin Hunter, Bernard Jukes, Whitford Kane (as "Dr. Carlos Finlay"), Robert Keith, Geoffrey Kerr, Sam Levene, Richie Ling (as "Col. Tory"), Barton MacLane (as "James Carroll") [final Broadway appearance], Myron McCormick (as "Brinkerhof"), John Miltern (as "Walter Reed"), Millard Mitchell (as "William H. Dean, Pvt., U.S.A."), Jock Munro, George Nash (as "William Crawford Gorgas, Major, M.C., U.S.A."), Robert Shayne (as "Harkness/Major Cartwright"), James Stewart (as "O'Hara"), Frank Stringfellow, Clyde Walters, Katherine Wilson (as "Miss Blake, Special Nurse in Charge of the Yellow Fever Ward"). Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1934) Stage Play: Divided by Three. Written by Margaret Leech and Beatrice Kaufmann. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 2 Oct 1934- Oct 1934 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Judith Anderson, Hancey Castle, Arthur Chatterdon, Gertrude Davis, Hunter Gardner, Tenen Holtz, Hedda Hopper, Vera Hurst, James Rennie, James Stewart. Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1934) Stage Play: Romeo and Juliet. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Adapted by Katharine Cornell. Choreographed by Martha Graham. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Martin Beck Theatre: 20 Dec 1934- Feb 1935 (closing date unknown/77 performances). Cast: Brian Aherne (as "Mercutio, kinsman to the prince and friend to Romeo"), Edith Allaire, Gilmore Bush (as "Ensemble"), Robert Champlain (as "Gregory, servant to Capulet"), Arthur Chatterdon [credited as Arthur Chatterton] (as "An Old Man, of the Capulet family/Apothecary"), Katharine Cornell (as "Juliet, daughter to Capulet"), Margaret Craven (as "Ensemble"), Jacqueline deWit (as "Ensemble") [Broadway debut], Angus Duncan (as "Guard"), John Emery (as "Benvolio, nephew to Montague and friend to Romeo"), Edith Evans (as "Nurse to Juliet"), Reynolds Evans (as "Escalus, prince of Verona"), Brenda Forbes (as "Lady Montague, wife to Montague"), John Gordon Gage (as "Ensemble"), Franklin Gray (as "Balthasar, servant to Romeo"), William Hopper(as "Ensemble"), Lois Jameson(as "Ensemble"), Agnete Johannson (as "Ensemble"), Paul Julian (as "Friar John, a Franciscan"), George Macready (as "Paris, a young nobleman, kinsman to the prince"), Ruth March (as "Ensemble"), Irby Marshall, Albert McCleery (as "Ensemble"), John Miltern (as "Montague"), Irving Morrow, Ralph Nelson, Moroni Olsen (as "Capulet"), Basil Rathbone (as "Romeo, son of Montague"), Pamela Simpson (as "Ensemble"), Charles R. Thorne (as "Ensemble"), David Vivian (as "Peter, servant to Juliet's nurse"), Charles Waldron (as "Friar Laurence, a Franciscan"), Orson Welles (as "Tybalt, nephew to Lady Capulet/Chorus") [Broadway debut]. Produced by Katharine Cornell.
- (1935) Stage Play: The Old Maid. Drama. Written by Zoe Akins. From a novel by Edith Wharton. Scenic Design by Stewart Chaney. Costume Design by Stewart Chaney. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Empire Theatre: 7 Jan 1935- Sep 1935 (closing date unknown/305 performances). Cast: Judith Anderson (as "Delia Lovell, later Mrs. James Ralson"), Helen Menken (as "Charlotte Lovell, Delia's cousin"), Margaret Anderson (as "Tina"), John Cromwell (as "Lanning Halsey"), Margaret Dale (as "Mrs. Mingott"), Dona Earl (as "Nora"), Hope Landin, Yvonne Mann, George Nash (as " Dr. Lanskell"), Gail Reade (as "Servant"), Mary Ricard, Warren Trent (as "John Halsey, Dee's husband"), Frederick Voight (as "James Ralston"), Robert Wallsten (as "Joseph Ralston"), Florence Williams (as "Dee, Delia's daughter"). Replacement actors: Alex Courtney (as "Lanning Halsey"), Diana Croye (as "Mrs. Jennie Meade"), Jackie Grimes (as "Tommy"), Luise G. Huntington (as "Bridget"), Jessie Royce Landis (as "Delia Lovell, later Mrs. James Ralson"), Marjorie Lord (as "Tina"), Robert Lowes (as "Joseph Ralston"), Gloria Mann (as "Susan"), Yvonne Mann (as "Young Tina"), Gretchen Rickel (as "Dee, Delia's daughter"), Charles Wiley Jr. (as "Benny"), Donald Willson (as "John Halsey, Dee's husband"). Produced by Harry Moses. Note: Filmed by Warner Bros. as The Old Maid (1939).
- (1935) Stage Play: The Barretts of Wimpole Street. Comedy (revival). Written by Rudolph Besier. Scenic Design and Costume Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Martin Beck Theatre: 25 Feb 1935- Mar 1935 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Brian Aherne (as "Robert Browning"), Gilmore Bush, Joyce Carey, Robert Champlain, Katharine Cornell (as "Elizabeth Barrett Moulton-Barrett"), John Emery (as "Capt. Surtees Cook"), Reynolds Evans (as "Dr. Ford-Waterlow"), Flush, Benda Forbes, Margalo Gillmore (as "Henrietta Moulton-Barrett"), John Gordon-Gage, John Hoyt (as "Henry Bevan") [credited as John Hoysradt], Burgess Meredith (as "Octavius Moulton-Barrett"), Irving Morrow, Moroni Olsen (as "Dr. Chambers"), Margot Stevenson (as "Bella Hedley"), David Vivian, Charles Waldron (as "Edward Moulton-Barrett"). Produced by Katharine Cornell.
- (1935) Stage Play: Flowers of the Forest. Drama. Written by John Van Druten. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Auriol Lee. Martin Beck Theatre: 8 Apr 1935- May 1935 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Alice Belmore (billed as Alice Belmore Cliffe), Leslie Bingham, Arthur Chatterdon (as "Matheson"), Katharine Cornell (as "Naomi Jacklin"), John Emery (as "Thomas Lindsay"), Brenda Forbes, Margalo Gillmore (as "Mercia Huntbach"), Moffat Johnston (as "Lewis Jacklin"), Burgess Meredith (as "Leonard Dobie"), Charles Waldron (as "Rev. Percy Huntbach"), Hugh Williams. Produced by Katharine Cornell.
- (1935) Stage Play: Winterset. Tragedy. Written by Maxwell Anderson. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Martin Beck Theatre: 25 Sep 1935- Mar 1936 (closing date unknown/195 performances). Cast: Richard Bennett, Abner Biberman (as "Radical"), Anthony Blair, Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Trock"), Fernanda Eliscu (as "Piny") [final Broadway role], Stanley Gould, Ruth Hammond, Theodore Hecht, Walter Holbrook (as "Young Man"), Harold Johnsrud, Eva Langbord (as "1st Girl"), Margo (as "Miriamne"), Harold Martin, Burgess Meredith (as "Mio"), John Philliber (as "Hobo"), Billy Quinn, Morton Stevens (as "Lucio/St. John Terrell), Anatol Winogradoff (as "Esdras"). Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1935) Stage Play: Parnell. Historical drama. Written by Elsie T. Schauffler [ealiest Broadway credit]. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 11 Nov 1935- Feb 1936 (closing date unknown/99 performances). Cast: Gordon Burby (as "The O'Gorman Mahon"), Phyllis Connard, George Curzon, John Emery (as "Captain William Henry O'Shea"), Alexander Frank (as "Gladstone"), Walter Holbrook (as "Montagu Harrison"), Joseph Holland (as "Timothy Healy"), Barry Kelly (as "1st Leader"), Edward MacNamara (as "Michael Davitt"), Barry Macollum (as "Thomas Murphy"), Ruth Matteson (as "Mrs. Steele"), Winston O'Keefe (as "3rd Leader"), Clement O'Loghlen (as "John Redmond"), Margaret Rawlings (as "Katharine O'Shea"), Harry Redding (as "Mr. Stanley"), Effie Shannon (as "Mrs. Benjamin Wood"), Charles Trexler (as "2nd Leader"), Ruth Yorke (as "Phyllis"). Produced by Robinson Smith and Frederick W. Ayer. Note: Play sold to MGM as a Clark Gable vehicle, Parnell (1937). It became the biggest flop in that studio's history to date (possibly excluding the troubled inherited production of Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925), whose costs were not revealed). Gable regarded it as his worst film and it nearly led to his refusing Gone with the Wind (1939).
- (1935) Stage Play: Romeo and Juliet. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Choreographed by Martha Graham. Scenic Design and Costume Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Martin Beck Theatre: 23 Dec 1935- Jan 1936 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Evelyn Abbott, Carl Allan, Albert Allen, Robert Champlain, Arthur Chatterdon (as "Montague"), John Cornell, Katharine Cornell (as "Juliet, daughter to Capulet"), John Cromwell (as "Paris, a young nobleman, kinsman to the prince"), Charles Dalton, Shelton Earp, Maurice Evans (as "Romeo, son of Montague"), Reynolds Evans (as "Escalus, prince of Verona"), Charlotte Fitch, Anne Froelick, Richard Graham, Lois Jameson, Alice John, Ruth March, Harriott Marshall, Irby Marshall (as "Lady Capulet, wife to Capulet"), Gabrielle Morgan, Irving Morrow, David Orrick, Tyrone Power (as "Benvolio, nephew to Montague and friend to Romeo"), Florence Reed, Ralph Richardson (as "Mercutio, kinsman to the prince and friend to Romeo" and "Chorus"), Joseph Roeder, William Roehrick, Hudson Shotwell, Kurt Steinbart, Fred Thompson, David Vivian, Charles Waldron (as "Friar Laurence"). Produced by Katharine Cornell.
- (1936) Stage Play: Ethan Frome. Written by Owen Davis and Donald Davis. Based on the novel by Edith Wharton. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Costume Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. National Theatre: 21 Jan 1936- 5 May 1936 (120 performances). Cast: Ruth Gordon (as "Mattie Silver"), Pauline Lord (as "Zenobia Frome"), Raymond Massey (as "Ethan Frome"), Oliver Barbour (as "A Young Man"), Catherine Careyas (as "Citizen of Starkfield"), Virginia Chew (as "Citizen of Starkfield"), Tom Ewell (as "Dennis Eady"), Marie Falls, Virginia Frank (as "Citizen of Starkfield"), Beatrice Graham (as "Citizen of Starkfield"), W. Dana Hardwick (as "Ned Hale"), Charles Henderson (as "Ed Varnum"), Eddie James (as "Citizen of Starkfield"), Pam Lawrence (as "Citizen of Starkfield"), Evelyn Monte (as "Citizen of Starkfield"), Ella Morrice (as "Citizen of Starkfield"), William Morris (as "Citizen of Starkfield"), George Parkes, Francis Pierlot (as "Jotham"), Arthur Rosen (as "Citizen of Starkfield"), Almira Sessions, Tom Tempest (as "Citizen of Starkfield"), Sylvia Ward (as "Ruth Varnum"), Jessie Wilson (as "Citizen of Starkfield"), John Winthrop (as "Ruth Varnum"). Produced by Max Gordon.
- (1936) Stage Play: Saint Joan. Drama (revival). Written by George Bernard Shaw. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Martin Beck Theatre: 9 Mar 1936- May 1936 (closing date unknown/89 performances). Cast: Brian Aherne (as "Richard de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick"), A.S. 'Pop' Byron (as "The Inquisitor"), Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Peter Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais"), Katharine Cornell (as "Joan"), George Coulouris (as "John de Stogumber"), Maurice Evans (as "The Dauphin later, Charles VII of France"), Charles Waldron (as "The Archbishop of Rheims"), Hilde Albers, Robert Champlain, Arthur Chatterton, John Cromwell (as "Brother Martin Ladvenu"), Charles Dalton, Anne Froelick, Richard Graham, Joseph Holland, Lois Jameson, Barry Kelly, Ruth March, Walter Marquiss, Irving Morrow, David Orrick, Tyrone Power (as "Bertrand de Poulengey"), William Roehrick, Edward Ryan, Hudson Shortwell, Kent Smith (as "Dunois"), Kurt Steinbart, Fred Thompson, David Vivian. Produced by Katharine Cornell. Note: One of Power's first major stage roles.
- (1936) Stage Play: Parnell. Historical drama (revival). Written by Elsie T. Schauffler. Staged by Robinson Smith and Frederick Ayer. Directed by Robinson Smith and Frederick Ayer. 48th Street Theatre: 4 May 1936- Jun 1936 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Edith Barrett, Hugh Bigelow, Gordon Burby, Gage Clarke, Phyllis Connard, Enid Cooper, John Emery (as "Captain William Henry O'Shea"), Alexander Frank, Whitford Kane (as "Michael Davitt"), Denis King (as "Parnell"), Barry Macollum, Winston O'Keefe (as "Timothy Healy"), Clement O'Loghlen, Harry Redding, Effie Shannon (as "Mrs. Benjamin Wood"), William Swetland (as "3rd Leader"), Charles Trexler. Produced by Pierce Power-Waters. Note: Filmed by MGM as Parnell (1937) as a Clark Gable vehicle.
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