Women’s History: Famous Women of Paris
- Question: This little-known American artist and portrait painter lived much of her adult life in Paris. Who is she?
- Answer: Romaine Brooks lived much of her adult life in Paris. She is represented in the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
- Question: Which of the following women was not sketched by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec?
- Answer: Alas, Toulouse-Lautrec died before Edith Piaf was born.
- Question: What Parisian was the first woman to head the International Monetary Fund?
- Answer: In 2011, Christine Lagarde became the first woman to head the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
- Question: What American expatriate in Paris opened an English-language bookstore called Shakespeare and Company?
- Answer: Sylvia Beach had a bookstore called Shakespeare and Company. She also helped James Joyce publish Ulysses.
- Question: Which of the following American expatriates, like Gertrude Stein, held a legendary, well-attended salon in Paris?
- Answer: Natalie Barney’s salon operated from 1909 to 1972.
- Question: What is the name of the female protagonist of The Hunchback of Notre Dame, a novel set in the Paris cathedral of that name?
- Answer: It is Esmeralda—rather than Quasimodo, the hunchback of the title—who is the moral center of the novel.
- Question: What French writer moved to Paris when she married and was first published under her husband’s pen name, “Willy”?
- Answer: Colette’s Claudine novels were published by her husband as his own work.
- Question: What actress played a humourless Russian Communist Party member corrupted by a Parisian hat?
- Answer: Greta Garbo played a Russian Communist in the movie Ninotchka (1939).
- Question: Which American writer, noted for her novels and stories of upper-class American society, lived in Paris from 1907 to 1937?
- Answer: Edith Wharton wrote such books as The Custom of the Country and The Age of Innocence while living in Paris.
- Question: What Parisian woman was a pioneer of the film industry?
- Answer: Alice Guy directed her first film, La Fée aux choux (“The Cabbage Fairy”) in 1896.
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© Photos.com/Jupiterimages