Jack Whiting (actor)


Jack Whiting was an American actor, singer and dancer whose career ran from the early 1920s through the late 1950s, playing leading men or major supporting figures.
He performed in 30+ musicals on Broadway, including Stepping Stones, Hold Everything!, Take A Chance, Hooray for What!, Hold On to Your Hats, Hazel Flagg and The Golden Apple. As a dancer, his talent was likened to Fred Astaire's and Gene Kelly's. He starred in London's West End premieres of Anything Goes and On Your Toes, and recorded medleys from these shows while in England. As a singer, he enjoyed great success with a few hit songs, such as "You're the Cream in My Coffee", "I've Got Five Dollars", and "Every Street's A Boulevard In Old New York".
Whiting acted in theatre plays like Aren't We All?, Design for Living, The Overtons, and A Girl Can Tell, and toured nationally with Arsenic and Old Lace, and with the musicals The Red Mill, High Button Shoes, and Gay Divorce.
Whiting also starred in a handful of films during the 1930s, including the British musical Sailing Along with Jessie Matthews, and the American comedy Give Me a Sailor with Martha Raye, Bob Hope and Betty Grable. He featured in a dozen popular television shows in the 1950s, as his career drew to a close. In 1953, he won the 10th Annual Donaldson Award for Best Musical Supporting Performance in Hazell Flagg, and came second in 1954, for his role in The Golden Apple.

Early life

Whiting was born on June 22, 1901, in Philadelphia, where he worked as a stenographer before going on the vaudeville stage as a young amateur actor with the Mask and Wig Club at the University of Pennsylvania, and developing a career as a singer and dancer, often portraying a smiling, blond leading man or a major supporting character.

Career

1922–1930: Early Broadway musicals, "You're the Cream in My Coffee"

Whiting's debut on Broadway was in the 1922 edition of Ziegfeld Follies, in which he sang "Flappers" with the Connor Twins during a dance by Jimmy Nervo. His career took off and he featured in many musicals where, as stated by Broadway chronicler Thomas Hischak: "he played the all-American boy who gets the all-American girl". In September 1922, he joined the cast of Orange Blossoms, to play one of the eight "Gentlemen in the case" with whom he sang three songs: "On the Riviera", "Orange Blossoms" and "Let's Not Get Married". The following April, he appeared as Bruce in Cinders, again in a group of nine gentlemen singing "I'm Simply Mad about the Boys", "You and I", "The Argentine Arago", and "Cinders".
In May 1923, Whiting appeared as Martin Steele with Leslie Howard in the Broadway staging of the drawing room comedy Aren't We All?, which ran for 32 performances. In November, he played the role of Captain Paul in the musical comedy Stepping Stones, and sang "In Love With Love" alongside the other principal characters, plus two more songs with the rest of the Company: "Babbling Babette" and "Rose Potpourri Finale". Stepping Stones ran for 11 months and 281 performances, ending on October 4, 1924. Exactly one month later, he was playing Alfred Weatherby in Annie Dear, in which he joined other cast members to sing "The Only Girl" and "Help, Help, Help", and to dance in "A Comic Fantasy". In October and November 1925, he played Larry Patton in When You Smile and sang "One Little Girl" with the Girls in the cast, as well as "Gee, We Get Along" and "Oh, What a Girl", both with Wynne Gibson. During the latter song, Whiting and Gibson also performed a dumbshow duet to the orchestra's mock sounds of flute, horn and saxophone in musical conversation.
From March to May 1926, he played Tommy Lansing in Rainbow Rose and sang "Jealous" with Billy Tichenor and Dancers, "If You Were Someone Else and Someone Else Were Only Here" with Shirley Sherman and Ensemble, and "Let's Get Married" with Billy Tichenor. In September, he played Billy Shannon in The Ramblers, in which he sang "All Alone Monday" and "You Smiled at Me", both with Marie Saxon and Chorus, and reprised "All Alone Monday" with Saxon, Eleanor Dawn, Blaine Cordner and Chorus. This show ran for 289 performances, closing on May 28, 1927. He played Robert Bennett in Yes, Yes, Yvette which opened on October 3, 1927, and closed on November 5, after only 40 performances. He sang "My Lady" and "How'd You Like To?", both with Jeanette MacDonald. Despite the show's short-lived run, Charles Brackett nonetheless wrote in The New Yorker that Whiting was "certainly the most promising jeune premier in his department."
In January 1928, he was Bob Martin in She’s My Baby, in which he sang "You're All I Need" with Irene Dunne, "Camera Shoot" with Beatrice Lillie and Clifton Webb, "Trio" with Webb and Nick Long Jr., and "Wasn't It Great?" with Long Jr., William McCarthy, Joan Clement, Pearl Eaton, Phyllis Rae and Ensemble. This show closed on March 3, after 71 performances. He played "Sonny Jim" Brooks in the highly successful Hold Everything!, which opened on October 10, 1928, and closed nearly a year later, after 409 performances. Whiting sang "Footwork", the highly popular "You're the Cream in My Coffee" with Ona Munson, "Too Good To Be True", and "To Know You Is to Love You" with Munson. Whiting then immediately joined the cast of Heads Up!, which opened on November 11, 1929, and ran for 144 performances until March 15, 1930. He played the role of Lieutenant Jack Mason, and sang "Why Do You Suppose?" and "It Must be Heaven", both with Barbara Newberry, and "A Ship Without a Sail".

1930–1935: Early films, more Broadway musicals, "I've Got Five Dollars"

In 1930, Whiting turned to acting in three musical comedy films in succession. In June of that year, he joined the cast of College Lovers, in which he starred in the role of Frank Taylor alongside Marian Nixon. He was Jerry Brooks in Top Speed with Joe E. Brown and Bernice Claire, and A. J. Smith in The Life of the Party with Winnie Lightner and Irene Delroy. The following year, he starred opposite Irene Delroy again, this time in the role of Jack Ames in Men of the Sky, a spy drama film with songs.
On February 10, 1931, Whiting opened Rodgers and Hart's America's Sweetheart in the role of Michael Perry, singing three songs with Ann Sothern : "I've Got Five Dollars", "We'll Be the Same", and "Hello Folks! Goodbye Folks!", as well as "How About It?" with Inez Courtney. On February 13, Whiting also recorded the first two of these songs for Brunswick Records. The New York Times said: "Jack Whiting of the blonde hair and baritone voice and Harriette Lake are a personable pair of musical comedy bandmasters. 'I've Got Five Dollars' is far more romantic than it sounds. It is the pet melody of Jack Whiting and H.L. the inevitable love interest." The show closed on June 6, 1931, after 135 performances.
He played three roles in Take A Chance: Kenneth Raleigh, Ronald in scene "Blackmail", and Daniel Boone in scene "Daniel Boone's Defense". The show opened on November 26, 1932, and closed on July 1, 1933, after 243 performances. He sang "So Do I" and "I Long To Belong To You", both with June Knight, "Tickled Pink" with the Girls, and "Turn Out the Light" with Sid Silvers, Jack Haley, June Knight and the Girls,
On December 13, 1934, he featured as himself in Harry Akst and Lew Brown's Calling All Stars, singing three songs with Mitzi Mayfair: "Thinking Out Loud", "I Don't Want To Be President", and "I'd Like To Dunk You In My Coffee", as well as "If It's Love" with Ella Logan, Martha Raye, Judy Canova, plus Boys and Girls. The show closed on January 12, 1935, after 36 performances.

1935–1937: Musicals in London West End, ''Sailing Along''

In early 1935, Whiting and his wife Beth travelled to London to join her son, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., for the celebrations of George V's silver jubilee, which took place on May 6. During their break in England, Whiting was offered the lead role of Billy Crocker in C. B. Cochran's London production of Cole Porter's Anything Goes, which opened on June 14. He sang "I Get a Kick Out of You" and "You're the Top" with Jeanne Aubert, "All Through the Night" with Adele Dixon, and "Anything Goes" with the Entire Company. The show closed on January 18, 1936, after 261 performances.
In May 1936, he starred in the London production of Rise and Shine by Harry Graham & Desmond Carter and Robert Stolz, in which he played Jack Harding, with Binnie Hale as Anne. One of the show's songs was "I'm Building Up to an Awful Letdown", written by Fred Astaire and Johnny Mercer. On May 8, The Times commented that while the piece had every possible element of a spectacular musical, it lacked "the impact of a unifying and selective personality." The show was considered a flop and closed on June 13, 1936, after 44 performances.
Still in London, the premiere of On Your Toes took place on February 5, 1937, and when Whiting joined the others in the company for the traditional first night celebrations at the Savoy Grill, "he was once again cheered to the rafters". In the lead role of Phil Dolan III, "Junior", he sang the title song, and "There's a Small Hotel" with Vera Zorina. The show ran for 123 performances and closed on May 29, 1937. Just over a week earlier, on May 21, Whiting and the cast's other main characters appeared in a viewing of excerpts from the same show, televised by the BBC as part of the British series Theatre Parade. Whiting, backed by the New Mayfair Orchestra, also recorded two medleys from the show: one comprised "There's a Small Hotel", "Glad to Be Unhappy", "Quiet Night", and a reprise of "There's a Small Hotel"; the other "It's Got to Be Love", "On Your Toes", "The Heart Is Quicker Than the Eye", and "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue" from the musical ballet of the same name. All of Whiting's recording from On Your Toes are included in the collection Jack Whiting & Jessie Matthews, along with two songs from the 1935 production of Anything Goes: "All Through the Night" sung by Whiting, and "You're the Top" by Whiting and Jeanne Aubert.
Whiting also starred with Jessie Matthews in the British film Sailing Along, shot at Pinewood Studios from August to December 1937. Playing the part of a Broadway star named Dicky Randall, he sang and danced solo to "Souvenir of Love", and with Matthews to "Your Heart Skips a Beat", two songs written by Arthur Johnston and Maurice Sigler. The contemporary Monthly Film Bulletin stated that "Matthews sings adequately and dances superbly, but Whiting matches her in dancing ability and outshines her in singing and acting". For the final big dance number—"My River", which lasted seven minutes on screen—the camera followed Whiting and Matthews for nearly a mile, and the set was so large that it had to be built across two studios. Including rehearsals, the pair danced an estimated twenty miles to complete that single scene. The film opened at the Gaumont Haymarket on April 17, 1938, and was generally released on August 29, 1938.

1937–1944: Return to Broadway, ''Give Me a Sailor'', national tours

Whiting resumed working in the US in late 1937 and joined Yip Harburg and Harold Arlen's Hooray for What!, which ran from December 1, 1937, until May 21, 1938, for a very successful 200 performances. In the role of Breezy Cunningham, he sang five songs with June Clyde: "God's Country", "I've Got Romantic on You", "Napoleon's a Pastry", "Down With Love", and "In the Shade of the New Apple Tree". During the opening night in New York, Whiting became ill with a cold and a temperature of 102 degrees, and was replaced by Roy Roberts. From mid-April until early June 1938, Whiting also joined the cast of Give Me a Sailor, a comedy film directed by Elliott Nugent in which he starred alongside Bob Hope, Martha Raye and Betty Grable. In this film, Grable and Whiting sang and danced to "What Goes on Here in My Heart".
On November 17, 1939, he returned to Broadway to play Johnny Graham in Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II's Very Warm for May, singing "Heaven In My Arms" with Frances Mercer and Hollace Shaw, "Scottische Scena" with Grace McDonald, and "All In Fun" with Mercer. The show closed on January 6, 1940, after 59 performances. On June 4, 1940, he joined Walk With Music in the role of Wing D'Hautville and sang "Even If I Say It Myself" with Alice Dudley and Kenneth Stock, "Walk with Music" with Kitty Carlisle and Ensemble, "Break It Up, Cinderella" with Mitzi Green and Ensemble, "Smile for the Press" and "Friends of the Family" with Carlisle and Art Jarrett, "Today I Am a Glamour Girl" with Carlisle, Green, Jarrett, Betty Lawford and Marty May. The show closed on July 20, 1940, after 55 performances. On September 11, 1940, Whiting played the role of Pete in Hold On to Your Hats and sang two songs with Eunice Healey and others: "The World Is in My Arms" and "Don't Let It Get You Down". It ran for 158 performances and closed on February 1, 1941.
Later in 1941, Whiting joined the 1941–1942 national roadshow of the play Arsenic and Old Lace, which travelled to 57 cities in about 18 months. He shared the role of Mortimer Brewster with Clinton Sundberg alongside Erich von Stroheim's Jonathan Brewster. On October 14, 1942, he returned to a musical theatre role by playing Damon Dillingham in Beat the Band, which ran for 67 performances and closed on December 12, 1942. In this, he performed two songs with Susan Miller: "Keep It Casual" and "Let's Comb Beaches", as well as "Proud of You", "America Loves a Band", "Steam Is on the Beam", "Every Other Heartbeat", and "The Four Freedoms—Calypso". On July 6, 1943, he joined Kitty Carlisle and Philip Huston for eight performances of Noël Coward's comedy play Design for Living at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio, where "critics and public alike cheered the superb performance of Coward's entertaining work". On September 17–18, 1943, Whiting was again playing his role of Mortimer Brewster—at the Playhouse in Wilmington, DE—as part of another tour of Arsenic and Old Lace, with Boris Karloff as Jonathan Brewster. In January 1944, he joined yet another tour of the same play throughout the Midwest and East Coast, this time with Bela Lugosi as Jonathan Brewster, for a run of 80 performances that lasted until June 1944.

1945–1958: Post-war years on Broadway, national tours, television

On February 6, 1945, Whiting played Jack Overton in The Overtons, a non-musical play which ran until July 7, for a total of 175 performances across three New York theatres. The following year, he played Con Kidder in replacement of Michael O'Shea in The Red Mill at least once on February 18, 1946, for an unknown period. After the Broadway run ended on January 4, 1947, Whiting reprised the role full-time during the play's national tour in 1947. In that role, he sang "Whistle It", " Go While the Goin' Is Good", "Good-a-bye, John", and "The Streets of New York (In Old New York)". He then embarked on another national tour by joining High Button Shoes, which opened in Boston, and ran for at least 16 shows throughout the Midwest and Great Plains, including Chicago, Denver, Minneapolis, Los Angeles, and closing in Kansas City, although the show ran again for two weeks the following year at the State Fair Auditorium in Dallas, TX. Playing the leading role of Henry "Papa" Longstreet, he sang "Get Away for a Day in the Country" with Andy Sanders as Stevie Longstreet, "Papa, Won't You Dance with Me?" and "I Still Get Jealous" with Audrey Meadows as Sara Longstreet, and "He Tried to Make a Dollar" with the entire company.
After the 1950 rerun of High Button Shoes, Whiting joined Herbert Kenwith's fourth summer season, playing the lead role of Guy Holden in Cole Porter and Dwight Taylor's musical play Gay Divorce—advertised under the title of the 1934 film, The Gay Divorcee. The musical ran for four weeks, opening on July 17 in East Hampton, NY, and closing on August 19 in
Stockbridge, MA, after 28 performances; other cast members included Carol Stone and Lenore Lonergan. The following year, Whiting played the role of Benjamin Tauber in Springtime Folly, a non-musical comedy play in three acts which ran for less than two weeks at the end of February 1951. He returned to the musical stage in May 1952, playing three roles in George and Ira Gershwin's Of Thee I Sing, which opened at the Ziegfeld Theatre and ran for 72 performances until July 5. Whiting sang " The Supreme Court Justices" with Male Ensemble, and "The Roll Call" with Paul Hartman, Donald Foster, Howard Freeman, Mort Marshall and Male Ensemble. This 1952 revival was recorded by Capitol.
In 1953, Whiting played the Mayor of New York in the very successful Hazel Flagg, which opened on February 11 and ran for 190 performances before closing on September 19. He sang Jule Styne and Bob Hilliard's "Every Street's A Boulevard In Old New York" to great critical acclaim, and Robert Coleman in the Daily Mirror wrote that "Jack Whiting had the audience blistering their palms" for encores of that song. Shortly after the opening, his name was placed above the title. He also sang "Everybody Loves to Take a Bow" with Benay Venuta. On June 20, Whiting won the 10th Annual Donaldson Award for Best Musical Supporting Performance in Hazell Flagg. The cast recording was released by RCA Victor. On October 29, he was J. G. in A Girl Can Tell, a comedy play in three acts which ran for 60 performances, until December 19.
The following year, he played the role of Hector Charybdis, Mayor of Rhododendron and one of "The Heroes" in The Golden Apple, a light-hearted adaptation of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey transposed to the United States during the first decade of the twentieth-century. It opened on April 20, 1954, and ran until August 7, for a total of 125 performances. Whiting sang "Hector's Song", four songs with The Heroes: "The Heroes Come Home", "It Was a Good Adventure", "Helen Is Always Willing" and "The Church Social"; "The Departure for Rhododendron" with The Company; "The Taking of Rhododendron" with Stephen Douglass and Jonathan Lucas ; and "Scylla and Charybdis" with Dean Michener. Brooks Atkinson in the New York Times quipped that "Jack Whiting was now probably destined to play mayors for the remainder of his career", since he had "stopped the show" as New York's mayor in Hazell Flagg. RCA Victor recorded a single LP of the show's musical highlights, released on LP #1014.
In 1956, he played the role of Jack in the musical Strip For Action, which opened on March 17 at the Shubert Theatre (New Haven, CT) and ran there for an unknown duration before relocating to the Shubert Theatre (Philadelphia, PA) on March 27 until April 7, and then moved on to the Nixon Theatre (Philadelphia, PA) on April 9, where it closed on April 14. He sang "Dame Crazy" with Yvonne Adair, "I Just Want to Be a Song and Dance Man", and "Good Old Days of Burlesque" with Adair, Danny Dayton, Jessica James and Lilly Christine.
Whiting's final New York stage appearance was as agent Charlie Davenport at the New York City Center's 1958 revival of Annie Get Your Gun, in which he opened Act I singing "Colonel Buffalo Bill" with Ensemble, and "There's No Business Like Show Business" with James Rennie, David Atkinson and Betty Jane Watson. The show ran for only 15 performances from February 19 to March 2.
On television, Whiting secured minor roles in drama series such as the Armstrong Circle Theatre, Studio One, Star Stage, and The Alcoa Hour, as well as The Joseph Cotten Show: On Trial and The Marge And Gower Champion Show. He also performed in Paris in the Springtime, a live telecast produced by Max Liebman and starring Dan Dailey, Gale Sherwood and Helen Gallagher, in which he reprised "Down With Love" from ''Hooray for What!''

Personal life

In early 1929, Anna Beth Fairbanks, attended a performance of Hold Everything!, in which Whiting was the leading man. They met and became inseparable. They were witnesses at the June 3, 1929, wedding of her son Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. and Joan Crawford, then got married themselves a few weeks later, on June 28, and moved into an apartment on East 52nd Street.
In his 1988 autobiography, Fairbanks, Jr. wrote: "Jack was a handsome redhead, about twenty-seven or -eight years old, with a virile baritone that helped make 'You're the Cream in My Coffee' a successful song. Jack was warm and friendly, and we hit it off handsomely. I had a new stepfather - charming, gifted, and only eight or nine years older than I." Despite the difference in age between Whiting and his wife, he was devoted to her and remained so all his life.
Although Whiting was earning a good deal of money at the time, he was assisting his father—Albert Draper Whiting, Sr., a retired doctor—and mother, and Beth was helping her siblings, Gladys and William. For the rest of Whiting's life, he and Beth remained in regular, close contact with her son, who also extended financial support to them when Whiting was out of work, or when his jobs on Broadway were short-lived. When he was in New York, Whiting would frequent The Lambs Club—which he had joined in 1926—where he and John Hundley periodically performed in sketches called "Lambs' Gambols"; as such, he featured among the stars lined up on the occasion of the big World's Fair gambol performed at the Imperial Theatre on April 23, 1939.

Death

Whiting died of acute coronary thrombosis in his Manhattan apartment on Wednesday, February 15, 1961, while watching television with his wife Beth.

Work

Musical theatre

In the table below, all theatres are located in New York, NY, except where indicated.
TitleRoleTheatreOpening dateClosing date# of perf.
June 5, 1922June 23, 1923424
Fulton TheatreDecember 9, 192295
CindersBruceDresden TheatreApril 3, 1923April 28, 192331
Stepping StonesCaptain PaulGlobe TheatreNovember 6, 1923October 4, 1924281
Annie DearAlfred WeatherbyTimes Square TheatreNovember 4, 1924January 31, 1925103
When You SmileLarry PattonNational TheatreOctober 5, 1925October 18, 192549
When You SmileLarry PattonCentral TheatreOctober 19, 1925November 14, 192549
Rainbow RoseTommy LansingForrest TheatreMarch 16, 1926May 1, 192655
The RamblersBilly ShannonLyric TheatreSeptember 20, 1926May 28, 1927289
Yes, Yes, YvetteRobert BennettSam H. Harris TheatreOctober 3, 1927November 5, 192740
She’s My BabyBob MartinGlobe TheatreJanuary 3, 1928March 3, 192871
Hold Everything!"Sonny Jim" BrooksBroadhurst TheatreOctober 10, 1928October 5, 1929409
Heads Up!Jack MasonAlvin TheatreNovember 11, 1929March 15, 1930144
Michael PerryBroadhurst TheatreFebruary 10, 1931June 6, 1931135
Take A ChanceKenneth Raleigh, Ronald, Apollo TheatreNovember 26, 1932July 1, 1933243
Calling All StarsHollywood TheatreDecember 13, 1934January 12, 193536
Anything GoesBilly CrockerPalace Theatre, LondonJune 14, 1935January 18, 1936261
Rise and ShineJack HardingDrury Lane, LondonMay 7, 1936June 13, 193644
On Your ToesPhil Dolan III, "Junior"Palace Theatre, LondonFebruary 5, 1937May 29, 1937123
Hooray for What!Breezy CunninghamWinter Garden TheatreDecember 1, 1937May 21, 1938200
Very Warm for MayJohnny GrahamAlvin TheatreNovember 17, 1939January 6, 194059
Walk With MusicWing D'HautvilleEthel Barrymore TheatreJune 4, 1940July 20, 194055
Hold On to Your HatsPeteShubert TheatreSeptember 11, 1940February 1, 1941158
Beat the BandDamon Dillingham46th Street TheatreOctober 14, 1942December 12, 194267
The Red MillCon Kidder 46th Street TheatreDecember 24, 1945January 4, 1947531
The Red MillCon KidderN/A
High Button ShoesHenry LongstreetApril 14, 1948?N/A
High Button ShoesHenry LongstreetState Fair Auditorium, Dallas, TXJune 12, 1950June 25, 1950N/A
Gay DivorceGuy HoldenGuild Hall, East Hampton, NYJuly 17, 1950July 29, 195028
Gay DivorceGuy HoldenMcCarter Theatre, Princeton, NJJuly 31, 1950August 5, 195028
Gay DivorceGuy HoldenBerkshire Playhouse, Stockbridge, MAAugust 14, 1950August 19, 195028
Of Thee I SingThe Chief Justice, Guide, Ziegfeld TheatreMay 5, 1952July 5, 195272
Hazel FlaggMayor of New YorkMark Hellinger TheatreFebruary 11, 1953September 19, 1953190
The Golden AppleHector CharybdisAlvin TheatreApril 20, 1954August 7, 1954125
Strip For ActionJackShubert Theatre, New Haven, CTMarch 17, 1956March ??, 1956N/A
Strip For ActionJackShubert Theatre, Philadelphia, PAMarch 27, 1956April 7, 1956N/A
Strip For ActionJackNixon Theatre, Philadelphia, PAApril 9, 1956April 14, 1956N/A
Annie Get Your GunCharlie DavenportNew York City CenterFebruary 19, 1958March 2, 195815

In replacement of Michael O'Shea, at least once on February 18, 1946, for an unknown period.

Theatre

In the table below, all theatres are located in New York, NY, except where indicated.
TitleRoleTheatreOpening dateClosing date# of
perf.
Aren't We All?Martin SteeleGaiety TheatreMay 21, 1923June 1, 192332
Arsenic and Old LaceMortimer BrewsterApril 6, 1941N/A
Design for LivingOtto or LeoHanna Theatre; Cleveland, OHJuly 6, 1943July 11, 19438
Arsenic and Old LaceMortimer BrewsterN/A
Arsenic and Old LaceMortimer BrewsterJanuary 29, 1944June 3, 194480
The OvertonsJack OvertonBooth TheatreFebruary 6, 1945March 10, 1945175
The OvertonsJack OvertonForrest TheatreMarch 12, 1945June 23, 1945175
The OvertonsJack OvertonNational TheatreJune 25, 1945July 7, 1945175
Springtime FollyBenjamin TauberNew Gayety; Washington, DCFebruary 19, 1951February 24, 1951≈ 10
Springtime FollyBenjamin TauberJohn Golden TheatreFebruary 26, 1951February 27, 1951≈ 10
A Girl Can TellJ.G.Royale TheatreOctober 29, 1953December 19, 195360

Films

College Lovers, as Frank TaylorTop Speed, as Gerald BrooksThe Life of the Party, as the real Jerry "A.J." SmithMen of the Sky, as Jack AmesSailing Along, as Dicky RandallGive Me a Sailor, as Walter Brewster

Selected recordings

Anything Goes – CD of 1935 original recording by London castOn Your Toes Medley – CD of 1937 original recording by London castVery Warm for May – CD of 1939 original recording by Broadway castOf Thee I Sing – CD of 1952 original recording by Broadway castHazel Flagg – CD of 1953 original recording by Broadway castThe Golden Apple – CD of 1954 original recording by Broadway castJack Whiting & Jessie Matthews – Vinyl LP

Television

Theatre Parade, in a BBC broadcast of excerpts from On Your Toes, such as "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue", the "Princess Zenobia ballet", and others – with Vera Zorina, Olive Blakeney, Marjorie Browne and Eddie PolaArmstrong Circle Theatre, in "The Nothing Kid" Armstrong Circle Theatre, in "The Pride of Jonathan Craig" The Ed Sullivan Show, in a song-and-dance routine with Audrey Meadows Studio One, as Tim O'Hara in "A Likely Story" Star Stage, in "Trumpet Man" The Alcoa Hour, as J.G in "A Girl Can Tell" Max Liebman Presents: Paris in the Springtime, as himself, singing "Down With Love" Arthur Godfrey and His Friends, as himself The Joseph Cotten Show: On Trial, as Hartford in "The Case of Double Trouble" The Marge And Gower Champion Show, as Marge's father The Vic Damone Show, as himself, singing "You're the Cream in My Coffee"

Awards

  • 1953: Won the 10th Annual Donaldson Award for Best Musical Supporting Performance in Hazell Flagg.
  • 1954: Runner-up at the 11th Annual Donaldson Award for Best Musical Supporting Performance in Golden Apple.

Explanatory footnotes

Books

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Theatre programs/playbills

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Liner notes

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Newspapers

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Websites

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AV media

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