Biography: life and films
Born Anne-Marie Benard on 3 August 1928, Cécile Aubry had trained
to become a dancer when she was offered her first screen role, the part
of Manon Lescaut in Henri-Georges Clouzot's 1949 film
Manon. Her performance in
this film helped it to win Clouzot the Golden Lion award at the Venice Film
Festival. This led 20th Century Fox to sign her up to play the
female lead in Henry Hathaway's
The
Black Rose (1950), opposite Tyrone Power and Orson Welles.
Aubry gave up her promising acting career after just eight films to
marry a Moroccan prince, Si Brahim El Glaoui. The marriage was
only to last six years. She penned several children's books
and scripted some popular series for French television. The
latter included the serial
Belle et
Sébastien, which ran to three seasons and was aired in
France between 1965 and 1968. This serial has been seen the world
over and recounts the alpine adventures of an orphan boy (played by
Aubry's six-year-old son Mehdi El Glaoui) and his faithful dog.
Cécile Aubry passed away at her home in Dourdan, near Paris, on
19th July 2010. She was 81 and had been suffering from lung
cancer.
© James Travers 2010
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Filmography
Key: a = actor; w = writer