- (1935 - 1949) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1935) Stage Play: Night of January 16. Melodrama.
- (1936) Stage Play: Arrest That Woman. Melodrama. Written by Maxine Alton. Directed by Ira Hards [final Broadway credit]. National Theatre: 18 Sep 1936- Sep 1936 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Frank Andrews (as "Brown"), Merle Clayton (as "Buddy"), Lillian Emerson (as "Madlyn Harcourt"), Walter Greaza (as "Robert Dorgan, District Attorney"), Harry Hanlon (as "Kelly"), Roger Hundley (as "Police Radio Announcer"), Gerald Kent (as "Davis"), Walter Kinsella (as "Marine"), George Lessey (as "Judge Marvin Drake"), Dave Mallen (as "Sailor'), Hugh Marlowe (I)' (as "Donald Drake") [Broadway debut], Doris Nolan (as "Marie Smith"), Francis Roberts (as "Police Telephone Operator"), Gertrude Short (as "Go-Go") [only Broadway role], Charles Wiley Jr. (as "Officer McCarthy"), Mervin Williams (as "Tom Thornton"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1937) Stage Play: Tell Me Pretty Maiden. Comedy.
- (1938) Stage Play: Lorelei. Drama.
- (1940) Stage Play: Cue for Passion. Drama. Written by Edward Chodorov and H.S. Kraft. Directed by Otto Preminger. Royale Theatre: 19 Dec 1940- 28 Dec 1940 (12 performances). Cast: Albert Bergh (as "Doctor"), Whit Bissell (as "Harkrider"), Edward Butler (as "Commissioner"), Clay Clement (as "Marvin A. Mallett"), Thomas Coley (as "Dave Herrick"), Bert Conway (as "Bellboy"), George Coulouris (as "John Elliott"), Philip Faversham (as "Photographer"), Mel Ferrer (as "Reporter"), Edward Forbes (as "Detective"), Lauren Gilbert (as "Herbert Lee Phillips"), Douglas Gilmore (as "Hughes, D.A."), Edwin Gordon (as "Detective"), Wilton Graff (as "General Escobar"), Harold Grau (as "Florist"), Peter Gregg (as "Waiter"), Roland Hogue (as "Maitre d'Hotel"), Oskar Karlweis (as "Paul Albert Keppler") [Broadway debut], Leonard Keith (as "Photographer/Waiter"), Ralph J. Locke (as "Clifford Gates"), Ellen Love (as "Reporter"), Scott Moore (as "Detective"), Russell Morrison (as "Medical Examiner"), John Neilan (as "Reporter"), Claire Niesen (as "Ann Bailey"), Doris Nolan (as "Vivienne Ames"), John Guy Sampsel [credited as Guy J. Sampsel] (as "Mr. Clark"), Clare Saunders (as "Elsie"), Fred F. Sears (as "Reporter"), Gale Sondergaard (as "Frances Chapman"), Lili Valenty (as "Ilsa Keppler"). Produced by Richard Aldrich and Richard Meyers.
- (1942) Stage Play: The Cat Screams.
- (1942) Stage Play: The Doughgirls. Comedy. Written by Joseph Fields. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Lyceum Theatre: 30 Dec 1942- 29 Jul 1944 (671 performances). Cast: Walter Beck, Reed Brown Jr., Theodore Bryant, Maurice Burke, King Calder (as "Julian Cadman"), George Calvert, Mary Cooper, George Davis, Reynolds Evans (as "Chaplain Stevens"), Virginia Field (as "Edna"), Arlene Francis (as "Natalia Chodorov"), Sydney Grant, Harold Grau (as "A Stranger"), Mildred Haines, Vinton Hayworth, Henry Howell, Edward Joyce, Kermit Kegley, William J. Kelly, James MacDonald, Joseph Martin, Harold Murphy, Doris Nolan (as "Nan"), Joseph Olney, Maxim Panteleieff, Edward H. Robins, Natalie Schafer (as "Sylvia"), Frank Taft, Jerome Thor, Thomas F. Tracey (as "Admiral Owens"), Arleen Whelan, Hugh Williamson, Ethel Wilson, Bernard Winter. Produced by Max Gordon.
- (1949) Stage Play: The Closing Door. Melodrama. Written by Alexander Knox. Directed by Lee Strasberg. Empire Theatre: 1 Dec 1949- 17 Dec 1949 (22 performances). Cast: Ronald Alexander (as "Basil Johnson"), Lonny Chapman (as "Guard"), Eva Condon (as "Grandma"), Richard Derr (as "Doctor Ed Harriman"), Jack Dimond (as "David Trahern"), Randolph Echols (as "Don"), Alexander Knox (as "Vail Trahern"), Doris Nolan (as "Norma Trahern") [final Broadway role], Alan Norman (as "Hector Trahern"), John Shellie (as "Ollie Stevenson"), Jo Van Fleet (as "Connie"). Produced by Cheryl Crawford.
- (1937) She acted in Noel Coward's play, "Tonight at 8:30," at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, Massachusetts with Martha Scott in the cast.
- (1941) She acted in George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart's play, "The Man Who Came to Dinner," at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, Massachusetts with Moss Hart in the cast.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content