Spooner and her sister toured and performed with the Spooner Stock company for many years. "The springtime and the Spooners have come again," commented writer
Willa Cather, on the family's perennial appearances in
Lincoln, Nebraska. Spooner was a fixture in
Brooklyn's theatres. She and her mother and sister leased and ran the Bijou Theatre for several years. and she had her own company, the Edna May Spooner Stock Company. The Spooners also ran a theatre in
New Orleans, Louisiana for a time. She also directed shows, with her mother as manager and her sister as actress. Some of her popular roles were in
Ullie Akerstrom's
St. Elmo (1910),
Zaza,
Camille,
Juliet,
Nell Gwynne. Spooner appeared on Broadway in
Babbling Brookes (1927), and in one silent picture,
Man and Wife (1923). She wrote a historical drama,
Madame du Barry (1908), and translated and adapted
The Obstinate Family, a German one-act farce. == Controversies ==