Dunaway had a popular monologue and musical comedy act on the
Chautauqua circuit. She was perhaps best known for her performances of
The Lady of the Decoration, a story set in Japan, which she performed for passengers on a train from Kansas City to Los Angeles in 1913, hired by the
Santa Fe Railway Company. She wrote plays including
The Flapper Grandmother (1924),
Cupid Up to Date (1927),
Mrs. and Mr. Polly Tickk (1927),
What Do the People Want? (1927), and
The Little Stranger (1929), and songs, including "When You're Waltzing with the One You Love" (1959). Dunaway spent eighteen years overseeing construction of Dunaway Gardens, a "theater-garden" on her husband's family's former plantation in rural Georgia. It included twelve spring-fed pools, a waterfall, sunken and hanging gardens, lodgings and a tea room.
Minnie Pearl was one of the instructors. Dunaway herself was said to always dress well as if she was always about to appear on the stage. One local historian noted that television and improved roads, which enable people to travel to Atlanta to eat and see shows, reduced the interest in Dunaway Gardens through the 1950s. It closed in the 1960s. == Personal life ==