[3] Waldron's Broadway appearances included roles in Billy (1909), The Country Boy (1910-1911), The Woman Haters (1912), Cousin Lucy (1915), Ladies' Night (1920-1921), and Better Times (1922-1923).
She also appeared in touring productions of The Merry Wives of Windsor[4] and She Stoops to Conquer,[5] and in different roles in The Henrietta (1887), in its original run and in its 1901-1902 revival.
[6][7] Her ten film credits came in the silent films Vaccinating the Village (1914), Lured from Squash Center (1914), The Precious Twins (1914), At the Cross Roads (1914), The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1916), The Gates of Gladness (1918), The Prodigal Wife (1918), The Lost Battalion (1919), His Bridal Night (1919), and A Broadway Saint (1919).
[8] She fasted for a month to lose weight for a part in 1889; one report compared Waldron to a circus performer and went into detail about her "reducing herself from a mountain of quivering adipose to a lithe, graceful figure, scarcely heavier than the average able bodied woman.
[11] The two had a son together, Stuart Robson Jr. Waldron, who died suddenly from a stroke in 1924 in Louisville, Kentucky, aged near 60 years.