With her sisters Sophie and Heather Pitt, she formed the Harmony Sisters, often joined by her brothers Arthur and Walter, and performed as part of the United States Service Office Show, touring Queensland to entertain US troops during
World War II. One of these shows was described in October 1943, "Heather and Dulcie Pitt, sang two songs, accompanied by [two men] on guitars, and one of the sisters did a fascinating hula dance... [also] in the second half [they sang] two popular songs, and on both appearances they were most enthusiastically applauded." After the war she took the name Georgia Lee and moved south to work in the cities and later in the
United Kingdom. She performed and recorded with many artists and bands including
Graeme Bell,
Geraldo,
Bruce Clarke,
Port Jackson Jazz Band, George Trevare and the Max Williams Quintet. Thereafter she performed as Georgia Lee. During that year Lee was heard on
Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC)'s radio programmes,
Show Business (Mondays) and
The Hit Parade (Wednesdays) backed by
Jim Gussey's ABC Dance Band. In late 1953 the singer relocated to London and was contracted to Geraldo's dance band by the following March. In December 1954 she declined a
£2000 offer to renew her contract with Geraldo, preferring to sign with a new revue. In 1957 she toured with
Nat King Cole on his Australian tour. She also performed on TV on
Graham Kennedy's
In Melbourne Tonight Lee is credited with being the first
Indigenous Australian artist to record blues songs. Her 1962 album
Georgia Lee Sings the Blues Down Under may have been only the second album to be released by an Australian woman and was the first Australian album recorded in stereo. Arranged by Brian Martin, the album features Raphael Melevende on trumpet, Jack Glenn on trombone, Alec Hutchison on clarinet and tenor sax, Ron Rosenberg on piano, John Frederick on bass, Horrie Weems on guitar and Alan Turnbull playing drums. In 2009 it was added to the
National Film and Sound Archive's
Sounds of Australia registry. ==Death==