Career
She became one of the first African-American executives at National Broadcasting Company Television in New York City, holding various positions over two decades. She was the first black president of American Women in Radio and Television. In 1981, she left National Broadcasting Company to become president and general manager of WNJR Radio in Union Township, Union County, New Jersey.
New Jersey Government.
Thomas Kean soon appointed her assistant state treasurer. In the 1990s, Warrick-Crisman moved to the Portuguese Authority of New York and New Jersey, where she worked in public affairs and survived the 1993 World Trade Center explosion, which killed six people. She also served on the board of the New School for the Arts in Tempe.
Her husband died in 1998.