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  1. C. Aubrey Smith. Sir Charles Aubrey Smith CBE (21 July 1863 – 20 December 1948) was an English Test cricketer who became a stage and film actor, acquiring a niche as the officer-and-gentleman type, as in the first sound version of The Prisoner of Zenda (1937).

    • Right-handed
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    • Charles Aubrey Smith
    • 21 July 1863, London, England
  2. C. Aubrey Smith was a British actor who appeared in silent and sound movies from 1915 to 1949. He played authoritative and dignified roles, such as Colonel Julyan in Rebecca and Gen. Sir John Mandrake in And Then There Were None.

    • January 1, 1
    • London, England, UK
    • January 1, 1
    • Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA
  3. C. Aubrey Smith was a British actor who played distinguished roles in silent and sound movies. He was also a cricketer, a Freemason, and a knight who worked with Greta Garbo and Shirley Temple.

    • July 21, 1863
    • December 20, 1948
  4. A biography of the British actor who became a mainstay of Hollywood movies in the 1930s and 1940s, known for his roles in musical comedies, historical epics, war films and more. Learn about his life, career, achievements and cricketing skills from his childhood in London to his death in Los Angeles.

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  5. Aug 15, 2013 · Born July 1, 1863 in London, England, Charles Aubrey Smith, known professionally as C. Aubrey Smith, was educated at Cambridge University where he was a member of the cricket team. Moving to South Africa in 1888 to prospect for gold, he developed pneumonia and was pronounced dead from the malady that would actually kill him sixty years later.

  6. Beyond Tomorrow (1940) -- (Movie Clip) The Soul Of Man Is Immortal Quote from Benjamin Franklin, a city montage and the introduction of Harry Carey as Melton, C. Aubrey Smith as Major Chadwick, then joined by their more festive housemate and partner in their prosperous engineering firm, Charles Winninger as O’Brien, in Beyond Tomorrow, 1940 ...

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  8. Sir Charles Aubrey Smith CBE (21 July 1863 – 20 December 1948) was an English Test cricketer who became a stage and film actor, acquiring a niche as the officer-and-gentleman type, as in the first sound version of The Prisoner of Zenda (1937). In Hollywood, he organised British actors into a cricket team, much intriguing local spectators.

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