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At Sword's Point

as Queen's Chamberlain

1952
Rope of Sand

as Parker, Chairman of the Board

1949
Hills of Home

as Jamie Soutar

1948
Dressed to Kill

as Julian 'Stinky' Emery

1946
The Man in Half Moon Street

as Sir Humphrey Brandon

1945
Gaslight

as General Huddleston

1944
The Woman in the Window

as Dr. Michael Barkstane

1944
Casanova Brown

as Mr. Drury

1944
Owd Bob

as Lord Meredale

1938
Crackerjack

as Tony Davenport

1938
Born to Love

as Tom Kent (uncredited)

1931
I Like Your Nerve

as Clive Lattimer

1931
Chances

as The General

1931
The Dawn Patrol

as Lieutenant Phipps

1930
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Edmund Breon Edmund Breon

Birthday

1882-12-12

Place of Birth

Hamilton, Scotland, UK

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Edmund Breon (12 December 1882 – 24 June 1953) was a Scottish film and stage actor. He appeared in 131 films between 1907 and 1952. Born Iver Edmund de Breon MacLaverty in Hamilton, South Lanarkshire, he began in John Hare's touring company and later played on the West End stage and in Glasgow, gaining prominence. According to his grandson, Breon "started out at the turn of the century doing silent pictures in France. Vampire movies", so it is reasonably certain that MacLaverty is indeed the actor who appeared under the name Edmond Bréon in many Gaumont films 1907-1922 including, most famously, playing the part of Inspector Juve for Louis Feuillade in the ground-breaking Fantômas series. He did also appear in a small part in the 1915-1916 Feuillade series Les vampires, although this is not, as his grandson supposes, a horror film. He returned to Britain where he made the film A Little Bit of Fluff (1928), then went to Canada in 1929 and worked on the land. A year later he emigrated to the United States and gained his first big American film part in The Dawn Patrol (1930). Breon appeared in a mixture of British and American films over the following two decades. He also appeared on stage in the West End production of the comedy Spring Meeting in 1938. A 1949 newspaper article noted that Breon's "career has been interrupted by serious illness and an accident which kept him idle for two years." Breon died in his native Scotland on June 24, 1953.
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