Deaths in November 2003

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in November 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.

November 2003[]

1[]

  • Carolyn Baylies, 56, American academic and activist, cancer.[1]
  • Michael DeSisto, 64, American educator, cerebral hemorrhage.
  • W. Brian Harland, 86, British geologist.
  • Colin Hayes, 83, British artist.
  • Sonny Senerchia, 72, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates) and college baseball coach (Monmouth University), motorcycle accident.[2]
  • Daishiro Yoshimura, 56, Japanese football player and manager, intracranial hemorrhage.

2[]

3[]

  • Derk Bodde, 94, American sinologist.[7]
  • Aaron Bridgers, 85, American-French jazz pianist, featured in the 1961 Paul Newman film Paris Blues.[8]
  • Rasul Gamzatov, 80, Avarian/Soviet/Russian poet, called the "People's poet of Dagestan".
  • A. James Manchin, 76, American politician, Secretary of State and State Treasurer for West Virginia.
  • Narendra Prasad, 57, Indian (Malayalam) film actor, professor and writer.

4[]

  • Lotte Berk, 90, German-English dancer and teacher, created Barre fitness classes.[9]
  • Charles Causley, 86, British poet.[10]
  • Ken Gampu, 74, South African actor.
  • Rachel de Queiroz, 92, Braziliam writer and journalist.[11]
  • R. M. Williams, 95, Australian bushwear manufacturer, known for their handcrafted riding boots.[12]
  • Richard Wollheim, 80, British philosopher and an authority on psychoanalysis and art.[13]

5[]

  • David Bar-Ilan, 73, Israeli concert pianist, journalist and political aide (Benjamin Netanyahu).[14]
  • Hugh H. Bownes, 83, American judge (Senior Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit).[15]
  • Dorothy Fay, 88, American actress.
  • Bobby Hatfield, 63, half of the singing duo the Righteous Brothers.[16]
  • Zaim Muzaferija, 80, Bosnian actor and poet.
  • Dernell Stenson, 25, American baseball player (Cincinnati Reds), killed during robbery.[17]

6[]

  • Just Betzer, 59, Danish film producer (Babette's Feast: 1988 Academy Award for Best Foreign-Language Film).[18]
  • Crash Holly, 32, American professional wrestler.
  • Spider Jorgensen, 84, American baseball player (Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Giants).[19]
  • Rie Mastenbroek, 84, Dutch swimmer (1936 Summer Olympics medals: gold:100m, gold:400m, gold:4x100m, silver:100m).[20]
  • Eduardo Palomo, 41, Mexican actor, heart attack.
  • Rudolf Schönbeck, 84, German football player.
  • Lubor J. Zink, 83, Czech-Canadian columnist, known for his anti-communism columns.[21]

7[]

  • James L. Bentley, 76, American politician, Comptroller General of Georgia.
  • Jack Durrance, 91, American rock climber and mountaineer.
  • Donald Griffin, 88, American professor of zoology.[22]

8[]

9[]

  • Buddy Arnold, 77, American jazz saxophonist.[26]
  • Stephen Benton, 61, American scientist, teacher and artist, inventor of the rainbow hologram.[27]
  • Art Carney, 85, American actor (The Honeymooners, Harry and Tonto, The Late Show).[28]
  • Gordon Onslow Ford, 90, British-born American surrealist painter.[29]
  • David Gray, 81, English cricketer.
  • Mario Merz, 78, Italian artist.[30]
  • Edith Nash, 90, American educator and poet, co-founder and director of Georgetown Day School.[31]

10[]

  • Margaret Armen, 82, American television screenwriter (The Rifleman, The Big Valley, Star Trek, Barnaby Jones).[32]
  • Canaan Banana, 67, Zimbabwean politician and minister, first president of independent Zimbabwe.[33]
  • June Beebe, 90, American professional golfer, won the Women's Western Open in 1931 and 1933.[34]
  • Irv Kupcinet, 91, American columnist, television personality.[35]
  • Morten Lange, 83, Danish mycologist and politician.
  • Jed Williams, 51, Welsh jazz journalist and artistic director of the Brecon Jazz Festival.[36]

11[]

12[]

  • Jonathan Brandis, 27, American actor (seaQuest DSV, It, Sidekicks), suicide by hanging.[42]
  • Whitfield Cook, 94, American writer of screenplays, stage plays, short stories and novels.
  • Dola de Jong, 92, Dutch-American dancer and writer.
  • Kay E. Kuter, 78, American actor.
  • Penny Singleton, 95, American actress, singer and dancer.
  • John Tartaglione, 82, American comic book artist.
  • Tony Thompson, 48, American drummer for The Power Station, kidney cancer.[43]

13[]

  • B. M. Gafoor, 61, Indian cartoonist and comic artist, heart attack.
  • Ray Harris, 76, American rockability musician and songwriter.
  • Nobuo Okishio, 76, Japanese Marxian economist.
  • Andrew Vázsonyi, 87, Hungarian-American mathematician, founder of The Institute of Management Sciences.[44]
  • Kellie Waymire, 36, American actress (Star Trek: Enterprise, Six Feet Under), cardiac arrest.[45]

14[]

  • Norm Baxter, 94, Australian politician.
  • Pierre Camonin, 100, French organist and composer.
  • Giles Gordon, 63, Scottish literary agent and writer.
  • Pete Rawlings, 66, American politician.
  • Gene Anthony Ray, 41, American actor, dancer, and choreographer, complications of a stroke.[46]
  • Tim Vigors, 82, British World War II fighter pilot and owner of Coolmore Stud.[47]

15[]

  • Earl Battey, 68, American baseball player (Chicago White Sox, Washington Senators, Minnesota Twins).[48]
  • Mohamed Choukri, 68, Moroccan author and novelist.
  • Ray Lewis, 93, first Canadian-born black Olympic medalist.
  • Dorothy Loudon, 70, American actress.[49]
  • John Stamper, 77, British aeronautical engineer.
  • Laurence Tisch, 80, American billionaire, head of Loews Corporation and CBS television network.[50]
  • James D. Weaver, 83, American politician (U.S. Representative for Pennsylvania's 24th congressional district).[51]
  • Speedy West, 79, American pedal steel guitarist and record producer.[52]
  • Ned Wulk, 83, American basketball coach (Arizona State University from 1958 to 1982) and baseball coach.[53]

16[]

  • Fernanda Bullano, 89, Italian sprinter (women's 4 × 100 metres relay at the 1936 Summer Olympics).[54]
  • Walt Conley, 74, American folk singer, Hollywood actor, and voice actor, stroke.
  • Lucien Dahdah, 74, Lebanese academic, media executive and politician.
  • Thomas B. Fitzpatrick, 83, American dermatologist.
  • Arihiro Fukuda, 40, Japanese associate professor and author of Sovereignty and the Sword.
  • Bettina Goislard, 29, French UNHCR relief worker, killed by Taliban militants.
  • Catalino Macaraig Jr., 76, Filipino public servant.
  • Albert Nozaki, 91, Japanese-American art director (The War of the Worlds, The Ten Commandments)[55]

17[]

  • Gerry Adams, Sr, 77, Irish Republican Army volunteer, father of Gerry Adams.[56]
  • Surjit Bindrakhia, 41, Indian singer, cardiac arrest.
  • Arthur Conley, 58, American soul singer.
  • Don Gibson, 75, American singer-songwriter.
  • Damian Mills, 24, Canadian international cricketer, died in his sleep.
  • Robert Passantino, 52, American author and journalist, cardiac arrest.
  • Pete Taylor, 75, American baseball player (St. Louis Browns).[57]

18[]

  • Vivian Bonnell, 79, Antiguan actress (House of Flowers, For Pete's Sake, Ghost, Sanford and Son).[58]
  • Ken Brett, 55, American baseball player, brother of George Brett.[59]
  • Patricia Broderick, 78, American playwright (Infinity) and painter, mother of Matthew Broderick, cancer.[60]
  • Anton Burg, 99, American chemist, professor and an expert on boron and the synthesis of boron compounds.[61]
  • Michael Kamen, 55, American composer (Die Hard, Band of Brothers, 101 Dalmatians).
  • Braulio Sánchez Fuentes, 81, Mexican Roman Catholic prelate, territorial prelate of Mixes (1970–2000).[62]

19[]

  • Gillian Barge, 63, English actress (The Cherry Orchard, Measure For Measure, The Winter's Tale).[63]
  • Christfried Berger, 65, German protestant theologian.
  • Harry Buffington, 84, American professional football player (Oklahoma State, New York Giants, Brooklyn Dodgers).[64]
  • William B. Macomber Jr., American diplomat and president of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.[65]
  • Greg Ridley, 56, English rock artist, complications following pneumonia.
  • Robert E. Thompson, 82, American political journalist.
  • Bill Young, 86, Australian politician (Tasmanian House of Assembly for Franklin).[66]

20[]

21[]

22[]

23[]

24[]

  • Lu'ay al-Atassi, 76/7, Syrian army commander and politician, President (1963).
  • Hesba Fay Brinsmead, 81, Australian author of books for children and young adults (Pastures of the Blue Crane).[82]
  • George Dunlap, 94, American golfer.
  • Hugh Kenner, 80, Canadian literary critic.[83]
  • Ralph Wilson Nimmons Jr., 65, American judge (U.S. District Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida).[84]
  • Michael Small, 64, American film score composer.[85]
  • Floquet de Neu, 38-40, Spanish only albino western lowland gorilla in the world.
  • Warren Spahn, 82, American baseball pitcher (Milwaukee Braves) and member of the MLB Hall of Fame.[86]

25[]

  • Frank B. Colton, 80, American chemist.
  • Shulamith Hareven, 73, Israeli writer and essayist.
  • Gus W. Weiss, 72, American White House policy advisor on technology, intelligence and economic affairs.[87]
  • Zhang Honggen, 67, Chinese football player and coach.

26[]

  • Ramona Barnes, 65, American politician (Speaker of the Alaska House of Representatives).[88]
  • Sadegh Khalkhali, 77, Iranian Shia cleric and ayatollah.[89]
  • Lionel Ngakane, 75, South African filmmaker and actor (The Mark of the Hawk, The Squeeze).[90]
  • Gordon Reid, 64, Scottish actor.
  • Soulja Slim, 26, American rapper.
  • Stefan Wul, 81, French science fiction writer, his novel Oms en série used as the basis for Fantastic Planet.[91]
  • Brian Wybourne, 68, New Zealand physicist, known for his groundbreaking work on the energy levels of rare-earth ions.[92]

27[]

  • Satyendra Dubey, 30, Indian Engineering Service officer, assassinated.
  • R. D. Lawrence, 82, Canadian naturalist and wildlife author.
  • Will Quadflieg, 89, German actor.
  • Marjorie Reeves, 98, British historian and educationalist.

28[]

  • Ted Bates, 85, British footballer and manager.
  • Harold von Braunhut, 77, American marketer and creator of Amazing Sea-Monkeys.[93]
  • Barry Broadfoot, 77, Canadian journalist, oral historian and best-selling author.[94]
  • Mihkel Mathiesen, 85, Estonian politician.
  • Thekra, 45, Tunisian singer, shot.

29[]

  • Norman Burton, 79, American actor (Diamonds Are Forever, The Towering Inferno, The New Adventures of Wonder Woman).[95]
  • Tony Canadeo, 84, American football player (Green Bay Packers) and member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.[96]
  • Jim Carlin, 85, American baseball player (Philadelphia Phillies).[97]
  • Jesse Carver, 92, English football player and manager.
  • Jan-Magnus Jansson, 81, Finnish politician. chairman of the Swedish People's Party of Finland.
  • Len Lawson, Australian comic book creator and convicted murderer.
  • Moondog Spot, 51, American professional wrestler.
  • Rudi Martinus van Dijk, 71, Dutch composer.[98]
  • Ethel Winant, 81, American first woman television executive (vice-president of CBS).[99]

30[]

  • Valentin Arbakov, 51, Russian chess grandmaster, tied for 1981 Moscow championship.[100]
  • Earl Bellamy, 86, American film and television director (Leave It to Beaver, The Lone Ranger, I Spy, M*A*S*H).[101]
  • Jack Brewer, 85, American baseball player (New York Giants).[102]
  • Barber B. Conable, 81, New York Congressman, president of the World Bank from 1986–1991.[103]
  • Gertrude Ederle, 98, American swimmer and first woman to swim the English Channel (1926).[104]
  • Granville Slack, 97, British judge and politician.

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