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Vivienne Osborne More at IMDbPro »

Other works
Performed on Broadway in the following productions:

Order Please (1934). Comedy. Written by Edward Childs Carpenter, from a play by Walter C. Hackett. Playhouse Theatre: 9 Oct 1934- Oct 1934 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Alney Alba, Albert Andress, James Bell, Tala Birell, Olive Briscoe, Gregory Deane, Clifford Dempsey, Pierre D'Ennery, Delphine Doray, Joseph R. Garry, Gladys Griswold, William Hopper (as "Victor Neilson"), Lulu Mae Hubbard, Paul Jachia (as "Tom"), Suzanne Jackson, Bernice Kenyon, Hermann Lieb, A. Fothringham Lysons, Peggy Marlowe, Percy Moore, Henry Norell, Vivienne Osborne (as "Phoebe Weston"), Addison Pinckert, Robert Shayne (as "Robert Kent"), Matthew Smith, Jack Soanes, Robert Toms. Produced by George Bushar and John Tuerk.

As Good as New (1930). Comedy. Written by Thompson Buchanan. Directed by Stanley Logan. Times Square Theatre: 3 Nov 1930- Dec 1930 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Marjorie Gateson, Kenneth Haviland, Gwladys Hupton, Otto Kruger (as "Tommy Banning"), Sardis Lawrence, Fred Lennox, Dorothy Libaire, Faye Martin, Owen Martin, Vivienne Osborne (as "Mrs. Violet Hargrave"), Lionel Pape, Billy Quinn, Walter F. Scott, Montague Shaw, Ben Smith. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.

The Royal Virgin (1930). Drama.

Week-End (1929). Comedy.

The Three Musketeers (1928). Musical drama. Music by Rudolf Friml. Lyrics by Clifford Grey and P.G. Wodehouse. Book by William Anthony McGuire. Based on the story by Alexandre Dumas père. Musical Director: Gus Salzer. Musical Staging by Albertina Rasch. Staged by Richard Boleslawski. Directed by William Anthony McGuire. Lyric Theatre: 13 Mar 1928- 15 Dec 1928 (318 performances). Cast: Pirkko Ahlquist (as "Ensemble"), Lester Allen (as "Planchet"), Virginia Beardsley (as "Ensemble"), Yvonne Beaupre as "Ensemble"), Marye Bern (as "Ensemble"), Jeanette Bradley (as "Ensemble"), Harrison Brockbank (as "Innkeeper"), Eleanor Buffington (as "Ensemble"), Edna Bunte (as "Ensemble"), Robert D. Burns (as "Jussac"), Katherine Cavelli (as "Ensemble"), Margaret Clark (as "Ensemble"), John Clarke (as "The Duke of Buckingham"), Nancy Corrigan (as "Ensemble"), Dona Desne Curry (as "Ensemble"), Yvonne D'Arle (as "Anne, Queen of France"), Audrey Davis (as "Ensemble"), Helen Derby (as "Ensemble"), Sylvia Derby (as "Ensemble"), Clarence Derwent (as "Louis XIII"), William Dillon (as "Ensemble"), Marion Dodge (as "Ensemble"), L. Dumbadse (as "Ensemble"), Douglass Dumbrille (as "Athos"), Ernest Ehler (as "Ensemble"), Marguerite Eisele (as "Ensemble"), Byrdeatta Evans (as "Ensemble"), Rose Gale (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Greenley (as "Ensemble"), Evelyn Groves (as "Ensemble"), Emily Hadley (as "Ensemble"), Sally Hadley (as "Ensemble"), William Hagen (as "Ensemble"), Pauline Hall (as "Ensemble"), Libby Hanley (as "Ensemble"), Vida Hanna (as "Ensemble"), Catherine Hayes (as "Aubergiste"), Louis Hector (as "Comte De La Rochefort"), Eve Hellesness (as "Ensemble"), Harriet Hoctor (as "Premiere Danseuse of the Court"), Stanley Howard (as "Ensemble"), Ivan Ismailov (as "Ensemble"), Norman Ives (as "Ensemble"), Harry James (as "Ensemble"), Andy Jochim (as "Cardinal's Guard"), Naomi Johnson (as "Zoe"), Wilma Kaye (as "Ensemble"), Frances Kelly (as "Ensemble"), William Kershaw (as "Brother Joseph"), Dennis King (as "D'Artagnan"), Charles Kirby (as "Ensemble"), John Kline (as "M. De Treville"), Lydia Krushinsky (as "Ensemble"), Julia Lane (as "Ensemble"), Elaine Lank (as "Ensemble"), Randolph Leyman (as "Cardinal's Guard"), Eleanor Little (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Macaulay (as "Aramis"), Glenn Macauley (as "Ensemble"), Mary MacDonald (as "Ensemble"), Lottie Marcy (as Ensemble"), Joan Marren (as "Ensemble"), Marie Merrifield (as "Ensemble"), G. Moore (as "King's Attendant"), Ellen Moray (as "Ensemble"), Ann Moss (as "Ensemble"), Armundi Muzzi (as "Ensemble"), Raymond O'Brien (as "Patrick"), Lucille O'Connor (as "Ensemble"), Vivienne Osborne (as "Lady De Winter"), Nona Otero (as "Ensemble"), Reginald Owen (as "Cardinal Richelieu"), Ivy Palmer (as "Ensemble"), Esther Peters (as "Ensemble"), Detmar Poppen (as "Porthos"), Nora Puntin (as "Ensemble"), Louise Raymond (as "Ensemble"), Elsie Reign (as "Ensemble"), Lee Russell (as "Ensemble"), Vivienne Segal (as "Constance Bonacieux"), Martin Sheppard (as "Ensemble"), Robert Shields (as "Ensemble"), Hilda Steiner (as "Ensemble"), Miriam Stockton (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Sutton (as "Ensemble"), Richard Thornton (as "The Bo'sun"), Mildred Turner (as "Ensemble"), Regina Tushinska (as "Ensemble"), Margaret Valient (as "Ensemble"), A. Van Mueller (as "Ensemble"), Serge Vino (as "Ensemble"), Lillian White (as "Ensemble"), Gertrude Williams (as "Ensemble"), Helen Withers (as "Ensemble"), John Zak (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..

One Glorious Hour (1927). Romantic comedy.

Fog (1927). Written by John Willard. Directed by Arthur Hurley. National Theatre: 7 Feb 1927- May 1927 (closing date unknown/96 performances). Cast: Charles Dow Clark, Alexander Clarke, Edward Colebrook, Ben Hendricks, Wilfred Jessup, Robert Keith (as "Charlie"), Frank McHugh (as "Scraggs"), Hugh O'Connell (as "Darcy"), Vivienne Osborne (as "Eunice"). Produced by Lorton Productions, Inc.

Aloma of the South Seas (1925). Drama.

Houses of Sand (1925). Drama. Written by G. Marion Burton. Directed by Daniel V. Arthur and Clifford Brooke. Hudson Theatre: 17 Feb 1925- Mar 1925 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Elise Bartlett, Charles Bickford (as "Hugh Schuyler"), Ethelbert Hales, Gladys Hanson, Paul Kelly (as "Arthur Demarest"), Naoe Kondo, Vivienne Osborne (as "Miss Kane; Golden Fragrance"), George Probert, Edith Shayne, Theodore Westman. Produced by Michael Mindlin.

The Blue Bandanna (1924). Comedy/melodrama.

New Toys (1924). Comedy/tragedy. Written by Milton Herbert Gropper and Oscar Hammerstein II. Fulton Theatre: 18 Feb 1924- Mar 1924 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Louise Closser Hale (as "Mrs. Warner"), Mary Duncan, Robert McWade (as "George Clark"), Frances Nelson, Robert Emmett O'Connor (as "Sam Wilks"), Vivienne Osborne (as "Ruth Webb"), James Spottswood (as "Tom Lawrence"), Ernest Truex (as "Will Webb"). Produced by Sam Harris.

Scaramouche (1923). Romance. Written by Rafael Sabatini. Morosco Theatre: 24 Oct 1923- Dec 1923 (closing date unknown/61 performances).

The Love Child (1922). Drama. Written by Henri Bataille. Material adapted by Martin Brown. Directed by Bertram Harrison. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 14 Nov 1922- Apr 1923 (closing date unknown/167 performances). Cast: Lee Baker, Janet Beecher, Sidney Blackmer (as "Eugene Thorne"), Juliette Crosby, Harry Gibbs, Geneva Harrison (as "Kitty Lansing"), Grace Kennard, Vivienne Osborne (as "Aline De Mar"), Lolita Robertson, F. Sinne, Roy Walling (as "Smith"), Eleanor Williams. Produced by A.H. Woods and Charles L. Wagner.

The Silver Fox (1921). Drama. Written by Cosmo Hamilton. Based on the original play by Ferencz Herczeg. Directed by William Faversham. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 5 Sep 1921- Dec 1921 (closing date unknown/112 performances). Cast: William Faversham, Lawrence Grossmith (as "Edmund Quilter"), Ian Keith (as "Captain Douglas Belgrave"), Violet Kemble-Cooper, Vivienne Osborne (as "Frankie Turner"). Produced by Lee Shubert.

The Bonehead (1920). Comedy/satire. Written by Frederic Arnold Krummer. Directed by Frank McCormack. Fulton Theatre: 12 Apr 1920- May 1920 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Claude Beerbohm, David M. Callis, Leonard Doyle, Paton Gibbs, Beatrice Moreland, John Daly Murphy, Nita Naldi (as "Mrs. Violet Bacon-Boyle"), Edwin Nicander, Vivienne Osborne (as "Jean Brent"), William St. James, Myrtle Tannehill. Produced by Claude Beerbohm.

The Whirlwind (1919). Melodrama (revival). Written by George C. Hazelton and Ritter Brown. Standard Theatre: 23 Dec 1919- Feb 1920 (closing date unknown/31 performances).

(May 21,1926-August 1926) She acted in John B. Hymer and Leroy Clemens' play, "Aloma," at the Adelphi Theatre in London, England with Francis Lister, Clay Clement, Mary Barton, Jack Raine, Allan Jeayes, Margaret Yarde, H. St. Barbe, Muriel Alexander, and W. Cronin Wilson in the cast.


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