Deaths in April 1995

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Contents
← March April May →

The following is a list of notable deaths in April 1995.

Entries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence:

  • Name, age, country of citizenship at birth, subsequent country of citizenship (if applicable), reason for notability, cause of death (if known), and reference.

April 1995[]

Francisco Moncion
Julius Hemphill
Priscilla Lane
Marti Barris
Bob Allison
Morarji Desai
Burl Ives
Nan Youngman
Arturo Frondizi
Amir Machmud
John C. Stennis
Ginger Rogers
Willem Frederik Hermans
Angier Biddle Duke

1[]

  • Stanley A. Cain, American botanist and pioneer of plant ecology and environmental studies (b. 1902)[1]
  • H. Adams Carter, American mountaineer, language teacher, and editor of the American Alpine Journal (b. 1914)[2]
  • Charles Bell, American Photorealist who created large scale still lifes (b. 1935)[3]
  • Samson De Brier, actor and occultist (b. 1899)[4]
  • Francisco Moncion, Dominican-American ballet dancer (b. 1918)[5]
  • Richard Pool, British naval hero of the Second World War in both the European and Pacific fronts who was involved in the Dunkirk evacuation and authored the 1987 memoir Course For Disaster (b. 1919)[6]
  • Dame Lucie Rie, British ceramicist (b. 1902)[7]

2[]

  • Hannes Alfvén, Swedish physicist (b.1908)[8]
  • Louis Audette, Canadian lawyer, naval officer and civil servant (b.1907)[citation needed]
  • Harvey Penick, American golfer, coach, and writer on golf (b.1904)[9]
  • Julius Hemphill, American saxophonist and composer (b. 1938)[10]
  • Leo LeBlanc, American country musician, guitarist, and pianist who was legally blind (b. 1939)[citation needed]

3[]

  • David Herbert, British writer and raconteur (b.1908)[12]
  • Gracita Morales, Spanish actress (b.1928)[13]

4[]

  • Richard Adrian, 2nd Baron Adrian, British peer and physiologist (b.1927)[14]
  • Lyndon Bolton, British Olympic horseman (b. 1899)[15]
  • Kenny Everett, British comedian (b. 1944)[16]
  • Priscilla Lane, American actress (b. 1915)[17]
  • Jo Sinclair, American novelist whose real name was Ruth Seid (b.1913)[18]

5[]

  • Baby K, an anencephalic baby who became the center of a major American court case and a debate among bioethicists (b.1992)[19]
  • Rita Cadillac, French dancer, singer, and actress (b. 1936)[citation needed]
  • Christian Pineau, French Resistance fighter, who later served an France's Minister of Foreign Affairs (b. 1904)[20]

6[]

7[]

  • Viktor Adamishin, Russian militia captain (b. 1962)[22][23]
  • Peter Brinson, British ballet and dance writer, lecturer, and promoter (b. 1920)[24]
  • Nicholas Ingram, British and American national convicted of murder, execution by electric chair (b. 1963)[25]
  • Philip Jebb, British architect and politician (b. 1927).[26]

8[]

  • Maurice Allom, English cricketer (b. 1906)[27]
  • Hans Bodensteiner, German politician (b. 1912)[citation needed]
  • René de Buzelet, French tennis player (b. 1907)[citation needed]
  • Andrej Očenáš, Slovak composer and music educator (b. 1911)[28]

9[]

  • Bob Allison, American baseball player (b. 1934)[29]
  • Bonnie Bird, American modern dancer and dance educator (b. 1914)[30]
  • Paola Borboni, Italian stage and film actress (b. 1900)[31][32]
  • James ["Jim"] Bullock, English colliery manager, unionist and reformist (b. 1903)[33]
  • John Chamberlain, American journalist, business and economic historian, syndicated columnist and literary critic (b. 1903)[34]

10[]

  • Betty Askwith, British writer and biographer (b. 1909)[35]
  • Morarji Desai, 4th Prime Minister of India (b. 1896)[36]
  • Annie Fischer, Hungarian pianist (b. 1914)[37]
  • Günter Guillaume, German spy for the Stasi and politician (b. 1927)[38]
  • Glyn Jones, Welsh writer (b. 1905)[39]
  • Chen Yun, Chinese political leader of the Communist Party of China (b. 1905)[40]

11[]

12[]

  • Buck Cheves, American college football player and referee (b. 1898)[citation needed]
  • Chris Pyne, British jazz trombonist (b. 1939)[42]
  • Mou Zongsan, Chinese philosopher (b. 1909)[citation needed]

13[]

14[]

  • Mario Carotenuto, Italian actor of film and theatre (b. 1916)[46]
  • Brian Coffey, Irish poet and publisher (b. 1905)[47]
  • Michael Fordham, English child psychiatrist and Jungian analyst (b. 1905)[48]
  • Burl Ives, American singer and actor (b. 1909)[49]
  • Donald Keech, English businessman who founded the Universal Printing Ink Co. which was the biggest supplier of ink for ballpoint pens in the United Kingdom during the 20th century (b. 1920)[50]
  • Danny Turner, American alto saxophonist (b. 1920)[51]

15[]

  • Michael Aldred, British record producer, music journalist, and television presenter (b. 1945)[citation needed]
  • Emin Bektóre, Dobrujan-born Crimean Tatar folklorist, ethnographer, lyricist, and activist for ethnic Tatar causes (b. 1906)[52]
  • Cleo Brown, American pianist and singer (b. 1907 or 1909)[53]
  • Dean F. Bryson, American attorney and 77th Associate Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court (b. 1910)[54]
  • Harry Shoulberg, American expressionist painter (b. 1903)[citation needed]

16[]

  • Olavi Ahonen, Finish basketball player (b. 1941)[55]
  • Lloyd Bennett, Australian rules footballer (b. 1916)[56]
  • Cheyenne Brando, French fashion model and the daughter of actors Marlon Brando and Tarita Teriipaia (b. 1970)[57]
  • Cy Endfield, American screenwriter, director, author, magician and inventor (b. 1914)[58][59]
  • Arthur English, British actor and comedian (b. 1919)[60]
  • Stewart MacPherson, Canadian-born British broadcaster (b. 1908)[61]
  • Iqbal Masih, Pakistani Christian boy who became a symbol of abusive child labour in Pakistan (b. 1982)"[62]

17[]

  • Ted Ball, Australian golfer (b. 1939)[63]
  • Argye M. Briggs, American author (b. c.1909)[64]
  • Jimmy D'Aquisto, Italian–American luthier who concentrated on building and repairing archtop guitars (b. 1935)[citation needed]
  • Anton Murray, South African cricketer (b. 1922)[citation needed]
  • Frank E. Resnik, American chemist and business executive who was CEO of Philip Morris USA (b. 1928)[65]
  • Kim So-hee, South Korean traditional singer (b. 1917)[66]
  • Nan Youngman, English painter and educationalist (b. 1906)[67]

18[]

  • Rafael Chaparro Madiedo, Colombian writer who won Colombia's 1992 National Literature Prize for his only novel Opio en las nubes (b. 1963)[68]
  • Arturo Frondizi, Argentine lawyer and politician, 32nd President of Argentina (b. 1908)[69]

19[]

  • Preston Blair, American animator for the Walt Disney Company (b. 1908)[citation needed]
  • Charles Burnham, American geneticist (b. 1904)[citation needed]
  • Kenneth Gardner, librarian of the British Museum and the British Library who was an authority on Japanese bibliography (b. 1924)[70]
  • J. Peter Grace, American industrialist (b. 1913)[71]
  • Igor Hájek, Czech translator, editor, and writer (b. 1931)[72]
  • Richard Snell, American white supremacist and convicted murderer, execution by lethal injection (b. 1930)[73]
  • "King" Herbert Whitaker, American R&B tenor saxophonist (b. 1927—1929)[74]
  • Victims of the Oklahoma City bombing which ultimately resulted in 168 deaths.[75]

20[]

  • Elsa Benham, American silent film actress and dancer (b. 1908)[76]
  • Paul A. Catlin, American mathematician and educator known for his contributions to graph theory and number theory (b. 1948)[77]
  • Milovan Đilas, Yugoslav politician and philosopher (b. 1911)[78][79]
  • Sunil Jayasinghe, Sri Lankan ODI cricketer (b. 1955)[80]
  • Tessie O'Shea, Welsh singer, instrumentalist, and actress (b. 1913)[81]

21[]

  • José del Carmen, Colombian fencer (b. 1917)[82]
  • Stafford Heginbotham, British toy manufacturer and chairman of Bradford City football club (b. 1933)[83]
  • Amir Machmud, Indonesian military general (b. 1923)[citation needed]
  • Bob Wyatt, English cricketer (b. 1901)[84]

22[]

  • Carl Albert, American musician (b. 1962)[85]
  • Violetta Bovt, American-Soviet ballet dancer (b. 1927)[86]
  • Carlo Ceresoli, Italian football goalkeeper (b. 1910)[87]
  • Norton Clapp, American businessman who served as chairman of the Weyerhaeuser corporation. (b. 1906)[88]
  • Maggie Kuhn, American activist known for founding the Gray Panthers movement (b. 1905)[89]
  • Don Pullen, American jazz pianist and organist (b. 1941)[90]

23[]

  • Douglas Lloyd Campbell, Canadian politician who served as the 13th Premier of Manitoba (b. 1895)[91]
  • Howard Cosell, American sportscaster (b. 1918)[92]
  • John C. Stennis, American politician who served as a U.S. Senator from the state of Mississippi (b. 1901)[93]
  • Lonesome Sundown [Cornelius Green III], American blues singer & guitarist (b. 1928)[94]
  • Robert Selby Taylor, Anglican bishop (b. 1909)[95]

24[]

  • Ronald Alexander, American playwright (b. 1917)[96]
  • Hideyuki Ashihara, Japanese master of karate who founded (b. 1944)[97]
  • Lodewijk Bruckman, Dutch magic realist painter (b. 1903)[98]
  • Stanley Burbury, Australian jurist (b. 1909)[citation needed]
  • Florrie Burke, Irish footballer (b. 1918)[citation needed]
  • Iosif Kheifits, Russian film director (b. 1905)[99]

25[]

  • Lou Ambers, World Lightweight boxing champion (b. 1913)[100]
  • Art Fleming, American actor and first television host of the game show Jeopardy! (b. 1924)[101]
  • Andrea Fortunato, Italian football player (b. 1971)[102]
  • Alexander Knox, Canadian actor and novelist (b. 1907)[103]
  • Ginger Rogers, American actress and dancer (b. 1911)[104]

26[]

27[]

  • Ivo Arčanin, Yugoslav swimmer (b. 1906)[108]
  • Silverio Blasi, Italian television and stage director, actor and screenwriter (b. 1921)[109]
  • Albert Brown, English cricketer and snooker player (b. 1911)[110]
  • Willem Frederik Hermans, Dutch writer (b. 1921)[citation needed]

28[]

  • Jacqueline Beaujeu-Garnier, French geographer (b. 1917)[111]
  • Thomas Binkley, American musicologist, lutenist and player of early wind instruments (b. 1931)[112]
  • Karl Bleyl, German entomologist (b. 1908)[citation needed]
  • Peaches Davis, Major Leagues baseball pitcher (b. 1905)[113]
  • Hana Janků, Czech soprano (b. 1940)[114]
  • Henry C. Rogers, American publicist (b. 1914)[115]
  • Andrew Salkey, Panamanian novelist and poet (b. 1928)[116]

29[]

  • Inger Marie Andersen, Norwegian actress (b. 1930)[citation needed]
  • Talley Beatty, American dancer, choreographer, teacher, and company director (b. 1918)[117]
  • Angier Biddle Duke, American diplomat who became the youngest American ambassador in history when he was appointed U.S. Ambassador to El Salvador at the age of 36 (b. 1915)[118]
  • Robert Gibb, British zoo and theme park creator (b. c.1938)[119]

30[]

  • Eric Barber, English cricketer (b. 1915)[120]
  • Christopher Chadman, American dancer and choreographer (b. c.1948)[121]
  • Maung Maung Kha, 5th Prime Minister of Burma (b. 1920)[citation needed]

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  121. ^ Jennifer Dunning (May 3, 1995). "Christopher Chadman, Dancer And Stage Choreographer, 47". The New York Times. p. D21.
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