Marc Goodman(V)
- Actor
- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
Marc Goodman is a character actor favoring slightly to very outlandish characters, accents, period pieces, villains, and character voices. He is best known for his role as the famous and infamous Bat Masterson in the feature film, Bill Tilghman and the Outlaws, . Also known for roles as Edward Doheny in "Hell House" on the Investigation Discovery Channel, as the Inventor in "The Machine," winner of Top 5 honors at the Rosebud Film Festival in 2015, as God in "The Bus to Paradise," featured in the 2015 Maryland International Film Festival, as CEO Snow in "The Black Friday Games," and as Black Bart the stage coach robber in Secrets of the Arsenal which aired numerous times on The American Heroes Channel in 2014-15. His stage work includes the role Armand Moncharmin in "Phantom of the Opera" at the Byrd Theater in Richmond, as Woodrow Wilson at the National Concert for Veterans/centennial of the armistice, and many other roles, starting when he was in high school. As an event entertainer, he does Shakespeare impersonation.
Marc is also an avid sailor, tennis player, vintage motorcyclist, cross-country skier, gardener, vintage shotgun shooter, and dog lover. He previously had a career as an international economist and energy analyst and has authored many published essays on international economics and foreign policy. The study of economic and social history is also a long-time hobby of his. He resides in North Beach, Maryland on the shore of the Chesapeake Bay and strives to live up to his philosophy, "It's never too late to have a happy childhood."
Marc is also an avid sailor, tennis player, vintage motorcyclist, cross-country skier, gardener, vintage shotgun shooter, and dog lover. He previously had a career as an international economist and energy analyst and has authored many published essays on international economics and foreign policy. The study of economic and social history is also a long-time hobby of his. He resides in North Beach, Maryland on the shore of the Chesapeake Bay and strives to live up to his philosophy, "It's never too late to have a happy childhood."