In the troupe, the actress Kamina complained about the life of the actor, and her male compatriot Billy proposed to her. Billy and his boss quarreled over the poor treatment of the actors. He and Kamina threatened that Bu was performing, and the boss finally agreed to split the bill with them 50/50.
The people in the troupe are busy and skillfully preparing everything for the performance, and the governor also comes to watch, and the performance is about to begin. The host introduced the characters in the whole play, and the noisy scene was basically a vulgar farce.
The most famous local matador also came to watch the performance, and his appearance caused a great sensation on the field. All the audience cheered around him, which made Kamina very dissatisfied, but the matador understood her joke and took the lead in applauding. With his encouragement, the performance became a great success. But after the performance, they found that the box office was pitiful. The matador came to pay attention to Kamina, but was rejected by the angry Kamina. Billy almost duel with the arrogant matador.
The governor heard applause and asked his servant Martinez to invite the troupe to perform at his official residence. Their performance at the official residence received little response. Only after the governor lit a cigarette did they begin to applaud, and others began to cater politely. In fact, they dislike vulgar tastes, and the governor's reward makes everyone in the troupe very happy.
After the performance, the Governor invited Kamina to meet him. Kamina kept her poor self-esteem while coping with the Governor. The same vulgar governor is in tune with Kamina. He asked Kamina what she wanted, and Kamina told him that she wanted a golden carriage like him, so the governor took Kamina to see the carriage. The troupe and Harold suddenly appeared, leaving them to break up in anger. Later, during the performance, the governor suddenly appeared at the scene and sent an expensive gift, which made Billy jealous and scuffled with Kamina backstage.
The governor called for a meeting of nobles and taxed them to pay for military expenses. The nobles were very opposed and simply accused the golden carriage of not becoming personal property. That night, the matador came to Kamina to sing love songs, and the governor also quietly courted and promised to give it to Kamina after getting the carriage tomorrow. Kamina, who just dealt with it at first, was almost ecstatic.
At the meeting the next day, the Marquise and Kamina waited in the rooms at the two ends of the conference room, all with the wishful thinking of the golden carriage. However, the meeting was not smooth, and the governor would be forced to sign a decree to distribute the golden carriage to the government. Kamina's appearance caused confusion in the meeting, and the governor and the nobles almost scuffled. The governor refused to sign the decree, and Kamina walked down the stairs in the stunned eyes of the nobles, loudly announcing that the carriage belonged to her and ran to the stadium with the troupe.
On the competition field, the matador won and saw the excited Kamina take off the gold necklace given to her by the governor and throw it to the matador.
The governor lost his temper. He asked his men to find this hateful woman as soon as possible, otherwise they would not be governors themselves. His men quickly dissuaded the governor. That night, the matador came to Kamina and wanted to develop a career with her. He expressed his jealousy and kissed Kamina. Billy came back, and Kamina locked the matador who was bent on revenge against the governor in the side door. Billy told her about his military and political ambitions. She told Billy that she was leaving, and then left her to see the governor, who also expressed his love and jealousy.
Billy and the matador finally met outside. The matador demanded a duel. They fought together until Kamina met the Governor's Office. Tired Kamina told them all to leave. The warden left, and the two men continued to fight swords outside the house until the police came forward and took them away.
People in the troupe asked Kamina to leave together, and Kamina decided to stay and wait for the golden carriage. At the last moment of the struggle between the old and new regimes, Kamina drove the Archbishop to a meeting in her golden carriage, announced that she had given the golden carriage to the church, and asked everyone to love it, and then began a grand party. A drama of life ended like this.