- (1920) Stage: Appeared in "Always You" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Herbert Stothart. Book by Oscar Hammerstein II. Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. Musical Director: Herbert P. Stothart. Choreographed by Robert Marks. Directed by Arthur Hammerstein. Central Theatre (moved to The Lyric Theatre from 26 Jan 1920- close): 5 Jan 1920- 28 Feb 1920 (68 performances). Cast: Joseph Barton (as "Thomas"), Rose Cardiff, Jose Carmen, Eduardo Ciannelli (as "An East Indian Peddler") [Broadway debut], Virginia Clark, Cortez and Peggy (as "Dancers"), Elinore Cullen, Helen Ford (as "Toinette Fontaine"), Bernard Gorcey (as "A Mysterious Conspirator"), George Hale (as "Ensemble"), Lillian Held, Ralph Herz (as "Montmorency Jones"), Leo Howe, Julie Kelety, Russell Mack (as "Charlie Langford"), Irma Marwick, Gene Morrison, Helen Neff, Marietta O'Brien, Mildred Rowland, Emily Russ, Memphis Russell, Walter Scanlan, Anna Seymour, Marvee Snow, Jacques Stone, Beatrice Summers, Jack Zambouli. Produced by Arthur Hammerstein.
- (1924) Stage: Appeared in "Rose-Marie" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Rudolf Friml and Herbert P. Stothart. Book by Otto A. Harbach and Oscar Hammerstein II. Lyrics by Otto A. Harbach and Oscar Hammerstein II. Musical Director: Herbert P. Stothart. Imperial Theatre: 2 Sep 1924- 16 Jan 1926 (557 performances). Cast: Lela Bliss (as "Ethel Brander"), Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Emile La Flamme"), Arthur Deagon (as "Sergeant Malone"), Mary Ellis (as "Rose-Marie La Flamme"), Frank Greene (as "Edward Hawley"), William Kent (as "Hard-Boiled Herman"), Denis King (as "Jim Kenyon"), Arthur Ludwig (as "Black Eagle"), Dorothy MacKaye (as "Lady Jane"), Pearl Regay (as "Wanda"). Produced by Arthur Hammerstein. Production Supervisor: Arthur Hammerstein
- (1927) Stage: Appeared in "Puppets o Passion" on Broadway. Written by Rosso di San Secondo. Book adapted by Ernst Boyd and Eduardo Ciannelli. Directed by David Burton. Theatre Masque: 24 Feb 1927- Mar 1927 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Joseph Bascetta (as "Messenger Boy"), Caddie Carr (as "First Dancer"), Chauncey Causland (as "First Workingman"), Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Maitre D'Hotel"), Elaine Davies (as "A Lady"), Chester Erskine (as "Telegraph Boy"), Edward Fetbroth (as "A Gentleman"), Rose Hobart (as "The Lady in the Blue Fox Fur"), Manart Kippen (as "The Gentleman in Mourning"), Gilda Leary (as "The Opera Singer"), Edith Leitner (as "A Bride"), Paul E. Martin (as "A Bridegroom"), Frank Morgan (as "The Gentleman in Grey"), Santos Ortega (as "A Man About Town"), Giorgio Romano (as "Waiter"), Evelyn Sabin (as "A Solo Dancer"), Antonio Salerno (as "Waiter"), Erskine Sanford (as "Attendant"), George Sinclair (as "Second Workingman"), Anne Tarshis (as "Second Dancer"), Ernesto Valente (as "Waiter"), Craig Ward (as "The Unexpected Guest"), Mrs. Charles Willard (as "Maid").
- (1930) Stage: Appeared in "Sari " on Broadway. Musical/operetta (revival). Book by C.S. Cushing and E.P. Heath. Music by Emmerich Kálmán. Lyrics by C.S. Cushing and E.P. Heath. Based on the Viennese original 'Der Zigeunerprimas' by Julius Wilhelm and Fritz Greenbaum. Choreographed by Albertina Rasch. Scenic Design by Ernest Gros and Ronsin. Costume Design by Albertine Randall Wheelan. Directed by George F. Marion [final Broadway credit]. Liberty Theatre: 29 Jan 1930- 8 Feb 1930 (15 performances). Cast: Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Count Estragon"), Pat Clayton (as "Pierre"), Marybeth Conoly (as "Juliska Fekete"), J. Humbird Duffey (as "Laczi"), Gloria Frey (as "Klari"), Mitzi Hajos (as "Sari"), Bernard Jukes (as "Cadeaux"), Boyd Marshall (as "Pali Racz"), David D. Morris (as "Joska Fekete"), Jack Squires (as "Gaston"). Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1928) Stage: Appeared in "The Front Page" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Times Square Theatre: 14 Aug 1928- Apr 1929 (closing date unknown/276 performances). Cast: Walter Baldwin (as "Bensinger, of The Tribune"), George Barbier (as "The Mayor"), Violet Barney, Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Diamond Louis"), Frank Conlan, Claude Cooper (as "Sheriff Hartman"), Jessie Crommette, Matthew Crowley, Larry Doyle, George Fleming, William Foran, Frances Fuller (as "Peggy Grant") [Broadway debut], Allen Jenkins (as "Endicott, of The Post"), George Leach, Osgood Perkins (as "Walter Burns"), Willard Robertson, Joseph Calleia (as "Kruger, of The Journal of Commerce"), Dorothy Stickney (as "Mollie Malloy"), Lee Tracy (as "Hildy Johnson, of The Herald Examiner"), Carrie Weller, Gene West, Jay Wilson, Vincent York (as "Wilson, of The American"), Tammany Young (as "Schwartz, of The Daily News"). Produced by Jed Harris. NOTE: Filmed as The Front Page (1931), The Front Page (1974), His Girl Friday (1940).
- (1930) Stage: Appeared in "This Man's Town" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Willard Robertson. Directed by Lester Lonergan. Ritz Theatre: 10 Mar 1930- Mar 1930 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Betty Brenska, John Burkell, Paul Byron, Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Antonio Fantana"), Constance Cummings (as "Carrie"), Betty De Pascue, W.L. Douglas, Clyde Franklin, Viola Frayne, Walter Glass, Lewis Gordon, Eugenia A. Herman, Milton C. Herman, Len D. Hollister, Mary Howard, Joseph Kennedy, Jerome Lesser, Sam Levene (as "Rosso"), Marjorie Main (as "Clara"), Harold Morgan, William E. Morris, George Neville, Caroline Newcombe, Walter Newman, Pat O'Brien (as "Bill Post"), Arvid Paulson, Willard Robertson, Antonio Salerno, Dorothea Scott, Emmett Shackelford, Lois Shore, Joseph Slayton, Edwin Stanley, Lulu Stone, Max Von Mitzel, Jethro Warner, Charles C. Wilson, Vincent York. Produced by George Jessel.
- (1930) Stage: Appeared in "Uncle Vanya" on Broadway. Drama (revival). Written by Anton Chekhov, as adapted by Rose Caylor. Directed by Jed Harris. Cort Theatre: 15 Apr 1930- Jul 1930 (closing date unknown/96 performances). Cast: Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Ilya Ilyich Telegin, Waffles"), Walter Connolly (as "Ivan Petrovich Voinitsky, Vanya"), Lillian Gish (as "Yelena Andreyevna"), Isabel Irving (as "Maria Vasilyevna Voinitskaya"), Harold Johnsrud (as "Servant"), Kate Mayhew (as "Maryina, Nanny"), Osgood Perkins (as "Mikhail lvovich Astrov"), Eugene Powers (as "Alexander Vladimirovich Serebryakov"), Joanna Roos (as "Sofya Alexandrovna, Sonya"). Produced by Jed Harris.
- (1930) Stage: Appeared in "Uncle Vanya" on Broadway. Drama (revival). Written by Anton Chekhov. Translated by Rose Caylor. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Costumes worn by Miss Gish in Act I and Act III by Herman Patrick Tappe. Other costumes by Fania Mindell. Directed by Jed Harris. Booth Theatre: 22 Sep 1930- Oct 1930 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Produced by Jed Harris.
- (1930) Stage: Appeared in "The Inspector General" on Broadway. Comedy/farce (revival).
- (1931) Stage: Appeared in "The Wiser They Are" on Broadway. Written by Sheridan Gibney. Directed and produced by Jed Harris. Plymouth Theatre: 6 Apr 1931- May 1931 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Geoffrey Bryant, Terry Carroll, Ruth Gordon, Julia Hoyt, Eduardo Ciannelli, Julia Hoyt, Ben Lackland, Osgood Perkins, G. Albert Smith, Joseph Spree, Charlotte Wynters. Produced by Jed Harris.
- (1931) Stage: Appeared in "Reunion in Vienna" on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1933) Stage: Appeared in "Foolscap" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Gennaro Curci and Eduardo Ciannelli. Directed by Geoffrey Kerr. Times Square Theatre: 11 Jan 1933- Jan 1933 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Harold Bolton (as "Another Lunatic"), Diane Bori (as "Martina"), Arthur Bowyer (as "Pierce"), Charles S. Brown (as "Electrician"), Francis Carter (as "Assistant Photographer"), Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Luigi Pirandello"), Frank Coulan (as "Property Man"), William Dorbin (as "Orderly"), Katherine Hastings (as "Helen of Troy"), Peggy Hovenden (as "Francesca da Rimini"), Geoffrey Kerr (as "Shakespeare"), Cynthia Latham (as "Nurse"), Alan Marshall (as "The Stranger"), Rosamund Merivale (as "Eve"), Gorris Nels (as "Menelaus"), Allen Nourse (as "Servant"), Henry O'Neill (as "Dr. Harrold"), William Orville (as "Second Orderly"), Arnold Preston (as "Photographer"), Alice Reinheart (as "Cleopatra"), Bennett Southard (as "Prof. Bluttner"), George Tawde (as "Octavius"), Robert Wallsten (as "Marc Antony"), Richard Whorf (as "Lunatic"), Frederic Worlock (as "George Bernard Shaw"). Produced by John R. Sheppard, Jr. and Frank A. Buchanan.
- (1934) Stage: Appeared in "Mahogany Hall" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Charles Robinson. Directed by Eduardo Ciannelli. Bijou Theatre: 17 Jan 1934- Feb 1934 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: Charlotte Andrews (as "Diana"), Charles Angelo (as "The Deacon"), Olga Baklanova (as "Madame Paris"), Paula Bauersmith (as "Marge"), Daisy Belmore (as "Cassie"), Anthony Blair (as "Barnes"), Isis Brinn (as "Dolores"), Eduardo Ciannelli The Professor"), Ann Dere (as "Miss Hall"), William Dorbin (as "Piano Tuner"), William Foran (as "Steve"), Marion Green (as "Commissioner"), Arthur Griffen (as "Hector"), Cliff Hicks (as "Lighthouse"), Charles La Torre (as "Victoire"), John Lucas (as "Eric"), Benedict MacQuarrie (as "Brown"), H.H. McCullum (as "Smith"), Florence McGee (as "Tangie"), Gordon Nelson (as "The Major"), Wayne Nunn (as "Fitz"). Produced by John R. Sheppard Jr.
- (1934) Stage: Appeared in "Yellow Jack" on Broadway. Historical drama. Written by Sidney Howard and Paul De Kruif. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Martin Beck Theatre: 6 Mar 1934- May 1934 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Eddie Acuff, Wylie Adams, Jack Carr, Eduardo Ciannelli, Francis Compton, Charles Gerard, Lloyd Gough, Harold Hoffat, Colin Hunter, Bernard Jukes, Whitford Kane (as "Dr. Carlos Finlay"), Robert Keith, Geoffrey Kerr, Sam Levene, Richie Ling (as "Col. Tory"), Barton MacLane (as "James Carroll") [final Broadway role], Myron McCormick (as "Brinkerhof"), John Miltern (as "Walter Reed"), Millard Mitchell (as "William H. Dean, Pvt., U.S.A."), Jock Munro, George Nash (as "William Crawford Gorgas, Major, M.C., U.S.A."), Robert Shayne (as "Harkness/Major Cartwright"), James Stewart (as "O'Hara"), Frank Stringfellow, Clyde Walters, Katherine Wilson (as "Miss Blake, Special Nurse in Charge of the Yellow Fever Ward"). Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1935) Stage: Appeared in "A Journey by Night" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Arthur Goodrich, from the German of Leo Perutz. Directed by Robert B. Sinclair. Shubert Theatre: 16 Apr 1935- Apr 1935 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Sarah Allen, Hobart Armory, George Barr, Mimi Bontemps, James Buchanan, Eduardo Ciannelli, Martin Corne, Tom Coyle, Isabel Delehanty, Ann Dere, Annette Downes, Harold Eidelseim, Jack Hartley, Nicholas Joy (as "Director General Manager"), Elizabeth Kendall, Waldemar Klavun, Jerome Leng, Grete Maren, Kate Mayhew, Joseph McInerney, John Meehan, Fuller Mellish, Mary Murray, P. Phillips, Francis Pierlot, John Ray, Otis Schaeffer, James Stewart, Beatrice Swanson, Richard Taber, Albert Dekker (credited as "Albert Van Dekker"), 'Frank Wilcox (I)'. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1936) Stage: Appeared in "Saint Joan" on Broadway. Drama (revival). Written by George Bernard Shaw. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Martin Beck Theatre: 9 Mar 1936- May 1936 (closing date unknown/89 performances). Cast: Brian Aherne (as "Richard de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick"), A.S. 'Pop' Byron (as "The Inquisitor"), Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Peter Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais"), Katharine Cornell (as "Joan"), George Coulouris (as "John de Stogumber"), Maurice Evans (as "The Dauphin later, Charles VII of France"), Charles Waldron (as "The Archbishop of Rheims"), Hilde Albers, Robert Champlain, Arthur Chatterton, John Cromwell (as "Brother Martin Ladvenu"), Charles Dalton, Anne Froelick, Richard Graham, Joseph Holland, Lois Jameson, Barry Kelly, Ruth March, Walter Marquiss, Irving Morrow, David Orrick, Tyrone Power (as "Bertrand de Poulengey"), William Roehrick, Edward Ryan, Hudson Shortwell, Kent Smith (as "Dunois"), Kurt Steinbart, Fred Thompson, David Vivian. Produced by Katharine Cornell. NOTES: (1) One of Tyrone Power's first major stage roles. (2) Filmed as Saint Joan (1957).
- (6/22-7/1/33) Stage: Wrote (w Gennaro Mario Curci) "Foolscap," performed at the Pasadena Playhouse in Pasadena, CA. Addison Richards was director. Gilmor Brown was artistic director.
- (1961) Stage: Appeared in "The Devil's Advocate" on Broadway. NOTE: He was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Supporting or Featured Actor (Dramatic).
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