Lionel Barrymore | Drew Barrymore | Ethel Merman | John Barrymore | Ethel Waters | Michael Barrymore | Julius and Ethel Rosenberg | Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize | Ethel (string quartet) | Ethel Booba | Ethel Schwabacher | ETHEL | Maurice Barrymore | John Blyth Barrymore | Ethel Turner | Ethel Scott | Ethel, Mississippi | Ethel Armes | Ethel | Diana Barrymore | Barrymore Awards for Excellence in Theater | Mary Ethel Creswell | Ethel T. Wead Mick | Ethel Thomson Larcombe | Ethel Skinner | Ethel Roosevelt Derby | Ethel Moorhead | Ethel M. Elderton | Ethel Lynn Beers | Ethel Lang |
Stars who have visited the theater or appeared on the stage include Al St. John, Buster Keaton, Pearl White, DeWolf Hopper, Helen Hayes, Lillian Russell, Ethel Barrymore and Abbott and Costello.
Built in 1903 and opened Halloween night 1904, the then-named Gayety Theater was stage and vaudeville house, and it featured stars such as Ethel Barrymore, Gertrude Lawrence, and Helen Hayes.
“At that time many Broadway-bound productions tried out first in Boston, and I remember Ethel Barrymore in The Corn Is Green by Emlyn Williams and Arsenic and Old Lace with Boris Karloff. I felt myself a seasoned spectator, was at home among audiences, and was always ready to applaud bravura displays of virtuoso acting.”
She was a member of the Theatre Guild companies for many years and played with Ethel Barrymore and Lynn Fontanne.
In 1903, Charles Frohman produced an English-language version called Carrots with Ethel Barrymore playing François.
Among Metro's productions were: The Eternal Question (1916) with Olga Petrova, The Divorceé (1919) with Ethel Barrymore, and What People Will Say? (1915) directed by Alice Guy-Blache.
The play was first produced in Cleveland, Ohio, at the Ohio Theatre, on November 1, 1926, with Ethel Barrymore playing the title role, and Mabel Terry-Lewis and C. Aubrey Smith in support.
A wall exists showing the signatures of some of those who came to Wayland including Ellen Terry, George Arliss, Florence Arliss, Katharine Cornell; the house archives show that other guests included diva Geraldine Farrar, and actors Ethel Barrymore, John Drew, Norah Bayes, and others.
He started in films in 1914 with Vitagraph and supported such well known stage and film actresses as Ethel Barrymore, Mabel Taliaferro, Charlotte Walker, Olga Petrova, Viola Dana, June Caprice, Edna Goodrich, and Mae West.
In the spring of 2011 she performed the role of Chloe Coverly in the revival of Arcadia by Tom Stoppard at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre in New York.