Deaths in April 2001

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in April 2001.

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 2001[]

1[]

  • Robert Aagaard, 68, British youth movement founder and furniture maker.
  • Jean Anderson, 93, English actress (The Brothers, Tenko).[1]
  • Olivia Barclay, 81, British astrologer.
  • Eugênio German, 70, Brazilian chess master and Brazilian chess champion (1951, 1972).[2]
  • Jayant Kothari, 71, Indian literary critic.
  • Jo-Jo Moore, 92, American baseball player.[3]
  • Brendan O'Reilly, 71, Irish broadcaster.
  • Jim Proudfoot, 67, Canadian sports journalist.
  • Valerie Scott, 83, English tennis player.
  • Trịnh Công Sơn, 62, Vietnamese musician and composer.[4]
  • Zellio Toppazzini, 71, Canadian ice hockey player.
  • Harvey C. Tschirgi, 92, United States Marine with the rank of Brigadier General.
  • Larry Tucker, 66, American screenwriter (Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice).[5]
  • Jalil Zandi, 49, Iranian flying ace, car accident.

2[]

3[]

  • Michael Berry, Baron Hartwell, 89, British newspaper proprietor.[9]
  • Dempster Jackson, 70, American Olympic rower (men's coxless four rowing at the 1952 Summer Olympics)(.[10]
  • Jason Massey, 28, American convicted murderer, execution by lethal injection.
  • Butch Moore, 63, Irish singer and a showband icon, heart attack.
  • Ray Osrin, 72, American comic book artist and cartoonist, complications due to heart disease and diabetes.
  • Adela Reta, 79, Uruguyan lawyer and politician.[11]

4[]

  • Beryl Gilroy, 76, British pioneering teacher and novelist, heart attack.
  • José M. Dávila Monsanto, 95, Puerto Rican politician and lawyer.
  • Liisi Oterma, 86, Finnish astronomer.
  • Stark Ritchie, 84, American football player and attorney.
  • Ed "Big Daddy" Roth, 69, American artist, cartoonist, and custom car designer and builder.[12]

5[]

  • Benjy Dial, 57, American football player.
  • Sir Kingsley Dunham, 91, British geologist.[13]
  • Sonya Hedenbratt, 70, Swedish singer and actress.
  • John Bertram Oakes, 87, American journalist.
  • Aldo Olivieri, 90, Italian football goalkeeper and manager.
  • David Lloyd Owen, 83, British army general and writer.
  • Malcolm Shepherd, 82, British politician who served as Leader of the House of Lords.[14]
  • Brother Theodore, 94, German-American actor and comedian.[15]
  • John Long Wilson, 87, American physician and academic.

6[]

7[]

  • David Graf, 50, American actor (Police Academy, The West Wing, Rules of Engagement).[19]
  • Kurt Hohenemser, 95, German-born American aerospace engineer and a pioneer in helicopter design.[20]
  • Sir Derek Lang, 87, British Army general.
  • Beatrice Straight, 86, American actress (Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for Network).[21]

8[]

  • Frank Annunzio, 86, American politician.[22]
  • Arthur Cantor, 81, American theatrical producer.[23]
  • Pedro Depestre, 55, Cuban violinist, arranger and musical director.
  • Safiya Henderson-Holmes, 50, African-American poet.
  • Elsie Locke, 88, New Zealand writer, historian, and feminist.
  • Clyde Packer, 65, Australian politician and businessman, heart and lung failure.
  • Van Stephenson, 47, American singer-songwriter, melanoma.
  • Marguerite Viby, 91, Danish actress.

9[]

  • J. Paul Emerson, 58, American radio personality.
  • Colin Radford, 66, English philosopher.
  • Shakoor Rana, 65, Pakistani cricket umpire.
  • Ken Rattenbury, 80, English jazz trumpeter.
  • Willie Stargell, 61, American baseball player, member of the Baseball Hall of Fame.[24]
  • Hsieh Tung-min, 93, Taiwanese politician and Vice President of the Republic of China.

10[]

  • Elizabeth Bugie, 80, American biochemist.
  • Tadeusz Chciuk-Celt, 84, Polish special forces operative during World War II, journalist and author.
  • Nora Eddington, 77, American actress and socialite.
  • John M. Edmond, 57, Scottish-American MIT professor of marine geochemistry and oceanography.[25]
  • Andy Farkas, 84, American footballer.
  • Michel Fribourg, 87, Belgian-American billionaire businessman.[26]
  • Derek Lambert, 71, English author.
  • Gianfranco Miglio, 83, Italian jurist, political scientist and politician.
  • Robert Moon, 83, American postal inspector, considered the father of the ZIP Code.[27]
  • Nyree Dawn Porter, 65, New Zealand actress.[28]
  • Richard Evans Schultes, 86, American ethnobotanist.[29]
  • Mysore A. Viswamitra, 68, Indian molecular biophysicist and crystallographer, heart attack.

11[]

  • Sandy Bull, 60, American folk musician and composer.[30]
  • John Harris, Baron Harris of Greenwich, 71, British political aide and politician (Chief Whip in the House of Lords from 1994 to 2001).[31]
  • Sir Thaddeus McCarthy, 93, New Zealand jurist.
  • Graciela Naranjo, 84, Venezuelan singer and actress.
  • Carolyn R. Payton, 75, American director of the Peace Corps (1977-1978)[32]
  • Sir Harry Secombe, 79, Welsh actor, comedian, member of The Goon Show, prostate cancer.[33]
  • J. T. Putney, 72, American NASCAR race car driver, heart attack.
  • Jack Wilson, 83, American footballer.

12[]

  • Harvey Ball, 79, American inventor of the smiley.
  • Edmund W. Barker, 80, Singaporean politician and lawyer.
  • Nelson Burbrink, 79, American baseball player.[34]
  • Jane Flanders, 61, American poet, cancer.
  • Mahmoud Tounsi, 56, Tunisian author and painter.

13[]

  • Celeste De Blasis, 54, American author of historical romance novels.
  • George Forrester, 66, Scottish footballer.
  • Jimmy Logan, 73, Scottish comedian, actor, producer and director.[35]
  • Stephen C. O'Connell, 85, American jurist.
  • Josephine Premice, 74, Haitian-American actress and singer.[36]
  • Ken Weston, 53, British sound engineer.[37]

14[]

  • Jim Baxter, 61, Scottish football player.[38]
  • János Holup, 78, Hungarian Olympic shooter (men's 50 metre rifle three positions at the 1960 Summer Olympics).[39]
  • Eric de Kolb, 85, Austrian-American visual artist and jewelry and fashion designer.
  • Dorothee Metlitzki, 86, German-American author, professor of English and zionist.[40]
  • Bryan Ranft, 83, British historian.
  • Hideo Takubo, 73, Japanese writer.
  • Hiroshi Teshigahara, 74, Japanese avant-garde filmmaker (Woman in the Dunes, The Face of Another).[41]

15[]

  • Donald Dorfman, 67, American mathematical psychologist and radiologist.[42]
  • Jack Elway, 69, American college football player and coach (Washington State, San Jose State, Stanford).[43]
  • Fritz Müller, 80, German nazi officer and later East Germany official.
  • Joey Ramone, (b. Jeffrey Hyman), 49, American musician, lead singer for The Ramones, lymphoma.[44]
  • Bo Roberson, 65, American track and field athlete, football player and Olympian.

16[]

  • Horace Gwynne, 88, Canadian boxer and Olympic champion.[45]
  • Alfred Horn, 83, American mathematician.
  • Eigo Kawashima, 48, Japanese singer-songwriter and actor, liver disease.
  • Henry Lloyd, 89, British Anglican priest, Dean of Truro (1960–1981).[46]
  • Andrew Lyght, 44, Guyanese cricketer, cancer.
  • Peter Maag, 81, Swiss conductor.[47]
  • John R. McNamara, 73, American naval officer and bishop.[48]
  • Robert Osterloh, 82, American actor.
  • Mohammad Rabbani, Afghani politician and one of the founders of the Taliban, liver cancer.[49]
  • Hank Riebe, 79, American baseball player.[50]
  • Michael Ritchie, 62, American film director.
  • Thomas H. Stix, 76, American physicist.[51]
  • Alec Stock, 84, English footballer and football manager.[52]

17[]

  • Merton E. Davies, 83, American astronomer and space exploration pioneer.[53]
  • John Ferraro, 76, American politician (Los Angeles City Council) and college football player (USC).[54]
  • Sri Sadiq Ali, Indian freedom fighter and politician.
  • Terry Scully, 68, British theatre and television actor.
  • Arthur A. Seeligson Jr., 80, American oilman and rancher.
  • Danica Seleskovitch, 79, French interpreter and academic writer.

18[]

  • Khursheed Bano, 87, Indian singer and actress.
  • Tony Bartley, 82, British film and television executive, and fighter pilot.
  • Denmark Groover Jr., 78, American politician.
  • Willie Haggart, 40, Jamaican mobster, shot.
  • John Yonakor, 79, American football player.

19[]

  • Lionel Abel, 90, American playwright ("Absalom"), essayist and theater critic.[55]
  • André du Bouchet, 77, French poet.
  • Egor Popov, 88, Russian-born American civil engineer.
  • Meldrim Thomson, Jr., 89, American politician, Governor of New Hampshire (1973–1979).[56]

20[]

  • Kenneth Colby, American psychiatrist and computer technology pioneer.[57]
  • David Gilbarg, 82, American professor emeritus of mathematics at Stanford University.[58]
  • Herbert Hamel, 96, Canadian professional ice hockey player (Toronto Maple Leafs).[59]
  • Maria Karnilova, 80, American ballet dancer and actress (Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical for Fiddler on the Roof).[60]
  • Avigdor Miller, 92, American Haredi rabbi and author.
  • Bert Sutcliffe, 77, New Zealand cricketer.
  • Kershasp Tehmurasp Satarawala, 85, Indian civil servant and diplomat.

21[]

22[]

  • John F. Allen, 92, Canadian physicist.
  • Hildegard Brom-Fischer, 92, Dutch textile artist.
  • Trevor de Cleene, 68, New Zealand politician and lawyer, cancer.
  • Shane Clements, 42, Australian cricketer, suicide.
  • Ike Cole, 73, American jazz pianist and composer, cancer.
  • George R. Hill III, 79, American chemist, cancer.
  • Sir Paul Holder, 89, British air marshal.
  • Fadil Hoxha, 85, Kosovar politician.
  • Edward Muhl, 94, Motion picture executive.
  • Heiko Oberman, 70, Dutch historian and theologian.[67]
  • Wesley C. Salmon, 75, American philosopher of science, car crash.[68]
  • Charles Schreiner III, 74, American rancher, author, publisher and historian, heart attack.

23[]

  • Electra Waggoner Biggs, 88, American heiress, socialite and sculptor.
  • Guglielmo Biraghi, 73, Italian film critic and film festival director.
  • Robert J. Huber, 78, American politician (U.S. Representative for Michigan's 18th congressional district from 1973 to 1975).[69]
  • Sir Charles Madden, 94, British admiral.
  • R. A. C. Parker, 73, British historian.
  • David M. Walker, 56, American astronaut.

24[]

  • Lindsay Daen, 78, New Zealand sculptor and artist.
  • Al Hibbler, 85, American singer (Duke Ellington Orchestra).[70]
  • Shailesh Matiyani, 69, Hindi writer, poet and essayist.
  • Peter Nugent, 63, Australian politician.
  • Josef Peters, 87, German racing driver.
  • Marion Stirling Pugh, 89, American archaeologist.
  • Leon Sullivan, 78, American civil rights leader, social activist and Baptist minister, leukemia.[71]
  • Paul Thieme, 96, German indologist.
  • Johnny Valentine, 72, American professional wrestler.
  • Li Yuqin, 72, Chinese noble and fourth wife of emperor Puyi.

25[]

  • Michele Alboreto, 44, Italian race car driver, car crash.[72]
  • Kow Nkensen Arkaah, 73, Ghanaian politician, Vice-President (1993–1997).
  • Viktor Bannikov, 62, Soviet/Ukrainian football player and official.
  • Rita Barisse, 83, British journalist and writer.
  • Chhaya Devi, Indian film actress.
  • Gwen Frostic, 94, American artist, entrepreneur and author.
  • Majda Potokar, 71, Slovenian actress.

26[]

  • Marjorie Arnfield, 70, British artist.
  • Edwin Jackson Anafi Asomaning, 70, Ghanaian plant physiologist.
  • Henry Boltinoff, 87, American cartoonist.
  • Guy Butler, 83, South African poet, academic and writer.[73]
  • Allan Hall, 71, British journalist.[74]
  • Lili Massaferro, 74, Argentine actress and Montoneros militant, thrombophlebitis.
  • Amrit Nahata, 72, Indian politician and film maker.
  • Edward F. Rector, 84, United States Air Force officer and flying ace during World War II, heart attack.
  • Edwin W. Shaar, 86, American writer, graphic artist and typeface designer.
  • Rudolf Trenkel, 83, German fighter pilot and flying ace during World War II.
  • Elisabeth Tschermak-Woess, 84, Austrian cytologist and phycologist.
  • Jim Ward, 53, American football coach, heart attack.

27[]

  • Charlie Applewhite, 68, American singer and radio host.
  • Wayne Davenport, 94, American gridironfootball player.
  • Ernie Graham, 54, Northern Irish singer, guitarist and songwriter.
  • Jack Murdock, 78, American actor, emphysema.
  • Richard M. Scammon, 85, American political scientist and author, Alzheimer's disease.[75]

28[]

  • Paul Daneman, 75, British actor (Not in Front of the Children, The Professionals, How I Won the War).[76]
  • Erica Green, 3, American child abuse victim, murdered.
  • Ken Hughes, 79, English film director, writer and producer (Chitty Chitty Bang Bang).[77]
  • Marie Jahoda, 94 Austrian-British social psychologist.[78]
  • Evelyn Künneke, 79, German singer and actress.
  • James Still, 94, American poet, novelist and folklorist.
  • Bako Touré, 61, Mali football player.

29[]

30[]

  • Andreas Kupfer, 86, German football player.
  • Maladi, 88, Indonesian athlete, songwriter, and politician.
  • Brian Morris, Baron Morris of Castle Morris, 70, British poet, academic and politician.
  • Laura Russo, 86, Brazilian librarian.
  • Frank Stewart, 94, American baseball player.[81]

References[]

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  5. ^ The Associated Press (April 13, 2001). "Larry Tucker -- Writer and Producer, 67". The New York Times. Retrieved December 30, 2018.
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