After having been discharged from the army in 1945, she chose the career of a professional singer.[3]
In early October 1948, she was noted in Billboard's review of the Savannah Club, New York, as having a "throaty voice" which was, however, "too vibrato" for her "Babalu" song[4] and a week later was reported to have signed an "exclusive three-year contract" with National Records.[5]
Around 1952, she signed up with a newly-formed Tuxedo record label.[1] Later in the decade, Billboard reviewed some of her single records, judging her performances as "capable", "acceptable" (Tuxedo 882, "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" / "Think of Me in Your Spare Time"),[6] "distinctive", "interesting", "mature" (Tuxedo 905, "Experience Unnecessary" / "Do You Remember").[7] In 1957, the magazine praised her recording of "Calypso Fever" (Tuxedo 919, c/w "Babalu") for its "wild gimmicked quality", concluding that the "smarty made side [...] should get play" and rating its commercial potential as 72 on a scale of 1 to 100.[8] No chart action was reported, though.
She died of cancer at the age of 48[3] or, according to another source, in her early 50s.[9]