She then moved to Hollywood with the intent of becoming a writer, and after finding work in short supply, she found employment as a stenographer at Famous Players–Lasky.
She left Hollywood in the mid-1930s to write scenarios for the British film industry, including Everything Is Thunder and It's Love Again for Gaumont.
After retiring from the film industry, she returned to her journalistic roots, working as a foreign correspondent, radio commentator, and lecturer.
[6] After the war was finished, she was made chief of the film and TV section of the United Nations Department of Information in New York City.
[7] She married Canadian writer-producer Haworth Bromley in Las Vegas in 1933 in a secret ceremony;[8] the marriage ended in divorce.