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From Nazi death camps to Spider-Man. My family story is just like a movie
Sunday Mail
|April 13, 2025
SURVIVAL, escape, tragedy, murder, success, glamour, beauty... Hollywood star Andrew Garfield's family history ticks all the boxes for a blockbuster in its own right.

In fact, the Spider-Man star's ancestors inspired two films - The Pianist, with Adrien Brody, and The Monuments Men, starring George Clooney and Matt Damon.
Andrew is overwhelmed more than once as he takes part in the upcoming series of Who Do You Think You Are?
From pre-war Poland to the sunshine and elegance of early Hollywood - via the Treblinka Nazi death camp - it's a journey of contrasts as Andrew traces his father's Jewish family roots.
The 41-year-old, who admits he didn't know much about his ancestry before taking part in the BBC1 show, is tearful as he finds out some of his relatives were murdered by the Nazis.
He also hears how some managed to escape the horrors of the Holocaust and some even made the big time during the golden age of Hollywood.
It's a poetic circle of discovery for Andrew, who grew up between London and Los Angeles. As he embarked on the trip, he says: "I feel a longing to connect more to my Jewish heritage. I'm excited to pursue some darker truths, or unknown truths."
Andrew, who spent his childhood in Surrey with his dad Richard, mum Lynn and older brother Ben, starts with a hunt through family photos.
He reveals his favourite photo of his mum - who died in 2019 - kissing him as a baby.
"Not everyone gets that kind of mothering," he says. "I got lucky. She was pure kindness and care. She was absolutely the best of us."
Dit verhaal komt uit de April 13, 2025-editie van Sunday Mail.
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