Deaths in August 2003

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in August 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.

August 2003[]

1[]

  • Bob McMaster, 82, Australian wrestler and rugby player.
  • Guy Thys, 80, former Belgian national football coach.
  • Marie Trintignant, 41, French actress and daughter of actor Jean-Louis Trintignant, beaten to death by singer Bertrand Cantat .
  • Gordon Arnaud Winter, 90, Canadian Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland.[1]

2[]

  • Ken Coote, 75, English footballer.
  • Don Estelle, 70, British actor.
  • Sir Charles Kerruish, 86, Manx politician.
  • Mike Levey, 55, American infomercial host, cancer.
  • Paulinho Nogueira, 75, Brazilian guitarist, singer and composer.[2]
  • Peter Safar, 79, Austrian-born American physician, cancer.[3]
  • Lesley Woods, 92, American actress (The Edge of Night, All My Children, The Bold and the Beautiful).[4]
  • Hatten Yoder, 82, American petrologist, writer and historian, pioneered the study of minerals under high pressure and temperatures.[5]

3[]

  • Joyce Macdonald, 81, New Zealand backstroke swimmer.
  • Joseph Saidu Momoh, 66, President of Sierra Leone.
  • Alan Reiher, 76, Australian public servant.
  • Roger Voudouris, 48, American singer-songwriter and guitarist, liver disease.

4[]

  • Anthony of Sourozh, 89, Russian monk, bishop and broadcaster, longest-ordained hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church.[6]
  • Pål Arne Fagernes, 29, Norwegian javelin thrower and olympian, car accident.
  • Chung Mong-hun, 54, Korean businessman, suicide.
  • Sarup Singh, 86, Indian academic and politician.
  • James Welch, 62, American Blackfeet and Gros Ventre writer and poet (Winter in the Blood, Fools Crow).[7][8]

5[]

  • Tite Curet Alonso, 77, Puerto Rican music composer, critic and journalist.
  • John Flemming, 62, British economist.
  • Samuel J. Tedesco, 88, American politician, Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut.
  • Don Turnbull, 66, UK games magazine editor.
  • Benjamin Vaughan, 85, Welsh Anglican priest, Bishop of Swansea and Brecon.[9]
  • Robert Joseph Ward, 77, American judge (U.S. District Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York).[10]

6[]

  • Julius Baker, 87, American flute player, principal flutist of the New York Philharmonic for 18 years.[11]
  • Robin Banerjee, 94, Indian environmentalist and wildlife photographer.[12]
  • William Bateman Hall, 80, British nuclear engineer.
  • Louis Lasagna, 80, American physician and professor of medicine, lymphoma.[13]
  • Roberto Marinho, 98, Brazilian businessman.
  • Grover Mitchell, 73, American jazz trombonist, cancer.[14]
  • Larry Taylor, 85, English actor and stuntman.

7[]

8[]

  • Peter Blunt, 79, British Army officer and businessman.[21]
  • Ismail Ahmed Cachalia, 94, South African political activist.
  • Martha Chase, 75, American geneticist, pneumonia.[22]
  • Sam Gillespie, 32, Australian-born philosopher.
  • Lilli Gyldenkilde, 67, Danish politician, cancer.
  • Bhupen Khakhar, 69, Indian contemporary artist.[23]
  • Allan McCready, 86, New Zealand politician.
  • Giant Ochiai, 30, Japanese professional wrestler and mixed martial artist, subdural hematoma.
  • Sir Edward Pickering, 81, British newspaper editor.

9[]

  • Ali Bakar, 55, Malaysian footballer.
  • Ray Harford, 58, English football manager.
  • Gregory Hines, 57, American dancer, actor.[24]
  • Chester Ludgin, 77, American baritone.[25]
  • Billy Rogell, 98, American baseball player (Boston Red Sox, Detroit Tigers, Chicago Cubs).[26]
  • Esmond Wright, 87, British historian, media personality and politician (Member of Parliament for Glasgow Pollok).[27]

10[]

  • Constance Chapman, 91, English actor.
  • Jacques Deray, 74, French film director and screenwriter.
  • Aïcha Fofana, Malian translator and author.
  • Carmita Jiménez, 64, Puerto Rican singer.
  • Jimmy Kelly, 71, English footballer.
  • Bill Perkins, 79, American jazz saxophonist and flutist.
  • Cedric Price, 68, English architect and writer.[28]

11[]

12[]

  • Sir William Douglas, 81, Barbadian jurist, Chief Justice of Barbados (1965–1986).
  • Jackie Hamilton, 65, British stand-up comedian.
  • Matt Moffitt, 46, Australian singer, songwriter.
  • Albert Lemieux, 87, Canadian politician and businessman.
  • Walter J. Ong, 90, American]] Jesuit priest, professor of English literature, historian, and philosopher.[34]
  • Edward Skottowe Northrop, 92, American judge (U.S. District Judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland).[35]

13[]

  • Ward Bennett, 85, American designer and artist.[36]
  • Charlie Devens, 93, American baseball player (New York Yankees).[37]
  • Lothar Emmerich, 61, German football player.
  • Kazım Kartal, 67, Turkish actor, heart attack.
  • Michael Maclagan, 89, British historian.
  • Ed Townsend, 74, American songwriter and producer.[38]

14[]

  • Chuck Brown, 52, American politician.
  • Bishop Donal Lamont, 92, Irish born Rhodesian Roman Catholic bishop and Nobel Peace Prize nominee.[39]
  • Helmut Rahn, 73, German footballer, World Champion 1954.
  • Robin Thompson, 72, Irish rugby player.
  • Kirk Varnedoe, 57, American art historian, chief curator at the Museum of Modern Art.[40]

15[]

  • Janny Brandes-Brilleslijper, 86, Dutch nurse, Nazi resister and last known person to see Anne Franke[41]
  • Red Hardy, 80, American baseball player (New York Giants).[42]
  • Enric Llaudet, 86, Spanish businessman and sports executive.
  • Mack Magaha, 75, American bluegrass fiddler.
  • Roy Neal, 82, American television correspondent, covered the manned space program for NBC News.[43]
  • Eric Nisenson, 57, American author and jazz historian, kidney failure related to leukemia.[44]

16[]

17[]

  • Ben Belitt, 92, American poet and translator.
  • James Chalker, 90, Canadian politician and businessperson.
  • Paolo Massimo Antici, 79, Italian diplomat.
  • Margaret Raia, 78, American actress with dwarfism, brain seizure.
  • Connie Douglas Reeves, 101, member of the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame, complications following a fall.

18[]

  • Alan Green, 71, British local politician.
  • Tony Jackson, 65, English singer and bass-guitar player, alcoholism.
  • Jocelyne Jocya, 61, French singer and songwriter, breast cancer.
  • Endre Szász, 77, Hungarian artist.
  • Zachary Turner, 1, American boy, murder–suicide, his killing is documented in the movie Dear Zachary[48]

19[]

  • Al Bansavage, 65, American professional football player (USC, Los Angeles Chargers, Oakland Raiders).[49]
  • Lester Mondale, 99, American Unitarian minister and humanist.
  • John Munro, 72, Canadian politician (member of Parliament of Canada representing Hamilton East, Ontario).[50]
  • Carlos Roberto Reina, 77, former president of Honduras.
  • Notable victims killed in the Canal Hotel bombing in Baghdad, Iraq:
    • Gillian Clark, 47, Canadian aid worker for the Christian Children's Fund
    • Reham Al-Farra, 29, Jordanian diplomat and journalist.
    • Arthur Helton, 54, American Director of peace and conflict studies at the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations.
    • Reza Hosseini, 43, Iranian UNOHCI Humanitarian affairs officer
    • Jean-Sélim Kanaan, 33, Egyptian, Italian and French United Nations diplomat and member of Sérgio Vieira de Mello's staff.
    • Sérgio Vieira de Mello, 55, Brazilian UN diplomat and Secretary-General's Special Representative in Iraq.[51]
    • Fiona Watson, 35, Scottish member of Vieira de Mello's staff, political affairs officer.
    • Nadia Younes, 57, Egyptian United Nations aide, chief of staff for Vieira de Mello.

20[]

  • Ian MacDonald, 54, British music critic, suicide.
  • Brianne Murphy, 70, British cinematographer,.
  • Nermin Neftçi, 78/79, Turkish jurist and politician.
  • John Ogbu, 64, Nigerian-American anthropologist and professor, post-surgery heart attack.
  • Andrew Ray, 64, British actor.

21[]

  • Ismail Abu Shanab, 52–53, Palestinian political leader, a founder and the second highest leader of Hamas.[52]
  • Ken Coleman, 78, American radio and television sportscaster.
  • John Coplans, 83, British artist, art writer, curator, and museum director.[53]
  • Frank Harlan Freedman, 78, American judge (U.S. District Judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts).[54]
  • Fraser Noble, 85, Scottish classicist, economist and university leader (University of Leicester, University of Aberdeen).[55]
  • Kathy Wilkes, 57, English philosopher and education worker in Eastern Europe.[56]
  • Wesley Willis, 40, American singer-songwriter and visual artist, leukemia.[57]

22[]

  • Imperio Argentina, 92, Argentine actress and singer.[58]
  • Colleen Browning, 85, American painter.
  • Julie Dusanko, 81, Canadian baseball player (AAGPBL)[59]
  • Arnold Gerschwiler, 89, Swiss figure skating trainer.
  • Glenn Stetson, 62, Canadian singer.

23[]

  • Hy Anzell, 79, American actor (Little Shop of Horrors, Checking Out, Bananas, Annie Hall).[60]
  • J. Bowyer Bell, 71, American historian, artist and art critic, best known as a terrorism expert.[61]
  • Bobby Bonds, 57, American baseball player (San Francisco Giants, California Angels) and father of San Francisco Giants ballplayer Barry Bonds.[62]
  • Maurice Buret, 94, French equestrian competitor (gold medal in equestrian team dressage at the 1948 Summer Olympics).[63]
  • Mal Colston, 65, Australian politician.
  • Jack Dyer, 89, Australian rules football legend.
  • John Geoghan, 68, defrocked American pedophile priest.
  • Robert N. C. Nix Jr., 75, American judge, chief justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court from 1984 to 1996.[64]
  • Michael Kijana Wamalwa, 58, Kenyan politician, eighth Vice-President of Kenya.[65]
  • Ed Zandy, 83, American trumpet player, member of the second Glenn Miller Orchestra, formed in 1938.[66]

24[]

  • Harry W. Addison, 82, American author.
  • Robert C. Bruce, 88, American actor.
  • John Burgess, 94, American bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts, first African-American to head an Episcopal diocese.[67]
  • John Jacob Rhodes, 86, American politician (House Minority Leader, U.S. Representative for Arizona's 1st congress. dist.).[68]
  • Sir Wilfred Thesiger, 93, British explorer.[69]
  • Zena Walker, 69, British actress (Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Play for A Day in the Death of Joe Egg).[70]
  • Kent Walton, 86, British sports commentator, known for his wrestling commentary on ITV's World of Sport from 1955 to 1988.[71]
  • Wendell L. Wray, 77, American librarian and professor, director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.[72]

25[]

26[]

  • Wayne Andre, 71, American jazz trombonist and session musician (Liza Minnelli, Bruce Springsteen, Alice Cooper).[75]
  • Sultanah Bahiyah, 73, Malaysian Sultanah and Raja.
  • Edo Belli, 85, American architect, one of Chicago's top architects.[76]
  • Wilma Burgess, 64, American country music singer ("Misty Blue", "Baby", "Don't Touch Me"), heart attack.[77]
  • Clive Charles, 51, English football player, coach and television announcer, prostate cancer.
  • Hans Fränkel, 86, German-American sinologist.
  • Bimal Kar, 81, Bengali writer and novelist.
  • Jim Wacker, American college football coach (Texas Christian University, University of Minnesota).[78]

27[]

  • Jinx Falkenburg, 84, American actress and model.[79]
  • Henry P. Glass, 91, Austrian-born American designer and architect.
  • Marc Honegger, 77, French musicologist and choirmaster.
  • Kogga Devanna Kamath, 81, India puppeteer.
  • Pierre Poujade, 82, French populist politician.[80]
  • Nikolai Todorov, 82, Bulgarian historian and politician, acting President (1990)
  • Charles Van Horne, 82, Canadian politician (member of Parliament of Canada representing Restigouche—Madawaska, New Brunswick).[81]

28[]

  • Frank E. Bolden, 90, American journalist, Pittsburgh street reporter and World War II war correspondent.[82]
  • William Cochran, 81, British physicist.
  • Peter Hacks, 75, German playwright and author.
  • Wilfred Hoare, 93, English cricketer.
  • Richard Morris, American author.

29[]

  • Herbert Abrams, 82, American portrait artist (Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush, William Westmoreland, Arthur Miller).[83]
  • Horace W. Babcock, 90, American astronomer, director of the Palomar Observatory from 1964 to 1978.[84]
  • Anant Balani, 41, Indian film director and screenwriter, heart attack.[85]
  • Dick Bogard, 66, American minor league baseball player, manager and MLB scout (Houston Astros, Milwaukee Brewers, Oakland Athletics).[86]
  • Ayatollah Sayed Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim, 63, Iraqi cleric and politician.
  • Madame Anahit, 85–86, Turkish accordionist, heart failure.

30[]

  • Robert Abplanalp, 81, American inventor and industrialist, invented aerosol spray valve, confidant of Richard Nixon.[87]
  • Webster Anderson, 70, American U.S. Army soldier and Medal of Honor recipient for his actions in the Vietnam War.[88]
  • Arthur Edward Blanchette, 82, Canadian diplomat.
  • Charles Bronson, 81, American actor (The Magnificent Seven, The Great Escape, Death Wish).[89]
  • Donald Davidson, 86, American philosopher.[90]
  • Claude Passeau, 94, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates, Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago Cubs).[91]

31[]

  • Jelena de Belder-Kovačič, 78, Slovenian-Belgian botanist and horticulturist.
  • Anne Grosvenor, Duchess of Westminster, 88, Irish born peeress.
  • Warren Rogers, 81, American journalist.
  • John Storrs, 83, American architect in Oregon.
  • Pavel Tigrid, 85, Czech writer, publisher, author and politician.
  • Jung Yong-hoon, 24, South Korean footballer, car accident.

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