Manawatu Standard

Holocaust survivor starred in Hogan’s Heroes

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Robert Clary

Rb March 1, 1926 d November 16, 2022

obert Clary,who has died aged 96, was a French-born survivor of Nazi concentrat­ion camps during World War II who played a feisty prisoner of war in the improbable 1960s sitcom Hogan’s Heroes.

Clary began his career in Paris as a nightclub singer and appeared onstage in musicals and had small film roles before appearing in Hogan’s Heroes.

The CBS comedy, in which Allied soldiers in a POW camp bested their clownish German army captors with espionage schemes, played the war strictly for laughs during its 1965-71 run. The 1.54m (5ft 1in) Clary sported a beret and a sardonic smile as Corporal Louis LeBeau.

Clary was the last surviving original star of the sitcom that included Bob Crane, Richard Dawson, Larry Hovis and Ivan Dixon as the prisoners. Werner Klemperer and John Banner, who played their captors, were European Jews who fled Nazi persecutio­n before the war.

Clary remained publicly silent about his own wartime experience until 1980 when, he said, he was provoked to speak out by those who denied or diminished the Nazis’ efforts to exterminat­e Jews. His parents and 10 siblings were killed under the Nazis, Clary wrote in a biography posted on his website.

A documentar­y about his childhood and years of horror at Nazi hands, Robert Clary, A5714: A Memoir of Liberation, was released in 1985. The forearms of concentrat­ion camp prisoners were tattooed with identifica­tion numbers, with A5714 to be Clary’s lifelong mark.

In 1997, he was among dozens of Holocaust survivors whose portraits and stories were included in the book The Triumphant Spirit. ‘‘I beg the next generation not to do what people have done for centuries – hate others because of their skin, shape of their eyes, or religious preference,’’ he said at the time.

Born Robert Max Widerman in Paris in 1926, Clary was the youngest of 14 children. He was 16 when he and most of his family were taken by the Nazis. In the documentar­y, he recalled a happy childhood until he and his family were forced from their Paris apartment and put into a crowded cattle car that carried them to concentrat­ion camps.

Following 31 months in captivity in several concentrat­ion camps, he was liberated from the Buchenwald death camp by US troops. Returning to Paris, where he was reunited with two older sisters who had avoided the death camps, he worked as a singer and recorded songs that became popular in America.

After immigratin­g to the United States in 1949, he moved from club dates and recording to Broadway musicals, and then to movies. He appeared in films including Thief of Damascus (1952), A New Kind of Love (1963) and The Hindenburg (1975). He also acted in soap operas such as The Young and the Restless, Days of Our Lives and The Bold and the Beautiful.’

Clary married Natalie Cantor, the daughter of singer-actor Eddie Cantor, in 1965. She died in 1997. He had no children.

He said he didn’t feel uneasy about the comedy on Hogan’s Heroes despite his family’s devastatin­g war experience. ‘‘It was completely different,’’ he once said. ‘‘I know they [POWs] had a terrible life, but compared to concentrat­ion camps and gas chambers it was like a holiday.’’

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