As her health deteriorated, she was forced to withdraw from acting, though she had expressed hope of returning to the screen once she had recovered. Around 1930, she moved to a new neighbourhood in the
Golders Green area of London, where she knew no one. Around September 1933, Hall-Davis confided in a neighbour that she spent most of her time alone and that her friends no longer made time to visit. She admitted to feeling depressed, citing both the lack of acting work and the quietness of the neighbourhood. However, several people in the film industry later stated she had been invited to take part in films earlier that year, to which she responded that her nerves had gone and no longer felt able to act. On 25 October 1933, her 14-year-old son returned home from school to find a handwritten note from his mother, asking him to fetch a neighbour. She had also locked the door to prevent him from entering. Her body was later discovered on the floor of her gas-filled kitchen, with a razor blade nearby and a wound to her throat. Her husband Walter Pemberton, also an actor, was away in Bristol at the time of her death. Police later confirmed that her death was caused by the self-inflicted throat wound, rather than from gas inhalation. At the
inquest, the
coroner ruled that she had died by suicide while of unsound mind. ==Filmography==