The short stories of Guy de Maupassant enjoyed a renaissance in the early 1950s, thanks in great part to the Max Ophuls production Le Plaisir. In Trois Femmes, three De Maupassant stories are dramatized, each conveying the central theme of women falling in love. In the first, a black female carnival entertainer causes an uproar when she falls in love with a white soldier. In the second, a young bride is pressured into having a baby to collect a huge inheritance. And in the final episode, a pregnant girl is "adopted" and protected by a small circle of friends. In standard De Maupassant fashion, each of the three stories in Trois Femmes is capped by a surprise twist.
Marcelle Arnold
Michel Bouquet
Betty Daussmond
Moune de Rivel
Agnès Delahaie
Luc Andrieux
Madeleine Barbulée
Claude Castaing
Georges Chamarat
Henri Coutet
Cécile Damien
Gérard Darrieu
Blanche Denège
Roland Dubillard
Jacques Duby
Jacqueline Duc
Catherine Erard
Jacques Fabbri
Bernard Farrel
Guy Favières
Florelle
Jacques François
René Lefèvre
Marcel Lupovici
Rodolphe Marcilly
Maryse Martin
Franck Maurice
Jean Mercure
Anne Moran
André Moreau
Marcel Mouloudji
Bernard Noël
Pierre Olaf
Jean Ozenne
Maryse Paillet
Pierre Palau
Raymond Pellegrin
Sarah Rafale
Max Rogerys
Jean-Pierre Serreau
Germaine Stainval
Rosy Varte
Julien Verdier
Serge Witta
Yvonne Yma