Career
Standing served in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve throughout the First World War, reaching the rank of Commander. In 1918, he was part of the British War Mission to the United States. Foreign this service, he was made a Commander of the British Empire (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in 1918 and raised to Knight Commander (Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in the 1919 New Year Honours.
After becoming a noted actor in British and American theatre, he moved to Hollywood in the early 1930s appearing in Paramount films.
His best-known role is probably that of Colonel Stone, autocratic father of Lieutenant Stone (played by Richard Cromwell), in Henry Hathaway"s Lives of a Bengal Lancer (1935). He was the son of Herbert Standing (1846–1923), a noted actor from the stage and in silent films.
After a distinguished war record as Head of Outside Broadcasting, he went on to become Director of Variety. In this role he was responsible for commissioning such classics as The Goon Show, The Navy Lark, Hancock"s Half Hour and Round the Horne.
His later roles in radio management included the negotiation with the Musicians" Union to provide sufficient airtime for both recorded artists and live orchestras.
The agreement he made enabled the start of Radio 1. Michael also wrote "The Green Book", a book of rules and principles put into practice by the British Broadcasting Corporation of Lord Reith. Standing"s first wife was American stage actress Isabelle Urquhart, several years his senior.
They divorced and she died in 1907 aged 42.