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Beatle_4
Jun 03, 2005, 07:20 PM
By DANICA KIRKA

VIENNA, Austria (AP) - Leon Askin (http://www.askin.at/), the actor who played Gen. Albert Burkhalter in the 1960s television comedy "Hogan's Heroes," has died, Austrian officials said Friday.

The actor was 97. Neither city officials nor the Vienna hospital where he died disclosed the cause or date of his death.

Askin was best known for his role as the Nazi general who constantly threatened to send the prisoner of war camp's inept commander, Col. Wilhelm Klink, to the Russian front because of his stupidity.

"Beverly Hills school children would call after me, 'Klink, Klink!'" Askin wrote on his Web site. "People driving through Beverly Hills who saw these children raising their arms in the Hitler salute couldn't continue out of sheer shock and amazement and brought traffic to a standstill."

Born Leo Aschkenasy in Vienna on Sept. 18, 1907, Askin worked as a cabaret artist in the 1930s before fleeing first to France and then to the United States to escape persecution by the Nazis.

He had roles in dozens of films, including Billy Wilder's "One, two, three" and the Austrian director Fritz Lang's "Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse." In the course of his career, he appeared opposite Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton and Peter Ustinov.

Askin took up residence in Vienna in 1994, returning to his roots in cabaret. He also took roles in Vienna's Festwochen and the city's second opera, the Volksoper.

He was decorated with Vienna's Gold Medal of Honor, one of the most distinguished prizes the city offers.

"We have lost a huge actor and artist and a wonderful man," Mayor Michael Haeupl said in a statement.

Lynner
Jun 03, 2005, 07:26 PM
Even tho' the show is terribly politically incorrect by today's standards, it was a fave of mine. May he rest in peace.

Beatle_4
Jun 03, 2005, 07:37 PM
By todays standard, it may be politically incorrect but you had to laugh at how they brought out the insanity of war.

When it first aired, it had only been about 15 - 20 yrs since the end of WW2 and a lot of people were still suffering. This show gave a lot of people something to laugh at. I remember reading an interview that Werner Klemperor (Col. Klink) gave where he said "I will play Col. Klink on 1 condition. He will be a bumbling stooge" and he did it so well considering the man was an accomplished musician and highly regarded actor. Between Col. Klink, Gen. Burkhalter, and of course Sgt Schultz (John Bannerman), you couldn't help but laugh.

AnyRoad69
Jun 03, 2005, 11:13 PM
http://img139.echo.cx/img139/8845/askin1ou.jpg

40. Anniversary of the Series, which irony.


Col. Robert E. Hogan-died 1978
Col. Wilhelm Klink-died 2000
Sgt. Hans Georg Schultz-1973
Sgt. Andrew Carter-died 2003
Maj. Wolfgang Hochstetter-died 1993

twovirgins
Jun 04, 2005, 12:28 AM
i used to watch the show my self sorry but i think its kind of funny they dont release the cause of death ......mabie being 97 had something to do with it you think?

beatlebangs1964
Jun 04, 2005, 05:14 AM
He had a long life. He probably just died of natural causes.

HMVNipper
Jun 04, 2005, 07:27 AM
I think it is particularly ironic that several actors on Hogan's Heros (Werner Klemperer, Leon Askin, Robert Clary) were actually Jewish, and had either fled Europe to escape the Nazis or were Holocaust survivors...and ended up playing Germans or prisoners on this show. (Inept, bumbling buffoons, to be sure...but...) I can only imagine that the irony was not lost on them...

beatlelover45223
Jun 04, 2005, 05:48 PM
I loved Hogan's Hero's, I thought it was very funny, and "Schultz" was the best ( I know nooothing, I see noothing) RIP Leon Askin.