Hélène Hallier gives up a life as an underpaid seamstress to go n the stage.
There's about 30 minutes of story in this late silent movie. The rest of it is taken up in extravagant, Folies Bergeres-style revue numbers, featuring lots of pretty girl, some contemporary performers of some renown, and two brief numbers featuring Josephine Baker, demonstrating she can shimmy like my sister Kate. For the first hour, all of the extravagant chorus numbers with their fantastic costumes are shot straight on, clearly offering a proscenium view from the expensive seats. After that, some tighter shots are edited in.
It's also a major demonstration of Pathe color, a stencil system devised twenty years earlier. Most of the examples people get to see are from the 1905-1910 era, and age has not been kind to them; chemical decomposition has rendered most of them blotchy, faded and looking like they were crayoned in by a bored five-year-old. The sharply defined borders and bright colors on view in the copy of this movie that I saw show the value and strength of the technique that was perfected by Segundo de Chomon for the Pathe Freres. Nonetheless, it was on its wa out in the face of the constantly improving Technicolor; it was tremendously expensive to use, involving a lot of skilled hand labor to produce multiple stencils for every frame of a movie. Its last major use would be in 1930's ELSTREE CALLING, although Bunuel would use it as late as 1954.
As a record of the sort of act that a tourist might see in 1920s Paris, this movie is interesting. Given its wisp of a plot, and the fact that after seeing thirty numbers, the 31st is of limited interest, it's not so good.