
Sylvia Breamer
Biography
From Wikipedia
Sylvia Breamer (9 June 1897 – 7 June 1943) was an Australian
actress who performed in American silent motion pictures beginning in 1917. Her
father was Sir James De Courcey Breamer, a commander in the Royal Navy. After
his death her mother married Judge A.G. Plunkett, formerly of Sydney,
Australia.
Sylvia's initial film efforts were with Colonel J. Stuart
Blackton films. She also performed in releases produced by Mayflower Pictures.
Breamer came to Hollywood with her sister, Doris, in 1920. Her mother relocated
also, residing at 837 South Catalina Street, Los Angeles, California.
Her first Hollywood movie was Athalie, a story of
spiritualism, directed by Sid Franklin, formerly the director of Mary Pickford.
The film was based on a work by Robert W. Chambers. Breamer worked at Brunton
Studios. Her work with director Franklin was released by First National
Pictures.
In 1921 Sylvia was signed by Director General Lloyd B.
Carleton to make features produced by the Rubayat Press and Photoplay
Corporation. Sylvia travelled with a Universal Pictures film crew on location
in Truckee, California. This was during the making of Bavu (1923). The group
left Universal City, California in an effort to complete scenes of the deaths
of Bolshevik characters in the Russian melodrama. Among others the film
featured actors Wallace Beery and Estelle Taylor.
When she came west from Australia Sylvia had just divorced
William Morrison, a director. She married him when she was only sixteen years
old. On 1 November 1924 the actress married Dr. Harry Martin at the Glenwood
Inn in Riverside, California. Martin, 34, formerly practiced medicine in
Chicago, Illinois. He served in World War I and relocated to Los Angeles after
being discharged from the U.S. Army.
Miss Breamer was an avid horsewoman. Another hobby was
seeking grunion at Del Rey, California. She owned beautiful jewellery. A
diamond bracelet was taken from her just before she departed New York City to come
to Hollywood. The bracelet was valued at $1,200.
Sylvia Breamer died in New York City in 1943.
Gallery



Known For
Acting History
1936
Too Many Parents as Malloy
1926Up in Mabel's Room as Alicia
1925Too Much Youth as Marguerite Crandall
1924Robes of Sin
1924Reckless Romance as Edith Somers
1924The Woman on the Jury as Betty Brown
1924Lilies of the Field as Vera
1923Her Temporary Husband as Blanche Ingram
1923Flaming Youth as Dee Fentriss
1923Thundergate as Alberta Hayward
1923The Barefoot Boy as Milicent Carter
1923Bavu as Olga Stropik
1923The Girl of the Golden West as The Girl
1923The First Degree as Mary
1922Wolf Law as Francine Redney
1922Calvert's Valley as Hester Rymal
1922The Man Unconquerable as Rita Durand
1922Sherlock Brown as Hilda
1922The Face Between as Marianna Canfield
1921A Poor Relation as Miss Fay
1921Doubling for Romeo as Lulu / Juliet
1921The Devil as Mimi
1921Not Guilty as Elsa Chetwood
1920Unseen Forces as Miriam Holt
1920The Blood Barrier as Enid Solari
1920My Lady's Garter as Helen Hamilton
1920Respectable by Proxy as Betty Blair
1919The Moonshine Trail as Cynthia
1919A House Divided as Mary Lord
1919The Common Cause as Helene Palmer
1918The Temple Of Dusk as Adrienne Chester
1918We Can't Have Everything as Zada L'Etoile
1918The Family Skeleton as Poppy Drayton
1917The Narrow Trail as Betty Werdin
1917The Cold Deck as Rose Larkin
1917Sudden Jim as Marie Ducharme
1917The Millionaire Vagrant as Ruth Vail
1917The Pinch Hitter as Abbie Nettleton







