- (1941) Stage: Appeared in "Banjo Eyes" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Vernon Duke. Material by Joseph Quillan and Izzy Ellinson. Lyrics by John La Touche. Additional lyrics by Harold Adamson. Based on "Three Men on a Horse" by John Cecil Holm and George Abbott. "We Did It Before" by Charles Tobias and Cliff Friend. Orchestrations supervised by Domenico Savino. Music arranged by Domenico Savino and Charles L. Cooke. Vocal arrangements by Buck Warnick. The De Marcos' arrangements by Alan Moran. Featuring songs by George Sumner. Costume Design by Irene Sharaff. Lighting Design by Hassard Short (also director). Hollywood Theatre: 25 Dec 1941-12 Apr 1942 (126 performances). Cast: Eddie Cantor (as "Erwin Trowbridge"), Ray Arnett, E.J. Blunkall, Betty Boyce, Norma Brown, Audrey Christie, June Clyde, Jimmy Corke, Kay Coulter, Ronnie Cunningham, Sally De Marco, Tony De Marco, Doris Dowling, Clark Eggleston, Carle Erbele, John Ervin, James Farrell, Florence Foster, Kate Friedlich, Chick Gagnon, Grace Gilren, Anne Graham, Arthur Grahl, Linda Griffeth, Miriam Gwinn, Ray Harrison, Doug Hawkins, Mitzi Haynes, Peggy Ann Holmes, Virginia Howe, Helene Hudson, Adele Jergens, Bill Johnson, Ray Johnson, Doris Kent, George Lovesee, Lynn, Royce, and Vanya, Lynn Malone, Rayford Malone, Joseph Malvin, Remi Martell, Ray Mayer, Morton Mayo (as "Banjo Eyes"), Virginia Mayo (as "Ginger, The Girl with "Banjo Eyes"), John McCord, Jack Nagle, Leona Olsen, George Richmond, Tina Rigat, Richard Rober, Sherry Shadburne, Phil Shafer, Billy Skipper, Jr., Puddy Smith, Lionel Stander (as "Patsy"), Jacqueline Susann (as "Miss Clark"), Shirl Thomas, Marie Vanneman, Mimi Walthers, Ray Weamer, Evelyn Weiss, Audrey Westphal, Tommy Wonder, Margie Young. Produced by Albert Lewis.
- (1937-51) Stage: Was active in the waning days of vaudeville as a straight woman with the Mayo Brothers, a two-man performing horse act. Her stage name derived from this period.
- (1951) Print ads: Stereo Realist 3-Dimension cameras.
- (5/19/47) Radio: Appeared (as "Marie Derry") in a "Screen Guild Theater" broadcast of "The Best Years of Our Lives".
- (3/25/36) Radio: Appeared in a "Lux Radio Theater" broadcast of "Wonder Man".
- (3/22/47) Radio: Appeared (as "Polly Pringle") in a "The Hedda Hopper Show - This Is Hollywood" broadcast of "The Kid from Brooklyn".
- (1941) Stage: Appeared in "Billy Rose's Diamond Horseshoe" on Broadway.
- (5/52) Stage: Appeared in "Christ on Trial", Hollywood First Presbyterian Church, Hollywood, CA.
- (1977) Stage: Appeared in Betty Comden and Adolph Green's musical, "Good News," at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, NJ, with Bert Parks, Tom Batten and Jill Choder in the cast. Bill Guske was director.
- (3/16/53) Radio: Appeared (as Elizabeth Austin) in a "Lux Radio Theatre" broadcast of "This Woman is Dangerous".
- (1954) Radio: Appeared (as "Judalon de Bornay") in a "Lux Radio Theater" broadcast of "The Iron Mistress".
- (Summer 1959) She acted in Joseph Fields and Jerome Chodorov's play, "The Tunnel of Love," in a Kenley Players production at the Packard Music Hall Theatre in Warren, Ohio with Michael O'Shea in the cast. John Kenley was artistic director.
- (Summer 1974) She acted in Frank Mandel, Otto Harbach, Vincent Youmans and Emil Nyitray's musical, "No, No Nanette," in a Kenley Players production at the Packard Music Hall Theatre in Warren; the Veterans Memorial Theatre in Columbus and Memorial Hall in Dayton, Ohio with Gale Gordon and Vicki Lawrence in the cast. John Kenley was artistic director.
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