- Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- Beggar on Horseback (1970). (Revival). Written by Marc Connelly and George S. Kaufman. Incidental music by Stanley Silverman and John Lahr. Musical Director: Abba Bogin. Movement sequences by Marvin Gordon. Directed by John Hirsch. Vivian Beaumont Theatre: 14 May 1970- 27 Jun 1970 (52 performances + 13 previews that began in late Apr 1970). Cast: Luis Avalos (as "Candy Vendor"), José Barrera (as "Person in Neil's Dream"), John Beecher (as "Person in Neil's Dream"), Roger Braun (as "Person in Neil's Dream"), Tommy Breslin (as "Person in Neil's Dream"), Bob Daley (as "A Poet"), Cherry Davis (as "Gladys Cady"), Ralph Drischell (as "Guide"), Dorothy Frank (as "A Flower Girl"), Leonard Frey (as "Neil McRae"), Ray Fry (as "A Novelist"), Les "Bubba" Gaines (as "Jerry"), Jay Garner (as "Mr. Cady"), Elaine Handel (as "A Flower Girl"), Tresa Hughes (as "Mrs. Cady"), Robert Keesler (as "A Policeman"), Bobby Lee (as "Singer"), Clark Lewis (as "Newsboy"), Biff McGuire (as "Dr. Albert Rice"), Peter Oliver Norman (as "Person in Neil's Dream"), Art Ostrin (as "Train Vendor"), Michon Peacock (as "A Flower Girl"), Charles Pegues (as "Person in Neil's Dream"), Robert Phalen (as "Homer Cady"), Arthur Sellers (as "Newsboy"), Raymond Singer (as "A Policeman"), Barbara Spiegel (as "Miss Hey"), Vickie Thomas (as "Person in Neil's Dream"), Beryl Towbin (as "Miss You"), Susan Watson (as "Cynthia Mason"), Robert Weil (as "A Juror"). Produced by Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center (under the direction of Jules Irving).
- Elaine Stritch At Liberty (2002). Constructed by John Lahr. Reconstructed by Elaine Stritch. Music orchestrated by Jonathan Tunick. Musical Director: Rob Bowman. Featuring songs by Jerome Kern ("All In Fun"), Stephen Sondheim ("Broadway Baby," "I'm Still Here," "The Little Things You Do Together" and "The Ladies Who Lunch"), George Gershwin ("But Not For Me"), Noël Coward ("If Love Were All," "I've Been To A Marvelous Party" and "Why Do The Wrong People Travel?"), Irving Berlin ("Can You Use Any Money Today?" and "There's No Business Like Show Business"), Carl Sigman ("Civilization"), Richard A. Whiting ("Hooray For Hollywood"), Porter Grainger ("I Want A Long Time Daddy"), Richard Rodgers ("Something Good" and "Zip"), Jule Styne ("The Party's Over" and "There Never Was A Baby Like My Baby") and Albert Hague("This Is All Very New To Me"). Featuring songs with lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II ("All In Fun"), Ira Gershwin ("But Not For Me"), Bob Hilliard ("Civilization"), Johnny Mercer ("Hooray For Hollywood"), Betty Comden ("The Party's Over" and "There Never Was A Baby Like My Baby"), Adolph Green ("The Party's Over" and "There Never Was A Baby Like My Baby"), Arnold Horwitt ("This Is All Very New To Me") and Lorenz Hart ("Zip"). Directed by George C. Wolfe. Neil Simon Theater: 6 Feb 2002- 21 Feb 2002 (11 performances). Cast: Elaine Stritch (Performer). Produced by John Schreiber, Creative Battery and Margo Lion. Produced in association with Dede Harris, Morton Swinsky, Cheryl Wiesenfeld and The Joseph Papp Public Theater/New York Shakespeare Festival (George C. Wolfe: Producer. Rosemarie Tichler: Artistic Producer. Mark Litvin: Managing Director). Associate Producer: Roy Furman, Jay Furman, Mark Krantz and Charles Flateman.
- (1995) Richard Condon and his play, "The Manchurian Candidate," was performed at the Shattered Globe Theatre in Chicago, Illinois with Doug McDade and Linda Reiter in the cast. The crew included Laura Contey (director) and J. J. Porterfield (sound designer).
- [Author] "Notes On a Cowardly Lion," 1969. Biography (of Bert Lahr. Paperback: 417 pages. Most Recent Publisher: University of California Press; 1 edition (2 Feb 2000). ISBN-10: 0520223047 ISBN-13: 978-0520223042.
- (April 8 to 27, 2003) He developed the revue, "Elaine Stritch at Liberty," at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles, California with Elaine Stritch in the cast. Elaine Stritch was developer. George C. Wolfe was director.
- (January 9 to March 6, 1983) He adapted Dario Fo's play, "Accidental Death of an Anarchist," in a West Coast premiere at the Mark Taper Forum Theatre in Los Angeles, California. Mel Shapiro was director.
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