Stage Work
- Blue Holiday (May 21–26, 1945) (Broadway)
- Carib Song (September 27 - October 27, 1945) (Broadway)
- Bal Negre (November 7 - December 22, 1946) (Broadway and European tour)
- Time Runs (1950)
- Dr. Faustus (1951) (Paris and European tour)
- New Faces of 1952 (May 16, 1952 - March 28, 1953) (Broadway)
- Mrs. Patterson (December 1, 1954 - February 26, 1955) (Broadway)
- Shinbone Alley (April 13 - May 25, 1957) (Broadway)
- Jolly's Progress (December 5–12, 1959) (Broadway)
- The Owl and the Pussycat (1965–1966) (national tour)
- The High Bid (1970) (London)
- Bunny (1972) (London)
- Bread and Beans and Things (Aquarius Theater, Hollywood, June 6, 1974)
- A Musical Jubilee (1976) (national tour)
- Timbuktu! (March 1 - September 10, 1978) (Broadway and national tour from 1979–1980)
- New Faces of 1952 (Revival) (1982) (Off-Off-Broadway)
- Blues in the Night (1985) (national tour)
- Follies (1987) (London) (replacement for Dolores Gray)
- Eartha Kitt in Concert (1989) (London)
- Yes (1994) (One Woman Show) (Edinburgh)
- Sam's Song (1995) (Benefit Concert) (Unitarian Church of All Souls)
- Lady Day at Emerson's Bar and Grill (1996) (Chicago)
- The Wizard of Oz (1998) (national tour)
- The Wild Party (April 13 - June 11, 2000) (Broadway)
- Cinderella (2001) (Madison Square Garden)
- Nine (replacement for Chita Rivera from October 5 - December 14, 2003) (Broadway)
- Mimi le Duck (2006) (Off Broadway)
- All About Us (April 10–28, 2007) (Westport Country Playhouse)
Read more about this topic: Eartha Kitt
Famous quotes containing the words stage and/or work:
“The spectacle of misery grew in its crushing volume. There seemed to be no end to the houses full of hunted starved children. Children with dysentery, children with scurvy, children at every stage of starvation.... We learned to know that the barometer of starvation was the number of children deserted in any community.”
—Mary Heaton Vorse (18741966)
“The beaux and the babies, the servant troubles, and the social aspirations of the other girls seemed to me superficial. My work did not. I was professional. I could earn my own money, or I could be fired if I were inefficient. It was something to get your teeth into. It was living.”
—Edna Woolman Chase (18771957)
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