German actor Hardy Kruger, who starred in a string of English-language adventure and war movies, has died in the US aged 93.
His Hamburg-based literary agent, Peter Kaefferlein, said that Kruger died “suddenly and unexpectedly” on Wednesday in California, where he lived with his third wife, American-born writer Anita Park.
Kruger starred in the 1957 British movie The One That Got Away about a captured German fighter pilot who stages a series of daring attempts to escape the Allies and — as the title suggests — finally succeeds.
His charm, good looks and the fact that he deserted from the Nazi army towards the end of the Second World War helped Kruger land roles at a time when Germans of his generation were still eyed with suspicion abroad.
Kruger also appeared in A Bridge Too Far in 1977 and The Wild Geese in 1978.
In later years, he focused on making travel films for German television, writing books and the occasional stage performance.
Franz Eberhard August Krueger was born on April 12 1928 in Berlin.
Initially, he wanted to follow in the footsteps of his engineer father, but while at an elite Nazi boarding school he appeared in the 1944 film Junge Adler.
While it was intended as a propaganda movie, Kruger’s encounter with older actors on the set opened his eyes to the horrors of Adolf Hitler’s dictatorship.
As the war turned against Germany, Kruger’s Hitler Youth unit was drafted into the newly formed SS division Nibelungen.
Kruger, who was 16 at the time, found himself fighting experienced American troops in southern Germany.
In a 2006 interview with German daily Bild, he recounted how he and his school friends were sent to the front “as cannon fodder” in Hitler’s futile attempt to halt the Allies’ advance.
“I knew the war was lost,” he told the newspaper. “I knew that there were concentration camps and that the Nazis were a bunch of criminals.”
Kruger deserted and was captured by the Allies and spent some time as a POW. After the war, he returned to acting, first in theatres and then in Germany’s re-emerging movie industry.
His breakthrough came when English director Roy Baker picked Kruger for the role of Luftwaffe ace Franz von Werra in The One That Got Away. Kruger managed to fit the archetype of the blond German soldier without appearing cold and superior — thereby avoiding being cast as the villain in the war movie roles that would inevitably follow.
“I had no interest in playing the war criminal,” Kruger said in a 2003 interview with German magazine Der Spiegel, adding that he wanted to portray the many Germans who found themselves unwilling participants in the war.
In later years, Kruger supported campaigns to educate younger generations about Nazi crimes and confront neo-Nazi groups in post-war Germany.
“The fight against racism and the education of young people was his personal mission in life,” Kruger’s agent said in a statement. “His warmth, his joy for life and his unshakable sense of justice made him unforgettable.”
During the 1960s and 70s Kruger appeared in numerous international blockbusters, starring alongside John Wayne in the safari movie Hatari (1962), and The Flight Of The Phoenix (1965), whose all-star cast included James Stewart, Richard Attenborough and Peter Finch.
An avid traveller, he once owned a farm in Tanzania at the foot of Mount Kilimanjaro.
He is survived by Park and his children Christiane, Malaika and Hardy Jr from previous marriages.