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Cast & Crew Willem Dafoe, Angelo Badalamenti, Ed Begley Jr., Greg Kinnear, Kelly Packard, Paul Schrader, Rita Wilson, Fred Murphy, Peter Kambasis, Luke Freeborn, Maria Bello, Alex Meneses, Timothy Mehlenbacher, Mark Dawson, Steve C. Aaron, Nikita Ager, Sande Alessi, Scott Alexander, Alicia Allain, Alicia Allain, Donna J. Anderson, James W. Apted, Michael Barnes, Andrew Barrett, Aaron Barsky, David Bartholomew, Bruce Bauer, Michael Bauman, Kevin Beard, Robert Benjamin, Kristan Berona, John Bilich, Jason Block, Kristina Boden, Cheryl Lynn Bowers, Gibby Brand, Kevin Brown, Kevin Brown, Kevin Brown, Ken Cade, Rick Chavez, James Chinlund, John Churchill, Kate Clarke, Stephanie Coffey, Stephanie Coffey, Andreas Crawford, Thomas M. Dangcil, Jeffrey De La Rosa, Will Dearborn, Rebecca DeHerrera, Michael Dennison, Catherine Dent, Alicia Allain, Patrick Dollard, Patrick Dollard, Sean J. Donnelly, Lamont Dozier, Jim Dunbar, Paul A. Edwards, William Eliscu, Frank Endewardt, Tass Filipos, Gary Sievers, Damian Fisher, Peter Persaud, Lilly Frank, Kurt Fuller, Ashley Fetterman, Robert Stover, Michael McKean, Vyto Ruginis, John C. Hartigan, Michael Miller, Michael E. Rodgers, Ron Leibman, John Kapelos, Cheryl Eckert, Bruce Solomon, Barbara Mason, David Johansen, Jeff Harlan, Joe Grifasi, Kevin Kilner, Curt Sobel, Richard Mall, Myke Michaels, Lyle Kanouse, Julie Weiss, Rebecca Poulos, Bill Marinella, M. Ross-Michaels, Daniel Pellerin, Cheryl Kurk, Steve Munro, Peter Kelly, Robert David Crane, Gene Serdena, Joseph D. Reitman, David Page, Joel Harlow, Candace Neal, Michael Jackman, G. Marq Roswell, Barbara M. Ravis, Michael Tolochko, Wendy Kurtzman, Karen Yokomizo, Isabel Harkins, Barbara Marko, Lisa Womble, Ziad Seirafi, Todd Rosken, Steven Jetton, Don McManus, David Drainie Taylor, Andrew Tay, Avi Levy, Chris Main, Jeffrey Greeley, Larry Karaszewski, Barry Idoine, Cathy Rait, James Schamus, Patrick Mignano, David Scott, Michael Hubert, Grant Samson, Rob Hinderstein, Michael Gerbosi, J. Michael Glynn, Eric Oliver, Seth Reed, Marsha Shearrill, Michael Peterson, Donnamarie Recco, Reverend Horton Heat, Sean Lyons, Arden Myrin, Frank Masi, Melissa Remenarich, Benjamin Scissors, Rick Hess, Tim Hardin, Alec Shepherd, Tree Adams, Christopher S. Parker, Dirk Stout, Hilary Peabody, Christopher Neiman, Thomas Spencer, Paul Schreiber, Owen Masterson, Kathleen Rosen, Nathan Polatin, Gary Schreiner, Sam Page, Evis Xheneti, Pamela Lee Incardona, Caroline Liem, Kitana Baker, Ella Marcus, Yuri Karjane, John C. Hartigan, Hayley Stuppel, Charles Heaphy, LeJon, Colin McLellan, Katie Lohmann, Stuart Macphee, Philip W. Gough, Shawn Reaves, Marieh Delfino, Peter Kujawski, Shannon Murphy, Cassie Townsend, Nick Rock, Eddie Merino, Brian Oliver, Trevor Macy, Sarah Jackson-Seirafi, Sean Donnelly, Brian Holland, Eddie Holland, Robert Graysmith, Sarah Uhrich, Amanda Niles, Amber Griebel, Hannah Feldner-Shaw, Roderick McCarthy, Michael Tachovsky, Teri Geary, Jade Ruggiero, Zen, Zero, Jennifer Piper, Kelly K.C. Quann, Danielle Petty, Jennifer Coffmon, Shelley Coleman-Hiestad, Christopher Hagard, Jacob Hagard, H.R. Haldeman, John Mitchell, Olivia Saint, Roxane Griffin, Ken Metzker, Kenneth J. Ferris, Zach Fine, Nikki Fitch, Will Frears, Michelle Impellizine, Jonathan Levine, Ryan Murphy, Steve Sinsheimer, Dean Butterworth, Spirit, The Four Tops ...Show All
Hide Description: In 1965, Bob Crane, who had achieved some earlier success as a television supporting actor, was working as a successful morning radio DJ at KNX Los Angeles. Despite enjoying his work, photography (especially of the female form) and drumming, Crane wanted to be a movie star. So it was with some reluctance that he accepted the title starring role in a new television sitcom called "Hogan's Heroes" (1965), a WWII POW comedy. To his surprise, the show became a hit and catapulted him to television stardom. The fame resulting from the show led to excesses and a meeting with home video salesman and technician John Carpenter, with who he would form a friendship based on their mutual interests, namely excessive sex (for Crane, purely heterosexual sex) and capturing nude females on celluloid. His fame allowed Crane to have as much sex as he wanted, which was incongruent to his somewhat wholesome television friendly image, and the way he portrayed himself to almost everyone except Carpenter and his extramarital sex partners. His sex addiction was somewhat known but ignored by his high school sweetheart/first wife Anne Crane née Terzian, but well known by his second wife, Patti Olson, better known as Sigrid Valdis, his Hogan's Heroes co-star. Especially after the end of Hogan's Heroes in 1971, this incongruence and his friendship with Carpenter, with who he would have a continuing love/hate relationship, would contribute to both his professional and personal downfall. ...Show Related & similar Films and TV-Shows:Links:
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