- (1924 - 1936) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1924) Stage Play: That Awful Mrs. Eaton. Drama. Written by John Farrar and Stephen Vincent Benet. Morosco Theatre: 29 Sep 1924- Oct 1924 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Cordelia Howard Aiken (as "Mrs. John Quincy Adams"), Katharine Alexander (as "Peggy O'Neal Eaton"), Mary Allen (as "Dolly Madison"), Frank Andrews (as "Mordecai Noah/John Branch, Secretary of the Navy"), Margaret Armstrong (as "Mrs. Everett"), Lee Beggs (as "Daniel Webster") [Broadway debut], James A. Bliss (as "U.S. Senator Peleg Sprague"), Joyce Borden (as "Emily Donelson"), Laura Brittan (as "Mrs. Henry Clay"), Herbert Bunston (as "Sir Charles Vaughan, British Ambassador"), Ulric Blair Collins (as "Duff Green"), Henry Crosby (as "Colonel Towson"), Harry Davies (as "Major-General Alexander Macomb"), H.G. Emerson (as "Samuel D. Ingham, Secretary of Treasury"), Franklyn Fox (as "Richard Hibson"), Elmer Grandin (as "John C. Calhoun"), Virginia Howell (as "Mrs. Sprague"), Margot Lester (as "Mary Vaughan"), Kirah Markham (as "Mrs. Daniel Webster"), Frank McGlynn (as "Andrew Jackson"), Isabel O'Madigan (as "Mrs. John C. Calhoun"), Ernest E. Pollock (as "John McPherson Berrien, Attorney General"), William R. Randall (as "John Henry Eaton, Secretary of War"), Mary Ellen Ryan (as "Mrs. Hibson"), Lota Sanders (as "Mrs. Branch"), Clifford Sellers (as "Mrs. Ingham"), Mary Taylor (as "Mrs. Berrien"), Lou Turner (as "William Taylor Barry, Postmaster General"), Minor Watson (as "Major William B. Taylor"), Robert Wayne (as "Martin Van Buren, Secretary of State"), Thomas H. Wenning (as "Commodore John Rodgers"), William Walcott [erroneously credited as William Wolcott] (as "Dr. Campbell"), Walter Young (as "Jim"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Stork. Comedy.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Virgin of Bethulia.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Pearl of Great Price. Drama. Written by Robert McLaughlin. Directed by J.C. Huffman. Century Theatre: 1 Nov 1926- Nov 1926 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Myrtle Adams (as "Folly"), Herbert Ashton (as "Smug"), Lee Beggs (as "Vulgarity"), Irma Bertrand (as "Flirt"), Amelia G. Bingham (as "Shame"), Sydna Black (as "Flip"), Lalive Brownell (as "Primp/Prudence"), Millie Butterfield (as "Slander"), Kathleen Cambridge (as "Preen"), Claudette Colbert (as "Pilgrim"), Marie Desyls (as "Lesbia"), Peter Doyle (as "Hunger/Bailiff"), William Dupont (as "Quill/Want"), 'Malcolm Fassett' (as "Truth"), Mrs. William Faversham (as "Envy"), Edward Favor (as "Greed"), Booth Franklin (as "Beggar/Blase/Despair"), 'Albert Froome' (as "Bore/Law"), Bernice Gardener (as "Lure"), Hazel Goodwin (as "Pert"), Elmer Grandin (as "Prejudice"), Frank Green (as "Idle Rich"), Julia Hoyt (as "Luxury"), Millie James (as "Loneliness"), Frances Kelly (as "Swirl"), Margot Kelly (as "Any Man's Sister"), Marion Kerby (as "Pander"), H. Kurasaki (as "Cringe"), Adele Le Roy (as "Primp"), Ross Neal (as "Queer"), John Nicholson (as "Adventure/Drink/Foreman of the Jury"), Dagmar Oakland (as "Beauty"), Eugene Ordway (as "Lust"), Florence Pendleton (as "Despair"), Marie Pettes (as "Pride"), Adele Ranson (as "Flounce"), Effie Shannon (as "Mother of Pilgrim"), Reginald Sheffield (as "Love"), Marcella Swanson (as "Vanity"), Richard Temple (as "Fame/Humanity"), Helen Tucker (as "Indolence"), Valdeo (as "Orgy"), Betty Webb (as "Smirk"), Mae Welch (as "Swish"), Irene Whipple (as "Wanton"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Lawyer's Dilemma.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Red Robe. Romance.
- (1931) Stage Play: The Student Prince. Musical/operetta.
- (1932) Stage Play: Take a Chance. Music by Nacio Herb Brown and Richard A. Whiting. Additional songs by Vincent Youmans. Material by Buddy G. DeSylva and Laurence Schwab. Additional Dialogue by Sid Silvers. Lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva. Music orchestrated by Stephen Jones, Edward Powell, Robert Russell Bennett and William Daly. Vocal Arrangements for Miss Merman's songs by Roger Edens. Musical numbers directed by Bobby Connolly. Material directed by Edgar J. MacGregor. Apollo Theatre: 26 Nov 1932- 1 Jul 1932 (243 performances). Cast: Louise Allen, James Ardell, Jack Armstrong, Lee Beggs (as "Actor, in Kenneth Raleigh's Revue, "Humpty Dumpty"/Mr. Krankel, "Blackmail"/Boss, "Eadie"), Gerry Billings, Chet Bree, Lucille Brodin, Flo Brooks, Andrew Carr, Louise Carr, Jean Carson, Edward Delridge, Marian Dixon, Al Downing, Josephine Dunn, Neil Evans, Helen Fairweather, Emily Fitzpatrick, John Fleming, Arline Garfield, Robert Gleckler, Frances Gordon, John Grant, Ethel Green, Jack Haley, Marion Herson, Sara Jane, Julie Jenner, Dorothy Kal, Budd Kehlner, Gloria Kelly, Henry King, Paula King, June Knight, Tommy Land, Jane Lane, Evelyn Laurie, Clark Leston, Florence Mallee, Mitzi Mayfair, Frances McHugh, Anna Marie McKenney, Ethel Merman (as "Wanda Brill"), Dorothy Morgan, George Pauncefort, Paul Peque, Blanche Poston, Oscar Ragland (as "Actor"), Adelaide Raleigh, Louise Seidel, Sid Silvers, William Stamm, Mildred Webb, Jack Whiting (as "Kenneth Raleigh"), Douglas Wood. Produced by Laurence Schwab and Buddy G. DeSylva.
- (1936) Stage Play: A Woman of Destiny. Written by Samuel Jesse Warshawsky. Directed by Edward Vail. Willis Theatre: 2 Mar 1936- Apr 1936 (closing date unknown/35 performances). Cast: Kermit Augustine (as "Buttoms"), Lee Beggs (as "Secretary of Labor Boyle") [final Broadway role], William A. Brady (as "Bannister"), Alexandra Carlisle (as "Constance Goodwin"), Terry Carlson (as "Kathryn Lawrence"), Alice Cavanaugh (as "Ruth Goodwin"), Wilfred Clark (as "Stoneleigh"), Theodore Collins (as "Newspaper Reporter"), Robert Conness (as "Secretary of the Interior Meclennon"), Dillon Deasy (as "Murray Hoyt"), Walter Green (as "Senator Mora"), Joseph Guthrie (as "Radio Announcer"), Howard Hall (as "Secretary of Treasury Bright"), Robert Harrison (as "President Cumberland"), Horace Head (as "Dick Harmon"), Boris Korlin (as "Ambassador Leonid Korakin"), J. Warren Lyons (as "Bob Stillman"), Carlton Macy (as "Chief Justice Burke"), George C. Mantell (as "Newspaper Reporter"), Fuller Mellish (as "Bishop Grimshaw"), William Melville (as "Marcus Roseheim"), Tom Morrison (as "Secretary of State Williamson"), John F. Morrissey (as "Postmaster General Watson"), Robert Perry (as "Gene Goodwin"), Roger Quinlan (as "Art Sullivan"), Dorothy Raymond (as "Mrs. Rice"), William Roselle (as "Stephen Talmadge"), Henry Sherwood (as "Secretary of War Sherman"), Ralph Simone (as "Newspaper Reporter"), George Henry (as "Trader Melrock"), Frank Verigun (as "Ambassador Takshiro Maru"), Walter Scott (as "Weeks Roger Harmon"), George Zorn (as "Sam Wright"). Produced by Managers Try Out Theatre of the Federal Theatre Project of the WPA, George L. Miller and Otto Metzger.
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