Flora Le Breton (1899 – 11 July 1951 in Brooklyn, New York City) was an English silent film actress from Croydon, Surrey, England.
In August 1918, her brother, Lieutenant Vivian Le Breton, who had just weeks before married Miss Theodora Fairbrother, was killed in action while fighting in France during World War I.
She secured the role of a London flower girl and played opposite Sir Gerald du Maurier for an entire year in the English capital.
As a dancer Le Breton and her partner Cecil Rubens won the world's amateur dancing championship in February 1923.
A reviewer praised her appearance, writing "Miss Le Breton's beauty is of the Dresden doll type".
In November 1925, she was featured in the Henry W. Savage production The Balcony Walker, which played the Lyric Theatre in Bridgeport, Connecticut.
In 1928, she played Lady Delphine, the romantic object of song and dance man Charles King, in the well-received Broadway show Present Arms, which had a run of 155 performances at the Mansfield Theatre.
In March 1929, Walter Winchell, in his gossip column "Diary of a New Yorker,"[2] recounted Miss Le Breton's theatrical struggle to win stardom and noted that she was now "the headliner and sensation of the bill at a vaudeville theater."