Phylis
was to return to Tulsa for the summer and Robert stayed
in New York to look for work. He was not very successful,
and in a spur of the moment decision, decided to work
on a banana boat. It was a subtle indication of
Walker's restless nature and unpredictability. Phylis
overlooked his odd career move but was surprised when
they reunited in the Fall and Robert told her that he
had decided to quit the Academy. He felt that it
was a waste of his time and he thought he could find work
on his own. Phylis agreed with him, and much to
the dismay of her parents, she quit the school also.
They
soon found that their prospects in the theater were bleak
and they were unable to find work. Phil Isley, worried
over his daughter's situation, lured her back to Tulsa
with a $25 a week radio job. Phylis told him that
she would accept only if Walker was offered the same deal.
Isley agreed and the young couple moved to Tulsa.
The new job would be a 13 week stint radio program called
"The Phylis Isley Radio Theater". The Isleys soon
became very fond of Robert Walker.
Robert
and Phylis were married on January 2, 1939, one year after
they met. Phil Isley urged the young couple to go
to Hollywood. In their brand new Packard convertible
(a wedding gift from the Isleys), they headed West, stopping
briefly in Utah to visit Walker's family. However,
once in Hollywood, even with her father's letters of recommendation,
work was hard to find. As a last resort, Phylis
found work at the low budget Republic Studios. She
was immediately assigned her first film role in a John
Wayne "Three Mesquiteer" western called New Frontier.
It was only a week's work and following that, she was
put to work in a Dick Tracy serial called Dick Tracy's
G-Men. Walker had only found work in a handful
of bit roles. Disheartened, they decided to go back
to New York. Phylis asked to be released from her contract
at Republic. Republic at first refused but changed their
minds after Phylis's father gave them a call and explained
that the two merely wanted to leave Hollywood and not
go to another studio.
Robert
had better luck with job opportunities in New York.
He found steady radio work but Phylis could only find
a job modeling hats. She also found out that she
was pregnant. Their first child, Robert Walker,
Jr. was born on April 15, 1940. She was soon pregnant
again and a second son (Michael Ross) was born on March
13, 1941. Walker continued to find success with
radio work but Phylis was becoming increasingly bored
at home with the boys.