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H Reeves Smith

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Occupation
  
Actor

Children
  
Olive Reeves-Smith

Role
  
Actor

Name
  
H. Reeves-Smith

Years active
  
1880s-1935


H. Reeves-Smith

Full Name
  
Harry Reeves-Smith

Born
  
May 17, 1862
Scarborough, England

Died
  
January 29, 1938, Ewell, United Kingdom

Movies
  
The Return of Sherlock Holmes

People also search for
  
Basil Dean, Olive Reeves-Smith, Fuller Mellish Jr., Fuller Mellish

Harry Reeves-Smith (17 May 1862 – 29 January 1938) better known as H. Reeves-Smith was an English born stage actor who achieved success in Broadway productions at the turn of the twentieth century. His father was G. Reeves-Smith, a manager of the Brighton Aquarium. Harry made his first appearance on stage in 1878 at Halifax in Jane Shore. He came to the U.S. in 1887 and toured with John Sleeper Clarke. In the U.S. he toured with actresses Henrietta Crosman and Grace George. He is mainly remembered for appearing in several hit plays. Ethel Barrymore became a stage star in Clyde Fitch's Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines (1901) but Reeves-Smith character Robert Jinks is the title of the play. In 1910 he appeared in another play with Barrymore, Mid-Channel, about a feuding couple. In 1912 he was opposite Laurette Taylor in her huge success Peg o' My Heart. In The Unchastened Woman (1915) the star was Emily Stevens. His last Broadway part was as Johan Strauss in The Great Waltz in 1935.

Films

Reeves-Smith appeared in only three motion pictures, two silents and one sound. His last was The Return of Sherlock Holmes (1929) with Clive Brook, which holds the distinction of being the first Sherlock Holmes film to be shot in sound and Reeves-Smith the first Dr. Watson in a sound film.

He died of a heart attack at Elwell, Surrey England on 29 January 1938.

References

H. Reeves-Smith Wikipedia