- A Story for a Sunday Evening (1950). Written and directed by Paul Crabtree (also starring as "David"). General Manager and Production Stage Manager. Playhouse Theatre: 17 Nov 1950- 25 Nov 1950 (11 performances). Cast included: Henry Jones, Cloris Leachman.
- Twentieth Century (1950) Comedy [revival]. Written by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur. Directed by José Ferrer (also starring as "Oscar Jaffe"). Stage Manager and Production Manager. ANTA Playhouse (moved to the Fulton Theatre on 9 Jan 1951 to close): 24 Dec 1950- 30 Jun 1951 (233 performances). Starring: Gloria Swanson, Robert Carroll, Leon Askin, John Glendinning, Werner Klemperer, Edward Platt, Robert Strauss.
- Stalag 17 (1951). Comedy-melodrama. Produced and directed by José Ferrer. Production Stage Manager. 48th Street Theatre: 8 May 1951- 21 Jun 1952 (472 performances). Cast included: Frank Campanella, John Ericson [Broadway debut], Harvey Lembeck, Allan Melvin [Broadway debut], Lothar Rewalt, Robert Strauss.
- The Shrike (1952). Drama. Written by Joseph A. Kramm. Directed and produced (in association with Milton Baron) by José Ferrer (also starring as "Jim Downs"). Production Stage Manager. Cort Theatre: 15 Jan 1952- 31 May 1952 (161 performances). Cast: Judith Evelyn, Somer Alberg, James H. Bay, Mary Bell, Isabel Bonner, William Bush, Kendall Clark, Joseph Comadore, Vincent Donahue, Jeanette Dowling, Stephen Elliott, Billy M. Greene, Phyllis Hill, Philip Huston, Arthur Jarrett, Will Kuluva, Will Lee, Artin Newman, Edward Platt, Tom Reynolds, Leigh Whipper. Note: Winner of the 1952 Pulitzer Prize for Drama (Joseph Kramm), won 1952 Tony Awards for Mr. Ferrer as Best Actor and Best Director.
- The Young and the Beautiful (1955). Written by Sally Benson from stories by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Directed by Marshall Jamison. Production Stage Manager. Longacre Theatre: (moved to the ANTA Playhouse on 7 Nov 1955 to close): 1 Oct 1955- 26 Nov 1955 (65 performances). Cast included: James Olson, Barry McGuire, Lois Smith.
- (1926) Stage Play: Move On. Comedy. Written by Charles Banfield Hoyt. Directed by Augustin Duncan. Daly's 63rd Street Theatre: 8 Jan 1926- Jan 1926 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Buford Armitage (as "Richard Merrill"), Ralph Bunker (as "Roger Wallace Blackett"), Lon Carter (as "Jude Minnow"), Arthur Christian (as "Harold Padgett"), Eva Condon (as "M. Sophie Rossrucker"), Claude Cooper (as "Muskogee"), Hope Drown (as "Ellen Leahy"), Frank Frayne (as "Frank Kanovan"), Fred Hayden (as "Ed. Calkins"), Austin O. Huhn (as "Monty Lyons"), Paul Jacchia (as "Arthur Conklin"), George Neville (as "Cecil Dumphy"), Frances Pitt (as "Hilda Pincus"), John M. Sullivan (as "Thomas Healy"), G.O. Taylor (as "Ray Yarnold"), Hallett Thompson (as "Michael Michaels"). Produced by Edward A. Miller.
- (1928) Stage Play: Eva the Fifth. Written by Kenyon Nicholson and John Golden. Directed by John Golden. Little Theatre: 28 Aug 1928- Oct 1928 (closing date unknown/63 performances). Cast: Buford Armitage (as "Mal Thorne"), Philip Barrison (as "Newton Wampler"), May Duryea (as "Lorna Montrose"), Edward M. Favor (as "Ed Blondell"), Claiborne Foster (as "Hattie Hartley"), Diana G. (as "Violet"), Ross Hertz, Nila Mack (as "Connie Bard"), Florence Pendleton (as "Jane Truxton"), Al Roberts, William Sellery (as "Ernest Beaumont"), Lois Shore (as "Oriole Hartley"), Harry Swan (as "A Flagman"), Sheila Trent (as "Grace Steeple"), William Wadsworth (as "Leon Montrose"). Produced by Edgar Selwyn and John Golden.
- Claire Adams (1929). As "Clyde Price."
- (1931) Stage Play: School for Virtue. Comedy. Written by Arthur Ebenhack. Directed by Victor Morley. Longacre Theatre: 21 Apr 1931- Apr 1931 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Buford Armitage, William Atlee (as "Ron Sinton"), Leopold Badia (as "Grocery Boy"), Ruth Baumon (as "Lady of the Evening"), Shirley Booth (as "Marg"), Robert W. Craig (as "Tom Raydon"), Barbara Graft (as "Mrs. Taylor"), Elma Mirian (as "Lady of the Evening"), J.C. Osborne (as "Bill"), Clarence Rock (as "Ray Graylen"), Evelyn Wade (as "Clarinda Robbins"), Merry Wagner (as "Lady of the Evening"), Betty Worth (as "Lady of the Evening"). Produced by Edward Casey.
- Louder Please (1931). Comedy. Written by Norman Krasna. Staged by George Abbott. Theatre Masque: 12 Nov 1931- Jan 1932 (68 performances). As "Allen West." Cast included: Louise Brooks, Percy Kilbride, Millard Mitchell, Lee Tracy, Mildred Wall. Produced by A.L. Jones.
- (1934) Stage Play: John Brown. Historical drama. Written by Ronald Gow. Scenic Design by Cirker & Robbins. Directed by George Abbott. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 22 Jan 1934- Jan 1934 (closing date unknown/2 performances). Cast: George Abbott (as "John Brown"), Eddie Acuff (as "A Virginia Militiaman"), Buford Armitage (as "Salmon Brown"), Oliver Barbour (as "Oliver Brown"), Whitney Bourne (as "Annie Brown"), Harry Cooke (as "Owen Brown"), William Corbett (as "Colonel Robert E. Lee"), John Emery (as "John Kagi"), Robert Foulk (as "Watson Brown"), Harold Gould (as "Uncle Jeremiah"), Edna Hagan (as "Ellen Brown"), Betty Kendall (as "Bell"), Alma Kruger (as "Mrs. John Brown"), James Lane (as "J.P. Gallagher, of the New York Herald"), Charles McClelland (as "A Slave-Owner"), Tom Morgan (as "Colonel Lewis Washington"), Walter Price (as "Shields Green"), William Shea (as "A Telegraph Operator"), J. Ascher Smith (as "A Sentry"), Alfred Webster (as "Stevens"), Ernest R. Whitman (as "Frederick Douglass"), Iris Whitney (as "Martha"), Barry O'Moore (as "T.W. Higginson"). Produced by George Abbott.
- (1934) Stage Play: Kill That Story. Comedy. Written by Harry Madden and Philip Dunning. Directed by George Abbott. Booth Theatre: 29 Aug 1934- Dec 1934 (closing date unknown/117 performances). Cast: Joyce Arling (as "Emily"), Buford Armitage (as "Frank Martin"), Eleanor Audley (as "Millicent"), Oliver Barbour (as "Joe Blake"), James Bell, Wyrley Birch (as "Joe McGuire"), Matt Briggs (as "Spike Taylor"), Claire Carleton, George Carleton, William Foran (as "Sam Gersten"), Pedro Galván (as "Second Bell Boy"), Gloria Grafton, Fred Kaufman, James Lane, Emily Lowry, William Lynn, Royal Dana Tracey (as "Paul Simpson"), Thomas F. Tracey (as "J. Goodington Cartwright"), Alfred Webster. Produced by Abbott-Dunning, Inc.
- Schoolhouse on the Lot (1938). Comedy. Written by Joseph Fields and Jerome Chodorov. Directed by Philip Dunning. Ritz Theatre: 22 Mar 1938- May 1938 (closing date unknown). Cast: Walter Armin (as "Herman Godansky"), Buford Armitage (as "Sampson"), Nancy Barnwell, Edward Barry, Carter Blake, Donald Brown, Joe Brown, Jr., Frederic Clark, Hylah Coley, Gerald A. Cornell, June Curtis, Virginia Dunning, Eleanor Flagg, William Foran, Averell Harris, 'Jean Harris' (as "Dolly Shepard"/Alternate), Robert H. Harris, Eda Heinemann (as "Miss Fish"), Jack Kelly, Natalynne LaGoff, Lucille Low, Sidney Lumet (as "Mickey"), Richard Manning, Mary Mason, James Moore, David Pelham, Robert Pelham, Betty Philson, Paton Price, Edward Ryan, Jr., Julanne Sack, Nate Sack, Nancy Sheridan, Gerard Sloane, Houseley Stevenson (as "J.G. Hamilton"), Onslow Stevens (as "Peter Driscoll"), Thomas F. Tracey (as "Mr. Zarbel"), Charles Wagenheim. Produced by Philip Dunning. Produced by arrangement with George Jessel.
- Lightnin' (1938). Comedy [revival]. John Golden Theatre: 15 Sep 1938- Nov 1938 (closing date unknown/54 performances). As "Rodney Harper" (also credited as performing Stage Manager).
- The Mud Turtle (1925). Written by Elliott Lester. Directed by Willard Mack. Bijou Theatre: 20 Aug 1925- Oct 1925 (closing date unknown/52 performances). Cast: Buford Armitage (as "Lem Trustine"), Albert Bannister, Claude Cooper, Viola Fortescue, David Landau (as "Trustine"), Helen MacKellar, Julian Noa, Victor Sutherland, Ellen Warner. Produced by A.E. Riskin and R.R. Riskin.
- Skylark (1939). Comedy. Written and staged by Samson Raphaelson. Stage Manager. Morosco Theatre: 11 Oct 1939- 25 May 1940 (256 performances). Cast included: Glenn Anders, Gertrude Lawrence, Donald Cook, Anne Driscoll, Vivian Vance, Horace Sinclair.
- (1941) Stage Play: Claudia. Written and directed by Rose Franken. Stage Manager. Booth Theatre (moved to the St, James Theatre from 24 May 1942- 8 Nov 1942, then moved to the Forrest Theatre from 8 Nov 1942- close): 12 Feb 1941- 9 Jan 1943 (722 performances). Cast included: Dorothy McGuire (as "Claudia."), Donald Cook, Frances Starr, Frank Tweddell, John Williams.
- Doctors Disagree (1943). Written by Rose Franken. Production Associate. Bijou Theatre: 28 Dec 1943- 15 Jan 1944 (23 performances). Cast included: Philip Ober, Barbara O'Neill, Ann Thomas.
- Soldier's Wife (1944). Written and directed by Rose Franken. Production Associate. John Golden Theatre: 4 Oct 1944- 12 May 1944 (253 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders, Lili Darvas, Frieda Inescort, Myron McCormick, Martha Scott, Raymond G. Swing, Lowell Thomas [recorded voice only]. Produced by William Brown Meloney.
- The Iceman Cometh (1946). Drama [original production]. Written by Eugene O'Neill. Stage Manager. Martin Beck Theatre: 9 Oct 1946- 15 Mar 1947 (136 performances). Cast included: James Barton, Jeanne Cagney, Russell Collins, Paul Crabtree, Dudley Digges, Ruth Gilbert, Nicholas Joy, E.G. Marshall, Frank Tweddell.
- (1954) He directed Donald Bevan and Edmund Trzcinski's play, "Stalag 17," at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey with Robert Lansing, Vincent Gardenia, and Richard Poston in the cast.
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