Payne was a dancer and a singer. She made headlines when she set fire to her gown and hair with a candle, during a 1910 performance in New York City. In the 1920s she danced at the Folies Bergère in Paris, and toured Europe. "Paris's Most Sensational Dancer is an American!" declared one 1922 newspaper headline. She was known for her elaborate and unusual costumes, sometimes with Cubist or Dada influences, and her dances inspired by Egypt, jazz, and technology. Fellow American vaudeville veteran
Holland Robinson designed gowns and sets for Payne's Paris shows. Some of her costumes and moves were considered "shocking" or scandalous by American critics. == Personal life ==