In 1915 she scored another success costarring with Emily Stevens and Louis Bennison in The Unchastened Woman.
Her other Broadway plays included Great Music (1924), The Nest (1922), The Crowded Hour (1918), Branded (1917), Upstairs and Down (1916), Our Children (1915), The Aviator (1910), Israel (1909), and An International Marriage (1909).
[2][5] After her death, a publicized battle over her will between her mother, her husband and various lawyers was mounted in which eventually a substantial amount of money $150,000 was left to her dog.
[6] (A contemporary Associated Press news story said, "The will divided an estate of $170,000 among 11 friends, ignoring the mother, Mrs. Minnie Mary Jamison, and the husband, Enos Booth ..."[1] The amount left for perpetual care of her dog's grave was reported as $500 in other articles.
)[7][2] Bequests included $40,000 to John Hayden and $50,000 to Clare Cassell, described respectively in a newspaper article as "an ardent admirer" and "a close friend and international tennis star of the day".