Revier danced with a Russian ballet company on tour, but homesickness brought her back to San Francisco, where she became the featured dancer at Tait's Cafe.
[6] She made her film debut in Life's Greatest Question (1921)[7] and was active throughout the 1920s, playing in The Virgin (1924),[8] The Supreme Test (1923), An Enemy of Men (1925),[9]: 215 The Far Cry (1926),[9]: 230 Cleopatra (1928),[10] Tanned Legs (1929)[11] and The Iron Mask (1929).
[9]: 384 After recovering from two broken arms suffered in a 1930 car accident, she played roles in low-budget films for Columbia Pictures.
In 1935 she played the role of a saloon girl in Paramount Pictures' second Hopalong Cassidy film, The Eagle's Brood, working alongside William Boyd.
[5] A resident of West Hollywood, Revier died at the age of 89, at the Queen of Angels-Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center,[5] and was interred at Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles area, buried under the simple marker of name and dates, marked with the lone inscription, "Beloved Actress.