Sheilah Graham
Sheilah Graham (born Lily Shiel; September 15, 1904 – November 17, 1988) was a British-born American gossip columnist, author, and actress renowned for her influential Hollywood column syndicated across numerous newspapers during the industry's Golden Age and for her three-year romantic relationship with author F. Scott Fitzgerald, which inspired her bestselling memoir Beloved Infidel.[1][2][3] Born into poverty as the youngest of six surviving children to Ukrainian Jewish immigrants Louis and Rebecca Shiel in Leeds, England, Graham—then Lily Shiel—lost her father shortly after birth and was placed in a London orphanage at age six following her mother's inability to support the family.[1][3] She spent eight years at the Jews' Hospital and Orphan Asylum in Norwood, where she excelled as head girl and won prizes in Hebrew and poetry despite hardships like having her head shaved for lice.[1] After leaving the orphanage at 14, she worked as a housemaid and dance hall performer while aspiring to journalism, eventually freelancing for British publications like the Daily Express.[3] In 1925, she entered a platonic marriage of convenience to British Army officer John Graham Gillam to gain social status and a passport, adopting the name Sheilah Graham; the couple separated in 1933 when she immigrated to New York City.[3][1] Upon arriving in the United States, Graham initially worked odd jobs before moving to Hollywood in 1935, where she quickly rose as a gossip columnist, securing a syndicated column by 1936 that appeared in up to 178 newspapers and rivaled those of Hedda Hopper and Louella Parsons.[2][3] Time magazine dubbed her the doyenne of Hollywood columnists in 1964 for her sharp insights into the film industry's elite.[2] She also ventured into acting with minor roles, hosted early radio and television programs, and concealed her Jewish heritage to assimilate in the non-Jewish entertainment world, fabricating a backstory of Scottish Protestant aristocracy.[3] Her career spanned nearly 40 years, during which she chronicled scandals, premieres, and stars from a rented Hollywood Hills home she shared with lovers and friends.[2] Graham's most famous personal connection was her affair with F. Scott Fitzgerald, which began in 1937 when both worked on film projects in Hollywood; their intense, often tumultuous relationship lasted until his death from a heart attack in her apartment on December 21, 1940, at age 44.[3][1] She supported him emotionally and financially during his declining years, even creating a self-education curriculum for them called the "College of One," which later became the title of one of her books.[1] Their story was detailed in her 1958 memoir Beloved Infidel, co-authored with Gerald Frank, which became a bestseller and was adapted into a 1959 film starring Gregory Peck as Fitzgerald and Deborah Kerr as Graham.[2][3] In her later years, Graham authored nine more books, including College of One (1967) and The Rest of the Story (1964), reflecting on her life, career, and Fitzgerald's influence, while continuing to write columns until the 1970s.[1] She remarried briefly in 1953 to Wojciechowicz Wojtkiewicz (divorced 1956), and raised her two children—son Robert and daughter Wendy—from her second marriage to Trevor Westbrook.[1][4] Graham died of congestive heart failure on November 17, 1988, at Good Samaritan Hospital in Palm Beach at age 84, leaving a legacy as a self-made figure who rose from orphanage hardships to chronicler of Hollywood glamour.[5][6]Early life
Childhood and family background
Sheilah Graham was born Lily Shiel on September 15, 1904, in Leeds, England, to Ukrainian Jewish immigrants Louis Shiel, a tailor, and Rebecca (née Blashman) Shiel.[1][3] Her parents had fled pogroms in Ukraine, seeking refuge in England during a period of rising antisemitism and economic hardship for Jewish immigrants in Edwardian society.[3] Lily was the youngest of six surviving children out of eight, with two siblings dying in infancy amid the family's precarious circumstances. Shortly after her birth, her father died of tuberculosis while on a business trip to Berlin, leaving Rebecca to support the family alone as a seamstress and cleaner.[3][7] The family relocated to a basement flat in the Stepney Green slums of London's East End, a densely packed immigrant neighborhood rife with poverty, overcrowding, and pervasive antisemitism.[1][8] Rebecca struggled to provide for her children, often working grueling jobs such as cleaning public lavatories, while the family adhered to Jewish traditions including Sabbath observances and kosher practices, though resources were scarce.[1] The East End's challenges for Jewish families like the Shiels included social exclusion, limited access to education, and exposure to street-level prejudice, shaping Lily's early awareness of her cultural identity amid broader immigrant struggles in pre-World War I Britain.[3] Around the age of six in 1910, after years of mounting financial desperation, Lily was briefly taken in by an aunt before she and her younger brother were placed in the Jews' Hospital and Orphan Asylum in Norwood, south London, as her mother could no longer afford to care for all the children.[9][10][1] She returned home at age 14 to nurse her ailing mother, who succumbed to stomach cancer two years later in 1920 when Lily was 16, further fracturing the family's already tenuous bonds.[10][11] This period of familial loss and instability underscored the harsh realities of working-class Jewish life in early 20th-century London.[1]Orphanage years and early education
In 1910, at the age of six, Lily Shiel was placed in the Jews' Hospital and Orphan Asylum in Norwood, south London, due to her mother's financial inability to support the family, where she remained until age 14 in 1918.[3][1] The institution, a Victorian-era facility housing over 200 Jewish children from impoverished families, provided communal living under strict routines that emphasized discipline and self-sufficiency.[3] Daily life included paltry meals, regular head shavings to prevent lice and identify potential runaways, and a uniform of blue denim dungarees, creating conditions often described as borderline Dickensian.[3] Education encompassed standard academic subjects alongside Hebrew lessons and Jewish history, fostering a strong sense of religious and cultural identity amid the orphanage's communal environment.[3][1] Graham excelled in this setting, emerging as a standout student and earning the position of "Head Girl," a leadership role that included serving as captain of the cricket team.[1] She won multiple prizes, including awards for proficiency in Hebrew, poetry recitation, and elocution, reflecting her academic prowess and performative talents honed through participation in school plays.[1] Beyond formal instruction, she pursued self-education by eagerly reading from the orphanage library, immersing herself in books on literature, history, and languages, which ignited a lifelong passion for writing and intellectual growth.[11] The orphanage years left a profound emotional imprint, marked by feelings of abandonment due to her family's poverty-driven separation, yet also by a burgeoning sense of resilience and empowerment that fueled her ambition.[1] Graham later reflected on this period in her memoirs as pivotal to her personal development, describing the haunting degradations like head-shaving alongside the intellectual awakenings that shaped her drive for reinvention.[1] In Beloved Infidel (1958), co-authored with Gerold Frank, and College of One (1967), she portrayed these experiences as foundational to her journey from institutional hardship to literary and journalistic success.[1]Early career
Entry into entertainment and first marriage
After leaving the orphanage at age 14, Graham briefly worked as a domestic servant, a role she despised, before taking a job as a toothbrush demonstrator at Gamage's department store in London, where her striking looks and engaging smile drew attention.[7] It was there that she met Major John Graham Gillam, a decorated World War I officer and published author more than two decades her senior, who spotted her potential and began supporting her ambitions financially and socially.[5] Encouraged by Gillam, she enrolled at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art to refine her skills and shed her Cockney accent through elocution lessons.[1] In 1925, at age 21, Graham married Gillam, adopting his surname as her stage name, Sheilah Graham, to mark her transition into a more polished persona.[7] The couple settled into a comfortable flat in a respectable West End neighborhood, where Gillam continued to guide her social refinement, teaching her table manners and introducing her to upper-class circles, including admittance to exclusive clubs and even presentation at court.[12] This period allowed Graham to pursue performance opportunities; by 1927, she had become a chorus girl in C.B. Cochran's revue One Dam Thing After Another at the London Pavilion, performing as one of the famed "Cochran Young Ladies" and briefly replacing the lead dancer to critical acclaim.[5] Her stage presence, honed by orphanage discipline, proved effective in the vibrant music hall scene.[1] Parallel to her entertainment forays, Graham began freelance writing, selling articles on show business to London's penny press, including a piece titled "The Stage Door Johnnies by a Chorus Girl" for the Daily Express, which earned her two guineas and marked her journalistic debut.[1] She had previously published an early novel of unknown title in Britain. In 1933, she published her novel Gentleman-Crook, a light mystery that reflected her growing interest in narrative storytelling, though it achieved modest success.[13] However, the marriage faced increasing strain from Gillam's financial troubles—he declared bankruptcy amid economic downturns—and Graham's independent ambitions, leading to their separation by the mid-1930s as she sought opportunities abroad.[1]Immigration and initial journalism
In 1933, separated from her husband John Gillam due to his financial difficulties, Sheilah Graham sailed from England to New York, arriving in June aboard the Aquitania, seeking better opportunities.[13] [1] Upon arrival, she faced immediate economic hardship amid the Great Depression, taking on various odd jobs such as waitressing and clerical work to support herself while her husband remained in England.[13] These early struggles underscored her determination to establish a stable life in America, drawing on her prior experience as a freelance writer in Britain.[1] Graham quickly transitioned into journalism, securing positions as a reporter for the New York Evening Post, New York Mirror, and New York Journal-American, where she focused on society and theater coverage.[7] Her reporting highlighted the vibrant New York cultural scene, leveraging her British perspective to offer fresh insights into Broadway productions and social events. During this period, she solidified her professional pseudonym "Sheilah Graham," which she had adopted earlier, and actively networked within publishing circles to advance her career.[1] In August 1933, shortly after her arrival, she published her novel Gentleman-Crook, a light mystery that built on her modest literary reputation and helped open doors in American media.[13] Throughout her initial years in the U.S., Graham navigated significant challenges, including persistent financial instability that forced her to prioritize low-paying assignments and antisemitism within the media industry, which she concealed by downplaying her Jewish heritage.[3] Her marriage to Gillam was formally dissolved in 1937. She initiated the naturalization process upon arrival but did not become a U.S. citizen until 1947, reflecting the lengthy bureaucratic hurdles for immigrants during that era.[6]Hollywood career
Launch of the gossip column
In 1935, Sheilah Graham relocated from New York to Los Angeles after receiving an offer from the North American Newspaper Alliance (NANA) to write a syndicated Hollywood column.[7] This opportunity built on her earlier reporting for New York newspapers, where she had honed her skills in covering entertainment news.[14] She debuted her signature column, titled Hollywood Today, which focused on the daily lives, scandals, and behind-the-scenes dynamics of Tinseltown.[5] The column's launch marked Graham's entry into the competitive world of Hollywood journalism, where she positioned herself as an astute observer of the industry's elite. Graham's writing style was marked by sharp wit, brittle commentary, and exclusive insider details that captivated readers.[7] She delivered scoops on major stars, including Clark Gable's personal habits and Joan Crawford's on-set maneuvers, often blending humor with pointed critiques of Hollywood's "lightweight pinheads."[8] Her approach emphasized trends and controversies, such as studio rivalries and emerging scandals, while navigating the intense public relations battles between film executives and the press.[5] This distinctive voice helped Hollywood Today stand out, rivaling the established columns of Louella Parsons, who reached about 69 newspapers, and Hedda Hopper, with around 100 papers, as Graham's syndication grew rapidly in the late 1930s. By the 1940s, Graham's column had become a cornerstone of Golden Age Hollywood coverage, syndicated across an expanding network that peaked at 178 newspapers by 1966.[8] Her professional success was evident in her substantial earnings, averaging $5,000 per week during this period.[5] She expanded her influence through radio broadcasts, hosting her own program that extended her gossip insights to a broader audience, and contributions to magazines like Photoplay, where she provided in-depth features on film trends.[7] Together, these milestones solidified Graham's role as a pivotal figure in shaping public perceptions of Hollywood, often breaking stories that influenced studio strategies and star personas.[5]Relationship with F. Scott Fitzgerald
Sheilah Graham first encountered F. Scott Fitzgerald on July 14, 1937—Bastille Day—at a Hollywood party, where she was a rising gossip columnist and he had recently arrived to work as a screenwriter for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Their initial attraction was immediate and mutual, leading to a romantic involvement that deepened rapidly; by late 1937, Fitzgerald had moved into Graham's apartment on North Hayworth Avenue in West Hollywood, where they shared a domestic life amid the glamour and pressures of the film industry.[15][16][17] The relationship was marked by intense passion but also considerable turbulence, exacerbated by Fitzgerald's ongoing battle with alcoholism, which led to frequent episodes of binge drinking, emotional volatility, and physical health decline, as well as the conflicting schedules imposed by Graham's demanding column-writing duties for NANA. Despite these challenges, their partnership fostered a profound intellectual bond; Fitzgerald, recognizing Graham's self-perceived educational gaps from her unconventional upbringing, designed a personalized two-year curriculum known as the "College of One" to broaden her knowledge. This program encompassed literature, including works by Shakespeare; history, such as French history; philosophy; poetry; religion; music; and art, with daily lessons, discussions, and assigned readings that Graham meticulously logged in notebooks, reflecting their shared commitment to mutual growth.[18][19][20] On December 21, 1940, Fitzgerald suffered a fatal heart attack while working in the living room of Graham's apartment, collapsing suddenly at the age of 44 and leaving her to discover his body. Devastated by grief, Graham nonetheless persisted in her career, continuing to write her column and later expanding into other journalistic pursuits. She chronicled their romance and its emotional depths in her 1958 memoir Beloved Infidel, co-authored with Gerold Frank, which detailed the highs and lows of their time together, and revisited the educational aspect in her 1967 book College of One, which reproduced her study logs and highlighted Fitzgerald's role as her devoted teacher.[21][22][23][24]World War II and interwar period
War correspondence in Britain
Following F. Scott Fitzgerald's death in December 1940, Sheilah Graham returned to her native Britain in July 1941, taking up a position as a foreign correspondent for the North American Newspaper Alliance (NANA).[7][5] This marked a pivotal shift from her Hollywood gossip column to international war reporting, as she documented the ongoing effects of the conflict on British society after the main phase of the Blitz had concluded.[25] Graham's dispatches focused on the war's impact on the home front, including the resilience of civilians amid wartime hardships. Her work extended to observations of celebrities and public figures maintaining morale under duress, blending her entertainment background with accounts of civilian life. A highlight of her tenure was an in-depth interview with George Bernard Shaw on his 85th birthday in July 1941, conducted at his countryside home and syndicated through NANA and local outlets like the Evening Star.[26] Through these efforts from 1941 to 1943, Graham earned recognition as a capable war journalist, broadening her reputation beyond Hollywood trivia to encompass thoughtful, on-the-ground analysis of global conflict.[7] She also broadcast her impressions of England at war from the BBC.[25] Her reporting demonstrated her adaptability, paving the way for postwar expansions in her career.[5]Second marriage and family expansion
In 1941, amid her work as a war correspondent in Britain, Sheilah Graham met Trevor Cresswell Lawrence Westbrook, general manager of Vickers Aviation (Supermarine) Ltd., the company responsible for producing the iconic Spitfire fighter planes for the Royal Air Force.[27] Their meeting facilitated by her journalistic assignments during the early years of World War II led to marriage later that year, providing Graham with a measure of personal anchorage in the midst of global upheaval.[7][28] The union expanded Graham's family with the birth of two children: daughter Wendy in 1942 and son Robert T. Westbrook in 1945.[29][30] Wendy was born in London shortly after the marriage, while Robert arrived toward the war's end, reflecting the couple's life rooted in Britain despite aerial threats. The family navigated the dangers of wartime London, seeking relative safety away from urban centers as bombings persisted. This period marked a blend of domestic growth and resilience for Graham, who balanced motherhood with her professional duties. The marriage supported Graham's reporting by offering logistical and emotional stability in war-torn Britain, yet strains emerged from geographical distances and conflicting career demands. By 1946, following the war's conclusion, the couple divorced after Graham opted to remain in the United States to revive her journalism career rather than relocate back to England with Westbrook.[25] In her memoirs, such as The Real F. Scott Fitzgerald: Thirty-Five Years Later, Graham later reflected on the challenges of wartime family life, highlighting the profound adjustments required in raising young children under constant uncertainty.[25]Postwar career
Return to American journalism
Following her divorce from Trevor Westbrook in 1946, Sheilah Graham returned to the United States with her two young children, resuming her career in Hollywood amid the challenges of postwar readjustment.[31] She quickly reinstated her syndicated gossip column, "Hollywood Today," through the North American Newspaper Alliance (NANA), a partnership that had launched her prominence in the 1930s and continued to provide wide distribution.[5] This resumption allowed her to navigate the industry's turbulent shifts and altered studio dynamics from the 1940s into the 1950s.[7] In August 1947, Graham became a naturalized U.S. citizen, solidifying her professional roots in America.[6] Her column adapted to emerging trends, increasingly featuring coverage of television personalities like Lucille Ball and rising stars transitioning from stage to screen, reflecting the medium's growing dominance over traditional film.[6] By the early 1950s, "Hollywood Today" had reached a peak of influence, syndicating to numerous papers and earning her up to $5,000 weekly at its height.[5] Graham expanded her contributions beyond NANA, writing a distinct daily gossip column for Daily Variety from 1952 to 1953, which emphasized trade insights and precise reporting on industry insiders. This period marked her reintegration into American media, where she balanced single parenthood—having left her wartime family support network in Britain behind—with high-profile journalism. In 1953, she entered a brief third marriage to Wojciechowicz (also known as Stanley) Wojtkiewicz, a Beverly Hills athletic club director; the union produced no children and ended in divorce in 1956.[5][32]Later media ventures and writings
In the 1950s, Sheilah Graham expanded her media presence beyond print journalism by hosting her own radio program, where she delivered commentary on Hollywood personalities and events, capitalizing on her established reputation as a gossip columnist.[7] This venture transitioned to television in the mid-1950s with Hollywood Today, a show that allowed her to engage audiences visually while discussing industry trends and celebrity insights.[7] Graham also made guest appearances on popular programs, including an episode of The Bob Cummings Show in 1958 where she appeared as herself, and General Electric Theater in 1959, portraying Aunt Cecilia in the episode "Nobody's Child."[33] Graham's syndicated column, Hollywood Today, evolved in the postwar era to reflect changing cultural dynamics, appearing in approximately 178 newspapers by 1964 and earning her up to $5,000 per week at its peak; in the mid-1960s, she changed the title to "Hollywood Everywhere" as Hollywood's influence declined.[5][7][6] Drawing from decades of observations, she published Confessions of a Hollywood Columnist in 1969, a memoir that candidly explored the competitive and often ruthless world of gossip writing, including her strategies for survival amid industry rivalries.[34] The book, published by William Morrow, offered behind-the-scenes anecdotes from her career, emphasizing the blend of toughness and insight required to thrive as a female columnist in male-dominated Hollywood media.[35] To diversify her income, Graham contributed regular articles to film magazines such as Photoplay throughout the 1950s and 1960s, providing in-depth profiles and commentary on stars that complemented her column's bite-sized scoops.[5] These freelance pieces highlighted her ability to navigate gender barriers in entertainment journalism, where women like Graham often faced skepticism but leveraged personal connections and persistence to secure prominent roles.[1] Her postwar U.S. citizenship further facilitated these opportunities by solidifying her professional standing in American media outlets.[1]Later years and legacy
Retirement and final publications
After 36 years of penning her syndicated Hollywood gossip column, Graham retired in 1971 and relocated to Palm Beach, Florida, embracing a more serene lifestyle away from the industry's bustle.[7] In her later years, Graham turned to reflective writing, producing several additional books that drew on her extensive experiences. Among these were My Hollywood: A Celebration and a Lament (1984), a nostalgic meditation on her career and the golden age of film, and Hollywood Revisited: A Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration (1985), which revisited the glamour and excesses of Tinseltown.[36][37] These works echoed themes from her earlier memoirs, such as Beloved Infidel (1958), but focused on personal introspection and historical reminiscence. Graham remained active publicly through television interviews and lectures on F. Scott Fitzgerald, sharing insights into their relationship and his legacy, even as she managed ongoing health challenges including heart problems.[6] Financially secure from decades of column earnings—peaking at $5,000 per week—and royalties from her prolific output, Graham supported her family while enjoying a comfortable retirement.[5]Death and cultural impact
Sheilah Graham died on November 17, 1988, in Palm Beach, Florida, from congestive heart failure at the age of 84.[7] Her obituary in The New York Times lauded her ability to bridge Hollywood gossip with literary depth, particularly through her memoirs that offered intimate insights into F. Scott Fitzgerald's life, while also underscoring her extraordinary rags-to-riches journey from East London poverty to journalistic prominence.[7] Graham's legacy endures as a trailblazer for female gossip columnists, forming part of the influential "unholy trio" with Louella Parsons and Hedda Hopper that shaped Hollywood coverage during its Golden Age.[1] Her memoirs profoundly shaped perceptions of Fitzgerald's final years, providing personal accounts that enriched literary scholarship and public understanding of his vulnerabilities and genius.[1] Additionally, her profile in the Jewish Women's Archive highlights her resilience, having survived eight years in a London Jewish orphanage after her family's impoverishment, a narrative that underscores her transformation from orphan to self-made icon.[1] Graham's cultural resonance persists through adaptations like the 1959 film Beloved Infidel, which dramatized her romance with Fitzgerald based on her memoir of the same name.[1] Her son Robert Westbrook further contributed to this legacy with his 1995 book Intimate Lies: F. Scott Fitzgerald and Sheilah Graham: Her Son's Story, offering additional perspectives on her life and relationship with Fitzgerald.[38] Her "College of One"—a bespoke two-year curriculum of literature, history, and arts that Fitzgerald designed for her self-education—continues to inspire as a model of intellectual empowerment and lifelong learning.[39] Scholarship has delved into her Jewish identity, which she largely concealed during her career but later embraced, revealing layers of her heritage as the daughter of Ukrainian Jewish immigrants and its role in her reinventions.[1]Works
Books
Sheilah Graham produced a prolific body of literary work over several decades, authoring more than a dozen books that blended fiction, memoir, and autobiography. Drawing from her experiences as a Hollywood gossip columnist, her writings frequently satirized the film industry, delved into romantic entanglements, and emphasized themes of personal transformation and self-improvement. Many of her books were inspired by her syndicated column, which provided intimate insights into celebrity culture and informed her narrative style.[7] Her early forays into fiction included two novels published in Britain: an untitled work before 1933 and Gentleman-Crook (1933), a tale of intrigue and deception published shortly after her marriage.[40] Around the World War II period, she released Film-Struck (c. 1941), a novel reflecting her growing immersion in Hollywood's glamorous yet superficial world.[41] Graham's memoirs about her relationship with F. Scott Fitzgerald form a cornerstone of her oeuvre, offering candid reflections on love, ambition, and intellectual growth. Beloved Infidel (1958), co-authored with Gerold Frank, became a national bestseller upon its release by Henry Holt and Company, chronicling her affair with Fitzgerald and achieving widespread acclaim for its emotional depth; it was later adapted into a 1959 film starring Gregory Peck as Fitzgerald and Deborah Kerr as Graham.[9][7] College of One (1967), published by Viking Press, detailed the self-education program Fitzgerald devised for her, underscoring themes of personal empowerment and their shared literary pursuits.[7] She revisited their bond in The Real F. Scott Fitzgerald (1976), a Grosset & Dunlap release that provided nuanced portraits of the author based on her intimate recollections.[7] In her later publications, Graham continued to explore autobiography and fiction with a focus on Hollywood's excesses and her own life trajectory. The Rest of the Story: The Odyssey of a Modern Woman (1964), issued by Grosset & Dunlap, extended her personal narrative beyond Fitzgerald, emphasizing resilience and reinvention.[41] Confessions of a Hollywood Columnist (1969; published as Scratch an Actor in the UK), a William Morrow release, offered insider anecdotes from her career.[42] The Garden of Allah (1969), a Crown Publishing memoir, evoked the legendary Hollywood hotel as a metaphor for transient fame and romance. Her novel A State of Heat (1972), from G.P. Putnam's Sons, satirized the steamy underbelly of Tinseltown relationships.[41] How to Marry Super Rich (1974), also by Putnam, offered humorous advice on social climbing and wealth, blending self-improvement with wry observations on elite society. The Late Lily Shiel (1978), an autobiographical account published by St. Martin's Press, traced her origins as Lily Shiel and her ascent to prominence, closing her main series of self-reflective works. Her final book, Hollywood Revisited: A Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration (1985), published by St. Martin's Press, reflected on her 50 years chronicling the film industry.[43][44]Film and television appearances
Sheilah Graham's foray into film and television was limited, primarily consisting of uncredited or cameo roles that capitalized on her reputation as a Hollywood gossip columnist rather than marking a dedicated acting career. Her appearances often featured her playing herself or similar figures, with early roles tied to her background as a showgirl in 1930s London and New York.[45] Later credits reflected her journalistic prominence, including guest spots on popular programs.[46] Graham's film roles spanned from the late 1930s to the early 1960s, beginning with minor uncredited parts and evolving into credited portrayals of media personalities. The following table summarizes her verified acting credits in films:| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1939 | That's Right – You're Wrong | Sheilah Graham | Uncredited, as herself (newspaper columnist)[47] |
| 1947 | Jiggs and Maggie in Society | Sheila Graham | Credited, as radio host |
| 1949 | Impact | Sheilah Graham | Credited, as herself |
| 1950 | The Great Jewel Robber | Sheilah Graham | Uncredited, as television commentator[48] |
| 1959 | Girls Town | Sister Grace | Credited |
| 1960 | College Confidential | Reporter | Credited, as herself (final film role) |