Hogan's Heroes - Season 6
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Just as the castaways were left to languish on Gilligan's Island,
so, too, did cancellation deprive fans of seeing Col. Hogan (Bob
Crane) and company finally liberated from Stalag 13. But at least
this controversial series (again; it's a P.O.W., and not a
concentration, camp!) went out literally with a bang, another
successful act of sabotage of Nazi operations. The sixth season
brought a new face to the barracks, Kenneth Washington as Sgt.
Baker, replacing (without explanation) Ivan Dixon's "Kinch."
Happily, some of the series' most entertaining recurring characters
put in final appearances. Bernard Fox, as the hapless Col.
Crittendon, enjoys his finest hour in the two-parter "Lady
Chitterly's Lover," in which he must impersonate a look-alike
British traitor, and Kathleen Freeman, as the dread Gertrude
Berkhalter, upsets Hogan's plans to sneak a downed U.S. general out
of camp in "Kommandant Gertrude." John Banner, as Sgt. Schultz, has
one of his best episodes in "Kommandant Schultz," in which power
goes to the cuddly buffoon's head when he is put in command of
Stalag 13.
But mostly this season is business as usual, with Hogan and his
men--Newkirk (Richard Dawson), LeBeau (Robert Clary) and Carter
(Larry Hovis)--smuggling, hijacking, stealing, and otherwise
disrupting the German war effort under the nose of clueless Col.
Klink (Werner Klemperer, an Emmy nominee for this season). One
standout episode is "Eight O'Clock and All Is Well," with guest star
Monte Markham as a new prisoner with impeccable credentials whom
Hogan discovers is actually a Gestapo spy. And in the episode "Look
at the Pretty Snowflakes," Crane gets to demonstrate his virtuoso
drumming as he attempts to cause an avalanche. Between the "krauts,
lice, stinking food and bloody awful weather," life in Stalag 13 was
no picnic. But, as Hogan tries to convince LeBeau not to return to
France in the episode "Cuisine a la Stalag 13," let us not forget
"all the fun... all the laughs." That is Hogan's Heroes' final
legacy. --Donald Liebenson