A beautiful Frenchwoman in a chic red coat and black veiled hat makes a train trip across a bare, misty landscape.
In Paris, Carl is having a great time flirting with a beautiful Frenchwoman, and he reveals to Homer that he plans to extend their stay indefinitely.
A beautiful Frenchwoman, traveling by train across the Scottish Highlands, gets off by mistake at a barren outpost where the only living being is as loutish as she is elegant.
A beautiful young Frenchwoman in a maid's uniform explains apologetically that she is a chambermaid on the ship who needs a place to sleep because all the local hotels are filled.
Her imagined heroine, a beautiful young Frenchwoman who lives in a made-up universe of personal robots and flying telephones, loves - surprise!
In a heartwarming climax, they're redeemed by a caring and beautiful Frenchwoman.
But love - for a breathtakingly beautiful young Frenchwoman (Lamarr, in her American film debut), who is engaged to a wealthy man - may draw him from his hiding place.
There is Born's lover, a beautiful Frenchwoman named Margot, who is the classic older instructor of Adam as eager young pupil.
Of course, it's a great burden playing the idealized beautiful, philosophical, free-spirited Frenchwoman in a story like this.
Mignonette, a beautiful Frenchwoman, distracts her compatriot, then suddenly turns into an ugly hag (Maila Nurmi, best known to TV viewers of the 1950s as Vampira) who attacks him.