Background
Goring was born in Newport, Isle of Wight, England, the son of Doctor Charles Goring and Kate Macdonald.
Goring was born in Newport, Isle of Wight, England, the son of Doctor Charles Goring and Kate Macdonald.
After attending the Perse School in Cambridge, where he became a friend of an older boy, the future documentary film maker Humphrey Jennings, he studied at the universities of Frankfurt, Munich, Vienna and Paris.
He is most often remembered for the four films he made with Powell & Pressburger, particularly as Conductor 71 in A Matter of Life and Death and as Julian Craster in The Red Shoes. He regularly performed French and German roles. He first performed professionally in 1927.
His early stage career included appearances at the Old Vic, Sadler"s Wells, Stratford and several European tours.
He was fluent in French and German. He first worked in the West End in a 1934 revival of Granville-Barker"s The Voysey Inheritance at the Shaftesbury Theatre.
During the 1930s, he played a variety of Shakespearean roles, including Feste in Twelfth Night (1937), Macbeth and Romeo, in addition to Trip in Sheridan"s The School for Scandal. Goring"s relationship with his union was fraught with conflict: he took it to litigation on three occasions.
In 1992 he unsuccessfully sought to end the block on the sale of radio and television programmes to (the still) apartheid South Africa.
During World World War II he joined the army, becoming supervisor of British Broadcasting Corporation radio productions broadcasting to Germany and continued to act under the name Charles Richardson, because of the association of his name with Hermann Göring. She died in 1976, and the next year Goring married television producer Prudence Fitzgerald, who survived him. His television work included starring as Sir Percy Blakeney in The Adventures of the Scarlet Pimpernel ( Independent Television, 1955) (a role which he also had in the 1952-1953 radio show), a series which he also co-wrote and produced.
Theodore Maxtible in the Doctor Who story The Evil of the Daleks (British Broadcasting Corporation, 1967).
Title role in The Expert (British Broadcasting Corporation, 1968–1976). King George V in Edward & Mistress
Simpson (Thames, 1980). And The Old Men at the Zoo (British Broadcasting Corporation, 1983).
Goring"s voice provides the narration of the sound and light show performed regularly in the evening at the Blue Mosque in Istanbul, Turkey.
He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1979 and appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in 1991. He died from cancer in 1998 aged 86.
In 1929, he became a founding member of British Equity, the actors" union, and became its president from 1963 to 1965, and again from 1975 to 1982.