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  1. 1 de ene. de 1982 · Sir Aubrey: A Biography of C. Aubrey Smith - England Cricketer, West End Actor, Hollywood Film Star. $301.92. (3) Only 1 left in stock - order soon. This is a biography of the Sussex and England cricketer who later became famous as a Hollywood actor. First published in 1982, this edition contains much new material, together with a foreword by ...

  2. Descubre todas las películas de la filmografía de C. Aubrey Smith. De sus inicios hasta el final de sus 17 años de carrera.

  3. Aubrey Smith studiò alla Charterhouse School e al St. John's College di Cambridge. Come crickettista, giocò per la squadra dell' Università di Cambridge negli anni 1882-1885 e per il Sussex fra il 1882 e il 1892. Nel 1888-1889 si trasferì in Sudafrica. Qui giocò con la squadra inglese di Johannesburg . Tornato in Inghilterra, iniziò la ...

  4. 15 de ago. de 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.

  5. Captain of England in his only Test. Smith was the son of Dr C.J.Smith, a Brighton doctor and was educated at Charterhouse and Cambridge University where he won a Blue in each of his four years. The family lived in Albany Villas, Hove and Smith first played for Sussex whilst still at Cambridge. He went on to captain Sussex in three seasons when ...

  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, produced by the acclaimed cinematographer Lee Garmes.

  7. Actor C. Aubrey Smith was, so far as many American moviegoers were concerned, the very personification of the British Empire. Even so, when young English journalist Alistair Cooke first travelled to Hollywood in the early 1930s to interview Smith, it was not to discuss the actor's four decades in show business, but to wax nostalgic on his athletic career.