- (2/18/51) Radio series: Guest-starred in "Theater Guild on the Air", episode "Promise", with Hume Cronyn.
- (1972) Wrote the foreword for Frances Marion's autobiography, "Off With Their Heads! A Serio-Comic Tale of Hollywood".
- (11/26/50) Radio: Appeared in "Theatre Guild on the Air" in W. Somerset Maugham's "Theatre", also starring Melvyn Douglas.
- (3/17/53) Radio: Appeared in "The Martin and Lewis Show". The trio teamed up for a take-off on the life of a trumpet player.
- (1945 - 1972) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1950) Stage Play: Twentieth Century. Comedy (revival). Written by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur. Based on a play by Charles Bruce Millholland. Scenic Design and Lighting Design by Wolfgang Roth. Costume Design by Noel Taylor. Lily Garland's costumes conceived by Gloria Swanson. Directed by José Ferrer. ANTA Playhouse (moved to The Fulton Theatre from 9 Jan 1951- close): 24 Dec 1950- 30 Jun 1951 (233 performances). Cast: José Ferrer (as "Oscar Jaffe"), Gloria Swanson (as "Lily Garland"), Robert Carroll (as "George Smith"), Donald Foster (as "Oliver Webb"), Leon Askin (as "Second Beard/Judas"), Betty Bartley (as "Anita Highland"), Paula Bauersmith (as "Dr. Johnson"), Ralph Bunker (as "Grover Lockwood"), Vincent Donahue (as "Red Cap"), John Glendinning (as "Flannagan"), Werner Klemperer (as "First Beard/Cristus"), Eva Leonard Boyne (as "Sadie"), Paul Lilly (as "First Detective"), William H. Lynn (as "Matthew Clark") [final Broadway role], Burton Mallory (as "Conductor"), Edward Platt (as "Pullman Conductor/Red Cap"), Van Prince (as "Waiter"), Charles Salez (as "Second Detective"), Henry Sherwood (as "Max Jacobs"), P. Jay Sidney (as "Porter"), Robinson Stone (as "Train Secretary"), Robert Strauss (as "Owen O'Malley"). Replacement actors: Cliff Cothron (as "Flannagan"), John Glendinning (as "Owen O'Malley"), Leo Lucker (as "Red Cap/Second Detective"), Chase Soltez (as "Pullman Conductor/Red Cap/Second Detective"), Donald Stevens (as "Matthew Clark"), Ellsworth Wright (as "Waiter"). Produced by The American National Theatre and Academy. Associate Producer: Richard Condon. Note: Previously filmed by Columbia Pictures as Twentieth Century (1934).
- (September 22, 1967) Guest on the daytime talk program "Keene At Noon" also guesting was Kaye Stevens.
- (July 13, 1943) She acted in Rachel Crothers' play, "Let Us Be Gay," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio.
- (May 6, 1946) She acted in the play, "A Goose for the Gander," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio.
- (November 2, 1970) She acted in Leonard Gershe's play, "Butterflies Are Free," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio.
- (1961) She acted in the play, "Between Seasons," at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey. Bill Penn was director.
- (1972) She acted in Leonard Gershe's play, "Butterflies are Free," at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey with Richard Backus and Erin Connor in the cast. Arthur Whitelaw was director.
- (August 1959) She acted in Andrew Rosenthal's play, "Red Letter Day," at the Ogunquit Playhouse in Ogunquit, Maine.
- (September 17 to 29, 1963) She acted in Harold J. Kennedy's play, "Just for Tonight," at the Playhouse on the Mall, Bergen Shopping Center, in Paramus, New Jersey. Robert Ludlum was editor.
- (Summer and Winter, 1947) She acted in Harold J. Kennedy's play, "Goose for the Gander," in a Kenley Players production in Deer Lake and Reading, Pennsylvania. John Kenley was artistic director.
- (Summer 1966) She acted in Clare Boothe Luce's play, "The Women," in a Kenley Players production at the Veterans Memorial Theatre in Columbus; the Packard Music Hall Theatre in Warren and Memorial Hall in Dayton, Ohio with Marge Champion and Dagmar in the cast. John Kenley was artistic director.
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