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  1. Sylvia Poppy Bremer [1] [2] (9 June 1897 – 7 June 1943), known professionally as Sylvia Breamer, was an Australian actress who appeared in American silent motion pictures beginning in 1917. Childhood and early career in Australia.

  2. Actress: Robes of Sin. Sylvia Breamer was one of a flock of Australians who came to Hollywood in the early silent era. She had been a stage actress in her native Sydney for several years, and had played in several Australian productions of American stage plays, which met with great success.

    • January 1, 1
    • Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
    • January 1, 1
    • New York City, New York, USA
  3. 23. Dez. 2018 · Sylvia Breamer was a stage and film star in Australia and the US from 1910 to 1936. She faced challenges of war, marriage and sound, and died in New York at 45.

  4. Sylvia Breamers light might have well and truly dimmed — her movies have all but vanished and only a handful of film buffs and historians would recognise her name — but she was the toast of Australia during the silent film era. Alongside her better-remembered contemporaries, Louise Lovely and Enid Bennett, this famed beauty was the Naomi ...

  5. She died of a heart condition in New York in June 1943, three years after her third marriage had ended in divorce. Updated 2018. Show full biography. Portraits. Sylvia Bremer (also Breamer) (1897–1943), actor, was born in Double Bay, Sydney, in June 1897 into a British-Australian naval family.

  6. Sylvia Breamer. Actress: Robes of Sin. Sylvia Breamer was one of a flock of Australians who came to Hollywood in the early silent era. She had been a stage actress in her native Sydney for several years, and had played in several Australian productions of American stage plays, which met with great success. Hoping to capitalize on that success ...

  7. A leading woman in forty-eight feature films from 1917 to 1936, her heyday lasted seven years, from 1917 to 1924. Her greatest performance may have been as Juliet in the 1921 Goldwyn production, "Doubling for Romeo." David S. Shields/ALS.