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  1. Personal Life In November 1931, at the age of nineteen, Marius married Mary Westwood Steel at Gretna Green, Scotland.They had eloped to Scotland as Marius was underage and his mother, Katie, tried strenuously to prevent their marriage - Mary was ten years his senior an d pregnant with their child.

  2. Oct 6, 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 ...

  3. The Bear 1938/Box for One 1949; BBC SNT 50-57/DF Jr Present 54/LPT 55-56; The Scarlet Pimpernel 1955-1956; ITV Play of the Week 1955-1974; Gaslicht 1956/Many Mansions 1957

  4. Sep 30, 1998 · 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.

  5. Marius Goring and the Swastikas article in the Sydney Morning Herald on 13 February 1941. Marius's exploits with the swastikas were still being reported over a year later in the international press. Inexplicably, he is erroneously referred to as being a Czech in the article.

  6. In the 1946 film A Matter of Life and Death, Goring played Conductor 71 whose role is to ‘conduct’ Peter Carter (David Niven) to the afterlife. In the film The Red Shoes , he played Julian Craster, a young composer who wins the heart of ballerina Vicky Page ( Moira Shearer ) and clashes with the imperious ballet impresario, Boris Lermontov ( Anton Walbrook ).

  7. 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 appearance together.