Deaths in January 2005

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable people who died in January 2005.

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 2005[]

1[]

  • Marc Baltzan, 75, Canadian physician.
  • Harold Bodle, 84, English footballer (Birmingham City, Bury, Stockport County and Accrington Stanley).
  • Shirley Chisholm, 80, American first black woman ever to serve in the U.S. Congress.[1]
  • Eugene J. Martin, 66, African-American painter.
  • Hugh Lawson, 6th Baron Burnham, 73, British executive and peer, Deputy Speaker of the House of Lords and former deputy managing director of The Daily Telegraph.
  • Bob Matsui, 63, American Democratic Party member of the House of Representatives, cancer.[2]
  • Dmitry Nelyubin, 33, Russian cyclist, murdered.
  • Patrick Denis O'Donnell, 82, Irish military historian and army officer.

2[]

  • Reine Andersson, 59, Swedish Olympic sailor [1]
  • Bernard Barrell, 85, British composer and conductor.
  • H. David Dalquist, 86, American inventor and chemical engineer, founder of Nordic Ware, creator of the Bundt cake pan.
  • Arnold Denker, 90, American chess player.[3]
  • Cyril Fletcher, 91, British comedian (That's Life!).
  • Frank Kelly Freas, 82, American science fiction artist.[4]
  • Félix Galimi, 84, Argentine Olympic fencer.
  • Ronald Ginn, 70, American former Congressman from Georgia.
  • Maclyn McCarty, 93, American geneticist and DNA research pioneer.
  • Edo Murtić, 83, Croatian painter.

3[]

  • Sir Edward Britton, 95, British trade unionist.
  • Paul Darragh, 51, Irish equestrian showjumper, heart failure
  • JN Dixit, 68, Indian national security adviser and former foreign secretary.
  • Will Eisner, 87, American comic book artist and pioneering graphic novelist.
  • Richard Feilden, 54, British architect.
  • Koo Chen-fu, 88, Chinese negotiator with the People's Republic of China, renal cancer.
  • Claude Meillassoux, 79, French anthropologist and economist.
  • Robert Gottschall, 89, American actor.
  • László Vadász, 56, Hungarian chess grandmaster.

4[]

  • Humphrey Carpenter, 58, British biographer and broadcaster[5]
  • Guy Davenport, 77, American writer, translator, illustrator, and painter, lung cancer[6]
  • Beulah Anne Georges, 81, American baseball player (AAGPBL).[7]
  • Ali Al-Haidri, Iraqi governor of Baghdad province, assassinated
  • Frank Harary, 84, American mathematician, a foremost expert on graph theory[8]
  • Robert Heilbroner, 85, American economist.[9]
  • Marguerite Pearson, 72, American professional baseball player (AAGPBL)
  • Bud Poile, 80, Canadian professional ice hockey player, right wing for Toronto Maple Leafs and Detroit Red Wings in the 1940s and 50s, member of Hockey Hall of Fame
  • Alton Tobey, 90, American muralist and painter.[10]

5[]

  • Martín Acosta y Lara, 70, Uruguayan basketball player.
  • Antoni Barwiński, 81, Polish football player.
  • Antonio Benítez-Rojo, 73, Cuban writer.
  • Gabrielle Daye, 93, English stage actress.
  • Tore Johannessen, 82, Norwegian ice hockey referee.
  • Charles Repenning, 82, American paleontologist and zoologist, murdered during burglary.
  • Danny Sugerman, 50, American music manager.

6[]

  • Vern Barberis, 76, Australian weightlifter.
  • Eileen Desmond, 72, Irish politician, Minister for Health and Social Welfare (1981–1982).
  • S. Paul Ehrlich Jr., 72, American physician, Acting Surgeon General of the United States (1973–1977).
  • Lois Hole, 75, Canadian politician, businesswoman, academician, professional gardener and best-selling author, Lieutenant Governor of Alberta, cancer.
  • Makgatho Mandela, 54, South African last surviving son of Nelson Mandela, AIDS.
  • Louis Robichaud, 79, Canadian former premier of New Brunswick.
  • Sir Nicholas Scott, 71, British politician.
  • Ali Shukriu, 85, Kosovan politician, Prime Minister (1963–1967) and President (1981–1982).

7[]

  • Harry Boyles, 93, American baseball player.
  • Pierre Daninos, 91, French novelist (The Diary of Major Thompson).
  • Bernard "Buddy" Diliberto, 73, American sports commentator in New Orleans, heart attack.
  • Rosemary Kennedy, 86, American sister of John F. Kennedy, natural causes.
  • Aleksandr Prokhorov, 58, Soviet footballer (Dynamo Kyiv, Spartak Moscow).[11]

8[]

  • Oleta Kirk Abrams, 77, American activist.
  • Leonardo Alishan, 53, Iranian scholar.
  • Jacqueline Joubert, 83, French television announcer, producer and director, one of the first television presenters on French television.
  • Suvad Katana, 35, Bosnian footballer.
  • Aksella Luts, 99, Estonian screenwriter, actress and filmmaker.[12]
  • Campbell McComas, 52, Australian comedian, writer and actor.
  • Song Renqiong, 95, Chinese general and politician.
  • David Shaw, 50, Australian scuba diver, drowned.[13]
  • Warren Spears, 50, American dancer and choreographer.
  • Michel Thomas, 90, Polish linguist and teacher.

9[]

  • Fritz Aigner, 74, Austrian artist.
  • Luis Alers, 54, Puerto Rican sprinter.[14]
  • Artidoro Berti, 84, Italian Olympic runner.[15]
  • Gonzalo Gavira, 79, Mexican sound effects creator (The Exorcist, The Towering Inferno).
  • Joanne Grant, 74, American journalist and communist activist.[16]
  • Koji Hashimoto, 68, Japanese film director.
  • Bob Mabe, 75, American baseball player.
  • Alan Loy McGinnis, 72, American author and Christian psychotherapist.
  • Michael P. Ryan, 88, United States Marine Corps major general.
  • Thady Ryan, 81, Irish Olympic equestrian.
  • Vantile Whitfield, 74, American arts administrator, Alzheimer's disease.
  • Alex Wu, 84, Hong Kong businessman and politician.

10[]

  • Gene Baylos, 98, American comedian.[17]
  • Professeur Choron, 75, French humorist Georges Bernier.
  • Margherita Carosio, 96, Italian soprano.
  • Tommy Fine, 90, American baseball player, pitcher in Major League Baseball for the Boston Red Sox and St. Louis Browns in the 1940s and 50s.
  • James Forman, 76, United States former executive secretary of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, colorectal cancer.
  • Sir Stephen Hastings, 83, British politician, MP for Mid Bedfordshire (1960–1983).
  • Erwin Hillier, 93, British cinematographer.
  • Gordon John "Jack" Horner, 92, American sports journalist.
  • Princess Joséphine Charlotte of Belgium, 77, Belgian-born Princess of Belgium and Grand Duchess of Luxembourg, cancer.
  • Helmut Losch, 57, East German heavyweight weightlifting champion.
  • Jan Pieter Schotte, 76, Belgian official of the Roman Curia, cardinal since 1994.
  • Arthur Walworth, 101, American writer and biographer.[18]

11[]

  • Ian Anderson, 79, Manx politician.
  • Spencer Dryden, 66, American drummer for rock band Jefferson Airplane, cancer.
  • Jimmy Griffin, 61, American singer, guitarist, songwriter, member of 1970s rock band Bread, cancer.[19]
  • Miriam Hyde, 91, Australian composer (Valley of Rocks).
  • Bud McCaig, 75, Canadian businessman, co-owner of the NHL's Calgary Flames.
  • Fabrizio Meoni, 47, Italian motorcyclist, motorcycle accident.
  • Jerzy Pawlowski, 72, Polish Olympic champion in fencing.
  • Thelma White, 94, United States actress (Reefer Madness), pneumonia.

12[]

  • John Brown, 76, New Zealand Test cricket umpire.
  • Kenneth Farmer, 92, Canadian Olympic ice hockey player and sports administrator.
  • Herbert Goldstein, 82, American physicist.
  • Ruth Packer, 94, British soprano, famous for playing Verdi heroines.
  • Amrish Puri, 72, Indian actor (Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom), massive cerebral hemorrhage.
  • Jay Schulberg, 65, American advertising executive, pancreatic cancer.[20]
  • Edmund S. Valtman, 90, Estonian-American Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist.

13[]

  • Hunter Andrews, 83, American politician.
  • Earl Cameron, 89?, Canadian broadcaster and The National anchor (1959–1966).
  • Roland Frye, 83, American English literature professor and theologian.
  • Nell Rankin, 81, United States mezzo-soprano opera singer who sang with the Metropolitan Opera for many years.
  • Karstein Seland, 93, Norwegian politician.

14[]

  • Edwin Bélanger, 94, Canadian musician.
  • Ward Beysen, 63, Belgian politician and freemason.
  • Charles T. Booher, 45, American engineer.
  • George Wendell Brett, 92, American philatelist.
  • Frederick H. Buttel, 56, American sociologist.
  • Ofelia Guilmain, 83, Spanish film and stage actress, worked mostly in Mexico after the Spanish Civil War.
  • Charlotte MacLeod, 82, United States mystery writer.
  • Conroy Maddox, 92, British surrealist painter.
  • Rudolph Moshammer, 64, German fashion designer.
  • Raja Lakshmeshwar Singh, 50, Indian politician.
  • Jesús Soto, 81, Venezuelan kinetic artist.[21]

15[]

  • Victoria de los Ángeles, 81, Spanish soprano.[22]
  • Felix Aprahamian, 90, English music critic.
  • Leonid Brekhovskikh, 87, Russian scientist.
  • Walter Ernsting, 84, German science fiction author (Perry Rhodan).
  • William Hare, 69, Canadian Olympic shooter
  • Elizabeth Janeway, 91, United States feminist author.[23]
  • Dan Lee, 35, Canadian animator for Finding Nemo.
  • Ruth Warrick, 89, United States actress best known for Citizen Kane and All My Children, pneumonia.[24]

16[]

  • Mireille Best, 61, French author.
  • William Brigden, 88, Canadian canoeist.
  • Alexander Everett, 83, English motivational consultant.
  • H. Bentley Glass, 98, United States biologist, known for controversial views.[25]
  • Agustín González, 74, Spanish film actor.
  • Marjorie Williams, 47, American journalist. The Washington Post columnist and contributing editor for Vanity Fair, liver cancer.[26]

17[]

  • Charlie Bell, 44, Australian business executive, former CEO of McDonald's, colon cancer.
  • Virginia Mayo, 84, United States film actress (White Heat, The Best Years of Our Lives).[27]
  • Albert Schatz, 84, American microbiologist, discoverer of streptomycin.[28]
  • George P. L. Walker, 78, British volcanologist.[29]
  • Zhao Ziyang, 85, Chinese politician, former Chinese Communist Party General Secretary, complications of multiple strokes.[30]

18[]

  • Gabrielle Brune, 92, British actress.
  • Vivian H. H. Green, 89, British priest and historian.
  • Kenneth Robinson, 90, British civil servant and academic.
  • Pez Whatley, 54, American professional wrestler.

19[]

  • Theodore W. Allen, 85, American writer.
  • Bill Andersen, 80, New Zealand communist and trade union leader.
  • Donald Beardslee, 61, American convicted murderer, executed in San Quentin State Prison, California.
  • Lamont Bentley, 31, American actor and rapper.
  • Kasimir Bileski, 96, Canadian philatelist.
  • Jens-Halvard Bratz, 84, Norwegian businessman and politician.
  • Carlos Cortez, 81, American artist and political activist.
  • K. Sello Duiker, 30, South African novelist, suicide.
  • Ardyth Kennelly, 92, US novelist whose books were popular in the 1940s and 50s.
  • Anita Kulcsár, 28, Hungarian handball player.

20[]

  • Parveen Babi, 55, Indian actress.
  • Ivor G. Balding, 96, American polo player.[31]
  • Bogle, 40, Jamaican dancer.
  • Per Borten, 91, Norwegian politician, former Prime Minister of Norway.
  • Dick Gallagher, 49, American composer, predominantly for off-Broadway productions.[32]
  • Jan Nowak-Jeziorański, 91, Polish journalist and highly decorated World War II hero, head of the Radio Free Europe Polish section.
  • Dame Miriam Rothschild, 96, British zoologist, entomologist and author.[33]

21[]

  • Jacques Andrieux, 87, French World War II fighter pilot.
  • Reg Cudlipp, 95, British newspaper editor.[34]
  • John L. Hess, 87, American journalist.
  • Richard Outram, 74, Canadian poet.
  • Don Poier, 53, United States NBA basketball announcer for the Memphis Grizzlies.
  • Adrianne Reynolds, 16, American teenager who was brutally murdered and made national headlines.
  • Neville Scott, 69, New Zealand Olympic runner.
  • Steve Susskind, 62, American voice-over actor.
  • Theun de Vries, 97, Dutch writer.

22[]

  • Harry J. Boyle, 89, Canadian broadcaster.
  • Sir William Deakin, 91, British World War II hero and founder of St Antony's College, Oxford.
  • César Gutiérrez, 61, Venezuelan baseball player, one of three players in Major League Baseball history with a 7-for-7 game.
  • Carlo Orelli, 110, Italian supercentenarian, oldest Italian veteran of World War I.
  • Patsy Rowlands, 74, British actress, known for her roles in the Carry On films, breast cancer.
  • William Trager, 94, American parasitologist.[35]
  • Consuelo Velázquez, 88, Mexican songwriter and lyricist, and author of the enduring song "Bésame mucho".[36]
  • Rose Mary Woods, 87, American politician, former secretary of Richard Nixon and key Watergate figure.[37]

23[]

  • Harley Baldwin, 59, American developer active in New York City and Aspen, Colorado, kidney cancer.[38]
  • Howard Kent Birnbaum, 72, American metallurgist.
  • Morys George Lyndhurst Bruce, 4th Baron Aberdare, 85, British politician and peer, former Deputy Speaker of the UK House of Lords.
  • Johnny Carson, 79, United States comedian and television host, emphysema.
  • Douglas Knight, 83, American educator, businessman, author, former president of Lawrence University and Duke University.

24[]

  • ZerNona Black, 98, American activist on behalf of senior citizens and the elderly, natural causes.
  • June Bronhill, 75, Australian actress and opera, operetta and musical comedy singer, Alzheimer's disease.[39]
  • Lev Saychuk, 81, Soviet Olympic fencer.[40]
  • Chalkie White, 76, English rugby union coach.
  • Leslie Wood, 72, English footballer.

25[]

  • Stanisław Albinowski, 81, Polish economist.
  • William Augustus Bootle, 102, American district judge overseeing desegregation in the American South.
  • Philip Johnson, 98, American architect.[41]
  • Vicky LaMotta, 75, American model, ex-wife of American boxer Jake LaMotta, following open-heart surgery.
  • Ray Peterson, 65, American popular singer (Tell Laura I Love Her), cancer.[42]
  • Max Velthuijs, 81, Dutch writer and illustrator.[43]
  • Nettie Witziers-Timmer, 81, Dutch athlete.

26[]

  • Roy Fraser Elliott, 83, Canadian lawyer and philanthropist.[44]
  • Peter A. Garland, 81, American politician, U.S. Representative from Maine (1961–1963).[45]
  • Jackie Henderson, 73, Scottish footballer.
  • Josie MacAvin, 85, Irish set director.
  • Charles Martin, 45, American NFL player, renal disease.[46]
  • Cordelia Scaife May, 76, American philanthropist and heiress to Mellon family fortune, pancreatic cancer.[47]

27[]

  • Gilbert Bennion, 106, Australian veteran, one of the last four surviving Australian veterans of World War I.
  • Eddie Burks, 73, American blues musician.
  • Donald Dempsey, Sr., American recording executive who helped launch Ozzy Osbourne and Merle Haggard, stroke.
  • Rado Lenček, 83, Slovene linguist and ethnologist.
  • Aurélie Nemours, 94, French painter.
  • Jonathan Welsh, 57, Canadian actor.[48]

28[]

  • Karen Lancaume, (aka Karen Bach), 32, French adult film performer, overdosed on sleeping pills.[49]
  • Artūras Barysas, 50, Lithuanian counter-culture actor, singer, photographer and filmmaker.
  • Trevor Billingham, 69, Australian athlete.
  • Barbara J. Bishop, 84, American Marine Corps officer.
  • Daniel Branca, 53, Argentinian Disney comic book artist, heart attack.[50]
  • Jim Capaldi, 60, British rock musician and songwriter (Traffic), stomach cancer.[51]
  • Lucien Carr, 79, American United Press International editor, bone cancer.[52]
  • Henry Hainworth, 90, British diplomat.[53]
  • Jacques Villeret, 53, French actor/comedian, internal hemorrhage.[54]
  • Robert Vogel, 86, American lawyer and politician.[55]

29[]

  • A. Owen Aldridge, 89, American academic.
  • Eric Griffiths, 64, British guitarist in the musical group The Quarrymen, pancreatic cancer.[56]
  • Ephraim Kishon, 80, Israeli satirist, dramatist, screenwriter and film director, apparent heart attack.[57]
  • Žika Mitrović, 83, Serbian film director.[58]
  • Bill Shadel, 96, American journalist.[59]
  • Ron Tomme, 73, American soap opera actor.[60]
  • Joan Tompkins, 89, American actress.[61]

30[]

  • Mary Beck, 96, American politician.[62]
  • Martyn Bennett, 33, Scottish Celtic musician, cancer.[63]
  • Susan Bradshaw, 73, British pianist.[64]
  • Sir Horace Law, 93, British admiral.[65]

31[]

  • Ron Basford, 72, Canadian cabinet minister (1970s).
  • Nel Benschop, 87, Dutch poet.
  • Yutsuko Chūsonji, 42, Japanese manga artist, colorectal cancer.[66]
  • Jack Collins, 86, American actor.[67]
  • Malcolm Hardee, 55, British comedian, drowning.[68]
  • Bobby Howitt, 79, Scottish football player and manager.[69]
  • H. Narasimhaiah, 84, Indian physicist and educator.[70]
  • Ivan Noble, 37, British BBC journalist, brain tumour.[71]

References[]

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