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  1. Marius Goring Film Career. Film Career . His film career began in 1936 with an uncredited role in The Amateur Gentleman with Douglas Fairbanks Jr and a small speaking role in Rembrandt.He shared his one scene in this film with the star Charles Laughton, with whom he had previously worked on stage at The Old Vic.He made two further films in 1939: Flying Fifty-Five with Derrick de Marney where ...

  2. 30 de sept. de 1998 · Biography. Probably best known for stealing Moira Shearer's heart in the Technicolor dance fable "The Red Shoes" (1948), Marius Goring had a long career on stage and television as well as in film. He began acting in 1925, appearing in a Cambridge production of "Crossings." Four years later he had his first of many Shakespearean roles, playing a ...

  3. 6 de oct. de 1998 · Marius Goring, a British actor who played Shakespearean villains and Nazi officers and stole Moira Shearer's heart in the classic ballet film, ''The Red Shoes,'' died on Wednesday at his home in ...

  4. Marius had an extensive career acting in television productions over nearly fifty years from the 1930s right through to 1980s. His earliest television work was in two short films, both for the BBC. The first was The Bear in 1938, a one-act comedic play written by Anton Chekhov, co-starring his future wife, Lucie Mannheim, in their first filmed ...

  5. Marius Re Goring CBE FRSL (23 May 1912 – 30 September 1998) was an English stage and screen actor. He is the son of Dr Charles Buckman Goring, a renowned physician and criminologist, and Kate Winifred (née MacDonald), a former suffragette and talented pianist. Marius Goring was educated at The Perse School, Cambridge, England and at universities in Frankfurt, Munich, Vienna and Paris (The ...

  6. A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH, (aka STAIRWAY TO HEAVEN), Marius Goring, 1946 HIGHLY DANGEROUS, Marius Goring, 1950 ROUGH SHOOT, Marius Goring, 1953 THE BAREFOOT CONTESSA, ...

  7. Goring, Marius (1912-1998) Educated at Perse School Cambridge and at several European universities, Marius Goring, in nearly 50 films, maintained an urbane image - when, that is, he wasn't being notably sinister. Wholly British as he was, he was remarkably adept at suggesting foreigners, sometimes merely decadent (like the playboy in The ...