- (1930) Plays: Under the auspices of impresario Henry Duffy, Anita was seen at the Dufwin Theater in Oakland, California, as Lola de la Corte, the vamp, in "Lovers in Quarantine" (September 1930) and as a prostitute in Channing Pollock's "The Fool" (October 1930).
- (1928) Plays: Studied drama under Irving Pichel and Charles Meredith (c. 1928-29) at the Lobero Theater in Santa Barbara. At the Lobero, Anita starred in "The Trial of Mary Dugan" and was featured in "Redemption." She became a regular at that theater in the ensuing years, playing, among many other roles, Carmelita in "Siesta Time" (August 1938) and Cecily Harrington in "Love From a Stranger" (October 1939).
- (1927) Plays: While enrolled at the University of California, participated in plays with both the Little Theater and the Thalia Society
- (1938) Play: Played opposite Leo Carrillo in "Lombardi Limited" in the late 1930s.
- (1934) Play: In March 1934, Anita portrayed Mrs. Allonby in Oscar Wilde's "A Woman of No Importance" at the Padua Hills Theater.
- (1954 - 1960) Plays: Anita Harder continued to appear at the Santa Barbara Repertory Theatre in the mid-to-late fifties. She portrayed Edna Selby in "Harlequinade" (1954), Mrs. X in "The Stranger Woman" (1955), Marty in "Anna Christie" (1955), Mrs. Manningham in "Gaslight" (1955), and Phoebe the maid in "You Touched Me" (1959). Ms. Harder was also seen in "Tiger at the Gates" (1959) and "Ladies of the Corridor" (1960).
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