Deaths in April 2003

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in April 2003.

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 2003[]

1[]

  • Booker Bradshaw, 61, American record producer, film & TV actor; Motown executive, heart attack.
  • Lloyd L. Brown, 89, American writer, activist and labor organizer, co-wrote Paul Robeson biography Here I Stand.[1][2]
  • Richard Caddel, 53, English poet, publisher and editor, a key figure in the British Poetry Revival.[3]
  • Leslie Cheung, 46, Hong Kong actor and singer.
  • Sven Holmberg, 85, Swedish actor.
  • David Horrobin, 63, British medical researcher and entrepreneur.
  • Adriaan Cornelis Zaanen, 89, Dutch mathematician, known for his books on Riesz spaces.[4]

2[]

  • Hilly Flitcraft, 79, American baseball player (Philadelphia Phillies).[5]
  • Paul Freeman, 59, American Bigfoot hunter.
  • Terenci Moix, 61, Spanish writer.
  • Ron Sceney, 85, Australian rules footballer.
  • Edwin Starr, 61, American soul singer.
  • Michael Wayne, 68, American film producer, eldest son of John Wayne, heart failure from complications of lupus.[6]

3[]

4[]

  • Anthony Caruso, 86, American actor.
  • Fred J. Cook, 92, American investigative journalist.[10]
  • Abdul Kadir, 54, Indonesian footballer, kidney failure.
  • Michael Kelly, 46, American journalist, columnist and magazine editor, war-related vehicular accident.[11]
  • Helmut Knochen, 93, Nazi official and senior commander of the SiPo and SD.
  • Billy McPhail, 75, Scottish football player.
  • José Menéndez Monroig, 85, Puerto Rican politician.
  • J. Quigg Newton, 91, American lawyer and politician, mayor of Denver from 1947 to 1955.[12]
  • Resortes, 87, Mexican comedian, emphysema.
  • Paul Ray Smith, 33, US Army Sergeant, killed in action.

5[]

  • Seymour Lubetzky, 104, American cataloging theorist and librarian.
  • Frédéric Kibassa Maliba, 63, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) politician, heart attack.
  • Beti Rhys, 96, Welsh bookseller and author.

6[]

  • David Bloom, 39, American television journalist (NBC News, Weekend Today), pulmonary embolism.[13]
  • Anita Borg, 54, American computer scientist, advocate for the advancement of women in computer science.[14]
  • Gerald Emmett Carter, 91, Canadian Roman Catholic prelate, Archbishop of Toronto (1978-1990).
  • Aleksandr Fatyushin, 52, Russian actor, pneumonia.[15]
  • Leon Levy, 77, American investor, fund manager, and philanthropist.[16]
  • Lance Corporal Ian Malone, 28, Irish soldier in the British Army, killed in action.
  • Babatunde Olatunji, 75, African drummer; recorded Drums of Passion, diabetes.[17]
  • Dino Yannopoulos, 83, Greek-American stage director, (Metropolitan Opera, Academy of Vocal Arts, Athens Music Festival).[18]

7[]

  • Julio Anguita Parrado, 32, Spanish journalist and war correspondent (El Mundo).[19]
  • Cécile de Brunhoff, 99, French pianist and teacher, created the children's book character Babar the Elephant.[20]
  • Ib Eisner, 77, Danish artist.
  • David Greene, 82, British television and film director, pancreatic cancer.
  • Jutta Hipp, 78, Germen-American jazz pianist and composer, pancreatic cancer.[21]
  • Maurice Kouandété, 70, Benin military officer and politician.
  • Mohammad Khan Majeedi, 85, Indian poet.
  • Robin Winks, 72, American professor, historian, prolific author and diplomat.[22]

8[]

  • Tareq Ayyoub, 35, Jordanian journalist for Al Jazeera, missile strike.[23]
  • Pamela Bowden, 77, English contralto, teacher and administrator.[24]
  • Kathie Browne, 72, American film and television actress (Perry Mason, Gunsmoke, Star Trek, The Love Boat).[25]
  • Basil Greenhill, 83, British diplomat, museum director and historian.
  • Franz Rosenthal, 88, German-American professor of Semitic languages.[26]
  • Bing Russell, 76, American actor and baseball club owner.

9[]

10[]

  • Abdul-Majid al-Khoei, 40, Shia cleric, stabbed.
  • Little Eva, (née Eva Narcissus Boyd), 59, American pop singer (The Loco-Motion).[33]
  • Maurice F. Neufeld, 92, American academic, author, union organizer and labor relations consultant.[34]
  • Franco Valle, 63, Italian boxer (bronze medal in middleweight boxing at the 1964 Summer Olympics).[35]
  • Abraham Zabludovsky, 78, Mexican modernist architect (Rufino Tamayo Museum, National Auditorium).[36]

11[]

  • Vasyl Barka, 94, Ukrainian-American poet, writer, literary critic and translator.[37]
  • John Butler, 56, American professional football general manager (Buffalo Bills, San Diego Chargers).[38]
  • Cecil H. Green, 102, Texas Instruments founder.[39]
  • Peter Lloyd, 95, British mountaineer and engineer.
  • Brian Nelson, 55, Northern Irish paramilitary intelligence chief and clandestine agent, implicated in sectarian murders.[40]

12[]

  • Clarence W. Blount, 81, American educator and politician, 31 years in Maryland State Senate.[41]
  • John Robert Boker Jr., 90, American philatelist, named the outstanding philatelist of the last half of the twentieth century.[42]
  • Sir Donald Harrison, 78, British surgeon.
  • Sydney Lassick, 80, American film actor (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest), complications of diabetes.
  • Chalom Messas, 94, Chief Rabbi of Morocco and of Jerusalem, Israel.

13[]

  • Farouk Afero, 63, Pakistani-born Indonesian film actor, cancer.
  • Sean Delaney, 58, American musician.
  • Allen Eager, 76, American jazz tenor and alto saxophonist, liver cancer.[43]
  • Majid bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, 64, member of House of Saud.
  • Elder Tadej Štrbulović, 88, Serbian Orthodox elder and author.

14[]

15[]

16[]

  • Timothy I. Ahern, 78, American U.S. Air Force major general.[51]
  • Jock Hamilton-Baillie, 84, British Royal Engineers officer.
  • Graham Jarvis, 72, Canadian actor in American films and television, multiple myeloma.
  • Samuel J. LeFrak, 85, American real estate tycoon.
  • Ray Mendoza, 73, Mexican professional wrestler.
  • Danny O'Dea, 91, British actor.
  • Richard B. Sewall, 95, American professor of English and writer.[52]
  • Jewell Young, 90, American professional basketball player (Purdue University, Indianapolis Kautskys, Oshkosh All-Stars).[53]

17[]

  • Robert Atkins, 72, American nutritionist (Atkins Diet).[54]
  • H. B. Bailey, 66, American NASCAR driver.[55]
  • John Paul Getty, Jr., 70, philanthropist, chest infection.
  • Sammy Kean, 85, Scottish football player and manager.
  • Earl King, 69, R&B musician/songwriter, complications of diabetes.[56]
  • Jozef Schell, 67, Belgian biologist.[57]
  • Graham Stuart Thomas, 94, British horticultural artist, author and garden designer.
  • Peter Cathcart Wason, 78, British cognitive psychologist, credited with founding the study of the psychology of reasoning.[58]
  • Sergei Yushenkov, 52, Russian politician, member of Russian Parliament and outspoken critic of President Vladimir Putin.[59]

18[]

  • Rudolf Brunnenmeier, 62, German football player, alcohol-related issues.
  • Edgar F. Codd, 79, English computer pioneer, heart failure.[60]
  • Jean Drucker, 61, French Television executive, heart attack.
  • Toni Hagen, 85, Swiss geologist.
  • Toby MacDiarmid, 77, Australian politician.
  • Lefty Sloat, 84, American baseball player (Brooklyn Dodgers, Chicago Cubs).[61]
  • Evlynn Smith, 40, Scottish artist, designer and furniture maker, brain aneurysm.

19[]

  • Mirza Tahir Ahmad, 74, Pakistani spiritual leader of the Ahmadiyya Muslim movement, Khalifatul Masih IV.[62]
  • Cholly Atkins, 89, American dancer and choreographer, partnered with Charles Coles at Cotton Club and Apollo Theater.[63]
  • Nazeh Darwazi, Palestinian freelance cameraman, gunshot wound.
  • Conrad Leonard, 104, British musician and composer.
  • Chris Zachary, 59, American baseball player (Houston Colt .45s / Astros, St. Louis Cardinals, Detroit Tigers).[64]

20[]

  • Debbie Barham, 26, English comedy writer, wrote for comedians: Clive Anderson, Rory Bremner, Angus Deayton.[65]
  • Jim Bartels, 57, American Hawaiian historian and museum curator, managing director of 'Iolani Palace.[66]
  • Johnny Douglas, 82, English musician.
  • Teddy Edwards, 78, American jazz tenor saxophonist, prostate cancer.[67]
  • Ruth Hale, 94, American playwright and actress.
  • Daijiro Kato, 26, Japanese motorcycle rider, after crashing at Suzuka on April 6.
  • Bernard Katz, 92, American Nobel Prize-winning biophysicist.[68]
  • Cole Weston, 84, American photographer.[69]

21[]

  • Robert Blackburn, 82, American artist and printmaker, one of America's foremost fine art lithographers.[70]
  • Robert Elmer Kleason, 68, American convict, heart failure.
  • Nina Simone, 70, American jazz singer, long-based in France (known as the "High Priestess of Soul").[71]
  • Raymond Henry Weill, 89, American philatelic dealer, one of the world's most famous stamp dealers.[72]

22[]

  • Felice Bryant, 77, American songwriter ("Bye Bye Love", "Wake Up Little Susie", "Raining in My Heart").[73]
  • James H. Critchfield, 86, American CIA operative during the Cold War, pancreatic cancer.
  • Omana Gopalakrishnan, 66, Indian translator.
  • Martha Griffiths, 91, Congresswoman; women's rights activist.[74]
  • Berkeley Smith, 84, British broadcaster.

23[]

24[]

25[]

26[]

  • Bernhard Baier, 90, German water polo player (silver medal in men's water polo at the 1936 Summer Olympics).[86]
  • Rosemary Brown, 72, Canadian politician (NDP); first black woman elected to a provincial legislature, myocardial infarction.[87]
  • David Lavender, 93, American historian and writer.
  • Danny Napoleon, 61, American baseball player (New York Mets).[88]
  • Edward Max Nicholson, 98, British environmentalist, a founder of the World Wildlife Fund.[89]
  • Peter Stone, 73, American screenwriter (Charade, Father Goose, 1776), Oscar and Tony-winner, pulmonary fibrosis.[90]
  • Anne Von Bertouch, 84, Australian author, gallery director and art supporter.[91]

27[]

  • Elaine Anderson Steinbeck, 88, American actress and Broadway stage manager, wife of John Steinbeck.[92]
  • Edward Gaylord, 83, American businessman, media mogul and philanthropist, cancer.
  • Eddie Loyden, 79, British politician.
  • Charles A. Marvin, 73, American district attorney and judge.
  • Dorothee Sölle, 73, German liberation theologian.
  • Wenzu Vella, 79, Maltese sports shooter (men's trap at the 1960 Summer Olympics).[93]

28[]

  • Johnny Griffith, 78, American football player and coach (Georgia).[94]
  • Barry Harper, 64, Australian sportsman, cancer.
  • Ciccio Ingrassia, 80, Italian actor, comedian and film director.
  • André Muhirwa, Burundian politician and Prime Minister.
  • Etti Plesch, 89, Austro-Hungarian countess and socialite.

29[]

  • Ron Barclay, 88, New Zealand politician (member of New Zealand Parliament for New Plymouth).[95]
  • Janko Bobetko, 84, Croatian general, hailed as a hero of Croatia but charged with war crimes by the U.N.[96]
  • David M. Brewer, 44, American convict, execution by lethal injection.
  • Angus Campbell-Gray, 71, British hereditary peer (House of Lords 1946–1999).[97]
  • Frank Weston, 67, British Bishop of Knaresborough.[98]
  • Jerry Williams, 79, American radio host, a pioneer of talk radio.[99]

30[]

  • Jennifer d'Abo, 57, British entrepreneur (Ryman).[100]
  • Gbenga Adeboye, 43, Nigerian singer, comedian and radio host, kidney-related diseases.
  • Ferdinand P. Beer, 87, French-American mechanical engineer and university professor, wrote widely used mechanics textbooks.[101]
  • Mark Berger, 47, American economist, professor and researcher (Center for Business and Economic Research).[102]
  • Peter 'Possum' Bourne, 47, New Zealand 3-time Asia-Pacific Rally champion, head injuries sustained in a car crash.[103]
  • Lionel Wilson, 79, American voice actor, audiobook reader and children's book author, pneumonia.[104]

References[]

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  2. ^ Stuart Lavietes (April 14, 2003). "Lloyd L. Brown, 89, Journalist And Paul Robeson Biographer". The New York Times. p. F 8. Retrieved August 16, 2021.
  3. ^ Taylor, Paul (April 18, 2003). "Richard Caddel". The Guardian. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
  4. ^ O'Connor, J J; Robertson, E F. "Adriaan Cornelis Zaanen". MacTutor History of Mathematics archive. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  5. ^ Sweetman, Jim. "Hilly Flitcraft". Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved February 20, 2019.
  6. ^ "Michael Wayne, 68, a Producer Of Films by His Father, John". The New York Times. April 4, 2003. p. A 19. Retrieved April 24, 2019.
  7. ^ "Walt Ashbaugh". Sports-Reference / Olympic Sports. Archived from the original on April 18, 2020. Retrieved May 8, 2019.
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  9. ^ "SAWYER, Harold Samuel, (1920 - 2003)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved January 29, 2019.
  10. ^ Stuart Lavietes (May 4, 2003). "Fred J. Cook, 92, the Author of 45 Books, Many Exposés". The New York Times. p. 1 54. Retrieved August 16, 2021.
  11. ^ Carr, David (April 5, 2003). "Michael Kelly, 46, Editor And Columnist, Dies in Iraq". The New York Times. Retrieved August 16, 2021.
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  14. ^ Katie Hafner (April 10, 2003). "Anita Borg, 54, Trailblazer For Women in Computer Field". The New York Times. p. A 25. Retrieved May 25, 2019.
  15. ^ Aleksandr Fatyushin died. An article in Komsomolskaya Pravda
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  55. ^ "Former NASCAR racer H.B. Bailey passes away". Autoweek. April 21, 2003. Retrieved May 14, 2019.
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