- (1903 - 1947) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1903) Stage Play: Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall. Melodrama. Written by Paul Kester. From the novel by Charles Major. Directed by R.A. Roberts. New York Theatre, (moved to The Lyric Theatre from 14 Jan 1904-close): 14 Dec 1903- Jan 1904 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Carl Anthony, Mary Bacon, S.K. Blair, Sheridan Block, Mrs. Irvin Chapman, Estelle Coffin, Lillian Coffin, Jane Cowl [Broadway debut], Edith Crane, Sara Delaro, Gertrude Dorrence, Stanley Drewitt, Bertha Galland (as "Dorothy Vernon"), Alexis Law Gisiko, Bernice Golden, Edna Griffin, Helen Hale, Mignon Hardt, Howard Hull, Sybil Klein, Ferrers Knyvett, George LeSoir, Emmet Lennon, William Lewers (as "John Manners"), Frank Losee, Charles Martin, Emma Millard, Harold Mitchell, Louise Moodie, Allen Murnane, Charlotte Nicoll Weston, Genevieve Reynolds, Isabel Richards, May Robson, Edith Rowand, Harold Watts, William Whitney, Kate Denin Wilson, Lydia Winters, Douglas J. Wood.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Music Master. Comedy/drama. Written by Charles Klein. Directed by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre (moved to the Bijou Theatre on 9 Jan 1905- close): 26 Sep 1904- Sep 1906 (closing date unknown/627 performances). Cast: Marie Bates (as "Miss Houston"), Tony Bevan (as "Mr. Ryan"), William Boag (as "Andrew Cruger"), H.G. Carleton (as "Ditson"), Downing Clarke (as "A Collector"), Jane Cowl (as "Octavie'), Minnie Dupree' (as "Helen Stanton"), Campbell Gollan (as "Henry A. Stanton"), Louis Hendricks (as "Al. Costello"), Alfred Hudson (as "Mr. Schwartz"), Master Richard Kessler (as "Danny"), Sybil Klein (as "Charlotte"), Leon Kohlmar (as "August Poons"), Harold Mead (as "Joles"), William Ricciardi [credited as W.G. Ricciardi] (as "Signor Tagliafico") [Broadway debut], Louis P. Verande (as "Louis Pinac"), Isabel Waldron (as "Mrs. Andrew Cruger"), Antoinette Walker (as "Jennie"), David Warfield (as "Anton Von Barwig"), J. Carrington Yates (as "Beverly Cruger"). Produced by David Belasco. Note: One of the biggest hits of the era.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Rose of the Rancho. Written by David Belasco and Richard Walton Tully. Music by William Furst. Directed by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 27 Nov 1906- 29 Jun 1907 (480 performances). Cast: Wayne Arey, Virgilio Arriaza, J.H. Benrimo, C.A. Burnett, Norbert Cills, Grace Gaylor Clark, Louise Coleman, Richard S. Conover, John W. Cope (as "Kinkaid"), Maria Davis, Frank De Felice, Vincent De Pascale, William Elliott, Julio Grau, Regino Lopez, Frank Losee, Marta Melean, Atalanta Nicolaides, Leonardo Piza Lopez, Francesco Recchio, Hamilton Revelle [credited as A. Hamilton Revelle], Charles Richman (as "Kearney"), Fermin Ruiz, Gilmore Scott, Frances Starr (as "Juanita"), Catherine Tower, Regina Weil, Frank Westerton, Candido Yllera, Salvatore Zito. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1907) Stage Play: A Grand Army Man. Musical/opera. Libretto by David Belasco, Pauline Phelps [earliest Broadway credit] and Marion Short [earliest Broadway credit]. Scenic Design by Ernest M. Gros and Wilfred Buckland. [Likely directed by David Belasco although uncredited]. Stuyvesant Theatre: 16 Oct 1907- Feb 1908 (closing date unknown/149 performances). Cast: Marie Bates, Tony Bevan, Louise Coleman, Jane Cowl, John V. Daly, William Elliott (as "Robert"), Reuben Fax, Thomas Gilbert, Howard Hall, Taylor Holmes, James Lackaye, Stephen Maley, Veda McEvers, Antoinette Perry (as "Hallie"), Amy Stone, Henry F. Stone, David Warfield (as "Wes Bigelow"), George Woodward. Produced by David Belasco. Note [theatre trivia]: This 1040-seat venue, built by David Belasco, opened in 1907 (the design incorporated a lavish 10-room penthouse duplex), changing names to The Belasco Theatre in Sep 1910. After Belasco's death in 1930 it was leased to Katharine Cornell, then Elmer Rice before being bought by the Shuberts in 1949. It was leased to NBC for TV production briefly but returned as a stage venue in 1953. It remains a fixture on Broadway to this day.
- (1909) Stage Play: Is Matrimony a Failure?. Comedy. Written by Leo Ditrichstein, from the German of Oskar Blumenthal and Gustaf Kadelburg. Directed by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 24 Aug 1909- Jan 1910 (closing date unknown/183 performances). Cast: James Bradbury, Frank Bolt, Helen Braun, Jane Cowl (as "Fanny Perry"), Helen Ferguson, W.J. Ferguson, Jane Grey, Edward Langford, F. Newton Lindo, Louise MacKintosh, Frank Manning, William Morris, Nat Nazarro Jr., Julia Reinhardt, Lou Ripley, Robert Rogers, Gilmore Scott, Josie Morris Sullivan, Anne Sutherland, H.J. Tobin, Gretta Vandell, John F. Webber, Louise Woods, Frank Worthing, Blanche Yurka. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1912) Stage Play: Within the Law. Written by Bayard Veiller. Directed by Holbrook Blinn. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 11 Sep 1912- Dec 1913 (closing date unknown/541 performances). Cast: Edward Bolton, Orme Caldara (as "Richard Gilder"), John Camp, Jane Cowl (as "Mary Turner"), Arthur Ebbetts, Kenneth Hill, Frederick Howe, Brandon Hurst, Georgia Lawrence, William B. Mack, Dodson Mitchell (as "Edward Gilder"), Florence Nash, Joseph Nickson, William A. Norton, Arthur Paulding, S.V. Phillips, Wilton Taylor, Catherine Tower, Martha White, John Willard. Produced by American Play Company.
- (1915) Stage Play: Common Clay. Written by Cleves Kinkead. Theatre Republic: 26 Aug 1915- May 1916 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: H.S. Aarons, Margaret Anderson, Andrew Bennison, Orme Caldara (as "Hugh Fullterton"), Roy Cochrane, Mabel Colcord, Jane Cowl (as "Eileen Neal"), Ida Darling, H. Dudley Hawley (as "Arthur Coakley"), Lela Lee, John Mason, Robert McWade (as "W.P. Yates"), John Ravoli, Cyril Reinhard, Russ Whytal (as "Policeman"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1917) Stage Play: Lilac Time. Written by Jane Cowl and Jane Murfin [earliest Broadway credit]. Theatre Republic: 6 Feb 1917- Jul 1917 (closing date unknown/176 performances). Cast: Michelette Burani [Broadway debut], Orme Caldara, Louise Coleman, Jane Cowl, Henry Crocker, Emile Detramont, Guilliame Deux, Charles Esdale, Lawrence Grant, Charles Hampden, Harry Hanlon, Felix Krembs, Mayne Lynton [credited as W. Mayne Lynton], Cecil Owen, Henry Stephenson, Cecil Yapp. Produced by Selwyn & Co. Note: Filmed as Lilac Time (1928).
- (1917) Stage Play: Daybreak. Written by Jane Cowl and Jane Murfin. Directed by Wilfrid North and Jane Cowl. Harris Theatre: 14 Aug 1917- Oct 1917 (closing date unknown/71 performances). Cast: Margaret Dale, Arthur Dennis, Frank Goldsmith, Jack Grey, William B. Mack, Reginald Mason, David Torrence, Catherine Tower, Frederick Truesdell, Blanche Yurka. Produced by Selwyn & Co. Note: The Harris Theatre opened in 1904 as The Lew M. Fields Theatre until 1906 when the name was changed (briefly) to The Hackett Theatre than changed again to The Harris Theatre from 1911- 1920. It changed again to The Frazee Theatre from 1920- 24 and then to Wallack's Theatre from 1924- 40. It became a movie theater in 1930 and changed names again to Anco Cinema. From 1988- 97 it was used as retail space before being torn down.
- (1918) Stage Play: Information Please. Written by Jane Cowl and Jane Murfin. Selwyn Theatre: 2 Oct 1918- Nov 1918 (closing date unknown/46 performances). Cast: Clifford Brooke [credited as Clifford Brook], Alan Brooks, Orme Caldara, Viola Compton, Malcolm Duncan, Jules Epailly, Hetty Graham, Harry Hanlon, Jack McKee, Cecil Owen, Robert Rendel, Helen Salinger, Henry Stephenson, Blanche Yurka. Produced by Selwyn & Co.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Crowded Hour. Written by Edgar Selwyn and Channing Pollock. Selwyn Theatre: 22 Nov 1918- Mar 1919 (closing date unknown/139 performances). Cast: Franklyn Ardell, Andy Aubrey, John Black, Michelette Burani, Orme Caldara, Henry Call, Jane Cowl, Jules Epailly, Mabel Godding, Sidney Hall, George LeSoir, Christine Norman, Burni Prevost, Cyril Raymond, Rae Selwyn, Henry Stephenson, Edward Tierney. Produced by Selwyn & Co.Produced by Selwyn & Co. Note: Filmed by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as The Crowded Hour (1925).
- (1919) Stage Play: Smilin' Through. Comedy/fantasy. Written by WrittAllan Langdon Martin [Pseudonym for Jane Cowl and Jane Murfin]. Scenic Design by Joseph Urban. Directed by Priestly Morrison, under the Personal Direction of Jane Cowl. Broadhurst Theatre: 30 Dec 1919- May 1920 (closing date unknown/175 performances). Cast: Jane Cowl Kathleen Dungannon/Moonyeen Clare"), Laline Brownell [credited as Lalive Brownell] (as "The Mother of the Boy") [Broadway debut], Orme Caldara (as "Kenneth Wayne/Jeremiah Wayne"), Ethelbert Hale [credited as Ethelbert D. Hales] (as "John Carteret"), Charles Hampden (as "Willie Ainley"), Augusta Haviland (as "Ellen"), Elaine Inescort (as "The Mother of the Girl, Mary Clare"), David Torrence (as "Dr. Owen Harding"). Produced by The Selwyns. Note: Filmed as Smilin' Through (1922), Smilin' Through (1932), and Smilin' Through (1941).
- (1922) Stage Play: Malvaloca. Written by Jacob S. Fassett. From the Spanish of 'Serafin Alvarez Quintero' and Joaquín Álvarez. Directed by Augustin Duncan. 48th Street Theatre: 2 Oct 1922- Nov 1922 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Lillian Albertson (as "Sister Piedad") [final Broadway role], Laline Brownell [credited as Lalive Brownell] (as "Sister Dolores"), Frederic Burt (as "Salvador"), Louise Closser Hale (as "Dona Enriqueta"), Claude Cooper (as "Tio Jerome"), Jane Cowl (as "Malvaloca"), Edward Cullen (as "Lobito"), Margaret Fareleigh (as "Dionisia"), Frank I. Frayne (as "Barrabas"), Grace Hampton (as "Sister Consuelo"), Mariette Hyde (as "Mariquita"), Angela McCahill (as "Juanela"), Lenore Norvelle (as "Alfonsa"), John Parrish (as "A Workman"), Rollo Peters (as "Leonardo"), Jessie Ralph (as "Teresona"), Edith Van Cleve (as "Sister Carmen") [Broadway debut], Marshall Vincent (as "Martin"). Produced by The Equity Players Inc.
- (1923) Stage Play: Romeo and Juliet. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Frank Reicher. Henry Miller's Theatre: 24 Jan 1923- Jun 1923 (closing date unknown/157 performances). Cast: Robert Ayrton (as "Friar Lawrence, a Franciscan"), Richard Bowler (as "Balthasar, servant to Romeo"), Edward Broadley (as "Abram"), Lalive Brownell Lady Montague, wife to Montague"), Gordon Burby (as "Capulet"), Jane Cowl (as "Juliet, daughter to Capulet"), John Sayre Crawley (as "Escalus, prince of Verona/Apothecary"), Frank Davis (as "Gregory, servant to Capulet"), Grayce Hampton [credited as Grace Hampton] (as "Lady Capulet, wife to Capulet"), Louis Hector (as "Tybalt, nephew to Lady Capulet"), Bailey Hick (as "Sampson, servant to Capulet"), Lionel Hogarth (as "Montague"), Vernon Kelso (as "Benvolio, nephew to Montague and friend to Romeo"), Dennis King (as "Mercutio, kinsman to the prince and friend to Romeo"), John Parrish (as "Paris, a young nobleman, kinsman to the prince"), Rollo Peters (as "Romeo, son of Montague"), Milton Pope (as "Peter, servant to Juliet's nurse"), Neil Quinlan (as "An Old Man, of the Capulet family"), Jessie Ralph (as "Nurse to Juliet"). Produced by The Selwyns and Adolph Klauber.
- (1929) Stage Play: Pelleas and Melisande. Drama. Written by Maurice Maeterlinck. Times Square Theatre: 4 Dec 1923- Dec 1923 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Laurence W. Adams, Richard Bowler, Gordon Burby, Jane Cowl (as "Melissande"), J. Sayre Crawley (as "Arkel"), Marion Evenson, Grace Hampton, Louis Hector (as "Golaud"), Mary Holton, Vernon Kelso, William Pearce, Rollo Peters, Jessie Ralph, Alma Reeves Smith (as "Maid Servant"), Harry Taylor (as "Beggar"), Edith Van Cleve (as "Maid Servant"), Lucile Wall (as "Maid Servant"), Mildred Wall (as "Maid Servant"), Katherine Wray (as "Maid Servant"). Produced by The Selwyns and Adolph Klauber.
- (1924) Stage: Antony and Cleopatra. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Incidental music by Alfred Dalby. Directed by Frank Reicher. Lyceum Theatre: 19 Feb 1924- Mar 1924 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Robert Ayrton (as "Mardian, a eunuch, attendant on Cleopatra"), Albert Bliss, Richard Bowler, Charles Brokaw (as "Maecenas/Thyreus, a soldier of Caesar"), Edward Brooks, Gordon Burbe (as "Lepidus, triumvir"), George Carter, Jane Cowl (as "Cleopatra"), J. Sayre Crawley (as "Eros, a soldier to Antony"), James Difley, Marion Evenson, John Gerard, Lionel Hammond, Grace Hampton, Louis Hector (as "Enobarbus, friend to Antony"), C. Bailey Hick, Lionel Hogarth (as "Lemprius Euphronius, a soothsayer"), Willard E. Joray, Vernon Kelso (as "Octavius Caesar, triumvir"), Dennis King, Walter Knapp (as "Euphronius, an ambassador from Antony to Caesar"), James Meighan, Rollo Peters (as "Antony, triumvir"), Milton Pope, Grandon Rhodes, Cyrus Staehle, Edith Van Cleve (as "Octavia, sister to Caesar and wife to Antony"), Harold Webster. Produced by The Selwyns. Produced in association with Adolph Klauber.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Depths. Drama. Written by Hans Mueller. Broadhurst Theatre: 27 Jan 1925- Feb 1925 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Charles Brokaw (as "A Passer-By"), Gordon Burby (as "A Lawyer"), Jane Cowl (as "Anna"), Jennie Eustace, Marion Evenson, Vernon Kelso (as "Herbert"), Rollo Peters, Jessie Ralph (as "The Housekeeper"), Edith Van Cleve (as "Gusti"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn. Produced in association with Adolph Klauber.
- (1925) Stage Play: Easy Virtue. Written by Noël Coward. Directed by Basil Dean. Empire Theatre: 7 Dec 1925- Apr 1926 (closing date unknown/147 performances). Cast: Constance Best, Joyce Carey (as "Sarah Hurst") [Broadway debut], Peter Carpenter, Joan Clement Scott, Jane Cowl (as "Larita"), Marion Evenson, Grace Hampton, Robert Harris, C. Bailey Hick, Halliwell Hobbes (as "Colonel Whittaker"), Lionel Hogarth, Vernon Kelso (as "Charles Burleigh"), Mabel Terry Lewis, Nancie B. Marsland, Peter McFarlane, Gypsy O'Brien (as "Nina Vansittart"), William Podmore, Marda Vanne, Wallace Wood. Jane Cowl appears by arrangement with Archibald Selwyn. Produced by Charles Frohman Inc. Produced in association with Joseph P. Bickerton Jr. and Basil Dean.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Road to Rome. Comedy. Written by Robert E. Sherwood. Directed by Lester Lonergan. Playhouse Theatre: 31 Jan 1927- Jan 1928 (closing date unknown/392 performances). Cast: Charles Brokaw (as "Scipio"), Fairfax Burger (as "Varius"), Joyce Carey, Jane Cowl, Louis Hector (as "Hasdrubal"), Lionel Hogarth (as "Sertorius" / "hotmes"), Barry Jones, Walter Kinsella (as "Third Guard"), Ben Lackland (as "Second Guard"), Richie Ling (as "Fabius"), Lewis Martin, Jock McGraw, John McNulty, Peter Meade, Philip Merivale (as "Hannibal"), Harold Moffet (as "Carthalo"), Clement O'Loghlen, William Pearce, Gert Pouncy, Jessie Ralph (as "Fabia"), William R. Randall, Alfred Webster. Produced by William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman.
- (1928) Stage Play: Diversion. Written by John Van Druten. Directed by Jane Cowl. 48th Street Theatre: 11 Jan 1928- Mar 1928 (closing date unknown/62 performances). Cast: Richard Bird, Leo G. Carroll, Eleanor Daniels, Harry Green, Ruby Hallier, Rose Hobart, Morton Lucas, Nan Marriott-Watson, Cathleen Nesbitt, Guy Standing, Elsie Wagstaff. Produced by Adolph Klauber.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Road to Rome. Comedy (revival). Written by Robert E. Sherwood. Directed by Lester Lonergan. Playhouse Theatre: 21 Jan 1928- Jun 1929 (closing date unknown/440 performances). Cast: Laurence W. Adams, Charles Brokaw (as "Scipio"), Fairfax Burger (as "Varius"), Joyce Carey, Jane Cowl (as "Amytis"), Daniel Coxe, Lionel Hogarth (as "Sertorius" / "Thotmes"), Barry Jones, Walter Kinsella (as "Third Guard"), Ben Lackland (as "Second Guard"), Richie Ling (as "Fabius"), Lewis Martin, Jock McGraw, John McNulty, Hale Norcross (as "Hasdrubal"), Clement O'Loghlen, Gert Pouncy, Jessie Ralph (as "Fabia"), William R. Randall, Guy Standing (as "Hannibal"), George Tobias (as "Carthalo"), Alfred Webster. Produced by William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Jealous Moon. Written by Theodore Charles and Jane Cowl. Directed by Priestly Morrison. Majestic Theatre: 20 Nov 1928- Jan 1929 (closing date unknown/71 performances). Cast included: Ben W. Barnett, Joyce Carey, Jane Cowl, Harry Davenport, Marion Evenson, Coburn Goodwin, Philip Merivale, Richard Nicholls, Hale Norcross, William Randall, Guy Standing, Leo Stark, Esther Stockton, Garner Weed. Produced by William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman.
- (1929) Stage Play: Paolo and Francesca. Drama (revival). Written by Stephen Phillips. Directed by Jane Cowl. Forrest Theatre: 1 Apr 1929- 13 Apr 1929 (16 performances). Cast: D.M. Bishop, Joyce Carey, Jane Cowl(as "Francesca"), Katherine Emmett, Marion Evenson, Coburn Goodwin, George Graves, Lionel Hogarth, Ben Lackland, Robert Lowe, Lewis Martin, Philip Merivale (as "Paolo"), Hale Nacross [credited as Hale Norcross] (as "Corrado"), Virginia Norton, Jessie Ralph (as "Angela"), William Randall, Guy Standing, F.C. Strang, Helen Wilson. Produced by William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman.
- (1929) Stage Play: Jenny. Comedy. Written by Margaret Ayer Barnes and Edward Sheldon. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Directed by Frederick Stanhope. Booth Theatre: 8 Oct 1929- Jan 1930 (closing date unknown/111 performances). Cast: Charles Brokaw, Helen Brooks, Joyce Carey, Jane Cowl (as "Jenny Valentine"), Katherine Emmett, Coburn Goodwin, Ben Lackland, Robert Lowe, Lewis Martin, Guy Standing. Produced by William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman.
- (1930) Stage Play: Twelfth Night. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Incidental music by Macklin Marrow. Directed by Andrew Leigh. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 15 Oct 1930- Dec 1930 (closing date unknown/65 performances). Cast: Jane Cowl (as "Viola"), Leon Quartermaine, Marietta Bitters, Jerry Bowman, Elise Breton, Gordon Burby, Joyce Carey, Evelyn Evans, Derek Fairman, Alfred Flanders, Coburn Goodwin, Kirk Henty, Arthur Hohl (as "Sir Andrew Aguecheek, companion of Sir Toby"), Walter Kingsford (as "Sir Toby Belch, Olivia's kinsman"), Robert Lowe, Lewis Martin, William Qualey, Jessie Ralph (as "Maria, Olivia's waiting woman"), Henry Richards, Harry Sothern (as "Fabian, inhabitant of Illyria"), Harry Thorne, Jane Traylor, Harry Waller, George Wilcox. Produced by 'Kenneth MacGowan' and Joseph Verner Reed.
- (1930) Stage Play: Art and Mrs. Bottle. Comedy. Written by Benn W. Levy. Directed by Clifford Brooke. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 18 Nov 1930- Dec 1930 (closing date unknown/50 performances). Cast: Elise Breton (as "Parlormaid"), Joyce Carey (as "Sonia Tippet"), Jane Cowl (as "Celia Bottle"), Katharine Hepburn (as "Judy Bottle"), G.P. Huntley Jr. (as "Michael Bottle"), Walter Kingsford (as "George Bottle"), Lewis Martin (as "Charlie Dawes"), Leon Quartermaine (as "Max Lightly"). Produced by Kenneth MacGowan and Joseph Verner Reed.
- (1932) Stage Play: Through the Years. Musical/romance. Music by Vincent Youmans. Book by Brian Hooker. Lyrics by Edward Heyman. Musical Director: William Daly. Choreographed by Jack Haskell and Max Scheck. Directed by Edgar J. MacGregor. Manhattan Theatre: 28 Jan 1932- 13 Feb 1932 (20 performances). Cast: Kay Adams, Peggy Andre, Marion Ballou, Frank Barron, Michael Bartlett, Gloria Beaumont, Caryl Bergman, Emily Burton, Dee Collins, Jane Cowl, Audrey Davis, Adline Forbes, Patricia Francis, John Frederick, Gregory Gaye, Mildred Gethins, Natalie Hall, Evelyn Hannons, Ann Hardman, Jack Lawrence, Nick Long, Gertrude Lowe, Anton Luksor, Estelle Malin, Dolly Martinez, Martha Mason, Evelyn Monte, Sonny Nelson, Leone Newmann, Reginald Owen (as "John Carteret"), Irving Pichler, Lelane Rivera, Peggy Schenck, Ivan Sokoloff, Ray Thomas, Winnie Torney, Marie Valot, Norman Van Emburgh, Charles Winninger (as "Dr. Owen Harding"), Paulette Winston, Anna Worth. Produced by by Vincent Youmans.
- (1932) Stage Play: A Thousand Summers. Romance. Written by Merrill Rogers. Directed by Shepard Traube. Selwyn Theatre: 24 May 1932- Jul 1932 (closing date unknown/51 performances). Cast: Jane Cowl (as "Sheila Pennington"), Osgood Perkins (as "Laurence Hereford"), Franchot Tone (as "Neil Barton"), Mary Newnham Davis, Florence Edney (as "Mrs. Hawkins"), Marion Evenson (as "Zoe King"), Thomas Findley, Josephine Hull. Produced by Archibald Selwyn. Produced in arrangement with Shepard Traube.
- (1934) Stage Play: Rain from Heaven. Comedy. Written by S.N. Behrman. Directed by Philip Moeller. John Golden Theatre: 24 Dec 1934- Mar 1935 (closing date unknown/99 performances). Cast: Alice Belmore (credited as Alice Belmore-Cliffe), Lily Cahill (as "Phoebe Eldridge"), Hancey Castle, Jane Cowl, Marshall Grant, Thurston Hall (as "Hobart Eldridge"), John Halliday, José Ruben (as "Nikolai Jurin"), Ben Smith, Robert Woods. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1935) Stage Play: First Lady. Comedy. Written by Katharine Dayton and George S. Kaufman. Press Representative: John Peter Toohey. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Music Box Theatre: 26 Nov 1935- Jun 1936 (closing date unknown/246 performances). Cast: Jane Cowl (as "Lucy Chase Wayne"), Florenz Ames (as "Ellsworth T. Ganning"), Don Beddoe (as "Jason Fleming"), Leslie Bingham, Isis Brinn, Helen Brooks, Jessie Busley, Lily Cahill, Armand Cortes (as "Senor Ortega"), Frank Dae (as "George Mason"), Thomas Findlay, Ruth Hovey, Bradford Hunt, Naoe Kondo, Charles La Rue, Judson Laire, Donald McKenzie, Lillian Norton, Daniel Ocko, George Parsons, Diantha Pattison (as "Sophy"), Susan Powers, Stanley Ridges (as "Stephen Wayne"), Margherita Sargent, James Seeley, John M. Troughton, Rita Vale, Regina Wallace, Ethel Wilson, Hon. Wu, Oswald Yorke (as "Cater Hibbard"). Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1938) Stage Play: The Merchant of Yonkers. Farce. Written by Thornton Wilder, from the comedy by Johann Nestroy. Directed by Max Reinhardt. Guild Theatre: 28 Dec 1938- Jan 1939 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: John Call, Philip Coolidge, Tom Ewell, Frances Harison, Edward Nannery, Minna Phillips, Maida Reade, Bartlett Robinson, Peter Struwel, Joseph Sweeney, June Walker (as "Miss Molly"), Percy Waram (as "Horace Vandergelder"), Carrie Weller, Nydia Westman, Max Willenz. Produced by Herman Shumlin.
- (1940) Stage Play: Old Acquaintance. Comedy. Written by John Van Druten. Scenic design by Richard Whorf. Directed by Auriol Lee. Morosco Theatre (moved to The Broadhurst Theatre from 8 Apr 1941 to close): 23 Dec 1940- 17 May 1941 (170 performances). Cast: Jane Cowl (as "Katherine Markham"), Peggy Wood, Kent Smith, Anna Franklin, Hunter Gardner, Adele Longmire, Edna West. Produced by Dwight Wiman. Note: Filmed as Old Acquaintance (1943), Old Acquaintance (2011).
- (1941) Stage Play: Ring Around Elizabeth. Comedy. Written by Charlotte Armstrong. Scenic Design by Raymond Sovey. Directed by William Schorr. Playhouse Theatre: 17 Nov 1941- 25 Nov 1941 (10 performances). Cast: Katharine Bard, Ruth Chorpenning (as "Vida"), Edwin Cooper, Jane Cowl (as "Elizabeth Sherry"), Katherine Emmett, Marilyn Erskine, Gilbert O. Herman, McKay Morris, Diantha Pattison, Lea Penman, Barry Sullivan, Barry O'Moore. Produced by William Schorr and Allen Boretz) Produced in association with Alfred Bloomingdale.
- (1947) Stage Play: The First Mrs. Fraser (Revival). Written by St. John Ervine. Directed by Harold Young. Shubert Theatre: 5 Nov 1947- 9 Dec 1947 (38 performances). Cast: Jane Cowl (as "Janet Fraser") [final Broadway role], Henry Daniell, Reginald Mason, Frances Tannehill, Kendall Clark, Hazel Jones, Emily Lawrence, Lexford Richards. Produced by Gant Gaither.
- (1933) Stage: Appeared in "Camille", Boston, MA, Stage manager: James Stewart.
- Playwright (w/Jane Murfin: "The Flaming Sign" (filmed as Flapper Wives (1924).
- (1910) Stage Play: The Gamblers. Drama. Written by Charles Klein. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 31 Oct 1910- Apr 1911 (closing date unknown/192 performances). Cast: George Backus, Edith Barker, Marjele Bornefeld, Charles Burbidge, Jane Cowl (as "Catherine Darwin"), Grant Ervin, Julia Hay, DeWitt Jennings, Cecil Kingstone, William B. Mack, Egbert Munroe, George Nash, Nat Nazarro Jr., William Postance, Charles Stevenson, George Wright Jr. Produced by The Authors Producing Co.
- (April 11-18, 1921) She acted in her play, "Smilin' Through," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio.
- (January 8, 1923) She acted in William Shakespeare's play, "Romeo and Juliet," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio.
- (October 6, 1924) She acted in William Shakespeare's play, "Romeo and Juliet," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio.
- (September 30, 1929) She acted in the play, "Jenny," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio.
- (March 23, 1931) She acted in the play, "Art and Mrs. Bottle," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio.
- (March 26, 1931) She acted in William Shakespeare's play, "Twelfth Night," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio.
- (November 16, 1936) She acted Katharine Dayton and George S. Kaufman's play, "First Lady," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio.
- (August 17, 1947) She acted in St. John Ervine's play, "The First Mrs. Fraser," at the Ogunquit Playhouse in Ogunquit, Maine.
- (March 9 to 20, 1949) She played the title role in Maxwell Anderson's play, "Elizabeth The Queen," at the Pasadena Playhouse in Pasadena, California with John Mantley (Essex) in the cast. Gilmor Brown was artistic director. Blevin Davis and Barbara Vajda were directors.
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