In 1916, she began recording for
Victor Records, singing a variety of songs, such as "Everybody's Crazy 'bout the Doggone Blues, but I'm Happy", "
After You've Gone", "
A Good Man Is Hard to Find", "When I Hear That Jazz Band Play" and her biggest success, "
I Ain't Got Nobody" (originally titled "I Ain't Got Nobody Much"). In 1920, after Victor prevented her from recording
W.C. Handy's "
St. Louis Blues", she joined
Columbia, where she recorded the song. Sometimes billed as "The Queen of the Blues", Harris commented, "You usually do best what comes naturally, so I just naturally started singing Southern dialect songs and the modern blues songs." She was briefly married to the actor
Robert Williams. They married in 1921 and divorced the following year. Harris and Williams had one daughter, Mary Ellen, who later became a singer under the name Marion Harris Jr. In 1922, she signed with
Brunswick. She continued to appear in Broadway theaters throughout the 1920s. She regularly played the
Palace Theatre, appeared in
Florenz Ziegfeld's
Midnight Frolic, and toured the country with vaudeville shows. After her divorce from a marriage that produced two children, she returned, in 1927, to New York theater, made more recordings with Victor, and appeared in an eight-minute
Vitaphone short film,
Marion Harris: Songbird of Jazz. After performing in a Hollywood movie, the early musical
Devil-May-Care (1929), with
Ramón Novarro, she temporarily withdrew from performance because of an undisclosed illness. ==Later career and death==