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Old 06-03-2012, 07:16 PM
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Transitions - Richard Dawson.

Hogan's Heroes star Richard Dawson dies



English-born actor Richard Dawson, who was best known for his role in the sitcom Hogan's Heroes, has died at the age of 79.

He died on Saturday at Ronald Reagan Memorial hospital in Los Angeles, his son Gary Dawson said.

Dawson played Corporal Peter Newkirk in the World War II comedy series for six years.

He later went on to host United States game show Family Feud for more than a decade.

"He was loved by millions of Americans as a television icon, but loved even more as a husband, a father, and grandfather by his family," Gary Dawson wrote on his Facebook page.

Richard Dawson, whose given name was Colin Lionel Emm, was born on November 20, 1932 in Gosport, England.

At age 14, he joined the merchant marine, serving for three years.

After his discharge, he worked as a stand-up comedian in London clubs including the legendary Stork Room, where he met actress Diana Dors. She became his first wife in 1959.

Dawson soon transitioned from British comedian to Hollywood actor appearing on many top TV programs of the early 1960s, such as The Dick Van Dyke Show and Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In.

His role as a military prisoner in the 1965 film King Rat led to TV's Hogan's Heroes, about a band of allied POWs in a German camp who were constantly fooling their captors.

Dawson portrayed Briton Peter Newkirk, who possessed a clever mind and a quick wit in the hit show that ran from 1965 to 1971.

When the program went off the air, Dawson began appearing as a celebrity panellist on a number of TV game shows, including the popular Match Game, and those appearances eventually led to his hosting duties on Family Feud.

Feud, which debuted in 1976 with members of two different families competing against each other by trying to guess the results of survey questions, became a number one US daytime TV show for a time.

Over the years, Feud expanded into prime-time specials featuring top celebrities and made Dawson the highest-paid game show emcee of his day.

It was cancelled in 1985, but reborn in syndication. Various incarnations with different hosts have aired since then.

Beyond TV, Dawson appeared in movies, including a co-starring role alongside Arnold Schwarzenegger in the Stephen King sci-fi film The Running Man. In 2000, Dawson retired.

At the height of his success on Feud, he met contestant Gretchen Johnson, who would become his second wife.

Dawson is survived by Johnson, two sons, a daughter and four grandchildren.

ABC/Reuters
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