Washington played opposite
Bill Robinson in Fox's
One Mile from Heaven (1937), in which she played a light-skinned Black woman claiming to be the mother of a "white" baby.
Claire Trevor plays a reporter who discovers the story and helps both Washington and the white biological mother (
Sally Bane) who had given up the baby. According to the
Museum of Modern Art in 2013: "The last of the six Claire Trevor 'snappy' vehicles [Allan] Dwan made for Fox in the 1930s tests the limits of free expression on race in Hollywood while sometimes straining credulity." Washington appeared in the 1939
Broadway production of ''
Mamba's Daughters, along with Ethel Waters and Georgette Harvey. She later became a casting consultant for the stage productions of Carmen Jones'' (1943) and
George Gershwin's
Porgy and Bess. Leaving Hollywood for radio Despite receiving critical acclaim, she was unable to find much work in the Hollywood of the 1930s and 1940s. Studios preferred Black actresses with darker skin, who were usually typecast as maids, cooks or other servants. Directors were also reluctant to cast a light-skinned Black actress in a romantic role with a white leading man; the film
production code prohibited suggestions of
miscegenation. Interracial marriage was illegal in the South and many other states.
Hollywood directors did not offer her any romantic roles. As one modern critic explained, Fredi Washington was "...too beautiful and not dark enough to play maids, but rather too light to act in all-Black movies..." Washington had a dramatic role in a 1943 radio tribute to Black women,
Heroines in Bronze, produced by the
National Urban League, but there were few regular dramatic radio programs in that era with Black protagonists. She wrote an opinion piece for the Black press in which she discussed how limited the opportunities in broadcasting were for Black actors, actresses, and vocalists, saying that "...radio seems to keep its doors sealed [against] colored artists." In 1945 she said: "You see I'm a mighty proud gal, and I can't for the life of me find any valid reason why anyone should lie about their origin, or anything else for that matter. Frankly, I do not ascribe to the stupid theory of
white supremacy and to try to hide the fact that I am a Negro for economic or any other reasons. If I do, I would be agreeing to be a Negro makes me inferior and that I have swallowed whole hog all of the propaganda dished out by our fascist-minded white citizens."
Writer Washington was a theater writer, and the entertainment editor for ''
The People's Voice'' (1942–1948), a newspaper for African Americans founded by
Adam Clayton Powell Jr., a Baptist minister and politician in New York City. He was married to her sister
Isabel Washington Powell. ==Personal life==