Abstract
Mae Murray’s films exemplified Jazz Age popular culture. This still
from the silent film Circe, The
Enchantress directed by her then-husband Robert Z. Leonard,
combines jazz elements, 1920s fashions, and a woman playing the role of
the vamp – aspects of contemporary culture that horrified the more
conservative elements of society. After its U.S. premiere in October
1924, the film opened in German movie theaters in 1925. Film would
become an extremely popular mass medium in the Weimar Republic, and the
films produced by Universum-Film AG (UFA), the film studio located in
Potsdam-Babelsberg, played an early and significant role in this
development.