- Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- First Lady (1952). Comedy (revival). Written by Katharine Dayton and George S. Kaufman. Scenic Design by Peter Larkin. Costume Design by Noel Taylor. Directed by David Alexander. City Center: 28 May 1952- unknown (5 performances). Cast: Edna Best (as "Irene Hibbard"), Norman Chi (as "A Chinese"), Hal Cooper (as "Bleecker"), Bette Ford (as "Mrs. Davenport"), Genevieve Frizzell (as "A Congressman's Wife"), Helen Gahagan (as "Lucy Chase Wayne"), Peggy Ann Garner (as "Emmy Paige"), Richard Hamilton (as "Jason Fleming"), Darthy Hinkley (as "Her Friend"), Will Hussung (as "George Mason"), Jean Jordan, Ulla Kazanova (as "The Baroness"), Leonard Lord (as "A General"), Luis Martinez, Margery Maude (as "Belle Hardwick"), Ruth McDevitt (as "Mrs. Creevey"), Scott McKay (as "Senator Keane"), Ona Munson (as "Sophy Prescott"), Althea Murphy (as "Ann Forrester"), Addison Richards (as "Tom Hartwick"), Frank Rowan, Guy Spaull (as "Stephen Wayne"), Richard Sterling (as "Herbert Sedgwick"), Frederic Tozere (as "Carter Hibbard"), Regina Wallace (as "Mrs. Ives"), Richard Warner, Howard Wierum. Produced by New York City Theatre Company.
- (1935) Stage Play: Ghosts. Drama. Written by Henrik Ibsen. Scenic Design by Stewart Chaney. Directed by Alla Nazimova. Empire Theatre: 12 Dec 1935- Feb 1936 (closing date unknown/81 performances). Cast: Harry Ellerbe (as "Oswald Alving, Mrs. Alving's son, a painter"), McKay Morris (as "Pastor Manders"), Ona Munson (as "Regina Engstrand, Mrs. Alving's maid"), Alla Nazimova (as "Mrs. Helen Alving, widow of Cpt. Alving, late Chamberlain to the King"), Raymond O'Brien (as "Jacob Engstrand, a carpenter"). Produced by Luther Greene.
- (1935) Stage Play: Petticoat Fever. Farce. Written by Mark Reed. Directed by Alfred De Liagre Jr.. Ritz Theatre: 4 Mar 1935- Jul 1935 (closing date unknown/137 performances). Cast: Robert Bentzen (as "Scotty"), Leo G. Carroll (as "Sir James Fenton"), Goo Chong (as "Kimo"), Leo Curley (as "Captain George Landry"), Doris Dalton (as "Ethel Campion"), Frances Hogan (as "Snow Bird"), Dennis King (as "Dascom Dinsmore"), Naoe Kondo (as "Little "), Ona Munson (as "Clara Wilson"), Joaquin Souther. Produced by Richard Aldrich and Alfred De Liagre Jr. Note: Filmed by MGM as Petticoat Fever (1936), a Robert Montgomery vehicle.
- Hold Your Horses (1933). Musical comedy. Music by Robert Russell Bennett, Robert A. Simon, Louis Alter, Arthur Swanstrom, Ben Oakland and Owen Murphy. Book by Russel Crouse and Corey Ford. Based on a play by Charles Beahan, Russel Crouse and Corey Ford. With many nonsensical moments by Joe Cook. Lyrics by Robert Russell Bennett, Robert A. Simon, Louis Alter, Arthur Swanstrom, Ben Oakland and Owen Murphy. Music orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett. Musical Director: Gene Salzer. Featuring songs by Margot Millham and Leslie Stuart. Featuring songs with lyrics by Margot Millham, Owen Hall and J.P. Murray. Directed by John Shubert. All dances, ensembles and principals' dances by Robert Alton. Ballets created and staged by Harriet Hoctor. Stage Manager: Frederick De Cordova. Book directed by R.H. Burnside. Winter Garden Theatre: 25 Sep 1933- 9 Dec 1933 (88 performances). Cast: Jack Anthony, Walter Armin (as "Charles Rector"), James Babbitt, Julia Barker, Alayne Blair, W.K. Brady, Jack Burleigh, Lehman Byck, Jack Byrne, Phyllis Carroll, Emeeta Casanova, Andre Charise, Dave Chasen (as "Frothington"), Cecile Clancy, Jay Conley, Mary Connor, Joe Cook (as "Broadway Joe"), Colleen Cooper, Barbara Coswell, Inez Courtney (as "Gwen Fordyce"), Carmen Cuyler, Hene Damur, Helen Day, Dorothy Drum, Helene Ecklund, Marion Farrish, Margie Finley, Helen Folsom, Frances Ford, Jimmie Fox, Peggy Gallimore, Douglas Gilmore, John Glenn, Ruth Gormley, Edwin Guhl, Clarence Harvey, Maurine Holmes, Jack Howard, Meredith Howard, Virginia Howard, Jeryl Joyce, Adelaide Kaye, Josephine Kaye, Marguerite Kennedy, Connie Madison, Jane Manners, Lila Manor, Lola Manor, Gene Martel, Rosalie McCallion, Joe McKeon, Edward J. McNamara, Tully Millet, Jack Morrissey, R.J. Mulligan, Ona Munson (as "Marjory Ellis"), Donnell O'Brian, Emmett O'Brien, Eileen O'Connor, Ethel O'Dell, Olaf Olsen (as "Kid Hogan's Second"), Evelyn Page, Walter Palm (as "Bartender at Nigger Mike's"), Pat Palmer, Tom Patricola, Tesha Pierson, Ernest Recco, Harry Rogers, Polly Rose, Jean Ryan, Lovee Sabalis, George Schiller, Myra Scott, Charles Senna, C. Ellsworth Smith, Stanley Smith, Edna Strong, Frances Stutz, Tanya Tschergi, Frances Upton (as "Dolly Montague"), Dick Wallace, Rex Weber, Eugene Winchester, Jack Wolf, Sunny Wright, Dan Wyler. Produced by Producing Associates, Inc., Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert and Joe Cook. Produced under the supervision of John Shubert.
- Hold Everything (1928). Musical comedy.
- Manhattan Mary (1927). Musical comedy. Music by Ray Henderson. Book by William K. Wells and George White. Lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva and Lew Brown. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh. Musical Director: William Daly. Costume Design by Max Weldy. Scenic Design by William Oden Waller. Additional Costumes by Schneider-Anderson Company and Juliette. Directed by George White. Apollo Theatre: 26 Sep 1927- 12 May 1928 (264 performances). Cast: Ed Wynn (as "Crickets"), Ona Munson (as "Mary Brennan"), George White (as "Himself"), Vada Alexander, Mae Clarke (as "Viola Fay"), Harland Dixon (as "Bob Sterling, Stage Manager of Scandals"), Sue Elliott, Mary Farley, Suzanne Fleming, Paul Frawley (as "Jimmy Moore, Mary's Sweetheart"), Messrs. Goff, Kerr and Barth (as "Embassy Boys"), Lou Holtz (as "Sam Platz, a Bond Salesman"), Ray Hunt, Sam Ledner, Doree Leslie, The McCarthy Sisters, Victor Munro (as "Micky, A Hudson Duster"), Harry Oldridge (as "Police Sergeant/His Honor, the Mayor of New York City", Amy Revere (as "Helen King, Premiere Danseuse of Scandals"), Marcel Rousseau (as "M. Max Duval, of the Folies Bergere, Paris"), The Scott Sisters, James Scott, Adele Smith, Paul Stanton (as "R.C. "Arcy" Black, a Bond Broker"), Dorothy Walters. Produced by George White.
- Twinkle, Twinkle (1926). Musical comedy. Music by Harry Archer. Book by Harlan Thompson. Lyrics by Harlan Thompson. Additional scenes and numbers by Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby. Musical Director: Max Steiner. Musical Staging by Julian Alfred and Harry Puck. Costume Design by Charles LeMaire. Scenic Design by P. Dodd Ackerman. Directed by Frank Craven. Liberty Theatre: 16 Nov 1926- 9 Apr 1927 (167 performances). Cast: Elise Bonwit (as "Louise/Sextette"), Joe E. Brown (as "P.G. "Peachy" Robinson"), Frank Bryan, Perqueta Courtney, Diana Day, Alan Edwards, Anita Firman, John Gray, Patty Hastings, Phyllis Hooper, Wanda Jarzy, Buddy Jenkins, Dorothy Jordan, Douglas Keaton, Ann Kelly, Therese Kelly, Myrtle Le Roy, Joseph Lertora, Flo Lewis (as "Bessie Smith"), Allyn Loring, Alice MacDonald, Dorothy Martin, William J. McCarthy, Ned McGarn, Helen Mirtel, Ona Munson (as "Alice James"), Henry Nelthropp, Frances Nevins, Marion Nevins, Anna Nito, John O'Neil, John Sheehan, Betty Sheldon, Nerene Swinton, Frances Upton (as "Jane Robinson"), Hazel Vee, Betty Veronica, Diana White, Wanda Wood. Produced by Louis F. Werba.
- George White's Scandals (1919). Musical revue.
- (June 8, 1943) Radio: "Suspense", Episode 45 "Five Canaries in the Room"
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