Pages

16 April 2020

Gina Palerme

French actress and singer Gina Palerme (1885-1977) was the toast of the London music halls in the 1910s. In the next decade, she played in numerous French silent films and finished her career in the Moulin Rouge and other Paris cabarets.

Gina Palerme
Austrian postcard by Iris Verlag, no. 487. Photo: Ifuk-Film.

Gina Palerme and Roy Royston in Bric-a-brac
British postcard by J. Beagles & Co, London, no. 240 C. Photo: Rita Martin. Publicity still for the stage production Bric-a-brac (1915) with Roy Royston.

Gina Palerme, Roy Royston
British postcard by J. Beagles & Co, London, no. 240 E. Photo: Rita Martin. Publicity still for the stage production Bric-a-brac (1915) again with Roy Royston.

Gina Palerme
French postcard by Gaillard, Paris / Amiens. Publicity for Dermoxa soap. Caption: "Dermoxa" est le meilleur produit connu pour les bains de pieds.

The Glamour of the French Cocotte


Gina Palerme was born Marie Louise Irène de Maulmont in Bussière-Galant in the West of France in 1885.

In 1911, she was discovered by a British entrepreneur and debuted as Toinette in the musical comedy The Quaker Girl (1911) directed by Lionel Mockton at the Adelphi Theatre.

Her début was followed by appearances in West-end productions like The Dancing Mistress (1912), Betty (1914), Platons Les Capucines (1914), Bric-a-Brac (1915), Vanity Fair (1916), La Petite Chocolatière (1917), Finsbury (1917), and The Girl for the Boy (1919).

Until 1919, Palerme was the toast of the London music hall. Cecil Beaton enthusiastically wrote about her: “Gina Palerme brought the glamour of the French cocotte to London. Her off-stage appearances were as sensational as her stage escapades...sometimes she wore a velvet tam-o'-shanter and men's riding breeches while relaxing in the richly ornate gilt of her Maida Vale drawing-room.”

The National Portrait Gallery holds beautiful photos from those years, made by the famous photographer Bassano and by his colleagues Rita Martin and The Dover Street Studios Ltd.

Gina Palerme
British postcard, no. 10273 E. Photo: The Dover Street Studios Ltd, London.

Gina Palerme
British postcard. Photo: Wrather & Buys, London.

Gina Palerme
British postcard in the Arcadian Series, no. A 39. Photo: Dover Street Studios.

Gina Palerme
British postcard, no. 8842 4. Photo: Dover Street Studios LTD, London.

Horror Comedy


Gina Palerme returned to France in 1919.

In the early 1920s she played in various silent French films like L’éternel féminin/The Eternal Female (Roger Lion, 1921), Margot (Guy du Fresnay, 1922), L’idée de Françoise/Françoise's Idea (Robert Saidreau, 1923) in which she played the title role of the foreseeing Françoise, and the Halevy & Meilhac adaptation Frou-Frou (Guy du Fresnay, 1923).

La bataille/The Danger Line (1923) was co-directed by Edouard-Emile Viollet and Hollywood star Sessue Hayakawa who also played the male lead, together with his wife Tsuru Aoki.

In the horror-comedy Au secours!/Help! (Abel Gance, 1924) she co-starred with the great comic Max Linder. It was his last surviving work;

Her final film was La clé de voute/The Keystone (Roger Lion, 1925), which Palerme produced herself. It was a drama about a young female factory worker who gives away her child but always repents.

After this film, Gina Palerme quitted the cinema. From then on, she would only work in such French cabarets as the Moulin Rouge and the Concert Mayol.

Gina Palerme died a natural death in 1977 in Les Pavillons-sous-Bois, France.

Gina Palerme
British postcard. Photo: Rita Martin.

Gina Palerme
French postcard by A.N., Paris, no. 57.

Gina Palerme
French postcard by Cinémagazine, no. 94.

Gina Palerme
French postcard.

Sources: John Culme (Footlight Notes), National Portrait Gallery, Les Gens du Cinema (French) and IMDb. And with thanks to Marlene Pilaete.

No comments:

Post a Comment