Sergine was a stage actress in Paris. She appeared in
Une lâche (1907) with
Albert Dieudonné,
Le Grand Soir (1908), ''The Children's Cardinal,
L'Aiglon,'' and Racine's
Phedre. Critic André Germain counted her as one of the "three best actresses in Paris" in 1921, alongside
Berthe Bady and
Ève Francis. Sergine appeared in several silent films, including
Mary Stuart (1908),
The Great Breach (1909),
Pygmalion (1910), ''L'écharpe
(1911), Moderne Galathée
(1911), Les deux gosses
(1912, 1916), Pro Patria
(1914), Le médecin des enfants
(1916), and Le geste'' (1917). Her father-in-law,
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, painted her portrait in 1914. During
World War I, she traveled to a military hospital to tell the wounded
Jean Renoir of his mother
Aline Charigot's death, and caused an uproar with her short dress and cropped hair. In 1916, she recited
Saint-Georges de Bouhélier's
Ode to Our Friends in the United States, at an event in the
Sorbonne. Sergine continued acting through the 1920s, and was considered an exemplar of Paris women's style. In 1927, she toured as an actress as "French fashion ambassador", in Asia and North America. == Personal life ==