Nelson appeared in ''
Mamba's Daughters'' with Roxie Roker, while on tour in Scandinavia and Germany with the Howard Players. She taught German at Howard University from 1962 to 1964. She lived in Nigeria, Venezuela, France, and Guyana with her husband, a
UNESCO official, in the 1960s. Wilburn moved to Wisconsin with her husband in 1973, and served on the school board in
Madison, Wisconsin from 1975 to 1977. She was the second Black woman to serve on the Madison school board. She was also a supervising attorney attached to the University of Wisconsin Law School's legal assistance program for institutionalized clients. From 1977 to 1982, she was based in Washington, D.C., working for the
Federal Bureau of Prisons. Her 1979 report with Gwynne Sizer, "Family Problems Related to the Female Offender", was part of congressional hearings on women in federal prisons. Wilburn was the keynote speaker at Madison's NAACP Freedom Fund Banquet in 1980. In 1986, she was appointed head of the Wisconsin Parole Board. "It's a job in which you make decisions about people's lives," she explained, "but not just about the lives of the people whose parole application you're considering. There's the rest of the people who have to receive this person into the community where they live." She resigned in 1987, to move back to Washington. Wilburn was president of the International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA) from 2000 to 2002. == Personal life ==