Deaths in January 2001

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in January 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.

January 2001[]

1[]

2[]

  • Sir Ewart Bell, 76, Northern Irish rugby player and civil servant.[3]
  • George Carman, 71, English barrister, prostate cancer.[4]
  • Sylvia Hahn, 89, Canadian artist.
  • George Ludford, 85, English professional footballer.
  • William P. Rogers, 87, American politician, diplomat and lawyer. (United States Attorney General, United States Secretary of State), congestive heart failure.[5]
  • Jimmy Zámbó, 42, Hungarian pop singer, accidental suicide by gunshot.

3[]

  • Kwang-chih Chang, 69–70, Taiwanese-American archaeologist and sinologist.[6]
  • Jack Fleming, 77, American sports announcer (Pittsburgh Steelers, Chicago Bulls, West Virginia Mountaineers).[7]
  • Marty Glickman, 83, American radio announcer.[8]
  • John F. Hayes, 85, American politician (Brooklyn Borough President).[9]
  • Kung Fu, 49, Mexican Luchador, arterial hyper tension.
  • Orlando Pantera, 33, Cape Verdean singer and composer, acute pancreatitis.
  • Alex Sabo, 90, American baseball player.[10]
  • Daddy Zemus, 32, Zambian musician and songwriter.

4[]

  • Les Brown, 88, American swing bandleader ("Sentimental Journey") (Les Brown and His Band of Renown), lung cancer.[11]
  • H. Ross Hume, 78, American distance runner.
  • Pierre Leyris, 93, French translator.
  • Clementino Ocampos, 87, Paraguayan composer and poet.
  • John Rhoden, 82, American sculptor.[12]
  • Bob Snyder, 87, American football player and coach.
  • Hilda Stevenson-Delhomme, 88, Seychellois politician and doctor.[13]
  • André Thirion, 93, French writer and political activist.
  • Villano I, 50, Mexican professional wrestler, heart attack following a cerebral haemorrhage.
  • Yoshika Yuhnagi, 17, Japanese fashion model, hypothermia.

5[]

  • G. E. M. Anscombe, 81, British analytic philosopher.[14]
  • James F. Hamlet, 79, United States Army Major General and division commander.
  • Milan Hlavsa, 49, Czech songwriter and bass guitarist (Plastic People of the Universe), lung cancer.[15]
  • Stanley S. Hughes, 82, United States Marine Corps colonel.
  • William J. Maddox Jr, 79, United States Army aviator.
  • Nancy Parsons, 58, American actress (Porky's), congestive heart failure.[16]
  • James Phiri, 32, Zambian footballer, cancer.

6[]

7[]

  • Frederick Baldwin Adams Jr., 90, American bibliophile.
  • Charles Cameron, 73, Scottish magician.
  • James Carr, 58, American rhythm and blues singer.[23]
  • Ken Durrett, 52, American professional basketball player (Cincinnati Royals / Kansas City-Omaha Kings, Philadelphia 76ers).[24]
  • František Hájek, 85, Czechoslovakian Olympic basketball player (men's basketball at the 1936 Summer Olympics).[25]
  • Johan van der Keuken, 62, Dutch documentary filmmaker, author, and photographer.
  • Joseph L. Melnick, 86, American epidemiologist and virologist.[26]
  • Lowell Perry, 69, American gridiron football player and coach, businessman, and broadcaster.[27]

8[]

  • Don Brodie, 96, American actor and director.
  • Edwin Etherington, 76, American writer, lawyer, civil rights advocate, and president of the American Stock Exchange.[28]
  • Chris Evert, 30, American Thoroughbred racehorse, euthanized.
  • Bert Hodges, 83, American baseball player.[29]
  • Néstor Scotta, 52, Argentine football striker, car accident.
  • Catherine Storr, 87, English children's writer.

9[]

  • Paul Vanden Boeynants, 81, Belgian politician, Prime Minister (1978–1979), pneumonia.[30]
  • Peter Düttmann, 77, German World War II Luftwaffe flying ace.
  • Judith Trim, 57, English studio potter, breast cancer.
  • Carol Voges, 75, Dutch illustrator and comics artist.[31]

10[]

  • Jalal Chandio, 57, Indian folk singer, kidney failure.
  • Necati Cumalı, 79, Turkish writer and poet, liver cancer.
  • Bryan Gregory, 49, American rock musician, heart failure.
  • Jacques Marin, 81, French actor.
  • John G. Schmitz, 70, American politician, prostate cancer.
  • Muhammad ibn al-Uthaymeen, 75, Saudi Salafi scholar.
  • Esteban Vicente, 97, American painter.[32]

11[]

  • Wanda Jean Allen, 41, American convicted murderer, execution by lethal injection.
  • Ken Brown, 55, American professional football player (Cleveland Browns: 1970–1975).[33]
  • Princess Vera Constantinovna of Russia, 94, Russian noblewoman and monarchist.
  • Oliver Gurney, 89, British Assyriologist.[34]
  • Dorothy M. Horstmann, 89, American epidemiologist, virologist and pediatrician, Alzheimer's disease.[35]
  • Sir Denys Lasdun, 86, British architect.[36]
  • Lorna Sage, 57, British literary critic and writer.[37]
  • Michael Williams, 65, British actor.[38]

12[]

  • Affirmed, 25, American racehorse, euthanasia after contracting laminitis.
  • Luiz Bonfá, 78, Brazilian guitarist and composer.[39]
  • William Hewlett, 87, American co-founder of Hewlett-Packard, heart failure.[40]
  • Mariano Juaristi, 96, Spanish Basque pelota player.
  • Vladimir Semichastny, 76, Soviet politician, stroke.
  • Elizabeth Sewell, 81, British-American critic, poet, and novelist.[41]
  • Jack Shearer, 74, Northern Irish priest, Dean of Belfast.
  • Adhemar da Silva, 73, Brazilian triple jumper and Olympic champion.
  • Ibnu Sutowo, 86, Indonesian army officer, politician and businessman.
  • C. Malcolm Watkins, 89, American historian, archaeologist, and curator.[42]

13[]

  • Michael Cuccione, 16, Canadian actor and musician, respiratory failure.
  • Bill Fraser, 76, New Zealand politician.
  • Amando de Ossorio, 82, Spanish film director.

14[]

  • Luigi Broglio, 89, Italian aerospace engineer.
  • Jim Coleman, 89, Canadian sports journalist and writer.
  • József Csermák, 68, Hungarian hammer thrower.
  • Dennis Fitzgerald, 64, American freestyle wrestler and football player and coach.
  • Burkhard Heim, 75, German theoretical physicist.
  • Kostas Rigopoulos, 70, Greek actor, stroke.
  • Vic Wilson, 69, British racing driver.
  • Joe Zapustas, 93, Latvian-American baseball player.[43]

15[]

  • Alex Blignaut, 68, South African racing driver and racing team owner, domestic accident.
  • Bob Braun, 71, American local television and radio personality in Cincinnati, Ohio and a film actor (Die Hard 2, Defending Your Life).[44]
  • Bert Corona, 82, American labor and civil rights leader.
  • David Lapsley, 76, Scottish footballer.
  • Ted Mann, 84, American businessman (Mann Theatres) and film producer (Brubaker, Krull).[45]
  • Leo Marks, 80, British World War II cryptographer, cancer.[46]

16[]

17[]

  • Gregory Corso, 70, American poet (Beat Generation).[53]
  • Luise Ermisch, 84, German political activist and communist.
  • Tom Kilburn, 79, British computer scientist.[54]
  • Richard Kraft, 64, South African Anglican Bishop.
  • Sergej Kraigher, 86, Yugoslav politician, President of Slovenia.
  • P. R. Kurup, 85, Indian socialist leader.
  • Robert Robertson, 70, British actor and director, heart attack.
  • Rito Romero, 73, Mexican professional wrestler.
  • Wakabayama Sadao, 78, Japanese sumo wrestler, cerebral thrombosis.

18[]

  • Allan Percy Fleming, 88, Australian public servant, National Librarian at the National Library of Australia.[55]
  • Mordechai Gifter, 85, American orthodox rabbi.
  • Zip Hanna, 84, American professional football player (South Carolina, Washington Redskins).[56]
  • Morris Lapidus, 98, Russian-American architect, heart failure.[57]
  • Reg Prentice, 77, British politician and government minister.[58]
  • Imre Sinkovits, 72, Hungarian actor.[59]
  • Boris Stenin, 66, Soviet speed skater and speed skating coach.
  • Al Waxman, 65, Canadian actor and director (King of Kensington, Cagney & Lacey).[60]

19[]

  • Leonard Ashton, 86, British Anglican prelate.
  • Johnny Babich, 87, American baseball player.[61]
  • Andy Dudish, 82, American gridiron football player, complications from pneumonia.
  • Alberto Gallardo, 60, Peruvian football player and manager.
  • Lille Graah, 92, Norwegian journalist, radio announcer and reporter.
  • Sir Roderick Macdonald, 79, British admiral.
  • Maxine Mesinger, 75, American newspaper columnist (Houston Chronicle), complications of multiple sclerosis.[62]
  • Paul Olum, 82, American mathematician.
  • Ian Taylor, 56, British sociologist.[63]
  • Gustave Thibon, 97, French philosopher and author.

20[]

  • Rønnaug Alten, 90, Norwegian actress and stage instructor.
  • Eddie Donovan, 78, American professional basketball coach and executive (New York Knicks).[64]
  • Beverley Peck Johnson, 96, American voice teacher, soprano, and pianist.[65]
  • Crispin Nash-Williams, 68, British mathematician.

21[]

  • Sasidharan Arattuvazhi, 45, Indian playwright and screenwriter, cirrhosis.
  • Sandy Baron, 64, American stand-up comic, actor (Seinfeld) and songwriter, emphysema.[66]
  • Byron De La Beckwith, 80, American white supremacist and Klansman.[67]
  • Bud Dunn, 82, American horse trainer, heart attack.
  • Joseph O'Conor, 84, Irish actor and playwright.[68]
  • Emlyn Walters, 82, British rugby player.

22[]

  • Tommie Agee, 58, American baseball player.[69]
  • Tuomas Anhava, 73, Finnish writer.
  • Roy Brown, 68, American television personality, puppeteer and clown (The Bozo Show).[70]
  • Sir Alistair Grant, 63, British businessman.[71]

23[]

  • Clayton Fritchey, 96, American journalist.[72]
  • Lou Levy, 72, American jazz pianist, heart attack.[73]
  • Jack McDuff, 74, American jazz organist, heart failure.[74]
  • Fred Ray, 80, American comic book artist.
  • Bill Reinhardt, 92, American clarinetist and bandleader.

24[]

  • Steve Dowden, 71, American gridiron football player (Baylor University, Green Bay Packers).[75]
  • Johannes Hörnig, 79, East German politician.
  • Gaffar Okkan, 49, Turkish police chief, assassinated.
  • Ian Scott, 67, Australian Rotarian.

25[]

  • Alice Ambrose, 94, American philosopher, logician, and author.[76]
  • John T. Biggers, 76, African-American muralist.
  • Aleksandr Chudakov, 79, Soviet Russian physicist.
  • Pamela Cunningham Copeland, 94, American horticulturist.
  • Vijaya Raje Scindia, 81, Indian political personality.
  • Margaret Scriven, 88, British tennis player.
  • Dare Wright, 86, Canadian–American children's author, model, and photographer.[77]

26[]

  • Murray Edelman, 81, American political scientist.[78]
  • Al McGuire, 74, American college basketball coach (Marquette University) and television commentator.[79]
  • Diane Whipple, 33, American lacrosse player and college coach, dog attack.

27[]

  • Pedro Carrasco, 57, Spanish boxer.
  • Tommy Luther, 92, American horse racing jockey.
  • Sally Mansfield, 77, American actress, lung cancer.
  • Marie José of Belgium, 94, the last Queen of Italy.[80]
  • André Prévost, 66, Canadian music composer and instructor (Order of Canada).[81]
  • Robert Alexander Rankin, 85, Scottish mathematician.
  • Hachiya Toshiyuki, 50, Japanese sumo wrestler, cancer.
  • Sir Colin Woods, 80, British police officer.

28[]

  • Curt Blefary, 57, American baseball player.[82]
  • Al Fiorentino, 83, American professional football player (Washington Redskins, Boston Yanks).[83]
  • Earl Ben Gilliam, 69, American judge (United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of California).[84]
  • Ellen Hammer, 79, American historian.[85]
  • Stephen Malcolm, 30, Jamaican international football player, car accident.
  • Sally Mansfield, 80, American actress.[86]
  • Ranko Marinković, 87, Croatian novelist and dramatist.
  • Thikkodiyan, 84, Indian playwright, novelist and lyricist.

29[]

  • Frances Bible, 82, American operatic mezzo-soprano (New York City Opera).[87]
  • Julia Bodmer, 66, British geneticist.[88]
  • Edmund Fuller, 86, American educator, novelist, historian, and literary critic (The Wall Street Journal, Saturday Review, New York Herald Tribune, The New York Times).[89]
  • Pablo Hernán Gómez, 23, Argentine football player, traffic accident.
  • Thomas C. Lea III, 93, American muralist, illustrator, novelist, and historian.
  • Simon Phipps, 79, British Anglican prelate, Bishop of Lincoln.
  • Ninian Smart, 73, Scottish religious scholar.[90]

30[]

  • Jean-Pierre Aumont, 90, French actor, heart attack.[91]
  • David Heneker, 94, British composer and lyricist (Irma La Douce, Half a Sixpence, Charlie Girl).[92]
  • Johnnie Johnson, 85, British World War II fighter pilot.[93]
  • O. Winston Link, 86, American photographer.[94]
  • Rodolfo Morales, 75, Mexican painter.[95]
  • John Prebble, 85, British journalist and historian.[96]
  • Joseph Ransohoff, 85, American neurosurgeon.[97]
  • John Vernon Taylor, 86, British Anglican bishop.[98]

31[]

  • Gordon R. Dickson, 77, American science fiction writer, asthma.[99]
  • Betty Kenward, 94, British magazine columnist.[100]
  • José Medel, 62, Mexican featherweight boxer.
  • Frederick Scott, 58, British designer.

References[]

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