- (1898 - 1952) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1898) Stage Play: The Turtle. Farce. Written by Léon Gandillot. Book adapted by Joseph Herbert. Manhattan Theatre: 3 Sep 1898- closing date unknown (performances unknown). Cast: W.J. Ferguson, Grace George [Broadway debut], Sadie Martinot. Produced by William A. Brady and Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1899) Stage Play: Mlle. Fifi. Farce. Manhattan Theatre: 1 Feb 1899- closing date unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Louise Beaudet (as "Mlle. Fifi") [Broadway debut], Aubrey Boucicault, Rose Coghlan, Grace George. Produced by William A. Brady and Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1900) Stage Play: The Countess Chiffon. Comedy. Adapted by Harry St. Maur. Fifth Avenue Theatre: 6 Feb 1900- Feb 1900 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: John Blair, Walter Clifford, Ruth Copley, Bijou Fernandez, Grace George, William Harcourt, Frank Hatch, Vivian Ogden, Henrietta Osborne, Ella Salisbury, J.G. Saville, A.,L. Traherne, Bertha Tueman, Edgar Walton, Affie Warner.
- (1900) Stage Play: Her Majesty, the Girl Queen of Nordenmark. Melodrama. Written by J.I.C. Clarke, from a novel by Elizabeth Tompkins. Directed by Frank Hatch. Manhattan Theatre: 15 Oct 1900- Dec 1900 (closing date unknown/58 performances). Cast included: May Arthur, Isabelle Bowman, George Conklin, Frazer Coulter, Fernanda Eliscu, Alfred Garland, Grace George, Frank Hatch, Emil Hoch, P. James, Louise Lloyd, Agnes Marks, Agnes McCarthy, Thomas Meighan, Samuel Michaelson, Annie Mifflin, William Murchison, George Osbourne, Bert W. Parmeter, George Pauncefort [Broadway debut], Louis Payne, Morton Selten [credited as Morton Selton], T. Troy, Marion Walsh, Frank Worthing. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1901) Stage Play: Under Southern Skies. Melodrama. Written by Lottie Blair Parker. Theatre Republic: 12 Nov 1901- Jan 1902 (closing date unknown/71 performances). Cast: Grace George (as "Leila Crofton"), Beatrice Bonner, Thomas Burns, Justine Cutting [Broadway debut], Roza Durant Da Porte, Cuyler Hastings, Grace Henderson, Laura Lemmers, Burr McIntosh, Donald McLaren, Vess Osman, Maude Reindollar, George C. Staley, Ralph Stuart, Minnie Victorson. Produced by William A. Brady. Note: Filmed as Under Southern Skies (1915).
- (1902) Stage Play: Frou-Frou (Revival). Written by Henri Meilhac. Adapted by Victorien Sardou. Garrick Theatre: 5 Jun 1902- Jun 1902 (closing date unknown/4 performances). Cast: Grace George (as "Gilberte"), Henry Bergman, Herbert Carr, Arthur Ebbets, Cuyler Hastings, Grace Henderson, Selene Johnson, Laura Lemmers, Donald MacLaren. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1903) Stage Play: Pretty Peggy. Drama [return engagement]. Written by Frances Aymar Mathews. Hoyt's Theatre: 5 Oct 1903- Nov 1903 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Bernard A. Reinold [credited as Adolph Bernard] (Broadway debut), Grace George (as "Peg Woffington"), Ruth Holt, Frances Leigh, Donald MacLaren, Victor Manley, Addison March, Henry March, Margaret Mayo, Vincent Serrano, Fred G. Swift, George Sylvester, Annie Ward Tiffany, Miss Tucker, Albert J. Tucker, Lyman Tucker, Burt Tucman. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1903) Stage Play: Pretty Peggy. Drama [return engagement]. Written by Frances Aymar Mathews. Hoyt's Theatre: 5 Oct 1903- Nov 1903 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Bernard A. Reinold [credited as Adolph Bernard], Grace George (as "Peg Woffington"), Ruth Holt, Frances Leigh, Donald MacLaren, Victor Manley, Addison March, Henry March, Margaret Mayo, Vincent Serrano, Fred G. Swift, George Sylvester, Annie Ward Tiffany, Miss Tucker, Albert J. Tucker, Lyman Tucker, Burt Tucman. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Two Orphans. Drama (revival). Written by 'Adolphe D'Ennery' and 'Eugene Cormon'. Book adapted by N. Hart Jackson. Directed by William Seymour. New Amsterdam Theatre: 28 Mar 1904- May 1904 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Kyrle Bellew (as "Chevalier DeVaudry"), Mignon Beranger (as "Florette"), Clara Blandick (as "Marianne"), Frank Conners (as "Lafleur"), Jameson Lee Finney (as "Marquis De Presles"), Grace George (as "Louise"), Robert Paton Gibbs (as "Martin"), Henry J. Hadfield (as "Cheif Clerk of Police"), Mona Harrison (as "Julie"), Stanley Hawkins (as "M. D'Estrees"), E.M. Holland (as "Picard"), Margaret Illington (as "Henriette"), Annie Irish (as "Countess De Linieres"), Alfred James (as "Footman"), Stanley Jessup (as "De Mailly"), Lucy Milliken (as "Sister Therese"), Clara Morris (as "Sister Genevieve"), James O'Neill (as "Pierre Frochard"), Elita Proctor (as "Otis La Frochard"), Corinne Parker (as "Cora"), Frederick Perry (as "Count De Linieres"), Frank Roberts (as "Dr. of Hospitals"), George S. Stevens (as "Antoine"), Charles Warner (as "Jacques Frochard"), Basil West (as "Officer of the Guard").
- (1905) Stage Play: Abigail. Comedy. Written by Kellett Chambers. Savoy Theatre: 21 Feb 1905- Apr 1905 (closing date unknown/47 performances). Cast: Ruth Benson, Louise Closser Hale [credited as Louise Closser], Joseph Coyne, Justine Cutting, Arthur Forrest, Grace George (as "Abigail"), Mrs. Hone, Selene Johnson, Willis Martin, Henry Mills, Vivia Ogden, Herbert Rollins, Mary Stuart, Conway Tearle (as "John "Booby" Kent"), Arthur Tennyson, Annie Woods. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1905) Stage Play: The Marriage of William Ashe. Drama. Written by: Margaret Mayo. Directed by William A. Brady. Garrick Theatre: 20 Nov 1905- Dec 1905 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: John Carlton, Mrs. Reginald Carrington, W.J. Constantine, Justine Cutting, Richard Davis, George Franklin, Grace George, Cecil Kingstone, Alma Mara, Leona Radnor, H. Reeves-Smith, May Davenport Seymour, Fred W. Sidney, Katherine Stewart, Ben Webster, Mortimer H. Weldon, Maud Williamson, Frank Wilson, Alfred Woods. Produced by William A. Brady. Note: Filmed by Metro Pictures Corporation as The Marriage of William Ashe (1921).
- (1906) Stage Play: Clothes. Drama. Written by Avery Hopwood and Channing Pollock. Scenic Design by Robert T. McKee and H. Robert Law. Costume Design by Van Horn and Lord and Taylor. Mannhattan Theatre: 11 Sep 1906- Dec 1906 (closing date unknown/113 performances). Cast: Grace George (as "Olivia Sherwood"), Louise Closser Hale, Justine Cutting, Douglas Fairbanks, Robert T. Haines, Diana Huneker, Angela Ogden, Dorothy Revelle, Charles Stanley, A.H. Stuart, Anne Sutherland, Richard Wilson, Frank Worthing. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1907) Stage Play: Divorcons. Comedy (revival). Written by Victorien Sardou and Emile DeNajac. Directed by Frank Hatch. Wallack's Theatre: 15 Apr 1907- Jun 1907 (closing date unknown/54 performances). Cast: Ruth Benson (as "Mme. De Brionne"), Evelyn Carter Carrington (as "Mme. De Valfontaine"), Justine Cutting (as "Mlle. De Lusigan"), Edward Fielding (as "Bastien"), Max Freeman (as "Joseph"), Grace George (as "Cyprienne"), Robert T. Haines (as "M. de Gratinac"), Laura Lemmers (as "Josepha"), Charles Stanley (as "M. Bafourlin"), A.H. Stuart (as "M. Clavynac"), Richard Wilson (as "Jamarot"), Frank Worthing (as "M. des Prunelles"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1909) Stage Play: A Woman's Way. Comedy. Written by Thompson Buchanan [earliest Broadway credit]. Hackett Theatre: 22 Feb 1909- May 1909 (closing date unknown/112 performances). Cast: Ruth Benson, Gardner Burton, Evelyn Carter Carrington [credited as Evelyn Carrington], Reginald Carrington, Fred Esmelton, Mary Fermier, Edward Fielding, Grace George (as "Marion Stanton"), Henry Miller, Jewel Power, Charles Stanley, Dorothy Tennant (as "Mrs. Blakemore"), Robert Warwick, Frank Worthing (as "Howard Stanton"). Produced by William A. Brady. Note: Filmed by Peerless Productions/World Film [distributed by World Film] as A Woman's Way (1916).
- (1909) Stage Play: Divorcons. Comedy (revival). Written by Victorien Sardou and Emile DeNajac. Hackett Theatre: 25 Feb 1909 (1 performance). Cast [as known]: Grace George. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1909) Stage Play: The School for Scandal. Comedy. Written by Richard B. Sheridan. New Theatre: 27 Dec 1909- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: A.E. Anson, Albert Bruning, Louis Calvert, Rose Coghlan, Grace George (as "Lady Teazle"), Ferdinand Gottschalk, E.M. Holland, Matheson Lang, Thais Lawton, Henry Stanford, Jacob Wendell, Olive Wyndham, Cecil Yapp, Oswald Yorke. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1911) Stage Play: Sauce for the Goose. Written by Geraldine Bonner and Hutcheson Boyd. Playhouse Theatre: 15 Apr 1911 (2 performances). Cast: E.D. Cromwell, Frank E. Denny, Louise Everts, Grace George, Carolyn Kenyon, Herbert Percy, Frederick Perry, Keith Wakeman.
- (1912) Stage Play: Just to Get Married. Written by Cicely Hamilton. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 1 Jan 1912- Jan 1912 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Owen Baxter, Ernest Chester, George Donald, Emily Fitzroy, Grace George, Lyn Harding [Broadway debut], Carolyn Kenyon, John May, Mona Morgan, Lucile Watson.
- (1913) Stage Play: Divorcons (Revival). Written by Victorien Sardou and Emile DeNajac. Playhouse Theatre: 1 Apr 1913- May 1913 (closing date unknown/55 performances). Cast: Frank Compton (as "Bastien"), William Courtleigh (as "M. des Prunelles"), Henry Dornton (as "Concierge"), Howard Estabrook (as "M. de Gratinac"), Grace George (as "Cyprienne"), Maude Turner Gordon (as "Mme. De Valfontaine"), Gail Kane (as "Mme. De Brionne"), Nina Lindsey (as "Mlle. De Lusigan"), Mario Majeroni (as "M. Clavynac"), Frank Peters (as "Jamarot"), Frank Reicher (as "Joseph"), Rae Selwyn (as "Josepha"), George Winstanley (as "M. Bafourlin"). Produced by William A. Brady. Note: Filmed as Divorcons (1915).
- (1913) Stage Play: The Younger Generation/Half an Hour [joint production]. Lyceum Theatre: 25 Sep 1913- Nov 1913 (closing date unknown/60 performances). The Younger Generation: Written by Stanley Houghton [final Broadway credit; he would die on 10 Dec 1913 in Lancashire, England at age 32 from meningitis]. Directed by Stanley Drewitt. Cast: Nigel Barry, Rose Beaudet, Katherine Browne, Alfred R. Dight, Stanley Drewitt, Robert Entwistle, Katherine MacPherson, Rex McDougall, Clinton Preston, Ida Waterman. "Half an Hour"--Written by J.M. Barrie. Cast: Nigel Barry, Daisy Belmore, Ruth Boyce, Alfred R. Dight, Stanley Drewitt, S. Dudley, H.E. Herbert. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1914) Stage Play: The Truth. Drama (revival). Written by Clyde Fitch. Little Theatre: 14 Apr 1914- Jun 1914 (closing date unknown/55 performances). Cast: Sydney Booth (as "Warder"), Grace George (as "Becky Warder"), Fanny Hartz, Lionel Hogarth (as "Butler"), Isabel Irving, Guthrie McClintic (as "Milliner's Employee"), Zelda Sears (as "Mrs. Crespigny"), Conway Tearle (as "Lindon"). Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1915) Stage Play: The New York Idea (Revival). Written by Langdon Mitchell. Playhouse Theatre: 28 Sep 1915- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Tracy Barrow (as "Tim Fiddler"), Richard Clarke (as "Monroe"), John Cromwell (as "William Ludley, Philip's cousin"), Grace George (as "Mrs. Cynthia Karslake"), Lumsden Hare (as "Philip Phillimore"), Selwyn Joyce (as "Brooks, Vida's footman"), Norah Lamison (as "Grace Phillimore, Philip's sister"), Ernest Lawford (as "Sir Wilfred Cates-Darby"), Josephine Lovett (as "Miss Heneage, Philip's aunt"), Guthrie McClintic (as "Nogam, Karslake's valet"), Mary Nash (as "Mrs. Vida Phillimore, Philip's divorced wife"), Albert Reed (as "The Rev. Matthew Phillimore, Philip's brother"), Conway Tearle (as "John Karslake"), Anita Wood (as "Benson, Vida's maid"), Eugenie Woodward (as "Mrs. Phillimore, Philip's mother"). Produced by Grace George and The New York Playhouse Company.
- (1915) Stage Play: The Liars (Revival/Note: Performed in repertory with "The New York Idea," "The Earth," and "Captain Brassbound's Conversion"). Written by Henry Arthur Jones. Playhouse Theatre: 9 Nov 1915- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Paul Bliss, Richard Clarke, John Cromwell, Grace George, Lumsden Hare, Alfred Hesse, Norah Lamison, Ernest Lawford, Josephine Lovett, Guthrie McClintic, Mary Nash, Albert Reed, Conway Tearle, Eugenie Woodward, Mary Worth. Produced by Grace George and The New York Playhouse Company.
- (1915) Stage Play: Major Barbara. Comedy. Written by George Bernard Shaw. Directed by Louis Calvert. Playhouse Theatre: 9 Dec 1915- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Paul Bliss, Margaret Calvert, Richard Clarke, John Cromwell (as "Charles Lomax"), Clarence Derwent, Charlotte Granville, Norah Lamison, Ernest Lawford, Josephine Lovett, Guthrie McClintic (as "The Butler"), Mary Nash, Conway Tearle. Produced by Grace George.
- (1916) Stage Play: The Earth (Revival/played in repertory with The New York Idea, The Liars, Major Barbara, Captain Brassbound's Conversion). Written by James Bernard Fagan. Playhouse Theatre: 15 Feb 1916- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: George Bangs, Louise Calvert, Richard Clarke, John Cromwell, Clarence Derwent, Daniel Eames, Arthur Eldred, Grace George, Charlotte Granville, Rexford Kendrick, Norah Lamison, Ernest Lawford, Guthrie McClintic, Conway Tearle. Produced by Grace George and The New York Playhouse Company.
- (1916) Stage Play: Captain Brassbound's Conversion. Comedy (revival). Written by George Bernard Shaw. Playhouse Theatre: 29 Mar 1916- unknown (unknown performances/repertory production/rotated with "The New York Idea", "The Earth", "The Liars", "Major Barbara"). Cast: William Balfour (as "Sidi El Assif"), Richard Clarke (as "Johnson"), John Cromwell (as "Capt. Kearney, U.S.N."), Clarence Derwent (as "The Cadi"), Hubert Druce (as "Rankin"), Daniel Eames (as "Petty Officer"), Lewis Edgard (as "Drinkwater"), Grace George (as "Lady Cicely Waynflete"), Rexford Kendrick (as "Ossman"), George Kent (as "Hassan"), Ernest Lawford (as "Sir Howard Hallam"), Guthrie McClintic (as "Marzo"), Malcolm Morley (as "Redbrook") [Broadway debut], Robert Warwick (as "Captain Brassbound"). Produced by Grace George and The New York Playhouse Co.
- (1917) Stage Play: Eve's Daughter. Written by Alice Ramsey. Playhouse Theatre: 11 Oct 1911- Nov 1917 (closing date unknown/36 performances). Cast: Lionel Atwill, Louis John Bartels, Florence Edney, Rockliffe Fellowes, Florence Flynn, Grace George, Lynn Hammond, Esther Howard, Mabel Knowles, Howard Kyle, Norah Lamison, Janet Slater, Florence Wollerson.
- (1917) Stage Play: L'Elevation. Written by Henri Bernstein. Playhouse Theatre: 14 Nov 1917- Dec 1917 (closing date unknown/38 performances). Cast: Kate Blancke, Holbrook Blinn, Florence Flynn, Vinton Freedley, Grace George, Esther Howard, John Kennedy, Mabel Knowles, Howard Kyle, Norah Lamison, Charles Pitt, Alison Skipworth, Florence Wollerson. Produced by Grace George.
- (1919) Stage Play: She Would and She Did. Comedy. Written by Mark Reed. Directed by John Cromwell. Vanderbilt Theatre: 11 Sep 1919- Oct 1919 (closing date unknown/36 performances). Cast: John Adair (as "Wallie Byrnes"), Edward Arnold (as "Charlie Vincent") [Broadway debut], Ned Burton, May Collins, John Cromwell (as "Frank Goward"), Lemist Esler (as "Harley Hunt"), Grace George (as "Frances Nesmith"), Fletcher Harvey (as "Dr. Coburn"), Esther Howard, Arthur Keith, George MacQuarrie (as "Fisher Brigham"), John Stokes, Isabel West, Cora Witherspoon (as "Elsie Goward").
- (1920) Stage Play: The Ruined Lady. Comedy. Written by Frances Nordstrom. Playhouse Theatre: 19 Jan 1920- Feb 1920 (closing date unknown/33 performances). Cast: Marie Bryar (as "Cutie Bird"), Thomas Donnelly (as "Bixby"), Richard Farrell (as "Dallis Mortimer"), Leila Frost (as "Dorothy Mortimer'), Grace George (as "Ann Mortimer"), May Hopkins (as "Mayene Breslin"), Caroline Locke (as "Mrs. Potts-Thompson"), John Miltern (as "Bill Bruce"), Carlotta Monterey (as "Olive Gresham"), Helen Reimer (as "Julia"), Freeman Wood (as "Jack Torrence").
- (1921) Stage Play: The New Morality. Comedy. Written by Harold Chapin. Playhouse Theatre: 30 Jan 1921- Feb 1921 (closing date unknown/5 performances). Cast: Kathleen Andrus (as "Lesceline"), Lillian Kemble-Cooper (as "Alice Meynell"), Warburton Gamble (as "Colonel Ivor Jones"), Grace George (as "Betty Jones"), John Gray (as "Wooton"), Lawrence Grossmith (as "E. Wallace Wister"), Ernest Lawford (as "Geoffrey Belasis, K. C."). Produced by Grace George.
- (1921) Stage Play: Marie Antoinette. Drama (revival). Written by "Edymar". Directed by Grace George and John Cromwell. Playhouse Theatre: 22 Nov 1921- Nov 1921 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Roy Adams (as "Swiss Guard"), Herbert Ashton (as "Sacques"), John Cromwell (as "Maillard"), Belle Daube [credited as Harda Daube] (as "Madame de Genlis"), Pedro de Cordoba (as "Count Axel Fersen"), Floria de Martimprey (as "Tirewoman"), Henri de Statera (as "Swiss Guard"), Paul Doucet [credited as H. Paul Doucet] (as "Leonard"), Agnes Dunphy (as "De Beauvert"), Jean Eastman (as "Tirewoman"), Florence Edney (as "Countess de Noailles"), Craig Ellis (as "Toulan"), Fred Eric (as "Louis XVI, King of France"), Grace George (as "Marie Antoinette, Queen of France"), Jack Grattan (as "Louis, Duke of Normandy, the Dauphin"), Austin O. Huhn (as "Augeard"), Rexford Kendrick (as "Pinnet"), Victor La Salle (as "Usher"), Jane Page (as "Tirewoman"), H.W. Rathke (as "Usher"), Walter Ringham (as "Joseph II, Emperor of Austria"), Lorna Valare (as "Marie Therese, the Princess Royal"), Betty Wales [credited as Bettie Wales] (as "Princess de Lamballe") [final Broadway role], Basil West (as "Caspierre"), Douglas Wood (as "Duc d'Orleans"), Frances Young (as "Madame Mouchy").
- (1922) Stage Play: The Nest. Drama. Book adapted by Grace George. Based on "Les Noces d'Argent" by 'Paul Geraldy'. Directed by Edward Elsner. 48th Street Theatre: 28 Jan 1922- Jun 1922 (closing date unknown/161 performances). Cast: Frank Burbeck (as "Jacques Hamelin"), Helen Cromwell (as "Louise"), Juliette Crosby (as "Suzanne"), Bruce Elmore (as "Henri"), Ruth Gillmore (as "Jeanne"), Florence Mack (as "Anna"), Kenneth MacKenna (as "Max Hamelin"), Christine Norman (as "Eveline Dore, called Marraine"), Marjorie Oakley (as "Leontine"), Lucile Watson (as "Marie Hamelin"). Produced by William A. Brady. Note: Filmed by Excellent Pictures as The Nest (1926).
- (1922) Stage Play: To Love. Drama. Written by Grace George. Based on the French of Paul Géraldy. Directed by Grace George. Bijou Theatre: 17 Oct 1922- Dec 1922 (closing date unknown/55 performances). Cast: Grace George (as "Helene"), Norman Trevor (as "Henri"), Robert Warwick (as "Challange"). Produced by Grace George.
- (1924) Stage Play: Merry Wives of Gotham. Comedy. Written by Laurence Eyre. Henry Miller's Theatre: 16 Jan 1924- Apr 1924 (closing date unknown/96 performances). Cast: Bertha Ballenger (as "Denbeigh"), Berton Churchill (as "Lambart DeRhonde"), Arthur Cole (as "Andy Gorman"), Laura Hope Crews (as "Annie O'Tandy"), Mary Ellis (as "Brigid Shannahan/Ophelia O'Tandy"), Herbert Farjeon (as "Angelo"), Grace George (as "Anne DeRhonde"), Wlliam Hanley (as "Dirk DeRhonde"), Avis Hughes (as "Sister Mercedes"), Tom Maguire (as "Phelim Hennessy"), John Miltern (as "Major Fowler"), Mignon O'Doherty (as "Cathy Donovan/Widow Gorman"), Eddie Quinn (as "Jimminy"), William Quinn (as "Patsy/A Small Gorman"), Lewis Sealy [credited as Lewis A. Sealy] (as "Pomeroy"), Arthur Sinclair (as "Seumas O'Tandy"), Judith Vosselli (as "Mother Agnes/Hudson Bess"), George Wilson (as "Paperhanger"), Ann Winston (as "Miss Mortimer"). Produced by Henry Miller.
- (1925) Stage Play: She Had To Know. Comedy. Written by 'Paul Geraldy'. Book adapted by Grace George. Directed by John Cromwell. Times Square Theatre: 2 Feb 1925- Apr 1925 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Anita Damrosch (as "Louise"), H. Tyrrell-Davis (as "Jack"), Grace George (as "Gerry"), Charlotte Ives (as "Kitty"), Barbara Kitson (as "Catherine"), Bruce McRae (as "Philip"), Edward H. Wever (as "Beaugard"), Frederic Worlock (as "Steven").
- (1927) Stage Play: The Legend of Leonora. Comedy (revival). Written by J.M. Barrie. Directed by Edward Elsner. Ritz Theatre: 29 Mar 1927- Apr 1927 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Edward Cooper (as "Mr. Lebetter"), Grace George (as "Leonora"), Harry Holliday (as "Usher"), Moffat Johnston (as "Mr. Justice Grim Dyke"), Kenneth Lawton (as "Clerk"), Nelly Malcolm (as "Mrs. Tovey"), Jane Maurice (as "Maid"), Bruce McRae (as "Captain Rottray, R.N."), William Newman (as "Juryman"), Richard Rawson (as "Policeman"), J.F. Robertson (as "Foreman of Jury"), Adele Ronson (as "Lady Peripety"), Richard Simpson (as "Railway Guard"), George Thorpe (as "Mr. Tovey"), Leonard Willey (as "Sir Roderick Peripety"), George H. Wiseman (as "Juryman"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (1929) Stage Play: The First Mrs. Fraser. Written by St. John Ervine. Scenic Design by Livingston Platt. Directed by Grace George. Playhouse Theatre: 28 Dec 1929- 1 Nov 1930 (352 performances). Cast: Grace George (as "Janet Fraser"), A.E. Matthews (as "James Fraser"), Eric Elliott (as "Murdo Fraser"), Carol Goodner (as "Elsie Fraser"), Lawrence Grossmith (as "Philip Logan"), John Halloran (as "Ninian Fraser"), Emily Hamill (as "Mabel"), Annabella Murray (as "Alice Fraser"). Replacement cast: Ruth Benson Blinn (as "Mabel"), Charles Campbell (as "Ninian Fraser"), Phyllis Elgar (as "Elsie Fraser"), Lowell Gilmore (as "Murdo Fraser"), May Marshall (as "Alice Fraser"), Craig Ward (as "Philip Logan"). Note: Filmed by Donau-Film Wien, Melodie Film [Austria] as Du bist die Richtige (1955).
- (1932) Stage Play: Domino. Romantic comedy. Written by Grace George. Adapted from the French by Marcel Achard. Directed by Stanley Logan. Playhouse Theatre: 16 Aug 1932- Aug 1932 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Joan Carr (as "Christine"), Geoffrey Kerr (as "Cremone"), Walter Kingsford (as "Mirandole"), Rod La Rocque (as "Domino"), Jessie Royce Landis (as "Loretta"), Robert Loraine (as "Heller"), Geraldine Wall (as "Louise"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1932) Stage Play: Mademoiselle. Written by Grace George. Based on the French of Jacques Deval. Directed by Clarence Derwent and Jacques DevalPlayhouse Theatre: 18 Oct 1932- Jan 1933 (closing date unknown/103 performances). Cast: Alice Brady (as "Madame Galvosier"), Grace George (as "Mademoiselle"), A.E. Matthews, Thomas Beck (as "Maurice Galvoiser"), Peggy Conklin (as "Christine Galvosier"), May Marshall (as "Juliette"), Garda Olesen (as "Therese"), Frank Rothe (as "Valentin"), Lillian Savin (as "Helene"), Kenneth Treseder (as "Edouard"), Harold West (as "Georges Boutin"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1935) Stage Play: Kind Lady. Drama. Book adapted by Edward Chodorov. Based on a story by Hugh Walpole. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by H.C. Potter. Booth Theatre: 23 Apr 1935- 29 Jun 1935 (82 performances). Cast: Florence Britton (as "Peter Santard"), Alan Bunce (as "Peter Santard"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Mr. Edwards"), Justine Chase, Francis Compton, Henry Daniell (as "Henry Abbott"), Elfrida Derwent, Jules Epailly (as "Gustav Rosenberg"), Grace George (as "Mary Herries"), Irby Marshall, Marie Paxton, Alfred Rowe, Barbara Shields, Hope Winchester (as "Annie"). Produced by H.C. Potter and George Haight.
- (1935) Stage Play: Kind Lady. Drama [return engagement]. Written by Edward Chodorov. Adapted from a story by Hugh Walpole. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by H.C. Potter. Longacre Theatre: 9 Sep 1935- Sep 1935 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Cast: Florence Britton, Justine Chase, Francis Compton, Henry Daniell (as "Henry Abbott"), Elfrida Derwent, Jules Epailly (as "Gustav Roseberg"), Grace George (as "Mary Herries"), Irby Marshall (as "Lady Weston"), Marie Paxton, Barbara Shields, Ralph Theodore, Ralph Urmy. Produced by H.C. Potter and George Haight.
- (1936) Stage Play: Matrimony Pfd. Comedy. Written by Louis Verneuil. Book adapted by Grace George and James Forbes. Directed by José Ruben. Playhouse Theatre: 12 Nov 1936- Jan 1937 (closing date unknown/61 performances). Cast: Rosemary Ames, Sylvia Field, Grace George (as "Linda Lessing"), A.J. Herbert, May Marshall, A.E. Matthews (as "Victor Gustav Martineau"), Victor Morely (as "Florist"), Rex O'Malley, José Ruben (as "Andre Lorre"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1938) Stage Play: The Circle. Romantic comedy (revival). Written by W. Somerset Maugham. Scenic Design by Donald Oenslager. Directed by Bretaigne Windust. Playhouse Theatre: 18 Apr 1938- Jun 1938 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: Tallulah Bankhead (as "Elizabeth"), James E. Corbett (as "Benson"), John Emory (as "Edward Luton"), Bramwell Fletcher (as "Arnold Champion-Cheney, M.P."), Grace George (as "Lady Catherine Champion-Cheney"), Dennis Hoey (as "Lord Porteous"), Cecil Humphreys (as "Clive Champion-Cheney"), May Marshall (as "Spaulding"), Audrey Ridgewell [credited as Audrey Ridgwell] (as "Mrs. Shenstone"). Produced by William A. Brady. Note: Previously filmed as The Circle (1925), and Strictly Unconventional (1930), and later as The Circle (1939).
- (1939) Stage Play: Billy Draws a Horse. Comedy. Written by Lesley Storm. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Directed by Harry Wagstaff Gribble. Playhouse Theatre: 21 Dec 1939- 31 Dec 1939 (13 performances). Cast: Hayley Bell (as "Clare Fleming"), Edna Bennett (as "Grace"), Carol Curtis Brown (as "Agnes"), Leo Bulgakov (as "Pschenschynoff"), William Chambers (as "A Customer"), Florence Edney (as "Mrs. Smith"), Jules Epailly (as "Waiter"), Grace George (as "Mrs. Parsons"), Lumsden Hare (as "Alfred Parsons"), Elizabeth Inglis (as "Elise Parsons"), Arthur Margetson, Harry Plimmer (as "Grandpapa"), Marion Sittler (as "Miss Burchill"), Douglas Walton (as "Tim Shields"). Produced by Lee Shubert and William A. Brady.
- (1940) Stage Play: Kind Lady. Drama (revival). Written by Edward Chodorov, from a story by Hugh Walpole. Directed by Felix Jacoves. Playhouse Theatre: 3 Sep 1940- 30 Nov 1940 (107 performances). Cast: Wylie Adams (as "Doctor"), Stiano Broggiotti (as "Henry Abbott"), Clarence Derwent (as "As "Gustav Rosenberg"), Elfrida Derwent (as "Mrs. Edwards"), Grace Dougherty (as "Aggie Edwards"), Mel Ferrer [credited as Melchor Ferrer] (as "Peter Santard"), Grace George, Dorothy McGuire, Marie Paxton (as "Rose"), John Robb (as "Mr. Foster"), Oscar Stirling (as "Mr. Edwards") [final Broadway role], Ivy Troutman (as "Lady Weston"), Joan Wetmore (as "Phyllis Glenning"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1941) Stage Play: Spring Again. Written by Isabel Leighton and Bertram Bloch. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Henry Miller's Theatre (moved to The Playhouse Theatre from 10 Jan 1942- close): 10 Nov 1941- 10 Jan 1942 (241 performances). Cast: Ann Andrews (as "Edith Weybright"), Betty Breckenridge (as "Elizabeth"), Joseph Buloff (as "William Auchinschloss"), Jayne Meadows [credited as Jayne Cotter] (as "Millicent Cornish") [Broadway debut], John Craven (as "Tom Cornish"), Lawrence Fletcher (as "L.J. O'Connor"), Grace George (as "Nell Carter"), Robert Keith (as "Dr. Lionel Carter"), Ben Lackland (as "Robert Reynolds"), Joe Patterson (as "Bell Boy"), C. Aubrey Smith (as "Halstead Carter"), George Spelvin Jr. (as "Western Union Boy"), Richard Stevenson (as "Girard Weybright"), Michael Strong (as "Joe Crumb"), William Talman (as "Arnold Greaves"). Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1949) Stage Play: The Velvet Glove. Comedy. Written by Rosemary Casey [earliest Broadway credit]. Scenic Design by Donald Oenslager. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Booth Theatre (moved to The John Golden Theatre from 13 Feb 1950- close): 26 Dec 1949- 13 May 1950 (152 performances). Cast: Barbara Brady (as "Mary Renshaw") [Broadway debut], Will Davis (as "Father Benton"), Jean Dixon (as "Sister Monica"), Grace George (as "Mother Hildebrand"), Walter Hampden (as "Monsignor Burke"), Ben Lackland (as "Mr. Barton"), James Noble (as "Professor Pearson"), Naomi Riordan (as "Sister Lucy"), Muriel Starr (as "Sister Athanasius"), John Williams (as "Bishop Gregor"). Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1951) Stage Play: The Constant Wife. Comedy (revival). Written by W. Somerset Maugham. Scenic Design by Donald Oenslager. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. National Theatre: 8 Dec 1951- 5 Apr 1952 (138 performances). Cast: Brian Aherne (as "John Middleton, F.R.C.S., Constance's husband"), Katharine Cornell (as "Constance Middleton"), John Emery, Grace George (as "Mrs. Culver, Constance Middleton's Mother") [final Broadway role], Claude Horton (as "Mortimer Durham, Marie-Louise's husband"), Eva Leonard Boyne (as "Barbara Fawcett, a friend"), Nan Martin (as "Marie-Louise Durham, a friend"), Gertrude Musgrove (as "Martha Culver, Constance's sister"), Liam Sullivan (as "Bentley, the butler"). Produced by Katharine Cornell.
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