Background
Goodliffe was born in Bebington, Cheshire, the son of a vicar, and educated at Street Edmund"s School, Canterbury, and Keble College, Oxford.
Goodliffe was born in Bebington, Cheshire, the son of a vicar, and educated at Street Edmund"s School, Canterbury, and Keble College, Oxford.
Keble College.
He was also sometimes cast in working class parts. He started his career in repertory theatre in Liverpool before moving on to the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford upon Avon. He joined the British Army at the beginning of the Second World War, and received a commission as a Second Lieutenant in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment in February 1940.
He was wounded in the leg and captured at the Battle of Dunkirk.
Goodliffe was incorrectly listed as killed in action, and even had his obituary published in a newspaper. He was to spend the rest of the war a prisoner in Germany.
Whilst in captivity he produced and acted in (and in some cases wrote) many plays and sketches to entertain fellow prisoners. These included two productions of William Shakespeare"s Hamlet, one in Tittmoning and the other in Eichstätt, in which he played the title role.
He also produced the first staging of Noël Coward"s Post Mortem at Eichstätt.
A full photographic record of these productions exists. After the war he resumed his professional acting career. As well as appearing in the theatre, he worked in film and television
He appeared in The Wooden Horse in 1950 and in other Prisoner Of War films.
His best-known film was A Night to Remember (1958), in which he played Thomas Andrews, designer of the Rated Maximum Sinusoidal Titanic. His best-known television series was Sam (1973-1975) in which he played an unemployed Yorkshire miner.
He also appeared with John Thaw and James Bolam in the 1967 television series Inheritance. Suffering from depression, Goodliffe had a breakdown in 1976 during the period that he was rehearsing for a revival of Equus.
He committed suicide a few days later by leaping from a hospital fire escape, while a patient at the Atkinson Morley Hospital in Wimbledon, London.