Words without Music: A Surrealist Ballet, a production number for the singing and dancing ensemble
Night Flight, a solo for Harriet Hoctor
5 A.M., a number for Josephine Baker and male dancers
On Your Toes (1936), music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by Lorenz Hart; starring Tamara Geva and Ray Bolger. This dramatic ballet served as the climax of this musical production and has subsequently been presented as a stand-alone piece; however, several of the sung numbers in the show featured dance routines as well, notably the title number.
I Married an Angel (1938), by Rodgers and Hart; starring Vera Zorina
The Boys from Syracuse (1938), by Rodgers and Hart
Great Lady (1938), music by Frederick Loewe
Keep Off the Grass (1940), a musical revue
Louisiana Purchase (1940), music and lyrics by Irving Berlin; with William Gaxton and Vera Zorina
Cabin in the Sky (1940), music by Vernon Duke, lyrics by John Latouche; starring Ethel Waters and Katherine Dunham, who collaborated with Balanchine on the choreography
The Lady Comes Across (1942), by Duke and Latouche; a notable flop
Rosalinda (1942), an operetta with music by Johann Strauss
The Merry Widow (1943), an operetta with music by Franz Lehár
What's Up? (1943), lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner, music by Frederick Loewe
Dream with Music (1944), a musical fantasy starring Vera Zorina
Song of Norway (1944), an operetta based on the life and music of Edvard Grieg; Balanchine's most successful Broadway show
Mr. Strauss Goes to Boston (1945), another flop
The Chocolate Soldier (1947), an operetta with music by Oscar Straus
Where's Charley? lyrics and music by Frank Loesser, a long-running show starring Ray Bolger
Courtin' Time (1951), music and lyrics by Don Walker and Jack Lawrence
House of Flowers (1954), music by Harold Arlen, lyrics by Truman Capote and Harold Arlen; starring Pearl Bailey, Diahann Carroll, and Juanita Hall; Balanchine's choreography was rearranged by Herbert Ross before the Broadway opening
^Balanchine had created ballet sequences for Ravel's opera L'enfant et les sortilèges with singers of the Monte Carlo Opera and dancers from the Ballets Russes for the 1925 Monte Carlo premiere; this is not however listed as a Ballets Russes production.