- (1914 - 1955) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1914) Stage Play: Consequences. Written by H.F. Rubinstein. Comedy Theatre: 1 Oct 1914- Nov 1914 (closing date unknown/36 performances). Cast: Horace Braham (Broadway debut), Elliott Dexter, Hubert Druce, Winifred Harris, Fania Marinoff, Gaston Mervale, Leonard Mudie, Saba Raleigh, Mary Servoss. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1915) Stage Play: Androcles and the Lion. Comedy. Written by George Bernard Shaw. Wallack's Theatre: 27 Jan 1915- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Eric Blind, Horace Braham, Lionel Braham, Cecil Cameron, Kate Carlyon, Ernest Cossart (as "Centurian"), Walter Creighton, Phil Dwyer (as "Lion"), Gerald Hamer, O.P. Heggie as "Androcles"), Edgar Kent, Wright Kramer, Arnold Lucy, Ian Maclaren, Hugh MacRae, Lillah McCarthy. Produced by Harley Granville-Barker.
- (1915) Stage Play: The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife. Written by Anatole France. Scenic Design by Robert Edmond Jones. Wallack's Theatre: 27 Jan 1915- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Edmund Banks, Ruby Blythe, Horace Braham, Lionel Braham, Cecil Cameron, George Carr, Ernest Cossart, Gerald Hamer, O.P. Heggie, Isabel Jeans, Edgar Kent, Eva Leonard Boyne, Manice Lewis, Arnold Lucy, Lillah McCarthy, Hugh McRae.
- (1915) Stage Play: A Midsummer Night's Dream. Comedy (revival). Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Harley Granville-Barker. Wallack's Theatre: 16 Feb 1915- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Mary Barton (as "Hippolyta"), Eric Blind (as "Theseus"), Horace Braham (as "Oberon"), Lionel Braham (as "Tom Snout, A tinker"), Cecil Cameron (as "Puck/Robin Goodfellow"), George Carr (as "Snug, A joiner"), Ernest Cossart (as "Nick Bottom, A weaver"), Valerie Cossart (as "Cobweb"), Walter Creighton (as "Lysander"), Gerald Hamer (as "Francis Flute, A bellows-mender"), O.P. Heggie (as "Peter Quince, A carpenter"), Isabel Jeans (as "Titania"), Edgar Kent (as "Egeus"), Bertha Kirstein (as "Mustardseed"), Wright Kramer (as "Philostrate"), Eva Leonard Boyne (as "Hermia, Daughter of Egeus"), Arnold Lucy (as "Robin Starveling, A tailor"), Ian Maclaren (as "Demetrius"), Lillah McCarthy (as "Helena"), Arthur Oppenheim (as "Moth"), Audrey Ridgewell (as "Peaseblossom"), Edward Roberts (as "Fairy").
- (1915) Stage Play: The Mark of the Beast.
- (1916) Stage Play: Little Lady in Blue. Written by Horace Hodges and T. Wigney Percyval. Belasco Theatre: 21 Dec 1916- Mar 1917 (closing date unknown/100 performances). Cast: A.G. Andrews, Lucy Beaumont, Horace Braham, Charles Garry, George Giddens, Frederick Graham, Harry Holiday, Jerome Patrick, Eleanor Pendleton, Adrian H. Rosely, Roland Rushton, Carl Sauerman, Frances Starr. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1919) Stage Play: The Gold Diggers. Comedy.
- (1922) Stage Play: Voltaire. Comedy/romance. Written by Leila Taylor and Gertrude Purcell. Plymouth Theatre: 21 Mar 1922- Mar 1922 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Leslie Austen (as "Marquis de Villette"), Horace Braham (as "Le Duc de Navailles"), Howard Claney (as "Wagniere"), Arnold Daly (as "Francois Marie Arouet de Voltaire"), Marguerite Forrest (as "Marie Corneille"), Lionel Hogarth(as "Jean Le Rond d'Alembert"), George Le Guerre (as "Moisnel"), Carlotta Monterey (as "Mlle. Clairon"), John S. O'Brien (as "Father Adam"), Marcel Rousseau (as "Janvier"), Frederick Truesdell (as "Aristide Freron"), Jane Wheatley (as "Mme. Denis"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Merchant of Venice. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by David Belasco. Lyceum Theatre: 21 Dec 1922- 6 Mar 1923 (92 performances). Cast: Julia Adler (as "Jessica, Shylock's daughter"), A.E. Anson (as "Duke of Venice"), Horace Braham (as "Lorenzo, gentleman of Venice"), Henry Brown (as "Page"), Albert Bruning (as "Tubal, an associate of Shylock"), Edward Crandall (as "Leonardo, servant to Bassanio"), Ward DeWolfe (as "Jester"), Mary Ellis (as "Nerissa, Portia's waiting gentle-woman") [Broadway debut], Reginald Goode (as "Solanio, friend of Antonio"), Herbert Grimwood (as "Prince of Morocco"), Charles Harbury (as "Balthasar, servant to Portia"), Nick Long (as "Court Clerk"), Ian Maclaren (as "Antonio, a merchant of Venice"), Fuller Mellish (as "Old Gobbo, Launcelot's father"), Philip Merivale (as "Bassanio, friend of Antonio"), W.I. Percival (as "Gratiano, gentleman of Venice"), Herbert Ranson (as "Salarino, friend of Antonio"), Mary Servoss (as "Portia, an heiress in Belmont"), Morris Strassberg (as "Chus"), Percival Vivian (as "Launcelot Gobbo, servant to Shylock"), David Warfield (as "Shylock, a Jewish moneylender"), Edward H. Wever (as "Stephano, servant to Portia"). Produced by David Belasco.
- (1923) Stage Play: Casanova. Drama.
- (1924) Stage Play: Cheaper to Marry.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Mask and the Face. Comedy. Written by C.B. Fernald, adapted from a story by Luigi Chiarelli. Bijou Theatre: 10 Sep 1924- Sep 1924 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Horace Braham (as "Georges Almaire"), Maud Durand (as "Teresa"), Austin Fairman (as "Franco Spina"), William Faversham (as "Count Mario Grazio"), Charles Hampden (as "Judge Ugo Praga"), Lumsden Hare (as "Pier Zanotti"), Beatrice Miles (as "Wanda Borelli"), Robert Montgomery [Broadway debut], Frederic Monti (as "Luigi Bunghi"), John Robert (as "A Boy"), Adele Thatcher-Shreve (as "A Girl"), H. Ashton Tonge (as "Andrea"), Edith Campbell (as "Walker Delia Fambri"), Catherine Willard (as "Savina Grazia"), Ann Winston (as "Nina Zanotti"). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Rat. Written by Ivor Novello and Constance Collier. Directed by Earl Carroll. New Colonial Theatre: 10 Feb 1925- May 1925 (closing date unknown/126 performances). Cast: Basil Allis, Suzanne Bennett, Horace Braham (as "Pierre Boucheron," AKA: "The Rat"), Ruth Chandler, C.H. Croker-King, Jeanne Dare, Dana Desboro, Jack de Fay, Florence Gerald, Teddie Gerard, Bryant Higgins, Warren Hill, Elizabeth Howard, C. Barry Kenton, Hilda Lappner, Wallace McCutcheon, George McKay, Jack Motte, Frances Nanine, Roberta Pierre, Katherine Revner, Chris Scaife, Helen Sinnott, Cyrus Staehle, Grace Stafford, Lucille Upton, Jeanne Wardley. Produced by Earl Carroll.
- (1925) Stage Play: Made in America. Written by M.H. Gulesian and Mrs. M.H. Gulesian. Directed by John Ravold. Cort Theatre: 14 Oct 1925- Dec 1925 (closing date unknown/75 performances). Cast: Emory Blunkall (as "O'Brien"), Horace Braham (as "Hagop Turian"), Jane Chapin (as "Mildred Lawrence"), G. Maude Cleveland (as "Zabell Turian"), Brandon Evans (as "Mr. Lawrence"), Viola Fortescue (as "Hattie Lawrence"), Frank Frayne (as "Jenkins"), A.J. Herbert (as "Richard Harrison"), Rosalie Herrup (as "Veedah Turian"), Carl Josef (as "Leon Turian"), Earle Larimore (as "Bill Pickering"), Paul McGrath (as "Larkin"), Roy Purviance (as "Sam Howard"), William Tennyson (as "Talaat").
- (1926) Stage Play: Find Daddy. Farce. Written by Tadema Bussiere. Directed by Rollo Lloyd. Ritz Theatre: 8 Mar 1926- Mar 1926 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Mabel Acker (as "Vera Morgan"), Peggy Allenby (as "Ethel Wood"), Horace Braham (as "Jerry Todd"), Herbert Farjeon [credited as Hubert Farjeon] (as "Chauffeur"), Charles Irwin (as "Russell Morgan") [Broadway debut], Paul Kelly (as "Larry Wood"), Louis Kimball (as "Serge Street"), 'Enid Markey' (as "Jane Potter"), Dorothy Peterson (as "Beth Todd"), Ross Savilla (as "Motorcycle Officer"). Produced by W.I. Percival.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Bells.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Squall. Drama.
- (1927) Stage Play: Caste. Written by Cosmo Hamilton. Directed by Campbell Gullan. Mansfield Theatre: 23 Dec 1927- Dec 1927 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: John Astley, Philip Bamshaw, Horace Braham (as "Max Lorbenstein"), Albert Bruning (as "Max Lorbenstein"), Michel De Polo, Halliwell Hobbes, Winifred Kingston, Anderson Lawyer, Nancie B. Marsland, Vivian Martin, Reginald Mason (as "Col. Erskine Dalbeatie Farquhar, of the Late Canadian Highlanders"), Vera Neilson, Thomas Wigney Percyval (as "Reginald Walter Willett"), Gordon Richards, Jean Shelby, Hilda Spong (as "La Duchess De Bercy"). Produced by Joe Weber.
- (1928) Stage Play: Mrs. Dane's Defense. Drama (revival).
- (1928) Stage Play: Sherlock Holmes [Being a hitherto unpublished episode in the career of the great detective and showing his connection with the STRANGE CASE OF MISS FAULKNER]. Drama (revival). Written by William Gillette and Arthur Conan Doyle. Directed by Clifford Brook. Cast: George Alison (as "Sir Edward Leighton"), Horace Braham (as "Sidney Prince"), J.H. Brewer (as "Count Von Stahlburg"), Jennie A. Eustace (as "Mrs. Faulkner"), Gene Raymond [credited as Raymond Guion] (as "Billy"), Philip Heege (as "John Forman"), Edgar Henning (as "Parsons"), Julia Hoyt (as "Madge Larrabee"), Frank Keenan (as "Professor Moriarty") [final Broadway role], Robert Linden (as "John"), John Litel [erroneously credited as John Littell] (as "Thomas Leary"), Stanley Logan (as "Doctor Watson"), Vivian Martin (as "Alice Faulkner"), Edward E. Rose (as "Jim Craigin"), Fritzi Scheff (as "Thérèse Fred Tiden [credited as Fred L. Tiden] (as "James Larrabee"), Ralph Vincent (as "Lightfoot" McTague"), Robert Warwick (as "Sherlock Holmes"), H. Conway Wingfield (as "Alfred Bassick"). Produced by Chamberlain Brown Cosmopolitan Artists.
- (1928) Stage Play: She Stoops to Conquer. Comedy (revival). Written by Oliver Goldsmith. Directed by William Seymour. Erlanger's Theatre: 14 May 1928- May 1928 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Kate Hardcastle"), Horace Braham (as "George Hastings"), Marie Carroll (as "A Maid"), Mrs. Leslie Carter (as "Mrs. Hardcastle"), Patricia Collinge (as "Constance Neville"), Thomas Coffin Cooke (as "Stingo"), Lawrence D'Rosay (as "Sir Charles Marlow"), Lyn Harding (as "Squire Hardcastle"), O.P. Heggie (as "Diggory"), Glenn Hunter (as "Tony Lumpkin"), Suzanne Lawrance (as "A Bar-Maid"), William Lorenz (as "Aminadab"), John D. Saymour (as "Mat Muggins"), Wilfrid Seagram (as "Young Marlow"), George Tawde (as "Jeremy/Slang"), Harold Thomas (as "Tom Twist"). Produced by George C. Tyler.
- (1928) Stage Play: Relations. Comedy/drama.
- (1928) Stage Play: Gods of the Lightning. Drama. Written by Maxwell Anderson and Harold Hickerson. Directed by Hamilton MacFadden. Little Theatre,: 24 Oct 1928- Nov 1928 (closing date unknown/29 performances). Cast: Morris Ankrum (as "Spiker"), Jules Artfield (as "Heine"), Charles Bickford (as "Macready"), Harry Bliven (as "Bartlett"), Horace Braham (as "Capraro"), Robert Brister (as "Salter"), Leo Bulgakov (as "Suvorin"), Maynard Burgess (as "Lubin"), Del Cleveland (as "Assistant to the District Attorney"), Samuel Coit (as "Sowerby"), Eva Condon (as "Mrs. Lubin"), Edward Cutler (as "Clerk of the Court"), Willard Dashiell (as "Haslet"), Henry Engel (as "Sheriff Henry"), Jules Ferrar (as "Bauer"), Benjamin Fesseden (as "Policeman"), Moss Fleisig (as "Jerusalem Slim"), John R. Hamilton (as "Gluckstein"), Thomas Kelly (as "Andy"), Barton MacLane (as "Ward"), Arthur Pederson (as "Pete"), Molly Ricardel (as "Salvation Lassie"), Lloyd Sabine (as "Police Sergeant"), Sylvia Sidney (as "Rosalie"), Sam Silverbush (as "Ike"), Ian Wolfe (as "Milkin"), Douglas Wood. Produced by Hamilton MacFadden and Kellogg Gary.
- (1929) Stage Play: Street Scene. Written by Elmer Rice. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Elmer Rice. Playhouse Theatre: 10 Jan 1929- Jun 1930 (closing date unknown/601 performances). Cast: Astrid Allwyn (as "College Girl/Nursemaid"), Joseph Baird, Beulah Bondi (as "Emma Jones"), Samuel S. Bonnell (as "Ice Man/Interne/Passer-By"), Horace Braham (as "Samuel Kaplan"), Hilda Bruce (as "Olga Olsen") [Broadway debut], Leo Bulgakov (as "Abraham Kaplan"), John Cambridge, Joe Cogert, Josephine Coghlan, Jane Corcoran, Glenn Coulter, John Crump, Edward Downes, Mary Emerson, Otto Frederick, Frederica Going, Francis F. Golden, Elizabeth Goodyear, Millicent Green (as "Mae Jones"), Russell Griffin, Emily Hamill, George Humbert, Ellsworth Jones, John Kelly, Robert Kelly, Ann Kostant [credited as Anna Kostant], Joseph Lee, Rose Lerner, Alexander Lewis, Herbert Lindholm, Robert Mack, T.H. Manning, Ed A. McHugh, Matt McHugh (as "Vincent Jones"), Carl C. Milter, Nelly Neil, Erin O'Brien-Moore, Anthony Pawley, Edward Pawley, John Qualen (as "Carl Olsen") [Broadway debut], Ruth Randolph, Mary Servoss (as "Anna Moran"), Jean Sidney, Eileen Smith, Jean Sydney, Benn Trivers, Conway Washburne, Eleanor Wesselhoeft, Ralph Willard. Replacement actors: Bobby Jordan (as "Charlie Hildebrand") [Broadway debut], Sam Levene (as "Forrest") [from ? Jun 1930- ?]. Produced by William A. Brady Ltd. Note: Filmed by The Samuel Goldwyn Company/Feature Productions [distributed by United Artists] as Street Scene (1931).
- (1930) Stage Play: Scarlet Sister Mary. Drama. Written by Daniel Reed. Based on the novel by Julia Peterkin. Directed by E.M. Blyth. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 25 Nov 1930- Dec 1930 (closing ate unknown/24 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore (as "Sister Mary, Si May-e"), Sylvia Allen (as "The Heaven Gate Singers"), Daniel Bagnell (as "Brer Dee, an old churchman"), Horace Braham (as "Budda Ben, Hannah's son"), Alan Campbell (as "Brunton"), Alice Cannon (as "The Heaven Gate Singers"), Joseph Christian (as "The Heaven Gate Singers"), Burke Clarke (as "Luke"), Blanche Collins (as "Tussie"), Ethel Colt (as "Seraphine"), Wilbur Cox (as "Gadsen"), Ted de Corsia (as "Big Boy at age 30"), Marcel Dill (as "Reverend Duncan, Thatcher"), Helen Dowdy (as "The Heaven Gate Singers"), Toussaint Duers (as "The Heaven Gate Singers"), Herbert Gentry (as "Big Boy, Andrew's son"), Walter Gilbert (as "July, twin brother"), Sam Gray (as "The Heaven Gate Singers"), Corrine Harris (as "Flower Girl"), Frank Jackson (as "The Heaven Gate Singers"), Leo Kennedy (as "Cousin Andrew, a deacon"), William B. Mack (as "Daddy Cudjoe"), Marjorie Main (as "Gracey"), Georgie Drew Mendum (as "Doll, sister of June and July"), Denise Morris (as "Tressie"), Bertha Powell The Heaven Gate Singers"), Charles Quigley (as "Wade"), William Raymond (as "The Heaven Gate Singers") [final Broadway role], Albert Ridge (as "Unex"), Mabel Ridley (as "The Heaven Gate Singers"), John Roseleigh (as "June/Twin brother"), Anita Rothe (as "Mona"), Erma Smith (as "Flower Girl"), Julia Smith (as "Flower Girl"), Malcolm Soltan (as "Unex at age 20"), Beatrice Terry (as "Maum Hannah"), Estelle Winwood (as "Cinder"). Produced by Lee Shubert.
- (1931) Stage Play: The Left Bank. Drama. Written by Elmer Rice. Scenic Design by Aline Bernstein. Directed by Elmer Rice. Little Theatre: 5 Oct 1931- May 1932 (closing date unknown/242 performances). Cast: Katherine Alexander (as "Claire Shelby"), Murray Alper (as "Joe Klein"), A.L. Bartolot (as "Gustave Jensen"), Horace Braham(as "John Shelby"), Janet Cool, M. Dorothy Day, Edward Downes, Millicent Green (as "Susie Lynde"), Fred Herrick (as "Charlie Miller"), Alfred Hesse (as "Claude"), Rose Lerner, Donald MacDonald, Merle Maddern (as "Lillian Garfield"), Tamara Nicoll, Cledge Roberts. Produced by Elmer Rice.
- (1932) Stage Play: The Girl Outside.
- (1933) Stage Play: A Church Mouse. Comedy (revival).
- (1933) Stage Play: Yoshe Kalb. Drama.
- (1934) Stage Play: Theodora, The Quean. Comedy. Written by Jo Milward and J. Kirby Hawks [final Broadway credit]. Directed by Jo Graham. Forrest Theatre: 31 Jan 1931- Feb 1931 (closing date unknown/5 performances). Cast: Lina Abarbanell (as "Klytemnestra"), Lester Alden (as "Father Sebastian"), Robert Anderson (as "Guard"), Horace Braham (as "Hypatius"), Raymond Bramley (as "Marcus"), Julia Colin (as "Cici"), Paul Everton (as "Belisarius"), Tom Fadden (as "Tavianus"), Harriet Freeborn (as "Ahgrah"), Carla Gloer (as "Antonina"), Hitous Gray (as "Crier"), Rex Ingram (as "Hatu") [Broadway debut], Raymond Jones (as "Paul"), Sarat Lahiri (as "Chandra"), Elena Miramova (as "Theodora"), Minor Watson (as "Justinian"). Produced by Jo Graham.
- (1934) Stage Play: The Shatter'd Lamp.
- (1934) Stage Play: Too Many Boats. Drama. Written by Owen Davis. Based on the novel by Charles L. Clifford. Directed by William A. Brady. Playhouse Theatre: 11 Sep 1934- Sep 1934 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Ruth Abbott (as "Betty Withers"), Richard Bond (as "Juan"), Horace Braham (as "Major Von Kurtz"), Eleazer Brice (as "Private Tousant Greer"), Alston Burleigh (as "Captain Chaplain Randolph"), A.B. Comatheire (as "Private Brant"), John Davis (as "Private Joe Grey"), Judith Barrett [credited as Nancy Dover] (as "Barbara Lake") [Broadway debut], James Dunmore (as "Private Paul Simon"), Ernest Evans (as "Private George Acorne"), John Ferguson (as "Private John Smith"), Helen Flint (as "Thelma Von Kurtz"), Ruth Gates (as "Mrs. Hart"), Shirley Gibbs (as "Nancy Carter"), James Gill (as "Private Peter Lee"), Jesse Gines (as "Sergeant Robert Washington"), Earl Goff (as "Private Franklin"), Mitchell Harris (as "Colonel Hart"), Arnie Howard (as "Private Franklin Southern"), Charles Kennedy (as "Lt. Col. Mathewson"), Earle Larrimore [credited as Earle Larimore] (as "Captain "Cork" Coates"), Herman Lynn (as "Private Louie Wadlin"), Eric Mansfield (as "Lieutenant Willard"), John Marriott (as "1st Sergeant Warren"), Joseph Martin (as "Private Jeff Woodbury"), Donald McClelland (as "Captain Withers"), Mack McCoy (as "Private Isiah Crowle"), Henderson Muziel (as "Private Peter Lazarus"), Brandon Peters (as "Lt. Col. Decker"), Hayes Prior (as "Private Grumby"), John Remy (as "Private Anthony Caesar"), Elmore Sanders (as "Private Marc Samson"), Frank Shannon (as "Lieutenant Shard"), William Smith (as "Private Thomas Jackson"), Charles Stewart (as "Sentry No. 5"), Al Stokes (as "Private Dinkin"), Louis Teague (as "Private Joe Tompkins"), Anne Teeman (as "Julie Shaw"), Joseph Tiggs (as "Private Jeff Wendel"), Rudolph Toombs (as "Corporal Murphy"), Percy Verwayne (as "Corporal Rivins"), Henry Whittemore (as "Major Hunt"), Frank Williams (as "Private Elisah Cunningham"), Harry Worth (as "Captain Brannan"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1940) Stage Play: Journey to Jerusalem. Drama.
- (1942) Stage Play: R.U.R. Drama (revival).
- (1946) Stage Play: Antigone. Tragedy.
- (1947) Stage Play: Bathsheba. Written by Jacques Deval. Directed by Coby Ruskin. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 26 Mar 1947- 19 Apr 1947 (29 performances). Cast: Phil Arthur (as "Uriah"), Martin Ashe (as "Gershoum"), Horace Braham (as "Ghazil"), Barbara Brooks (as "Bahila"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Nathan"), Paul Donah (as "Manasseh"), Vega Keane (as "Lady-in-Waiting"), Pamela Kellino (as "Bathsheba"), Rusty Lane (as "Joab"), James Mason (as "David"), Jane Middleton (as "Micale"), Hildy Parks (as "Shari"), Lenka Peterson (as "Orphie"), Leonore Rae (as "Niziah"), Patricia Robbins (as "Sourab"), Maud Scheerer (as "Hanoufati"), Michael Sivy (as "Obram"), Gloria Swanson, Joseph Tomes (as "Agreb"), Carleton Young (as "Hiram"), Blanche Zohar (as "Aroussia"). Produced by Maximilian Becker and Lee K. Holland. Produced in association with Sylvia Friedlander.
- (1950) Stage Play: Julius Caesar. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Scenic Design and Lighting Design by Ralph Alswang. Directed by Dan Levin. Arena Theatre: 20 Jul 1950- 15 Jul 1950 (31 performances). Cast: Rafael Arguelles (as "Citizen"), Larry Berry (as "Citizen"), Horace Braham (as "Julius Caesar"), Sarah Burton (as "Calpurnia"), Michael Davis (as "Citizen"), Tony Dowling (as "Decius Brutus"), Alan Dreeben (as "Artemidorus"), Marshall Flaum (as "Citizen") [Broadway debut], John Garrison (as "Citizen"), John Glendinning (as "Trebonius"), Ralph Habberstad (as "Citizen"), Jerry Harvey (as "Citizen"), Joseph Holland (as "Marcus Brutus"), Stephen Joyce (as "Citizen"), Roy Kauffmann (as "Citizen"), Berry Kroeger (as "Casca"), Emily Lawrence (as "Portia"), Allan Lewis (as "Citizen"), James McLaughlin (as "Citizen"), Moses Moses (as "Citizen"), William Newey (as "Citizen"), Martin Newman (as "Lucius"), Michael Occhipinti (as "Citizen"), Nishan Parlakian (as "Citizen"), Basil Rathbone (as "Cassius"), Herbert Ratner (as "Cinna"), Kurt Richards (as "Octavius Caesar"), Winston Ross (as "Metellus Cimber"), Alfred Ryder (as "Marc Antony"), Milton Selzer (as "Messala"), Michael Thorne (as "Citizen"), Charles Vocalis (as "Servant To Antony"), Richard Wilder (as "Pindarus"). Produced by David Heilweil and Derrick Lynn-Thomas. Note: Play was originally scheduled for a limited 2-week run.
- (1954) Stage Play: Witness for the Prosecution. Drama/mystery. Written by Agatha Christie. Production Design by Raymond Sovey. Costume Design by Kathryn B. Miller. Production Stage Manager: John Effrat. Assistant Stage Mgr: Eugene Stuckmann. Directed by Robert Lewis. Henry Miller's Theatre: 16 Dec 1954- 30 Jun 1956 (645 performances). Cast: Mary Barclay (as "Greta"), Jack Bittner, Horace Braham (as "Mr. Justice Wainwright") [final Broadway role], Ernest Clark, R. Cobden-Smith, Brace Conning, Robin Craven, Ronald Dawson, Andrew George, Ruth Greene, Bryan Herbert, Claude Horton, Patricia Jessel, Sam Kramer, Ralph Leonard, Gene Lyons, Michael McAloney, Franklyn Monroe, Henry Craig Nelson, Gordon Nelson (as "Carter"), Una O'Connor (as "Janet Mackenzie"), Arthur Oshlag, Dolores Rashid, Albert Richards, Ralph Roberts, Guy Spaull (as "Dr. Wyatt"), Dawn Steinkamp, Francis L. Sullivan, W.H. Thomas, Harold Webster. Replacement cast: Francis Compton (as "Mr. Justice Wainwright"), John Dooley (as "Warder"), Neil Fitzgerald (as "Carter"), MacGregor Gibb (as "Court Usher"), Will Hare (as "Court Stenogapher"), Charles Hart (as "Barrister"), Geoffrey Lumb (as "Mr. Myers, Q.C."), John Malcolm (as "Foreman of the Jury/Mr. Mayhew"), Dawn Mathison (as "The Other Woman"), Doris Patston (as "Greta"), Henry Sherwood (as "Barrister"). Produced by Gilbert Miller and Peter Saunders. Note: Filmed by Edward Small Productions [distributed by United Artsts] as Witness for the Prosecution (1957).
- (1932) He acted in Katherine Alexander and his play, "The Left Bank," at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, Massachusetts with Katherine Alexander in the cast.
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