Her lively on-stage character and English accent while speaking French greatly amused audiences at the Folies Bergère.
With Louis Maurel she sang 'Entrevue de Marienbad' at the Folies Bergère, which was recorded and which betrays her English accent while singing in French.
[1] From 1912 to 1915 she was on film sets for the studio Urban-Eclipse in Paris where she created the title role in the Maud series under the direction of René Hervil.
at La Cigale, with some critics believing her poor grasp of the French language had been an obstacle which audiences earlier in her career had found delightful.
In 1923 she appeared in Blanc et Noir at the Théâtre des Variétés and in the same year at the same theatre she had a supporting part in Un Jour de Folie by André Birabeau.
[1][8] Sometime after her divorce from Charles Prince she married Paul Derval,[1][9][10] director and owner of the Folies Bergère and appeared here regularly before gradually stopping performing on stage.
Aimée Campton was buried on 25 November 1930 in the Derval family vault at Montmartre Cemetery, after a religious ceremony at the Church of St. Francis de Sales in Paris.