Not exact matches
One of the most
memorable examples occurs early on, as the mute heroine (played by Sally Hawkins) watches Shirley Temple
dance up the stairs with Bill «Bojangles» Robinson in 1935's «The Little Colonel,» a
sequence that broke through the racial barriers of the period.
There is one particularly
memorable burlesque
sequence involving the beautiful Erika Blanc where a coffin is carried out onto a stage and she proceeds to climb out of it and
dance.
This audacious and wildly entertaining French New Wave gem is at once sentimental and insouciant, effervescently romantic and melancholy, and it features some of Godard's most
memorable set pieces, including the headlong race through the Louvre and the unshakably cool Madison
dance sequence.