Deaths in January 2003

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in January 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.

January 2003[]

1[]

  • Royce D. Applegate, 63, American actor (seaQuest DSV, Diff'rent Strokes, Dallas, Home Improvement).[1]
  • Pat Daly, 75, Irish football player.
  • Joe Foss, 87, American politician, fighter pilot, recipient of the Medal of Honor.[2]
  • Giorgio Gaber, 63, Italian singer-songwriter and playwright.
  • Cyril Shaps, 79, British actor (The Pianist, Doctor Who, The Spy Who Loved Me).[3]
  • David Young, 72, British politician (Member of Parliament for Bolton East, Bolton South East).[4]

2[]

  • Peter Harris, 77, British footballer.
  • Eric Jupp, 80, British-Australian musician, composer, arranger and conductor.
  • Jack Keller, 80, American comic book artist.
  • Bud Metheny, 87, American baseball player (New York Yankees).[5]
  • Sydney Omarr, 76, American astrologer and newspaper columnist, heart attack.[6]
  • Sir Bill Shelton, 73, British politician.
  • Leroy Warriner, 83, American midget car racing driver (National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame).[7]

3[]

4[]

  • Raymond Aker, 82, American scholar and authority on Francis Drake.
  • Conrad Hall, 76, American cinematographer (American Beauty, Cool Hand Luke, Road to Perdition).[14]
  • Klementyna Mankowska, 92, Polish resistance activist and spy.
  • Yfrah Neaman, 79, Lebanese-born British violinist and teacher.[15]
  • Louis Spector, 84, American judge (United States Court of Federal Claims).[16]
  • Lila Zali, 84, Georgian-American prima ballerina and ballet director, founded Ballet Pacifica in Irvine, California.[17]

5[]

  • Buzz Busby, 69, American bluegrass mandolinist, songwriter and bandleader.[18]
  • Massimo Girotti, 84, Italian film actor, heart attack.
  • Roy Jenkins, 82, British politician and biographer.[19]
  • Jean Kerr, 80, American author and playwright, pneumonia.[20]
  • King Biscuit Boy, 58, Canadian blues musician.
  • Daphne Oram, 77, British composer and musician.
  • Ray Scott, 75, Australian football player and umpire.
  • Hiram D. Williams, 85, American artist and art professor at the University of Florida.[21]

6[]

7[]

  • Ed Albosta, 84, American baseball player (Brooklyn Dodgers, Pittsburgh Pirates).[28]
  • Ken Biddulph, 70, British cricketer.
  • Montagu Dawson, 83, British World War II bombardier.
  • Edith Hirsch, 103, German-born American economist.
  • Gordon Kidd Teal, 95, American electrical engineer.
  • Beatrice Willard, 77, American botanist, known for her research in alpine tundra ecosystems.[29]
  • Siggi Wilzig, 76, Prussian (Polish)-American Holocaust survivor and business executive.[30]

8[]

9[]

  • Elizabeth Irving, 98, British actress.
  • Don Landrum, 66, American baseball player (Philadelphia Phillies, St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago Cubs, San Francisco Giants).[33]
  • Lloyd Monserratt, 36, American political activist, complications following surgery.
  • Peter Tinniswood, 66, British writer.
  • Penny Valentine, 59, British music journalist and critic.[34]
  • Steve Young, 50, American national president of the Fraternal Order of Police.[35]

10[]

  • Knut Albrigt Andersen, 70, Norwegian pianist.
  • C. Douglas Dillon, 93, American diplomat (U.S. Ambassador to France) and politician (Secretary of the Treasury, National Security Council).[36]
  • Jorge "Lobito" Martínez, 50, Paraguan musician, murdered.
  • Donald Nestor, 64, British suffragan bishop in Lesotho.[37]
  • O. Arthur Stiennon, 83, American clinical radiologist and radiation treatment pioneer.
  • Alex Weir, 86, Scottish football player and manager.
  • George M. Wyckoff Jr., 74, American steel company owner, executive and politician (mayor of Cumberland, Maryland).[38]
  • Denis Zanette, 32, Italian professional racing cyclist.[39]

11[]

  • Ruth Feldman, 91, American poet and translator.
  • Mickey Finn, 55, band member of T. Rex.
  • Sir Anthony Havelock-Allan, 98, British producer and screenwriter.
  • Maurice Pialat, 77, French movie director.
  • Masato Sako, 56, Japanese actor.
  • Richard Simmons, 89, American actor, Sgt William Preston on TV's Sergeant Preston of the Yukon.[40]
  • George Waters, 87, American business executive, transformed American Express Card into a global brand.[41]

12[]

  • Dean Amadon, 90, American ornithologist and an authority on birds of prey.[42]
  • Clarence H. Burns, 84, American politician, mayor of Baltimore in 1987.[43]
  • Jack Douglas, 72, Canadian Olympic ice hockey player.
  • Leopoldo Fortunato Galtieri, 76, former dictator of Argentina.
  • Maurice Gibb, 53, British band member of Bee Gees.[44]
  • Alan Nunn May, 91, British nuclear physicist and convicted Soviet spy.[45]
  • Paul Pender, 72, American boxer.
  • Koloman Sokol, 100, Slovak artist.[46]
  • Wang Tieya, 89, Chinese jurist and Judge of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.[47]

13[]

14[]

  • Mirza Babayev, 89, Azerbaijani actor and singer.
  • Robert Bart, 72, French sprinter (men's 4 × 400 metres relay, men's 400 metres hurdles at the 1952 Summer Olympics).[51]
  • Mel Bourne, 79, American set designer and art director (Annie Hall, Fatal Attraction, Manhunter).[52]
  • Alan Edwards, 77, Australian actor.
  • Monica Furlong, 72, British author, journalist, and activist.
  • Earl Lawson, 79, American sportswriter, cancer.
  • Paul Monash, 85, American television and film producer and screenwriter, pancreatic cancer.
  • Sujit Mukherjee, 72, Indian writer, literary critic and publisher.
  • Stephen Oake, 40, English police officer with Greater Manchester Police, murdered while attempting to arrest an Islamic terrorist.[53]
  • Johnny Ritchey, 80, American baseball player.

15[]

16[]

  • Fernand Dorais, 74, Canadian writer, Jesuit priest and academic.
  • Bruce Juddery, 61, Australian journalist.
  • Alfred Kantor, 79, Czech-born Holocaust survivor, artist and author of The Book of Alfred Kantor.[61]
  • Phil McCullough, 85, American baseball player (Washington Senators).[62]
  • Chris Mead, 62, British ornithologist, author and broadcaster.
  • Susie Bootja Bootja Napaltjarri, Australian indigenous artist.
  • Hans Pietsch, 34, German professional Go player.
  • Ray Owen, 97, Australian agricultural scientist and politician.
  • Richard Wainwright, 84, British politician (Member of Parliament for Colne Valley).[63]

17[]

  • Alden G. Barber, 83, American professional Scouter for the Boy Scouts of America (fifth Chief Scout Executive).[64]
  • Annie Barnes, 99, Swiss-English scholar, Reader in French literature and an expert on Pascal.[65]
  • Hylo Brown, 80, American bluegrass and country music singer, guitarist and bass player.[66]
  • Fritzi Burr, 78, American actress (Once Upon a Mattress, Funny Girl, Fiddler on the Roof).[67]
  • Richard Crenna, 74, American actor (First Blood, Summer Rental, The Real McCoys), heart failure.[68]
  • Herbert Crüger, 91, German communist and political activist.
  • George Haimsohn, 77, American writer and photographer.[69][70]
  • Sao Nang Hearn Kham, 86, First Lady of Myanmar.

18[]

  • Harivansh Rai Bachchan, 95, Indian poet.[71]
  • Ed Farhat, 76, Lebanese-American wrestler, dheart failure.[72]
  • Virginia Heinlein, 86, American chemist, biochemist and engineer.
  • Gavin Lyall, 70, English author of espionage thrillers, cancer.[73]
  • Renée Short, 83, British Labour Party politician.
  • Boris Struminsky, 63, Russian and Ukrainian physicist.

19[]

  • Milton Flores, 28, Honduran football player, killed by automatic weapons fire.
  • Eric Frodsham, 79, English rugby league footballer.
  • Françoise Giroud, 86, French journalist, screenwriter, writer and politician.[74]
  • Joy Hodges, 87, American singer and actress.
  • Morris Kight, 83, American gay rights pioneer and peace activist.
  • L. D. Meyer, 87, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs, Detroit Tigers, Cleveland Indians) and manager.[75]
  • Russell A. Rourke, 71, American lawyer and public official.

20[]

21[]

  • William Cronk Elmore, 93, American physicist, educator, and author.
  • Paul Kuusberg, 86, Estonian writer.
  • Obert Logan, 61, American football player (Trinity University, Dallas Cowboys, New Orleans Saints), colon cancer.[80]
  • Antonio Domínguez Ortiz, 93, Spanish historian.
  • Khin Hnin Yu, 77, Burmese writer (Hmwe), spokesperson for Burmese Prime Minister U Nu.[81]

22[]

  • George Aitken, 77, Scottish footballer.
  • Marvin Bower, 99, American management consultant, considered the father of modern management consulting.[82]
  • Richard Buchanan, 90, British politician (Member of Parliament for Glasgow Springburn).[83]
  • Ernst Kitzinger, 90, German-American art historian.[84]
  • Bill Mauldin, 81, American World War II cartoonist.[85]
  • Peter Russell, 81, British poet.
  • Tan Qilong, 90, Chinese politician, head of four provinces.
  • Fred M. Winner, 90, American judge (U.S. District Judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado).[86]

23[]

24[]

25[]

  • Toby Atwell, 78, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs, Pittsburgh Pirates, Milwaukee Braves).[94]
  • Diana Gould, Baroness Menuhin, 90, British dancer and widow of Yehudi Menuhin.[95]
  • Sidney Hatfield, 73, American baseball player.
  • Scylla Médici, 95, Brazilian First Lady.
  • Cliff Norton, 84, American actor (The Ed Sullivan Show, Caesar's Hour, Harry and Tonto, Funny Lady).[96]
  • Robert Rockwell, 82, American actor (Our Miss Brooks, Growing Pains, Lassie).[97]
  • Joseph A. Walker, 67, American playwright (Tony Award for Best Play for The River Niger), director, actor and professor.[98]
  • Samuel Weems, 66, American writer and disbarred lawyer.
  • Stanley Wudyka, 92, American Olympic long-distance runner (men's 10,000 metres at the 1936 Summer Olympics).[99]

26[]

  • John Browning, 69, American pianist, winner of two Grammy Awards: 1991, 1993.[100]
  • Valeriy Brumel, 60, Soviet high jumper (men's Olympic high jump medals: 1960 silver, 1964 gold).[101]
  • Vladimir Mulyavin, 62, Belarusian and Russian rock musician, complications after car accident.
  • Annemarie Schimmel, 80, German orientalist and scholar.[102]
  • Hugh Trevor-Roper, 89, English historian.
  • Fred Russell, 96, American sports writer.[103]
  • George Younger, 71, British politician, Secretary of State for Scotland 1979–1986.[104]

27[]

  • Louis Archambault, 87, Canadian sculptor.[105]
  • Maurice Ash, 85, British environmentalist, writer and administrator.[106]
  • Paul Burrough, 86, English Bishop of Mashonaland from 1968 to 1981.[107]
  • Lord Dacre of Glanton, 89, British historian, authenticator of the hoaxed Hitler Diaries.
  • Bob Kammeyer, 52, American baseball player (New York Yankees).[108]

28[]

  • Miloš Milutinović, 69, Serbian footballer and manager.
  • Emília Rotter, 96, Hungarian figure skater.
  • John Philp Thompson, Sr., 77, American businessman (7-Eleven).[109]
  • Edward Preston Young, 89, British graphic designer, submariner, writer (One Of Our Submarines).[110]
  • Vladimir Vasilyev, 67, Soviet Olympic sailor[1]

29[]

  • Ihsan Abbas, 82, Palestinian professor
  • Douglas Allanbrook, 81, American composer, pianist and harpsichordist.[111]
  • Pandari Bai, 73, Indian actress.[112]
  • George Dews, 81, English cricketer.
  • Leslie Fiedler, 85, American literary critic.[113]
  • László Kákosy, 70, Hungarian Egyptologist, member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
  • Frank Moss, 91, American lawyer and politician, United States Senator from Utah.[114]
  • Peter Shaw, 84, British actor and producer; husband of Angela Lansbury.[115]
  • Sir Alan Walker, 91, Australian theologian.[116]

30[]

31[]

  • Julie Alexander, 64, British model and actress, Alzheimer's disease.
  • Horace Hahn, 87, American actor.
  • Peter Guy Ottewill, 87, British World War II RAF officer.
  • Meka Rangaiah Appa Rao, 87, Indin Raja freedom activist.
  • John Westergaard, 71, American investment manager.[118]

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  112. ^ Pandari Bai Dies at 73
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