- (1934 - 1961) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1934) Stage Play: Furnished Rooms. Comedy/drama.
- (1937) Stage Play: Orchids Preferred. Musical comedy. Music by Dave Stamper. Book by Fred Herendeen. Lyrics by Frederik Herendeen. Based on "Taxi Fare" by Fred Herendeen. Additional music by Henry Russell. Additional lyrics by Morry Olsen. Musical Director: Louis Gress. Music orchestrated by Paul Sprosty. Scenic Design by Frederick Fox. Costume Design by Jenkins. Choreographed by Robert Sanford. Directed by Alexander Leftwich [final Broadway credit]. Imperial Theatre: 11 May 1947- 15 May 1937 (7 performances). Cast: Leslie Austin (as "Richard Hope, Sr."), Phyllis Avery (as "Goldie"), James Babbitt (as "Bobbie"), Bob Borger (as "Dr. Sommers"), Lillian Carson (as "Sally"), Violet Carson (as "Edithe"), William Chalmers (as "Doorman"), Jack Clifford (as "Henry Warrenton"), Ethel Colt (as "Penelope Halchester"), Margie Conradi (as "Margie"), Vicki Cummings (as "Marion Brown"), Jack Curry (as "Footman"), Frew Donald (as "Hortense Chatfield"), John Donaldson (as "Richard Hope, Jr."), Elsie Edwards (as "Elsie"), Audrey Elliott (as "Mary Ann Miller"), Eddie Foy Jr. (as "Bubbles Wilson"), Joanne (as "June"), Hilda Knight (as "Gertrude Devereaux"), Helen Leftwich (as "Elizabeth Hope"), Fay Long (as "Helene Windsor"), Verna Long (as "Dorothy Charters"), Helen Martin (as "Evy"), Dilys Miles (as "Eva"), Bill Pillick (as "Chauffeur"), Bob Rice (as "Henry Monroe"), Lucille Rich (as "Sunny"), Henry Russell (as "Teddy Barber"), Frances Smith (as "Chorus"), Julie Sterling (as "Evangeline Landreth"), Frances Thress (as "Violet Manning"), Virda Twiford (as "Eve"), Benay Venuta (as "Lillian Mahoney"), Doris Vinton (as "Billie"), Jules Walton (as "July"), Jack Whittridge (as "Elmer Traun"). Produced by Charles H. Abramson.
- (1942) Stage Play: The Time, the Place and the Girl. Musical comedy. Music by Joseph E. Howard. Book by Will M. Haugh, Frank Adams and Joseph E. Howard. Lyrics by William B. Friedlander. Revised by Will Morrissey and John Neff. Musical Director: Louis Katzman. Music orchestrated by Louis Katzman. Vocal arrangements by Louis Katzman. Choreographed by Carl Randall. Directed by William B. Friedlander. Mansfield Theatre: 21 Oct 1942- 31 Oct 1942 (13 performances). Cast: Olga Alexandrova (as "Ensemble"), Jimmy Allison (as "Ensemble"), Irene Carroll (as "Ensemble"), Evelyn Case (as "Mrs. Talcott, a widow"), Ray Cook (as "Ensemble"), Kendrick Coy (as "Ensemble"), Vicki Cummings (as "Molly Kelly, a nurse"), Robert Douglas (as "A Patient/Ensemble"), Kay Dowd (as "Ensemble"), Rhoda Gerard (as "Ensemble"), Sheila Herman (as "Ensemble"), Irene Hilda (as "Margaret Howard"), Joseph E. Howard (as "Joe Howard"), Fred Kuhnly (as "An Attendant/Ensemble"), Wilson Lang (as "Ensemble"), Marion Lulling (as "Ensemble"), Peggy Lynn (as "Ensemble"), Red Marshall (as "Happy" Johnny Hicks, a gambler"), Ray McGregor (as "Ballerina"), Ruth Mitchell (as "Ensemble"), May Muth (as "Ensemble"), Clarence Nordstrom (as "Hjalmar Swenson"), Duke Norman (as "Willie Talcott, a spoiled child"), Dorothy Ostrander (as "Ensemble"), Doris Pare (as "Ensemble"), James Phillips (as "A Guide/A Police Sergeant/Ensemble"), Terry Saunders (as "Ensemble"), Rolfe Sedan (as "Mr. Duval"), Connie Sheldon (as "Ensemble"), Dot Sloane (as "Ensemble"), Fanette Stalle (as "Ensemble"), Gene Stern (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Stirwalt (as "Ensemble"), Lee Sullivan (as "Tom Cunningham, a rich man's son"), Andrew Thurston (as "Ensemble"), Alfred Weber (as "Ensemble"), Richard Worth (as "Lawrence Farnham"), Helen Zurad (as "Ensemble). Produced by Georges D. Gersene.
- (1943) Stage Play: The Voice of the Turtle. Comedy.
- (1944) Stage Play: Mrs. Kimball Presents.
- (1945) Stage Play: Lady in Danger. Comedy/mystery.
- (1947) Stage Play: For Love or Money. Comedy.
- (1948) Stage Play: Oh, Mr. Meadowbrook! Comedy.
- (1950) Stage Play: Mr. Barry's Etchings. Comedy.
- (1950) Stage Play: A Phoenix Too Frequent/Freight.
- (1951) Stage Play: Buy Me Blue Ribbons. Comedy. Written by Sumner Locke Elliott. Directed by Cyril Ritchard. Empire Theatre: 17 Oct 1951- 27 Oct 1951 (13 performances). Cast: Philippa Bevans (as "Nurse Fiske"), Audrey Christie (as "Liz Kendall"), Vicki Cummings (as "Camilla Ransome"), Gavin Gordon (as "Victor Hatfield") [final Broadway role], Kate Harrington (as "Maude"), Jack Hartley (as "Alvin Sable"), Cynthia Latham (as "Norma Cusack"), Enid Markey (as "Daisy Sable"), Wells Richardson (as "Professor Oscar Nimrod"), Jay Robinson (as "Jordan Sable"). Produced by Jay Robinson.
- (1952) Stage Play: Hook n' Ladder. Comedy.
- (1952) Stage Play: I've Got Sixpence.
- (1953) Stage Play: Mid-Summer. Comedy.
- (1954) Stage Play: Lunatics and Lovers.
- (1956) Stage Play: The Hot Corner. Comedy/farce.
- (1961) Stage Play: How to Make a Man. Written by William Welch. Based on a story by Clifford D. Simak. Electronic Sound Composition: Bruce Haack Directed by Eddie Bracken. Brooks Atkinson Theatre: 2 Feb 1961- 11 Feb 1961 (12 performances). Cast: Barbara Britton (as "Grace Knight"), Vicki Cummings (as "Harriet Lee") [final Broadway role], Michael Dunn (as "Adam, A legal Robot"), David Durston (as "First Counsel"), Harold Gary (as "Judge"), Scott Hale (as "Announcer/A Delivery Man/Second Counsel"), Pepi Krisch (as "Beer Robot/Second Legal Robot"), Peter Marshall [credited as Pete Marshall] (as "Albert"), Monica May (as "How-2 Co. Operator/Miss Jenkins/Ava"), Tommy Noonan (as "Gordon Knight"), Charles Pursell (as "Abe, A Robot"), Erik Rhodes (as "Anson Lee"), Alois Sapik (as "Gardener Robot"), John Schon (as "Adolph, A waiter Robot"), Allen Swift (as "Commentator/Trial Commentators/All Voices"). Produced by Dick Randall, Jerome Rudolph and Play Producers Inc. Produced by arrangement with Jay Garon, Morgan Wilson and Spice Wood Enterprises.
- (March 13, 1957) She played the title role in Aristophanes' play, "Lysistrata," in a Playwrights Theatre Club Production at the Studebaker Theatre in Chicago, Illinois with Mike Nichols, Elaine May, Severn Darden, Barbara Harris, Andrew Duncan, and Jeffrey Sweet in the cast. Paul Sills and Bernie Sahlins were directors.
- (1965) She acted in Edward Albee's play, "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?," at the Studebaker Theatre in Chicago, Illinois with Kendall Clarke in the cast.
- (1964) She acted in Edward Albee's play, "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?," at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey with Kendall Clark in the cast. Alan Schneider was director.
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