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Dwight Frye More at IMDbPro »

Other works
Active on Broadway in the following productions:

(1933) Stage: Appeared (as "Ah Sing") in "Keeper of the Keys" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Valentine Davies. Based on a novel by Earl Derr Biggers. Fulton Theatre: 18 Oct 1933-Nov 1933 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Roberta Beatty, Romaine Callender (as "Dr. Frederick Swan"), Aristides de Leoni, Ruth Easton, William Harrigan (as "Insp. Charlie Chan"), Robert Lynn, Warren Parker, Roy Roberts (as "Don Holt"), Howard St. John, Elwood K. Thomas, Fleming Ward (as "Dudley Ward"). Produced by Sigourney Thayer.

(1928) Stae: Appeared (as "Alfons") in "Mima" on Broadway. Written / directed / produced by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 12 Dec 1928-May 1929 (closing date unknown/180 performances). Cast: Eduardo Abdo, A.E. Anson (as "Magister"), Najeeb Assaf, Eva Barcay, Philip Bishop, Sidney Blackmer (as "Janos"), William Boag, Lionel Braham (as "Rubicante"), Romaine Callender (as "Malacoda"), Reginald Carrington, Norman Constantin, Armand Cortes, W. Gordon Craig, Ruth Dayton, Eugene Donovan, Andre Dumont, Jane Ferrell, Myra Florian, George Gardon, Vivienne Gieson, Florence Golden, Kitty Gray, Alan Hale (as "Farfarello"), Charlie Hedge, Arthur Stuart Hull (as "The Husband"), Jerome Jordan, Madeline King, Richard Lambart, Frank Lengel, Arthur MacArthur, Schuyler MacGuffin, Charles H. Martin, Jah Misko, Fred Nelson, Logan Paul, Lennox Pawle, Ben Probst, Frederick Raymond, George Ryan, Anthony J. Sansome, Harold Seton, Loretto Shea, Maurice Sturez, Bernard Sussman, Douglas F. Swanson, Lenore Ulric, Kraft Wilson, Helen Withers, H. Percy Woodley, Ali Ilma Yousoff.

(1928) Stage: Appeared (as "Prince William") in "The Queen's Husband" on Broadway. Written by Robert E. Sherwood. Directed by John Cromwell. Playhouse Theatre: 25 Jan 1928-May 1928 (closing date unknown/125 performances). Cast included Roland Young.

Ink (1927). Melodrama. Written by Dana Watterson Greeley. Directed by T. Daniel Frawley. Biltmore Theatre: 1 Nov 1927- Nov 1927 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Clara Blandick (as "Hester Trevelyan"), John H. Dilson, Brandon Evans, Dwight Frye (as "Clarence Jerome"), William Harrigan (as "Robert Buchanan"), Robert Hyman, Leo A. Kennedy, Sue MacManamy, Carlyle Moore Jr. (as "Office Boy"), Isabel Randolph, Charles Richman, Kay Strozzi (as "Jeanne Keenan"). Produced by Charles L. Wagner.

(1926) Stage: Appeared (as "Dr. Pointell Jones") in "Devil in the Cheese" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Tom Cushing. Produced / directed by Charles Hopkins. Charles Hopkins Theatre: 29 Dec 1926-May 1927 (closing date unknown/157 performances). Cast: Hooper Bunch (as "A Gorilla"), Catherine Doucet (as "Mrs. Quigley"), Joseph Hazel, Frank Norman Hearn, Bela Lugosi (as "Father Petros"), Earl MacDonald, Fredric March (as "Jimmie Chard"), Robert McWade (as "Mr. Quigley"), George Riddell, Linda Watkins.

(1926) Stage: Appeared (as "A Student") in "The Chief Thing" on Broadway. Comedy/drama. Written by Nicolas Evreinoff [credited as Nikolai Evreinov]. Translated by Leo Randole and Herman Bernstein. Directed by Philip Moeller. Guild Theatre: 22 Mar 1926-Apr 1926 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Donald Angus (as "Tigelin"), Patricia Barron (as "A Fallen Woman"), Alice Belmore (as "Landlady in a Rooming House"), Romney Brent (as "Petronius"), Harold Clurman (as "Nero"), Peggy Conway (as "Popea Sabina"), Ernest Cossart (as "A Comedian"), C. Stafford Dickens An Actor"), William Griffith (as "Electrician"), Hildegarde Halliday (as "Nigidia, A Deaf Mute"), House Jameson (as "Lucian"), Kate Lawson (as "Ligia"), Edith Meiser (as "Lady With the Dog"), Esther Mitchell (as "Landlady's Daughter"), McKay Morris (as "Paraklete"), Edward G. Robinson (as "A Stage Director"), Lee Strasberg (as "A Prompter"), Willard Tobias (as "A Slave"), Henry Travers (as "Retired Government Clerk"), Mary True (as "Calvia Crispinilla"), Helen Westley (as "A School Teacher"), Estelle Winwood (as "A Dancer"), Stanley G. Wood (as "The Manager of a Provincial"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.

(1926) Stage: Appeared (as "Mirko") in "The Goat Song" on Broadway. Directed by Jacob Ben-Ami. Guild Theatre: 25 Jan 1926-Mar 1926 (closing date unknown/58 performances). Cast included: Lynn Fontanne, Zita Johann, Philip Loeb, Alfred Lunt, Edward G. Robinson, Erskine Sanford. Produced by the Theatre Guild.

(1925) Stage: Appeared (as "Melville Tuttle") in "A Man's Man" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Patrick Kearney. Directed by Edward T. Goodman. 52nd Street Theatre: 13 Oct 1925-Jan 1926 (closing date unknown/120 performances). Cast: Clarke Billings, Olga Brent, Marienne Francks, Robert Gleckler (as "Charlie Groff"), Arthur Hughes, Josephine Hutchinson (as "Edie Tuttle"), Margaret Love (as "Ma Tuttle"), Jerry Lynch, Rita Romilly, Jean Worth. Produced by The Stagers.

(1925) Stage: Appeared (as "Frank Mohacz") in "Puppets" on Broadway. Written by Francis Lightner. Directed and produced by Brock Pemberton. Selwyn Theatre: 9 Mar 1925-Apr 1925 (closing date unknown/54 performances). Cast included: C. Henry Gordon, Miriam Hopkins, Fredric March, Florence Koehler, Frank McDonald.

(1924) Stage: Appeared (as "Willie Marsden") in "So This is Politics" (Stange Bedfellows) on Broadway. 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, Majorie Gateson, John S. Morrissey, Lolita Robertson. Produced by Carl Reed.

(1924) Stage: Appeared (as "Horace") in "Sitting Pretty" on Broadway. Based on a book by Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse. Fulton Theatre (moved to the Imperial Theatre on 9 Jun 1924 to close): 8 Apr 1924-28 Jun 1924 (95 performances).

(1924) Stage: Appeared (as "The Son") in "Six Characters in Search of an Author" on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Written by Luigi Pirandello. Directed and produced by Brock Pemberton. 44th Street Theatre: 6 Feb 1924-Feb 1924 (closing date unknown/17 performances).

(1923) Stage: Appeared (as "Max Duvelleroy") in "The Love Habit". Comedy. Adapted by Gladys Unger from "Pour Avior" by Louis Verneuil. Bijou Theatre: 14 Mar 1923-May 1923 (closing date unknown/69 performances). Produced and directed by Brock Pemberton.

(1923). Stage Play: Rita Coventry. Comedy. Written by Hubert Osborne. from the novel by Julian Street. Directed by Brock Pemberton. Bijou Theatre: 19 Feb 1923- Mar 1923 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Luis Alberni (as "Busini"), Auguste Aramini (as "Louis"), Leopoldine Damrosch (as "Eleanor"), Jay Fassett (as "Johnson"), Grace Filkins, Charles Francis, Dorothy Francis (as "Rita Coventry"), Harriette Frazier, Dwight Frye, Hans Herbert (as "Pierre"), Curtis Karpe (as "Wolff"), Corbet Morris (as "Wetherell"), Eugene Powers (as "Herman Krauss"), G. Albert Smith (as "Paldowski"), Clare Weldon, Edward H. Weaver. Produced by Brock Pemberton.

(1922). Stage Play: Six Characters in Search of an Author. Comedy. Written by Luigi Pirandello. Directed by Brock Pemberton. Princess Theatre: 30 Oct 1922- Feb 1923 (closing date unknown/136 performances). Cast: Jack Amory, Katherine Atkinson, Ashley Buck, Elliot Cabot, Ernest Cossart (as "The Manager"), Florence Eldridge, Ida Fitzhugh (as "Mme Pace"), Dwight Frye (as "The Son"), Blanche Gervais, Kathleen Graham, William T. Hays, Fred House, Moffat Johnston (as "The Father"), Leona Keefer, Constance Lusby, Russell Morrison, John Saunders, Maud Sinclair, Eleanor Woodruff (as "The Leading Lady"), Margaret Wycherly. Produced by Brock Pemberton.

(1922) Stage: Appeared in "The Plot Thickens" on Broadway. Written by Luigi Barzini and 'Arnaldo Fraccaroli'. Book adapted by Thomas Beer. Directed and produced by Brock Pemberton. Booth Theatre: 5 Sep 1922-Sep 1922 (closing date unknown/15 performances).

(1942) Stage: Appeared (as "Renfield") in "Dracula" in Los Angeles, CA.

(1937) Stage: Starred in "Night Must Fall" in Los Angeles, CA.

(1933) Stage: Appeared in "Her Majesty the Widow" in Los Angeles, CA.

Stage: Appeared in "The Pursuit of Happiness" in Los Angeles, CA, 1933.

(1929) Stage: Appeared in "Rope's End" in Los Angeles, CA.

(1934). Stage Play: Queer People. Comedy. Written by John Floyd, from a novel by Carroll Graham and Garrett Graham. Directed by Melville Burke. National Theatre: 15 Feb 1934- Feb 1934 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Frank Allworth (as "Edward Worth, A Policeman"), Flavia Arcaro (as "Madame Frankie Lee"), Joseph Burton, Kay Carlin, Helen Claire, Colleen Cooper, "Peppy" D'Albrew, Willard Dashiell (as "John Grew"), Frank De Sylva, James Fallon, Walter Fenner, Dwight Frye (as "Frank Carson") [final Broadway role], Gladys George, Wesley Givens (as "Bartender"), Jerry Hausner (as "Sammy Schmaltz"), Marga Herden, Herbert Heywood, Milly June, Lawrence Keating, Billie Kemp, Walter Kevan, Ruth Lee, James Levers, Leonard Lord, Sylvia Manners, Edna Mears, Nita Naldi, Charles O'Connor, Frank Otto (as "Henry McGinnis"), Clara Palmer, Arthur Pierson (as "Gilbert Vance"), William Roselle, W.W. Shuttleworth, Hal Skelly, Ming Soy, Harry Vokes (as "Pop Schmaltz") [final Broadway role], J. Arthur Young. Produced by Galen Boque.


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