Deaths in August 2001
The following is a list of notable deaths in August 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.
August 2001[]
1[]
- Zuzana Chalupová, 76, Serbian/Yugoslavian naïve painter.
- Jay Chamberlain, 77, American racing driver.
- Dwight Eddleman, 78, American basketball player and Olympic athlete, heart ailment.
- Joe Lynch, 76, Irish actor.
- Begum Aizaz Rasul, 92, Indian politician.
- Robert Rimmer, 84, American writer.[1]
- Korey Stringer, 27, American football player (Ohio State, Minnesota Vikings), complications following a heat stroke.[2]
- Nicolae Tătaru, 69, Romanian football player.
- Dan Towler, 73, American gridiron football player.[3]
2[]
- James A. Corbett, 67, American rancher and philosopher.[4]
- Valerie Davies, 89, British Olympic swimmer, bronze medalist (1932).
- Sir Edward Gardner, 89, British politician.[5]
- Lawrence Minard, 51, American journalist and editor, heart attack.[6]
- Ronald Townson, 68, American vocalist (The 5th Dimension).[7]
3[]
- Henriette Bie Lorentzen, 90, Norwegian activist.
- Louis Chevalier, 90, French historian with interests in geography, demography and sociology.[8]
- Christopher Hewett, 80, British actor (Mr. Belvedere).[9]
- Frank Pakenham, 7th Earl of Longford, 95, British politician and social reformer.
- Mario Perazzolo, 90, Italian footballer.
- Lars Johan Werle, 75, Swedish composer.
4[]
- S. K. Bhatnagar, 71, Indian politician and diplomat.
- Claude Bloodgood, 64, American chess player and convicted murderer, cancer.
- Michael Cole, 68, British writer.
- Joseph Cooper, 88, British pianist and broadcaster.
- Jack Maple, 48, American police officer and author, cancer.
- Lorenzo Music, 64, American voice actor known for the voice of the cartoon cat Garfield, complications related to lung and bone cancer.[10]
5[]
- Otema Allimadi, 72, Ugandan Foreign Minister (1979–1980) and Prime Minister of Uganda (1980–1985).[11]
- Iskra Babich, 69, Soviet film director and screenwriter.
- Miloš Bojović, 63, Serbian basketball player, sports journalist, and politician.
- Caro Crawford Brown, 93, American journalist and Pulitzer Prize winner.[12]
- Roy D. Chapin Jr., 85, American business executive (Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of American Motors Corporation).[13]
- Aaron Flahavan, 25, English football goalkeeper, car accident.
- Bahne Rabe, 37, German rower, Olympic champion (1988).[14]
- Priscilla Roberts, 85, American artist.
- Christopher Skase, 52, Australian businessman and fraudster, stomach cancer.
- Patricia Woodroffe, 75, New Zealand fencer.
6[]
- Larry Adler, 87, American harmonica player, cancer.[15]
- Jorge Amado, 88, Brazilian writer.[16]
- Wina Born, 80, Dutch journalist and cooking books author.
- Hans Gruber, 76, Austrian-Canadian conductor (Victoria Symphony, University of Toronto).[17]
- Robert Dunham, 70, American actor, writer, and racecar driver.
- Adhar Kumar Chatterji, 86, Indian Navy admiral.
- Vasili Kuznetsov, 69, Russian decathlete.
- Kenneth MacDonald, 50, English actor, heart attack.
- Jim Mallory, 82, American baseball player and football coach.[18]
- Dương Văn Minh, 85, South Vietnamese politician and ARVN general.
- Wilhelm Mohnke, 90, German SS general during World War II.
- Alan Rafkin, 73, American actor, director and producer.
- Shan Ratnam, 73, Singaporean andrologist.
- Dick Rehbein, 45, American football coach, cardiomyopathy.
- Dame Dorothy Tutin, 71, British actress (The Importance of Being Earnest, The Beggar's Opera, A Tale of Two Cities, The Shooting Party).[19]
7[]
- Paul Richard Averitt, 78, American soldier and Holocaust photographer.
- Billy Byrd, 81, American country guitarist.
- Dan Edwards, 75, American professional football player (1948–1957) and coach (1958–1961).[20]
- Jack James, 80, American rocket engineer who worked at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (Project Manager for NASA's Mariner program).[21]
- Robert Kraus, 76, American children's author and cartoonist.[22]
8[]
- John Deacon, 38, British motorcycle racer, motorcycle accident.
- Jean Dorst, 77, French ornithologist, former director of the National Museum of Natural History in Paris.[23]
- Jean-Louis Flandrin, 70, French historian.
- John A. Hostetler, 82, American scholar.
- George Mann, 83, English cricketer.
- Noud van Melis, 77, Dutch football player.
- Maureen Reagan, 60, American political activist and daughter of Ronald Reagan, melanoma.
- Nora Sayre, 68, American film critic and essayist.[24]
- Peter Sinclair, 62, New Zealand radio personality.
- Paul Vaessen, 39, English footballer.
- Patrick David Wall, 76, British neuroscientist.
- Paul Weatherley, 84, British botanist.
9[]
- Abe Bonnema, 74, Dutch architect.
- Humphry Bowen, 72, British botanist and chemist.
- Jacky Boxberger, French athlete, killed by an elephant[25]
- Elmer Knutson, 86, Canadian businessman, activist and politician.
- John Gordon Lane, 85, Canadian politician.
- Sir Alec Skempton, 87, British scientist.
10[]
- Gertrude Bleiberg, 80, American visual artist.
- François Brochet, 76, French sculptor, painter and printer.
- Lou Boudreau, 84, American baseball player and manager, seven-time All-Star and a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame.[26]
- Álvaro Carolino, 50, Portuguese football player and manager, pulmonary complications.
- Elsa Cavelti, 94, Swiss operatic contralto and mezzo-soprano.
- Aladár Donászi, 46, Hungarian robber and serial killer, suicide.
- Manfred Eglin, 65, German footballer.
- Vasudeo S. Gaitonde, Indian painter.
- Edward Gaskin, 83, Panamanian educator and labor leader.
- Bob Johnson, 60, British businessman and philanthropist.[27]
- Ramón Monzant, 68, Venezuelan baseball player.[28]
- Dietrich Peltz, 87, German Luftwaffe bomber and Wehrmacht general during World War II.
- Stanislav Rostotsky, 79, Soviet/Russian film director and screenwriter.
- Michael Sumpter, 53, American serial killer, cancer.
11[]
- Paul Cunniffe, 40, Irish singer-songwriter, fall from balcony.
- Edward Thomas Hall, 77, British scientist, known for exposing the Piltdown Man as a fraud.[29]
- James Lechay, 94, American painter.
- Barbara Ruszczyc, 72, Polish Egyptologist and art historian.
- Percy Stallard, 92, British racing cyclist.[30]
12[]
- Irene Astor, Baroness Astor of Hever, 81, English noblewoman and philanthropist.
- Pierre Klossowski, 96, French writer, translator and artist.
- Milton Kohn, 88, American architect.
- Julian Pitt-Rivers, 82, British social anthropologist ands ethnographer.[31]
- Sir Walter Walker, 88, British army general.
13[]
- Manuel Alvar, 78, Spanish linguist, historian, and university professor.
- René Berthier, 89, French actor.
- John C. Elliott, 82, American politician and 39th Governor of American Samoa.
- Sir John Hoddinott, British police officer.
- Jim Hughes, 78, American baseball player.[32]
- R.S. Jones, 47, American novelist and editor (HarperCollins Publishers).[33]
- Gabor Peterdi, 85, Hungarian-American painter and printmaker.[34]
- Alan Skene, 68, South African rugby player.
- Otto Stuppacher, 54, Austrian race car driver.[35]
- Antonio Zumel, 69, Filipino journalist, activist, and revolutionary.
14[]
- Earl Anthony, 63, American professional bowler.[36]
- Oscar Janiger, 83, American experimental psychiatrist, known for his LSD research.[37]
- Jackie "Butch" Jenkins, 63, American child actor.
- Ridgway B. Knight, 90, American diplomat and ambassador.
- Sir Graham Shillington, 90, Northern Irish police officer.[38]
15[]
- Yavuz Çetin, 30, Turkish musician, suicide.
- Richard Chelimo, 29, Kenyan Olympic long-distance runner (silver medal winner of the men's 10,000 metres at the 1992 Summer Olympics).[39]
- Gale Cincotta, 72, American community activist.[40]
- Raymond Edward Johnson, 90, American radio and stage actor (Inner Sanctum Mysteries).[41]
- Peter Mazur, 78, Austrian-Dutch physicist.
- Jim Russell, 92, Australian cartoonist.
- Sir Roderick Sarell, 88, British diplomat.
- Kateryna Yushchenko, 81, Ukrainian computer and information research scientist.
16[]
- Dave Barry, 82, American actor and comedian.
- Kenneth Reese Cole Jr., 63, American political aide to Richard Nixon.[42]
- Ruperto Donoso, 86, Chilean jockey.
- Fred Glover, 73, Canadian professional ice hockey player (Chicago Black Hawks, Detroit Red Wings, Cleveland Barons) and coach (Oakland Seals, Los Angeles Kings).[43]
- Kaadsiddheshwar, 96, Indian Hindu guru.
- Anna Mani, 82, Indian physicist and meteorologist.
- Floyd Spence, 73, American attorney and a politician, cerebral thrombosis.[44]
- Sidney Tillim, 76, American artist and art critic.[45]
17[]
- Josef Fried, 87, Polish-American organic chemist, member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[46]
- Herman Goffberg, 80, American Olympic long-distance runner (men's 10,000 metres at the 1948 Summer Olympics).[47]
- Emil Gorovets, 78, Soviet Ukrainian singer.
- Živko Nikolić, 59, Yugoslav and Montenegrin film director.
- Charles Palmer, 71, British martial artist.
- Flip Phillips, 86, American jazz tenor saxophone and clarinet player.[48]
- Sir Ralph Verney, 5th Baronet, 86, British army officer and conservationist.
18[]
- Edmund Cambridge, 80, American actor and director, complications from a fall.
- Roland Cardon, 72, Belgian composer, music teacher, and multi-instrumentalist.
- Jack Elliott, 74, American film and television music composer, conductor and arranger (Barney Miller, Charlie's Angels, The Love Boat, The Jerk, Oh God!).[49]
- Hillel Kook, 86, Russian/American Revisionist Zionist activist and politician.[50]
- David Peakall, 70, British environmental toxicologist and ornithologist.[51]
- Toppur Seethapathy Sadasivan, 88, Indian plant pathologist.
- Tom Watson, 69, Scottish actor.
19[]
- Betty Everett, 61, American soul singer and pianist ("The Shoop Shoop Song", "Let It Be Me").[52]
- Pericle Luigi Giovannetti, 85, Italian/Swiss painter and illustrator.
- Sylvia Millecam, 45, Dutch actress and comedian, breast cancer.
- Dean Roper, 62, American stock car racer, heart attack.
- Les Sealey, 43, English footballer, heart attack.
- Inder Singh, 57, Indian Olympic hockey player.
- Willy Vannitsen, 66, Belgian racing cyclist.
- Donald Woods, 67, South African journalist, newspaper editor, and anti-apartheid activist.[53]
20[]
- Richard Cloward, 74, American sociologist and activist (National Voter Registration Act of 1993).[54]
- Neal Colzie, 48, American gridiron football player (Oakland Raiders, Miami Dolphins, Tampa Bay Buccaneers), heart attack.
- Hazzard Dill, 82, Bermudian Olympic sprinter (1948 Summer Olympics).[55]
- Hainer Hill, 88, German costume designer, painter and graphic artist.
- Sir Fred Hoyle, 86, British astronomer and science fiction writer.[56]
- Anthony Michael Juliano, 78, American bank robber.
- Walter Reed, 85, American stage, film and television actor.[57]
- Eliezer Shostak, 89, Israeli politician.
- Kim Stanley, 76, American actress (two nominations for a Tony Award, two nominations for an Academy Award, winner of a Primetime Emmy Award).[58]
- Rolla M. Tryon Jr., 84, American botanist.
21[]
- Beryl Cooke, 94, British actress.
- Kathleen Deery de Phelps, 92, Australian-Venezuelan explorer, conservationist, and pacifist.
- Pál Engel, 63, Hungarian historian.
- Steven Izenour, 61, American architect and author (Learning from Las Vegas).[59]
- John Kerins, 39, Irish Gaelic footballer, cancer.
- Calum MacKay, 74, Canadian professional ice hockey player.[60]
- Norman Rigby, 78, English footballer and manager.
- John H. Wotiz, 82, Czech-American chemist, car accident.
22[]
- Tatyana Averina, 51, Soviet Russian Olympic speed skater (won two gold medals and two bronze medals at the 1976 Winter Olympics).[61]
- Rose Edgcumbe, 67, British psychologist, psychoanalyst, and academic.[62]
- Bernard Heuvelmans, 84, French scientist.
- Bobby Johnstone, 71, Scottish footballer (Hibernian, Manchester City, Oldham Athletic, Scotland).
- Tage Jönsson, 81, Swedish Olympic racewalker (men's 50 kilometres walk at the 1948 Summer Olympics).[63]
- Stefan Kanchev, 86, Bulgarian graphic artist.
- Spiro Koleka, 93, Albanian communist politician and statesman.
- Sharad Talwalkar, 82, Indian actor, heart attack.
23[]
- Eric Allandale, 65, British jazz musician.
- Howard Fletcher, 88, American college football player and head coach (Northern Illinois University).[64]
- Frank Emilio Flynn, 80, Cuban pianist.[65]
- Ray Frederick, 72, Canadian professional ice hockey player (Chicago Black Hawks).[66]
- Kathleen Freeman, 82, American actress (Wagon Train, North to Alaska, The Nutty Professor, Support Your Local Sheriff!, The Blues Brothers, The Golden Girls).[67]
- Herbert Haag, 86, German-Swiss Roman Catholic theologian and biblical scholar (known for challenging the Vatican).[68]
- Shirley Kleinhans, 72, American baseball player (All-American Girls Professional Baseball League).[69]
- Henriette Bie Lorentzen, 90, Norwegian journalist, peace activist, feminist, and publisher.
- Peter Maas, 72, American journalist and author (Serpico, The Valachi Papers).[70]
- Hukukane Nikaido, 78, Japanese economist.
- Gordon Ogden, 92, Australian rules footballer.
- Doc Terry, 79, American blues musician.
24[]
- Jane Greer, 76, American film and television actress (Out of the Past).[71]
- Milan Kadlec, 42, Czechoslovakian Olympic pentathlete (team and individual modern pentathlon at the 1980 Summer Olympics and 1988 Summer Olympics).[72]
- Helen McGrath, 59, Scottish trade unionist.
- Hank Sauer, 84, American baseball player (1952 Most Valuable Player) ("The Mayor of Wrigley Field").[73]
- Raymond Wilding-White, 78, American composer.[74]
25[]
- Aaliyah, 22, American R&B singer and actress (Romeo Must Die), plane crash.[75]
- Raymond Abescat, 109, French veteran of World War I.
- Madge Adam, 89, English astronomer.
- Mary Barnard, 91, American poet, biographer and translator.
- Carl Brewer, 62, Canadian ice hockey player.[76]
- John Chambers, 78, American make-up artist and first civilian to receive the Intelligence Medal of Merit.
- Diana Golden, 38, American disabled ski racer, cancer.[77]
- Inigo Jackson, 68, English actor.
- Philippe Léotard, 60, French actor and singer, respiratory failure.[78]
- Ginzō Matsuo, 50, Japanese voice actor, subarachnoid hemorrhage.
- John L. Nelson, 85, American jazz musician, songwriter and father of Prince.
- Harry Ramberg, 92, Swedish tennis player.
- Asit Sen, 78, Bengali Indian film director, cinematographer and screenwriter.
- Ben Oumar Sy, 75, Malian footballer player and manager.
- Ken Tyrrell, 75, British motor racing driver and team leader, pancreatic cancer.[79]
26[]
- John Horn, 69, British tennis player.
- Louis Muhlstock, 97, Canadian painter.[80]
- Cecil Null, 74, American songwriter, cancer.
- Marita Petersen, 60, Prime Minister of the Faroe Islands and first female speaker of the House, cancer.
- Al Pittman, 61, Canadian poet and playwright.
27[]
- Michael Dertouzos, 64, Greek-American professor, computer scientist and Director of the MIT Laboratory for Computer Science (LCS) from 1974 to 2001.[81]
- John Joe Landers, 94, Irish Gaelic footballer.
- Juan Lechín Oquendo, 87, Bolivian politician, Vice President (1960–1964).
- Abu Ali Mustafa, 63, Palestinian leader and Secretary General of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP).[82]
- Karl Ulrich Schnabel, 92, Austrian pianist.[83]
- Ethel Scull, American art collector.[84]
28[]
- James Homer Elledge, 58, American convicted murderer, executed by lethal injection in Washington.
- Bert Gardiner, 88, Canadian professional ice hockey player (Montreal Canadiens, Chicago Black Hawks, Boston Bruins, New York Rangers).[85]
- Käthe Grasegger, 84, German Olympic alpine skier (silver medal winner in women's combined alpine skiing at the 1936 Winter Olympics).[86]
- David P. Harmon, 82, American scenarist and producer.
- Johan Frederik Holleman, 85, Dutch- South African ethnologist and legal scholar.
- Kenneth Maddocks, 94, British colonial official and Governor of Fiji (1958–1963).
- Juan Muñoz, 48, Spanish sculptor.[87]
- Serhiy Perkhun, 23, Ukrainian footballer.
- Remy Presas, 64, Filipino martial artist and founder of Modern Arnis, brain cancer.
- Sir Reo Stakis, 88, Cypriot-born British hotelier.
29[]
- Roger Daley, 58, British meteorologist.[88]
- Victor Jörgensen, 77, Danish Olympic boxer (bronze medal winner in welterweight boxing at the 1952 Summer Olympics).[89]
- Manubhai Pancholi, 86, Indian novelist, author, and politician.
- Sid Peterson, 83, American baseball player.[90]
- Francisco Rabal, 75, Spanish actor.[91]
- Dick Selma, 57, American baseball player.[92]
- Graeme "Shirley" Strachan, 50, Australian singer (Skyhooks) and television presenter.[93]
- Eric Tipton, 86, American baseball player.[94]
- Gentile Tondino, 77, Canadian educator and artist.
- Dame Olga Uvarov, 91, Russian-born British veterinarian.
30[]
- A. F. M. Ahsanuddin Chowdhury, 86, 9th President of Bangladesh.
- Julie Bishop, 87, American actress (Sands of Iwo Jima, Princess O'Rourke, Northern Pursuit, The High and the Mighty).[95]
- Stan Harland, 61, English football player.
- Govan Mbeki, 91, South African politician, leader of the ANC and SACP.[96]
- G. K. Moopanar, 70, Indian Politician, Rajya sabha Member[97]
- Dilli Raman Regmi, 87, Nepali historian and politician.
- Kothamangalam Seenu, 91, Tamil actor and singer.
31[]
- Sir Eric Bullus, 94, British politician.
- Crash Davis, 82, American baseball player.[98]
- Rex Forrester, 72, New Zealand hunting and fishing specialist and outdoor sports author.[99]
- Paul Hamlyn, Baron Hamlyn, 75, British publisher and philanthropist.
- Connie Hill, 83, Canadian ice hockey player.
- James Petrie, 59, British pharmacologist.
References[]
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- ^ George, Thomas (August 2, 2001). "PRO FOOTBALL; Heat Kills a Pro Football Player; N.F.L. Orders a Training Review". The New York Times. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
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- ^ The Associated Press (August 7, 2001). "Christopher Hewett, 'Mr. Belvedere,' 80". The New York Times. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
- ^ The Associated Press (August 8, 2001). "Lorenzo Music -- Actor, 64". The New York Times. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
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- ^ Jon Pareles (August 27, 2001). "Aaliyah, 22, Singer Who First Hit the Charts at 14". The New York Times. p. B 6. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
- ^ The Associated Press (September 1, 2001). "Carl Brewer, 62, Battled N.H.L. for Pensions". The New York Times. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
- ^ Frank Litsky (August 28, 2001). "Diana Golden Brosnihan, Skier, Dies at 38". The New York Times. p. B 7. Retrieved April 4, 2021.
- ^ The Associated Press (September 5, 2001). "Philippe Leotard; Actor, 60". The New York Times. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
- ^ Henry, Alan (August 26, 2001). "Ken Tyrrell: Driving force behind a world champion". The Guardian. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
- ^ "Louis Muhlstock". National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
- ^ John Schwartz (August 30, 2001). "Michael L. Dertouzos, 64, Computer Visionary, Dies". The New York Times. p. B 9. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
- ^ Joffe, Lawrence (August 27, 2001). "Abu Ali Mustafa: Palestinian leader who rejected peace accords". The Guardian. Retrieved January 9, 2019.
- ^ Allan Kozinn (August 30, 2001). "Karl Ulrich Schnabel, Pianist, 92; Favored 4-Hand Repertory". The New York Times. p. B 9. Retrieved April 4, 2021.
- ^ Grace Glueck (September 1, 2001). "Ethel Scull, a Patron of Pop and Minimal Art, Dies at 79". The New York Times. p. C 15. Retrieved April 4, 2021.
- ^ "Bert Gardiner". Sports Reference, Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
- ^ Käthe Grasegger, Sports-Reference / Olympic Sports
- ^ Ken Johnson (August 31, 2001). "Juan Muñoz, 48, Sculptor of Enigmatic Works". The New York Times. p. B 9. Retrieved April 4, 2021.
- ^ Merilees, Philip. "Roger Willis Daley 1943-2001". United States Naval Research Laboratory. Retrieved January 21, 2019.
- ^ Viktor Jørgensen, Sports-Reference / Olympic Sports. Retrieved 2019-02-02.
- ^ Bohn, Terry. "Sid Peterson". Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved January 1, 2019.
- ^ The Associated Press (September 10, 2001). "Francisco Rabal, 75, Prominent Spanish Actor". The New York Times. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
- ^ The Associated Press (September 1, 2001). "Dick Selma -- Baseball Player, 57". The New York Times. Retrieved January 1, 2019.
- ^ "Strachan, Graeme (1952-2001)". Trove, National Library of Australia. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
- ^ Huber, Mike. "Eric Tipton". Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved January 1, 2019.
- ^ Oliver, Myrna (September 9, 2001). "Julie Bishop, 87; Actress Was in 84 Movies". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
- ^ Henri E. Cauvin (August 31, 2001). "Govan Mbeki, 91, an Enemy Of Apartheid System, Dies". The New York Times. p. B 9. Retrieved April 4, 2021.
- ^ "G K Moopanar is dead | undefined News - Times of India".
- ^ Richard Goldstein (September 4, 2001). "Crash Davis, 82, 'Bull Durham' Model, Dies". The New York Times. p. C 11. Retrieved August 7, 2021.
- ^ Simmons, Alan. "Rex Forrester Has Died". Site Magazine, FishNHunt.co.nz. Retrieved January 24, 2019.
Categories:
- August 2001 events
- 2001 deaths
- Lists of deaths in 2001