One of Hollywood's few women art directors in the silent era, Iowa-born Una Nixson Hopkins (sometimes spelled "Nixon") began her screen career in 1915 designing sets for the Oliver Morosco Photoplay Company in Los Angeles. Later switching to another firm releasing under the Paramount umbrella, Realart, Hopkins designed sets for such feature films as Food for Scandal (1920), starring Wanda Hawley, and Mary Miles Minter's Judy of Rogues' Harbor (1920). Hopkins seems to have left the film industry in the mid-1920s. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi