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Bob Crane

Actor

Bob Crane starred on the hit 1960's sitcom Hogan's Heroes, which ran in prime time from 1965 to 1971. The show was set in a World War II prisoner of war camp in Germany; Crane played Colonel Robert Hogan, a crafty POW leader who constantly outwitted his bumbling Nazi guards. (The cast included Richard Dawson as a British POW and John Banner as the buffoonish Sergeant Schultz.) Crane is also notorious for his mysterious death in Scottsdale, Arizona on 29 June 1978. Crane was found bludgeoned to death in his own motel room, and investigations revealed that Crane had a racy personal life which included a habit of videotaping his encounters with various women. Crane's friend John Carpenter (no relation to the movie director by that name) was later tried for the crime but found not guilty, and the murder remains officially unsolved.

Extra credit: Auto-Focus, a film about Crane's life and death was directed by Paul Schrader and stars Greg Kinnear as Crane... Both Mel Gibson and Russell Crowe have expressed interest in playing Col. Hogan in a separate feature film version of Hogan's Heroes... Before beginning his acting career, Crane was a popular morning radio disc jockey on Los Angeles station KNX... Crane's second wife (1970-78) was actress Sigrid Valdis, who played the blonde secretary Hilda on Hogan's Heroes... Their son Robert "Scotty" Crane became a radio host and co-creator of the radio comedy show Shaken, Not Stirred... Hogan's Heroes is sometimes compared with the more serious 1953 POW film Stalag 17, which starred William Holden.

Blog posts mentioning Bob Crane:

Four Good Links

The Hofbräu

Fan tribute to Hogan's Heroes featuring nostalgic gems

Bob Spelled Backwards is boB

Bob Crane fan pages that include all kinds of memorabilia

The Bob Crane Experience

Odd and cluttered fan page, with notes on his death plus many links

Bob Crane Filmography

The IMDB's (surprisingly short) list of Crane's film and TV appearances

Vital Stats

Birth

13 July 1928

Birthplace

Waterbury, Connecticut

Death

29 June 1978
(bludgeoning, age 49)

Best Known As

Star of TV's Hogan's Heroes