In 1925, she appeared in Fred Wall and Ralph Murphy's
The Handyman.
Variety wrote, "Elizabeth Allen in a role that meant but little was decidedly in character as the small town kid". Don Carle Gillette in
The Billboard wrote, "Elizabeth Allen gives a natural and neat performance". In 1926, she appeared in the comedy
Applesauce at the Morosco Theatre in Los Angeles. Katherine Lipke of
The Los Angeles Times wrote, "Little Elizabeth Allen, the new ingenue, is from Louisville, Ky., and this fact is revealed in every word she speaks. She has been on the stage but a few years but has been fortunate in appearing in excellent parts in
The Handy Man and
The Holy Terror." Allen performed in
Dancing Mothers,
A Family Upstairs and
Ladies of the Evening with the Morosco Theatre, where she was a principal actress, in 1926. In 1927, she appeared in
Easy Come, Easy Go. Lipke wrote, "Elizabeth Allen is very funny as a liver patient whose disposition may come from her complaint or may be a natural one. It is hard to recognize pretty Elizabeth in the funny make-up". == Personal life ==