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CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Actor Ivan Dixon, who brought the
problems and promise of contemporary blacks to life in the
film "Nothing But a Man" and portrayed the levelheaded POW
Kinchloe in TV's "Hogan's Heroes," has died. He was 76.
Dixon died Sunday at Presbyterian Hospital in Charlotte after
a hemorrhage, said his daughter, Doris Nomathande Dixon of
Charlotte. He had suffered complications from kidney failure,
she said.
Dixon, who also directed scores of television shows, began his
acting career in the late 1950s. He appeared on Broadway in
William Saroyan's 1957 "The Cave Dwellers" and in playwright
Lorraine Hansberry's groundbreaking 1959 drama of black life,
"A Raisin in the Sun." In the latter, he played a Nigerian
student visiting the United States, a role he repeated in the
film version.
While not a hit, the 1964 "Nothing But a Man," in which Dixon
co-starred with Abbey Lincoln, also drew praise as a rare,
early effort to bring the lives of black Americans to the big
screen.
Other film credits included "Something of Value," "A Patch of
Blue" and the cult favorite "Car Wash."
"As an actor, you had to be careful," said Sidney Poitier,
star of "Patch of Blue" and a longtime friend. "He was quite
likely to walk off with the scene."
In 1967, Dixon starred in a CBS Playhouse drama, "The Final
War of Olly Winter," about a veteran of World War II and Korea
who decided that Vietnam would be his final war. The role
brought Dixon an Emmy nomination for best single performance
by an actor.

He was probably best known for the role of Staff Sgt. James
Kinchloe on "Hogan's Heroes," the hit 1960s sitcom set in a
German prisoner-of-war camp during World War II.
The technically adept Kinchloe was in charge of electronic
communications and could mimic German officers on the radio or
phone.
Dixon was active in efforts to get better parts for blacks in
movies and television, telling The New York Times in 1967:
"Sponsors haven't wanted anything negative connected with
their products. We must convince them that the Negro is not
negative."
"Heretofore, people have thought that, to use a Negro, the
story must pit black against white. Maybe we're getting to the
problems of human beings who happen to be black."
While Dixon was most proud of roles such as those in "A Raisin
in the Sun" and "Nothing But a Man," he had no problem about
being recognized for Kinchloe, his daughter said.
"It was a pivotal role as well, because there were not as many
blacks in TV series at that time," Nomathande Dixon said. "He
did have some personal issues with that role, but it also
launched him into directing."
Dixon also directed numerous episodes of TV shows, including
"The Waltons," "The Rockford Files," "Magnum, P.I." and "In
the Heat of the Night."
In 1973, he directed the film "The Spook Who Sat by the Door,"
a political drama based on a novel about a black CIA agent who
becomes a revolutionary. He also directed the 1972 "blaxploitation"
story "Trouble Man."
His honors included four NAACP Image Awards, the National
Black Theatre Award and the Paul Robeson Pioneer Award from
the Black American Cinema Society.
Born in 1931 in New York, Dixon graduated in 1954 from North
Carolina Central University in Durham.
In addition to his daughter, survivors include his wife of 53
years, Berlie Dixon of Charlotte, and a son, Alan Kimara Dixon
of Oakland. At Dixon's request, no memorial or funeral is
planned, the family said.
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