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  1. Awards

    • Emmy (Primetime) Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series 1969 · Winner

  1. 1968 Winner Primetime Emmy. Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Comedy. Werner Klemperer. For playing: "Wilhelm Klink". 1968 Nominee Primetime Emmy. Outstanding Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Comedy. Nita Talbot. For playing: "Marya". For episode: "The Hostage".

  2. Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Comedy Series - 1966. Nominee: Bob Crane. Hogan's Heroes. CBS. Hogan's Heroes: awards, nominations, photos and more at Emmys.com.

  3. Hogan's Heroes is an American television sitcom set in a prisoner-of-war (POW) camp in Nazi Germany during World War II, which concerns a group of Allied prisoners who use the POW camp as an operations base for sabotage and espionage purposes directed against Nazi Germany. It ran for 168 episodes (six seasons) from September 17, 1965, to April ...

    • 6
    • Sitcom
  4. Hogan's Heroes: Created by Bernard Fein, Albert S. Ruddy. With Bob Crane, Werner Klemperer, John Banner, Robert Clary. The inmates of a German World War II prisoner of war camp conduct an espionage and sabotage campaign right under the noses of their warders.

    • (12K)
    • 1965-09-17
    • Comedy, War
    • 25
  5. Sep 19, 2019 · Even so, it was a huge hit and a favorite with fans. After launching in September 1965, Hogan's Heroes became a top 10 show in its first season and ran for five years.Actor Werner Klemperer won ...

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  7. Oct 21, 2019 · The original Emmy Award-winning Hogan’s Heroes was a sitcom set in a WWII prisoner of war camp, its successor, however, focuses on the descendants of the characters who get involved in a global treasure hunt. The show was set in a fictional POW Camp Stalag 13, from which Colonel Robert E. Hogan and his motley crew of expert saboteurs were ...

  8. Colonel Hogan leads a ragtag band of POW's caught behind German lines. The bumbling Germans give Hogan and his crew plenty of opportunities to sabotage their war efforts. Colonel Klink is more concerned with having everything run smoothly and avoiding any trouble with his superiors than with being tough on Hogan and his fellow prisoners.

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