Skip to main content
Skip to main menu Skip to spotlight region Skip to secondary region Skip to UGA region Skip to Tertiary region Skip to Quaternary region Skip to unit footer

Slideshow

Film Screening: Princess Tam Tam

Poster
-
Georgia Museum of Art
Film Screening

In the 1930s, Black performers were subjected to stereotypes even as they sought, and often achieved, their own opportunities to show the full range of their talents on the American screen. In pursuit of her artistic ambitions, singer/dancer/comedian Josephine Baker accepted an invitation to work in France. The resulting films, including “Princess Tam Tam” reveal what Hollywood producers in the US suppressed: a confident, sexy, scene-stealing African American woman who projected exuberance, expressiveness and raw charisma like an uncorked bottle of champagne. “Princess Tam Tam” is a Pygmalion-like comedy in which Baker stars as a mischievous shepherd girl who rises through society to become a pretend princess and the toast of Paris nightlife. 1935, NR, 77 min.

This screening will include a video introduction by Dr. Terri Simone Francis, associate professor of cinematic arts at the University of Miami. Dr. Francis is the author of “Josephine Baker’s Cinematic Prism” (Indiana University Press, 2021). She is a scholar of Black film history and aesthetics.

See https://georgiamuseum.org/event/film-princess-tam-tam/ for more details. 

Support us

EMPOWER STUDENT TRANSFORMATION. Here's how.

STAY CONNECTED!

Want to stay up-to-date with the latest events, lectures, and activities at the Department of Romance Languages?

Subscribe to our EVENTS listserv