Deaths in June 2001

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in June 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.

June 2001[]

1[]

  • Peter Corr, 77, Irish footballer.
  • Jamake Highwater, 70, American writer and journalist.
  • Nkosi Johnson, 12, South African AIDS awareness campaigner, AIDS.[1]
  • Tom Keane, 74, American gridiron football player.
  • Hank Ketcham, 81, American cartoonist, creator of Dennis the Menace, prostate cancer.[2]
  • Abe Silverstein, 92, American aerospace engineer.[3]
  • Victims of the Nepalese royal massacre[4]
    • King Birendra, 55, King of Nepal
    • Queen Aishwarya, 51, Queen of Nepal
    • Prince Nirajan, 22, son of Birendra and Aishwarya
    • Princess Shruti, 25, daughter of Birendra and Aishwarya
    • Prince Dhirendra, 51, brother of King Birendra
    • Princess Shanti, 60, sister of King Birendra
    • Princess Sharada, 59, sister of King Birendra
    • , husband of Princess Sharada
    • Princess Jayanti, 54, cousin of King Birendra

2[]

  • Imogene Coca, 92, American actress (Your Show of Shows).[5]
  • John T. Fesperman, 76, American conductor, organist and author (Division of Musical Instruments at the National Museum of History and Technology).[6]
  • Sir Kenneth Hayr, 66, British air marshal.
  • Joey Maxim, 79, American professional boxer (World Light Heavyweight Champion).[7]
  • Zygmunt Milczewski, 95, Polish historian and resistance fighter during World War II.
  • Abdul Aziz Pasha, Bangladesh army officer.
  • Viktor Popkov, 54, Russian dissident, human rights activist and journalist, shot.
  • Frank Stagg, 89, American Southern Baptist theologian and author.[8]
  • Adolf Thiel, 86, Austrian-German rocket scientist.
  • Gene Woodling, 78, American baseball player.[9]

3[]

  • Humayun Abdulali, 87, Indian ornithologist and biologist.
  • J. C. Furnas, 95, American writer and social historian.[10]
  • Jamake Highwater, 70, American writer.[11]
  • Bahgat Osman, 69, Egyptian cartoonist and illustrator.
  • Andrea Prader, 81, Swiss scientist, physician, and pediatric endocrinologist.
  • Anthony Quinn, 86, Mexican-American actor (The Guns of Navarone, Zorba the Greek, Lawrence of Arabia) (two-time winner of Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor).[12]
  • Niño Valdés, 76, Cuban heavyweight boxing champion.

4[]

  • John Corriden, 83, American baseball player.[13]
  • Dipendra, King of Nepal, 29, suicide.[14]
  • John Hartford, 63, American musician and composer ("Gentle on My Mind").[15]
  • Chenjerai Hunzvi, 51, Zimbabwean politician.[16]
  • Dinos Iliopoulos, 85, Greek actor.
  • Pierre Lamaison, 52, French anthropologist.
  • Lu Jiaxi, 85, Chinese physical chemist.
  • Reynaldo Mendoza, 84, Philippine Army brigadier general.
  • Darshan Ranganathan, 60, Indian organic chemist.
  • Ruth Sanger, 82, Australian immunogeneticist, haematologist and serologist.
  • Tod Sweeney, 82, British Army officer.
  • Joan Vohs, 73, American model and actress (Fort Ti, Fireside Theater, Maverick, Perry Mason, Family Affair).[17]
  • Francois Weideman, 40, South African cricket player, murdered.

5[]

6[]

  • Alfonso Brescia, 71, Italian film director.
  • José Manuel Castañón, 81, Spanish writer.
  • William J. Darby, 87, American nutrition scientist.
  • Luce d'Eramo, 75, Italian writer and literary critic.
  • Ford Garrison, 85, American baseball player.[21]
  • Ken Lack, Jamaican ska, rocksteady and reggae record producer.
  • Douglas Lilburn, 85, New Zealand composer.
  • Ami Priyono, 61, Indonesian film director and actor.
  • Suzanne Schiffman, 71, French film director and screenwriter, cancer.
  • Lyubov Sokolova, 79, Soviet/Russian film actress.
  • John C. F. Tillson, 86, United States Army Major General.

7[]

  • Franco Balducci, 78, Italian film actor.
  • Víctor Paz Estenssoro, 93, Bolivian politician and four-term President of Bolivia.[22]
  • Carole Fredericks, 49, American singer, heart attack.
  • Ken Green, 77, English footballer.
  • Boris Lavrenko, 81, Russian painter.
  • Betty Neels, 91, British novelist.
  • Charles Templeton, 85, Canadian cartoonist, broadcaster and writer.
  • Leonard Tepper, 61, American actor and comedian.

8[]

  • Aviva Gileadi, 83, Israeli nuclear scientist.
  • Duncan MacIntyre, 85, New Zealand politician.
  • Kotayya Pratyagatma, 75, Indian film journalist, director and producer.
  • Alex de Renzy, 65, American director and producer of pornographic movies.
  • Nathaniel Rochester, 82, American computer scientist.
  • Dennis Puleston, 95, British-American environmentalist, adventurer and designer.[23]
  • Don Roper, 78, English footballer.
  • Lanette Scheeline, 90, American artist and designer.
  • Harry Watson, 79, American child actor and television journalism pioneer.

9[]

10[]

  • Jochen Liedtke, 48, German computer scientist.
  • John McKay, 77, American football assistant coach (Oregon Ducks) and head coach (USC Trojans, Tampa Bay Buccaneers).[28]
  • Mike Mentzer, 49, American bodybuilder.[29]
  • Vladimir Muravyov, 62, Russian translator and literary critic.
  • Princess Leila Pahlavi of Iran, 31, Iranian Princess and daughter of the Shah of Iran.[30]

11[]

  • Pierre Eyt, 67, French Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church.
  • Lou Fant, 69, American teacher, author, expert on American Sign Language, and actor (Ace Hardware's "helpful hardware man").[31]
  • Lou Lombardo, 72, American baseball player.[32]
  • Timothy McVeigh, 33, American convicted terrorist (Oklahoma City bombing), execution by lethal injection.[33]
  • Amalia Mendoza, 77, Mexican singer ("Échame a mi la culpa", "Amarga navidad").[34]
  • Milan Pantić, 46, Serbian journalist, assassinated.

12[]

  • Owen Bush, 79, American television announcer and actor.
  • Peggy Cartwright, 88, Canadian silent film actress.
  • W. D. Davies, 89/90, Welsh congregationalist minister and theologian.
  • Viktor Hamburger, 100, German embryologist.[35]
  • Jim Seminoff, 78, American basketball player.
  • Paula Wiesinger, 94, Italian alpine skier and mountain climber.
  • Thomas Wilson, 73, Scottish composer.[36]

13[]

  • Gordon Christie, 86, New Zealand politician.
  • Marcelo Fromer, 39, Brazilian rock musician, traffic accident.
  • Robert Heyssel, 72, American health-service executive (President of Johns Hopkins Hospital from 1982 to 1992).[37]
  • Digish Mehta, 66, Indian essayist, novelist and critic.
  • Rajzel Żychlińsky, 90, Polish poet.

14[]

  • Paul Carey, 38, American civil servant, endocrine cancer.[38]
  • Oleg Fedoseyev, 65, Soviet Olympic long jump and triple jump athlete (silver medal winner in men's triple jump at the 1964 Summer Olympics).[39]
  • Miroslav Marcovich, 82, Serbian-American philologist.
  • Jay D. Scott, 48, American convicted murderer, execution by lethal injection.
  • Horace M. Wade, 85, general in the US Air Force.

15[]

  • Henri Alekan, 92, French cinematographer, leukemia.[40]
  • Maria Foka, 83, Greek actress.
  • Mikhail Gluzsky, 82, Soviet/Russian actor.
  • John Harper, 71, American politician, member of the Kentucky House of Representatives.
  • Jay Moriarity, 22, American surfer, drowned.
  • Marcelino Solis, 70, Mexican baseball player.[41]

16[]

17[]

  • Diana Bellamy, 57, American character actress (Air Force One, Outrageous Fortune, Popular).[45]
  • John Broderick, 58, American film director, producer and screenwriter.
  • Donald J. Cram, 82, American chemist and co-winner of Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1987.[46]
  • Ninfa Laurenzo, 77, Houston restaurateur, bone cancer.
  • Thomas Winning, 76, Scottish Roman Catholic cardinal, heart attack.[47]
  • Mohammad Yunus, 84, Indian diplomat.

18[]

  • Dame Rosamund Holland-Martin, 86, British head of the NSPCC.[48]
  • Barton Mumaw, 88, American dancer and choreographer.[49]
  • Ivan Neill, 88, British Anglican priest and Army officer.
  • Davorin Popović, 54, Bosnian singer-songwriter.
  • Paolo Emilio Taviani, 88, Italian politician, economist and historian.[50]
  • Karl Friedrich Titho, 90, German nazi criminal.

19[]

  • Frank Bossard, 88, British Secret Intelligence Service agent.
  • Lindsay L. Cooper, 61, Scottish musician.
  • Jerry Cornes, 91, British athlete.
  • Juan Garza, 44, American murderer and drug trafficker, execution by lethal injection.
  • John Heyer, 84, Australian documentary filmmaker (The Back of Beyond).[51]
  • Jandhyala, 50, Indian screenwriter, director and actor, heart attack.
  • Robert Klippel, 81, Australian sculptor.
  • Col Maxwell, 83, Australian rugby league player.
  • Lee Mishkin, 74, American animator and director, heart failure.
  • Stanley Mosk, 88, American jurist, politician, and attorney.
  • Brian O'Shaughnessy, 70, British-South African film actor.
  • C. R. Pattabhiraman, 94, Indian lawyer and politician.
  • David Sylvester, 76, British art critic.[52]
  • Eddie Vartan, 63, French musician, bandleader, arranger, and record producer, cerebral hemorrhage.
  • Guma Zorrilla, 81, Uruguayan costume designer.

20[]

  • Angela Browne, 63, British actress (Ghost Squad, The Avengers, The Prisoner, Upstairs, Downstairs, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes).[53]
  • Tom Burns, 88, English sociologist and author.
  • Bob Keegan, 80, American baseball player.[54]
  • Bert Kramer, 66, American actor (Kojak, The Bionic Woman, The Rockford Files, Dallas, Dynasty, Matlock).[55]
  • James Parker, 77, American art historian.[56]
  • Massimo Pirri, 55, Italian film director and screenwriter.
  • Delbert Leroy True, 77, American architect.
  • Douglas Scott, 20, High-school student murdered by .

21[]

  • John Lee Hooker, 83, American blues singer, songwriter and guitarist (appeared in The Blues Brothers).[57]
  • Soad Hosny, 58, Egyptian actress ("Cinderella of Egyptian cinema").[58]
  • François Lesure, 78, French librarian and musicologist.
  • K. V. Mahadevan, 83, Indian singer-songwriter, music producer, and musician.
  • Carroll O'Connor, 76, American actor (All in the Family).[59]
  • Vernon Sewell, 97, British film director.[60]

22[]

  • Arbi Barayev, 27, Chechen warlord, killed during a raid by the Russian military special forces.
  • Luis Carniglia, 83, Argentine footballer and manager.
  • George Evans, 81, American comic book and comic strip cartoonist and illustrator.[61]
  • John Herbert, 74, Canadian playwright (Fortune and Men's Eyes).[62]
  • Lika Yanko, 73, Bulgarian artist.

23[]

24[]

25[]

26[]

27[]

  • Sidney Buckwold, 84, Canadian politician and businessman.
  • Hal Goldman, 81, American screenwriter, three Primetime Emmy Awards: The Jack Benny Program (1959, 1960), An Evening with Carol Channing (1966).[75]
  • Darrell Huff, 86, American statistician.
  • Tove Jansson, 86, Finnish author, painter and comic strip artist.[76]
  • Jack Lemmon, 76, American actor (Days of Wine and Roses, The Odd Couple) and film director, bladder and colorectal cancer.[77]
  • Udo Proksch, 67, Austrian industrialist.
  • Joan Sims, 71, British actress (Carry On Nurse, Carry On Cleo, Carry On Camping, On the Up, As Time Goes By).[78]
  • Jukka Wuolio, 74, Finnish ice hockey player.

28[]

  • Mortimer J. Adler, 98, American philosopher and author.[79]
  • Jim Ellis, 45, American computer scientist (Usenet).[80]
  • David Guthrie Freeman, 80, American badminton player (multi-year U.S. Champion).[81]
  • Caroline R. Jones, 59, American advertising pioneer.[82]

29[]

  • Mary Barnes, 86, English artist and writer.[83]
  • Maurice Estève, 97, French painter.
  • Maximos V Hakim, 93, Egyptian patriarch.
  • Minoru Kawabata, 90, Japanese artist.
  • Karen Lamm, 49, American film actress and producer, heart failure.
  • Silvio Oddi, 90, Italian cardinal and Vatican diplomat.

30[]

References[]

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  2. ^ Lawrence Van Gelder (June 2, 2001). "Hank Ketcham, Father of Dennis the Menace, Dies at 81". The New York Times. p. B 7. Retrieved December 31, 2018.
  3. ^ Wolfgang Saxon (June 5, 2001). "Abe Silverstein, 92, Engineer Who Named Apollo Program". The New York Times. p. B 10. Retrieved February 15, 2021.
  4. ^ Crossette, Barbara (June 4, 2001). "Birendra, 55, Nepal's King During Transition to Democracy, Is Dead". The New York Times. Retrieved December 31, 2018.
  5. ^ McFadden, Robert D. (June 3, 2001). "Imogene Coca, 92, Is Dead; a Partner in One of TV's Most Successful Comedy Teams". The New York Times. Retrieved January 1, 2019.
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  12. ^ Anita Gates (June 4, 2001). "Anthony Quinn Dies at 86; Played Earthy Tough Guys". The New York Times. p. B 6. Retrieved January 1, 2019.
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