She became a prominent oratorio and concert performer. Her friend
Browning Mummery arranged for her to make some 40 recordings with the Gramophone Company, mainly of ballads, which, along with frequent radio broadcasts, spread her fame even more. She was last singer to perform at
The Crystal Palace before it was destroyed by fire in 1936. For her first Sydney concert on 13 March 1937, the demand for seats outstripped the Conservatorium's capacity, so the concert was moved to the
Sydney Town Hall. She was accompanied by the violinist
Ernest Llewellyn and the pianist Raymond Lambert. She toured her native land for four months, and a further two months in
New Zealand. During World War II she sang over 1,300 times in hospitals, air raid shelters, army camps and factories throughout Great Britain, and entertained Australian soldiers at her London home. ==Later life==