Deaths in March 2003

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in March 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.

March 2003[]

1[]

  • Nadine Conner, 96, American operatic soprano, radio singer and music teacher.[1]
  • Elaine Barrie, 87, American actress (Midnight), fourth wife of John Barrymore.[2]
  • Franjo Glaser, 90, Croatian footballer.
  • Roger Needham, 68, British computer scientist, pioneered computer password one-way hash functions.[3]
  • Countess Viktoria-Luise of Solms-Baruth, 81, German princess.

2[]

  • Roger Albertsen, 45, Norwegian footballer, cancer.
  • Hank Ballard, 66, American singer (The Midnighters), composer, famous for his hit "The Twist".[4]
  • William Blezard, 81, English composer, accompanist/arranger for Noël Coward, Marlene Dietrich, Joyce Grenfell, Honor Blackman.[5]
  • Joe Decker, 55, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs, Minnesota Twins, Seattle Mariners).[6]
  • Sir George Edwards, 94, British aircraft designer.
  • Sir Ian Hogg, 91, British admiral.
  • Robert B. Ingebretsen, 54, pioneer in the development of digital sound.
  • Malcolm Williamson, 71, Australian composer, Master of the Queen's Music.[7]
  • Bill Woggon, 87, American cartoonist who created the comic book Katy Keene.[8]

3[]

  • Gilbert Wheeler Beebe, 90, American epidemiologist and statistician, conducted ground-breaking radiation exposure studies.[9]
  • Ann A. Bernatitus, 91, American U.S. Navy nurse, Legion of Merit for heroism during the siege of Bataan and Corregidor.[10]
  • Sir John Brown, 86, British publisher (Oxford University Press).[11]
  • Horst Buchholz, 69, German actor (The Magnificent Seven, One, Two, Three, Life Is Beautiful).[12]
  • Jack Dain, 90, British-born Australian Anglican prelate, Assistant Bishop of Sydney.[13]
  • Dick Garrard, 92, Australian Olympic wrestler (silver medal in men's freestyle welterweight at the 1948 Summer Olympics).[14]
  • John S. Gill, 70, Australian rules footballer.[15]
  • Malcolm Kilduff, 75, American journalist.
  • Luis Marden, 90, American photographer, explorer, writer, and filmmaker.[16]

4[]

  • Fedora Barbieri, 82, Italian operatic mezzo-soprano and actress.[17][18]
  • Sébastien Japrisot, 71, French author, screenwriter and film director.
  • Lin Lanying, 85, Chinese electrical engineer, physicist, and politician.
  • Oliver Payne Pearson, 87, American zoologist and ecologist.
  • Amiya Pujari, 54, Indian computer scientist.
  • Neil Smith, 53, English cricketer.

5[]

  • Sir Hardy Amies, 93, English fashion designer, official dressmaker for Queen Elizabeth II.[19]
  • Séamus de Brún, 91, Irish teacher, member of the Seanad and a promoter of Irish culture and language.[20]
  • George Miller, 61, American stand-up comedian, leukemia.
  • Pete Taylor, 57, American sportscaster.
  • Dzhabrail Yamadayev, 32, Chechen rebel field commander, killed by a bomb.

6[]

  • Ernst B. Haas, 78, German-born American political scientist.
  • Mickey Kreitner, 80, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs).[21]
  • Ramón Mestre, 65, Argentine politician.
  • Luděk Pachman, 78, Czechoslovak-German chess grandmaster, chess writer, and political activist.
  • John Sanford, 98, American screenwriter and author.[22]
  • Hannah Semer, 78, Israeli journalist.

7[]

  • José Márcio Ayres, 49, Brazilian conservationist and zoologist, founded Brazilian rain forest reserves.[23]
  • Monica Hughes, 77, Canadian science fiction author.
  • Al Libke, 84, American baseball player (Cincinnati Reds).[24]
  • Sid Scales, 86, New Zealand cartoonist.

8[]

  • Cho Byung-hwa, 81, South Korean poet.
  • Adam Faith, 62, British singer and actor.
  • Stanisław Fołtyn, 66, Polish Olympic footballer.
  • Wallace M. Greene, 95, United States Marine Corps four-star general.[25]
  • Elliott Jaques, 86, Canadian psychoanalyst and social scientist who coined the term "midlife crisis".[26]
  • Mickey McGowan, 81, American baseball player (New York Giants).[27]
  • Karen Morley, 93, American film actress and political activist; former wife of Charles Vidor.

9[]

  • Stan Brakhage, 70, American filmmaker, bladder cancer.[28]
  • Tony Dornhorst, 87, British physician and medical educator.
  • Rolf Hagedorn, 83, German theoretical physicist.
  • Toni Mendez, 94, American agent for writers and cartoonists.
  • Sir Frederick Wood, 76, British businessman and industrialist (Croda International).[29]

10[]

  • Víctor Alba, 86, Spanish writer and anti-communist, anti-capitalist political journalist.[30]
  • Gennadi Afanasyev, 60, Russian football player and manager.
  • Tom Boardman, Baron Boardman, 84, British businessman and politician (MP for Leicester South West, Leicester South).[31]
  • Lionel Frederick Dakers, 79, British cathedral organist.
  • Bernard Dowiyogo, 57, President of Nauru, cardiac complications from diabetes.
  • Geoffrey Kirk, 81, British classical scholar.
  • Barry Sheene, 52, British twice 500cc MotoGP Champion.
  • Naftali Temu, 57, Kenyan athlete, prostate cancer.
  • Ottorino Volonterio, 85, Swiss Formula One race car driver.[32]
  • Nilufar Yasmin, 55, Bangladeshi singer, cancer.

11[]

  • Brian Cleeve, 81, Anglo-Irish writer.
  • Alta Cohen, 94, American baseball player (Brooklyn Robins/Dodgers, Philadelphia Phillies).[33]
  • John G. Dow, 97, American politician (U.S. Representative for New York's 27th congressional district).[34]
  • Ivar Hansen, 64, Danish politician and speaker of the Folketing.
  • Alec Harper, 92, British soldier and polo player.
  • Kevin Laffan, 80, British playwright and screenwriter (Emmerdale), pneumonia.[35]
  • Kenneth G. Wilson, 79, American author (The Columbia Guide to Standard American English) and academic.[36]
  • Wayne D. Wright, 86, American horse racing jockey, winner of all three Triple Crown races in different years.[37]

12[]

  • Herb Banet, 89, American professional football player (Manchester University, Green Bay Packers).[38]
  • Zoran Đinđić, 50, Prime Minister of Serbia, gunshot (assassination).
  • Alys Faiz, 87, Pakistani writer and human rights activist.
  • Howard Fast, 88, American novelist.[39]
  • Andrey Kivilev, 29, Kazakhstani road bicycle racer (2001 Route du Sud, 2000 Olympics, 1996 Olympics), fall during Paris–Nice race.[40]
  • Lynne Thigpen, 54, American television and Tony Award-winning stage actress (An American Daughter).

13[]

  • Lois Tobío Fernández, 96, Galician writer, translator and philologist.
  • Enriko Josif, 78, Serbian composer, pedagogue and musical writer.
  • Ian Samwell, 66, English musician, singer-songwriter and record producer.
  • Christiane Schmidtmer, 63, German actress, fashion model and nude model.
  • Gus Yatron, 75, American politician (U.S. Representative for Pennsylvania's 6th congressional district).[41]

14[]

  • Harmon Craig, 76, American geochemist.
  • Amanda Davis, 32, American writer and teacher, plane crash.[42]
  • Al Gionfriddo, 81, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates, Brooklyn Dodgers).[43]
  • Jack Goldstein, 57, American artist, suicide.[44]
  • Ron Shoop, 71, American baseball player (Detroit Tigers).[45]

15[]

  • Yevgeny Belyayev, 48, Soviet cross-country skier (Olympic medals: 1976 silver, 1976 bronze, 1980 gold).[46]
  • Mari Bicknell, 89, English choreographer and ballet teacher.[47]
  • Margaret Coit, 83, American writer.
  • Dame Thora Hird, 91, British actress, comedian, presenter and writer.
  • Bill Robertson, 79, British footballer.
  • Li Xuefeng, 96, Chinese politician.

16[]

  • Lawrence H. Aller, 89, American astronomer who studied the chemical composition of stars and nebulae.[48]
  • George Bayer, 77, American professional golfer, won three PGA Tour events, known for his long drives.[49]
  • Rachel Corrie, 23, American International Solidarity Movement activist, crushed by bulldozer.
  • Major Ronald Ferguson, 71, father of UK royal divorcée Sarah, Duchess of York.
  • Sir Davis Hughes, 92, Australian politician.
  • Teemu Raimoranta, 25, Finnish metal musician.

17[]

  • Herbert Aptheker, 87, American historian and political activist.[50]
  • Terje Baalsrud, 88, Norwegian newspaper editor.
  • Thomas N. Barnes, 72, American Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force.[51]
  • Bill Carlisle, 94, American country music singer, songwriter and comedian.
  • Yvette Etiévant, 80, French actress.
  • Alan Keith, 84, British broadcaster.
  • Klaus Oldendorff, German Olympic sailor [1]
  • Robert Shelton, 73, American clansman.[52]
  • Su Buqing, 100, Chinese mathematician.
  • Beatrice Wright, 92, American-British politician (Member of Parliament of the U.K. for Bodmin).[53]

18[]

  • József Balla, 47, Hungarian wrestler (men's Olympic freestyle super-heavyweight wrestling: 1976 silver medal, 1980 silver medal).[54]
  • Bruno Heim, 92, Swiss ecclesiastical diplomat, Apostolic Nuncio to Britain.
  • Karl Kling, 92, German racing driver.
  • Adam Osborne, 64, computer pioneer (Osborne 1).[55]
  • Monk Williams, 58, American professional football player (Cincinnati Bengals).[56]

19[]

  • Joe Buzas, 83, American baseball player (New York Yankees) and minor league baseball team owner.[57]
  • Hiromichi Fuyuki, 42, Japanese professional wrestler and promoter.
  • Émile Genest, 81, Canadian actor, heart attack.
  • Olivier Long, 87, Swiss Ambassador and the director-general of the GATT.[58]
  • Emily Muir, 99, American painter, architect and philanthropist.
  • Michael Mathias Prechtl, 76, German illustrator.
  • Nancy Farley Wood, 99, American physicist and business owner, member of the Manhattan Project.[59]

20[]

  • Al Blades, 26, American professional football player (University of Miami, San Francisco 49ers), car accident.[60]
  • Krishanu Dey, 41, Indian football player, pulmonary disorder.
  • Sailor Art Thomas, 79, American professional wrestler, cancer.
  • Richard W. Vollmer Jr., 77, American judge (U.S. District Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Alabama).[61]

21[]

  • Wesley Balk, 70, American opera artistic director (Minnesota Opera), professor of theater arts and writer.[62]
  • Harry Eisenstat, 87, American baseball player (Brooklyn Dodgers, Detroit Tigers, Cleveland Indians).[63]
  • Leonard Hokanson, 71, American pianist, pancreatic cancer.
  • Shivani, 79, Indian writer.
  • Umar Wirahadikusumah, 78, Indonesian fourth Vice President, served from 1983 to 1988.[64]

22[]

  • Jim Anderson, 59, Australian politician.
  • Amado Cortez, 75, Filipino actor and diplomat.
  • Terry Lloyd, 50, British ITN reporter, killed in southern Iraq.
  • Paul Moran, 39, Australian photojournalist, killed by suicide bomb in Northern Iraq.

23[]

  • Hideyo Amamoto, 77, Japanese actor, complications from pneumonia.
  • Dave Dallwitz, 88, Australian jazz musician and painter.
  • Wolf-Eberhard von Lewinski, 75, German music and theatre critic.
  • Tage Nielsen, 74, Danish composer, teacher and music administrator.[65]
  • Lori Piestewa, 23, United States Army soldier, head wounds received during ambush.

24[]

25[]

  • Robert W. Allard, 83, American plant geneticist, founded the field of plant population genetics.[68]
  • Christopher French, 77, British barrister and judge.
  • Masato Furuoya, 45, Japanese actor, suicide by hanging.
  • Michael Kidron, 72, revolutionary thinker and cartographer.

26[]

  • Yisroel Moshe Dushinsky, 81, second rebbe of Jerusalem, Israel.
  • Marcus Kaufman, 73, American politician, renal failure.
  • Daniel Patrick Moynihan, 76, American politician, sociologist, and diplomat, complications following an appendectomy.[69]
  • Babatunji Olowofoyeku, 85, Nigerian politician, educationist and lawyer.
  • Tauese Sunia, 61, Governor of American Samoa, heart attack.
  • Rolf Thomsen, 87, U-boat commander in the Kriegsmarine during World War II.
  • Dorothy Clarke Wilson, 98, American writer, wrote Prince of Egypt, which was primary source for The Ten Commandments.[70]

27[]

  • Jeremiah Duggan, 22, British student, traffic accident.
  • Edouard Masengo,69/70, Congolese guitarist.
  • Chris Michie, 55, guitarist and composer and best known for his work with Van Morrison, malignant melanoma.
  • Elisa Mújica, 85, Colombian writer.
  • Paul Zindel, 66, American playwright (The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds), lung cancer.[71]

28[]

29[]

  • Placide Adams, 73, American string bass player, drummer and vocalist.[73]
  • Neil Clarke, 45, Australian footballer.
  • Matthew J. Ryan, 70, American politician.
  • Maude Storey, 73, British nursing administrator, diabetes.
  • Dr. Carlo Urbani, 46, World Health Organization doctor who discovered SARS, SARS.

30[]

  • Andy Barr, 89, Northern Irish trade unionist (chairman of Communist Party of Ireland, president of Irish Congress of Trade Unions).[74]
  • Bruno Boni, 87, Italian rower (bronze medal in men's coxless pair at the 1948 Summer Olympics).[75]
  • David Cook, 73/4, British literary critic.
  • Nick Enright, 52, Australian dramatist, playwright and theatre director, melanoma.
  • Michael Jeter, 50, American actor (Evening Shade, Waterworld, Jurassic Park III), epilepsy[76]
  • Sir Gregor MacGregor, 6th Baronet, 77, Scottish clan chief and army officer.
  • Valentin Pavlov, 65, former Prime Minister of the Soviet Union.
  • Gaby Rado, 48, Hungarian-born activist and UK-based journalist.
  • Patricia Vinnicombe, 71, South African-Australian archaeologist and art preservationist (San rock art, Australian Aboriginal art).[77]

31[]

References[]

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  3. ^ Schofield, Jack (March 10, 2003). "Roger Needham: He set up Microsoft's first overseas research body". The Guardian. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
  4. ^ Boucher, Geoff (March 4, 2003). "Hank Ballard, 66; Found the B-Side of Fame in Writing, Recording '60s Hit Tune 'The Twist'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 20, 2019.
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