BAKER, Josephine (1906-1975). Vintage black and white production still of Josephine Baker in the bathtub for the 1927 French silent film La Sirène des Tropiques (The Siren of the Tropics) , signed and inscribed by Baker : Inscribed in blue ink ‘Souvenir de Josephine Baker’. Following her success in the Revue Nègre , Baker became the first black woman to star in a major motion picture. Baker played Papitou, a Caribbean stowaway who falls in love with a French man and follows him to Paris. The scene pictured here follows a slapstick scene in which Baker avoids capture while crossing the Atlantic: ‘Papitou over-determines her blackness by rolling in coal, only to whiten herself with flour in a reversal of black-face before emerging from her bath like Boticelli’s Venus’. Powrie and Rebillard, ‘Josephine Baker and Pierre Batcheff in La Sirène des Tropiques’ in Studies in French Cinema , 8(3), 245-264. Gelatin silver print on doubleweight paper, stamped distributor’s credit ‘Eduard Weil & Co.’ and pencilled numerical notation verso, 219 x 282 mm, framed (377 x 435 mm). [With:] La Revue des Folies Bergère , Paris, Èditions Artistique 1927-31. Three programmes, comprising: Un Vent de Folie: Cinquième Album , 1927, featuring a colour plate of Josephine Baker and an advertisement for Club Chez Joséphine Baker on the back cover; La Grande Folie: Sixième Album , 1928; and L’Usine A Folies: Neuvième Album , 1931. Quarto, each with original paper wrappers and die-cut opening to front cover. [With:] a programme for the Theatre des Champs-Élysées music hall, 1925, with cover illustration by Paul Colin, listing La Revue Nègre with Josephine Baker, wire-stitched in the original wraps. [With:] The Original Charleston. Paris, Editions Francis Salabert, 1926. Printed piano score, with cover illustration of a dancing Josephine Baker by R. de Valerio, and a loosely inserted sheet Théorie du Charleston by Pradère-Niquet giving detailed instructions for the dance, 350 x 269 mm. [And:] TELLY, Vincent and Laurent HALET. Dansez le Shimmy. Paris: 1921. Sheet music, with graphic cover illustration by Gaston Girbal, 271 x 174 mm.