Hardy Krüger
Hardy Krüger was a German actor and author who appeared in more than 60 films from 1944 onwards. After becoming a film star in Germany in the 1950s, Krüger increasingly turned to roles in international films such as The [One That Got Away (1957 film)|The One That Got Away], Hatari!, Sundays and Cybèle, The [Flight of the Phoenix (1965 film)|The Flight of the Phoenix], Battle of Neretva, The Secret of Santa Vittoria, The Red Tent, Barry Lyndon, A [Bridge Too Far (film)|A Bridge Too Far], and The Wild Geese.
Early life
Hardy Krüger was born in Wedding, Berlin, in 1928, the son of Max and Auguste Krüger. Krüger's parents were ardent Nazis and he stated in a 2016 interview that he was "raised to love Hitler." From 1941, he attended an elite Adolf [Hitler Schools|Adolf Hitler School] at the Ordensburg Sonthofen. At the age of 15, Hardy made his film debut in Alfred Weidenmann's The Young Eagles. According to Krüger, it was here that he met the eminent actor Hans Söhnker. Söhnker was a covert anti-Nazi, who gave refuge to those fleeing the regime. Krüger claimed that Söhnke made a point of educating him and that he assisted his friend with delivering messages to fugitives.In March 1945, Krüger was assigned to the 38th SS Grenadier Division Nibelungen and was drawn into heavy combat. Krüger stated that he, at that time 18 years old, was ordered to shoot at an American squad. Krüger refused and was sentenced to death for cowardice, but another SS officer apparently countermanded the order. Krüger described this experience as his break with Nazism. He afterwards served as a messenger for the SS, but stated that he later escaped and hid out in Tyrol until the end of the war. Hardy was captured and taken prisoner by U.S. forces but attempted to escape three times, the third time successfully. He was a member of the Amadeu Antonio Foundation and frequently spoke publicly against extremism and for democracy, citing his own experiences.
Life and work
Krüger continued his acting career after the Second World War with small stage roles. He could not afford to attend an acting school. He established himself as a German film star during the 1950s, appearing in Die Jungfrau auf dem Dach, the German version of The Moon is Blue, directed by Otto Preminger. Krüger sought international roles because he found the German Heimatfilm cinema of the 1950s rather shallow. He first came to the attention of English language audiences in the 1957 British war film The One That Got Away, the story of Franz von Werra, the only German prisoner of war to escape from Allied custody and return to Germany. This prompted a boom in the use of German stars in British films although none matched the success of Kruger.In 1960, Krüger bought Ngorongoro, a farm in the Tanganyika Territory, which he owned for 13 years. Ngorongoro and the area around it served as the setting for the film Hatari!, directed by Howard Hawks, in which Krüger appeared with John Wayne. He fell in love with the area so much during filming that he decided he wanted to live there.
Fluent in German, English and French, Kruger appeared in numerous European and American films. He had the leading role in the Oscar-winning Sundays and Cybele, and a key role as the German model aircraft designer in the original version of The Flight of the Phoenix. Other films he acted in include the comedy-drama The Secret of Santa Vittoria, in which he played a German officer during the Second World War trying to find hidden wine in a small Italian town; Stanley Kubrick's Barry Lyndon with Ryan O'Neal ; Richard Attenborough's A Bridge Too Far, sharing a scene with Laurence Olivier, 1977; and The Wild Geese with Richard Burton. Because of his stereotypical "Teutonic" look, Krüger often played German soldiers; however he thought that "war films were boring and should not be made". Indeed, his own experiences with the war provided enough trauma for him to be against the glorification of it.
In the late 1980s, Krüger largely retired from acting and became a writer, including novels, travel books and memoirs. He published 16 books starting in 1970. Four of them have been translated into English. He also directed a number of European television documentaries showing his travels around the world.
Personal life and death
Krüger met his first wife, Renate Densow, in a hotel lobby when he was just 16 years old. He had been billeted there with the army, while she was celebrating an acting success. They spent the night together and talked about the future together, though the war pulled them apart. He tracked her down again after the war had ended, and found that he had fathered a child Christiane Krüger. They married afterwards, although the marriage broke down in 1964.His second marriage, to the Italian painter Francesca Marazzi, lasted from 1964 to 1977. He and Marazzi had two children, Malaika Krüger and Hardy Krüger Jr.. In the 1960s and 1970s, Krüger lived at the ranch "Hatari Lodge" at the foot of Mount Meru, Tanzania.
Krüger married his third wife, Anita Park, in 1978. They lived in California and Hamburg. This marriage lasted, as it was around this time that he also retired from acting and was able to spend more time at home.
Krüger died at his home in Palm Springs, California, on 19 January 2022, at the age of 93.
Selected filmography
Source:- ' as Heinz Baum, called "Bäumchen"
- I'll Never Forget That Night as Eugen Schröter
- Kätchen für alles as acting student
- Das Fräulein und der Vagabund as Karl
- The [Girl from the South Seas] as Richard Kirbach
- Insel ohne Moral as Manfred
- You Have to Be Beautiful as Juppi Holunder Jr.
- My Friend the Thief as Bimbo
- My Name is Niki as Paul
- I Can't Marry Them All as Edi
- Illusion in a Minor Key as Paul Alsbacher
- The Moon Is Blue as Tourist
- Die Jungfrau auf dem Dach as Donald Gresham
- As Long as You're Near Me as Stefan Berger
- Must We Get Divorced? as Andreas von Doerr
- I and You as Peter Erdmann
- The Last Summer as Rikola Valbo
- The Blue Danube as König Richard
- Heaven Is Never Booked Up as Michael
- Alibi as Harald Meinhardt
- Liane, Jungle Goddess as Thoren
- Die Christel von der Post as Horst Arndt, assistant police detective
- ' as Klaus Burkhardt
- The Fox of Paris as Capt. Fürstenwerth
- The One That Got Away as Franz Von Werra
- Confess, Doctor Corda as Dr. Fred Corda
- Bachelor of Hearts as Wolf Hauser
- The Rest Is Silence as John H. Claudius
- Blind Date as Jan-Van Rooyer
- The Goose of Sedan as Fritz Brösicke
- Boomerang as Robert Wegner
- Taxi for Tobruk as le capitaine Ludwig von Stegel
- Two Among Millions as Karl
- The Dream of Lieschen Mueller as Autograph hunter
- Hatari! as Kurt Muller
- Sundays and Cybele as Pierre
- Three Fables of Love as El rubio
- ' as Frank Willes
- The Uninhibited as Vincent
- Le Chant du monde as Antonio
- The Flight of the Phoenix as Heinrich Dorfmann
- The Defector as Counselor Peter Heinzmann
- ' as Carl
- Franciscain of Bourges as Alfred Stanke
- The Lady of Monza as Father Paolo Arrigone
- The Battle of Neretva as Kranzer
- The Secret of Santa Vittoria as Captain von Prum
- The Red Tent as Aviator Lundborg
- ' as Jim Ellis
- What the Peeper Saw as Paul
- ' as Eric Lambrecht
- Paper Tiger as Müller
- Barry Lyndon as Captain Potzdorf
- ' as Potato Fritz
- The Spy Who Never Was as Arthur Hersfeld
- ' as Commissare Bolar
- A Bridge Too Far as Generalmajor der Waffen-SS Karl Ludwig
- The Wild Geese as Lt. Pieter Coetzee
- Blue Fin as Bill Pascoe
- High Society Limited as Harms
- Wrong Is Right as Helmut Unger
- The Inside Man as Mandell
- War and Remembrance as Field Marshal Erwin Rommel
- The Family as Victor Frey
Writings
Awards
- 1959 Bravo Otto
- 1960 Bravo Otto
- 1983 Deutscher Filmpreis
- 1986 Goldene Kamera
- 2001 Bavarian Film Awards Honorary Award
- 2001 Officier de la Légion d’Honneur
- 2008 Bambi: Lifetime Achievement Award
- 2009 Commander's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
- 2011 Jupiter Award, Lifetime Achievement
- 2014 Star on the Boulevard der Stars in Berlin