Paint and Powder is a surviving 1925 American silent drama film produced and released by the Chadwick Pictures.
The director of the film was Hunt Stromberg, later be best known as a producer and one of Louis B. Mayer's right hand men over at MGM.
[1][2] As described in a film magazine review,[3] a waiter in a cheap cabaret loves the premier dancer of the place, and when a noted theatrical producer visits the cabaret, the waiter by deft manipulation obtains his wallet.
When he is released, he finds the young woman married and successful.
A print of Paint and Powder is held by the Library of Congress and in the George Eastman Museum Motion Picture Collection.