Sylvain Goldberg

Description
Sylvain Goldberg is a Belgian actor, voice actor, director, and composer, born on August 20, 1970, in Brussels. He trained at the Conservatoire National d'Art Dramatique in Brussels, which marked the beginning of his career in the audiovisual sector. In 1992, he co-founded the dubbing studio Made in Europe with Bernard Perpète, a venture that became a significant player in the Belgian dubbing industry. The studio gained particular prominence during a prolonged strike by French voice actors in 1995, which allowed Belgian talent to secure contracts for French-language dubs of major films.

Goldberg is known for his extensive work in dubbing anime series and films during the 1990s and 2000s. Among his most prominent roles is Terry Bogard in the trilogy of animated specials based on the Fatal Fury video game series, which includes Fatal Fury: Legend of the Hungry Wolf, Fatal Fury 2: The New Battle, and Fatal Fury: The Motion Picture. He also voiced Robert Garcia in the Art of Fighting animated special, a role the user specifically inquired about. His other notable anime credits include the characters Gen-An Shiranui, Kyoshiro Senrio, and Moichiro in Samurai Shodown: The Motion Picture, and the role of Bill in the series Kaze no Naka no Shoujo Kinpatsu no Jeanie, also known as Le Rêve de Jeanie. He further lent his voice to Tenchi Masaki in the French dub of the original Tenchi Muyo! OVA series, Nicolas in Plastic Little, and Charles in Cinderella Monogatari.

In addition to his work in anime, Goldberg provided voices for numerous other animated series, such as Willi in Willi Souris Globe Trotter, Attila in Grimmy, and Fantasio in the 2006 adaptation of Spirou et Fantasio, for which he used the pseudonym Ronald Mondor. His voice acting career also extended to live-action films, where he became known as one of the regular French voices for actors John Cusack, Tom Hulce, and Henry Thomas.

Beyond performance, Goldberg has worked as a voice director on projects like the series Alice et les Hardy Boys and Samba et Leuk le lièvre. Around the 2000s, he gradually shifted his professional focus away from dubbing and toward film production and musical composition. He has since built a career as a film composer, creating soundtracks for numerous feature films, including Tout le monde debout and Un ours dans le Jura by Franck Dubosc, and has also worked as a producer on many projects.