Deaths in October 2001

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in October 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.

October 2001[]

1[]

  • Guy Beaulne, 79, French-Canadian actor and theatre director.[1]
  • Anna McClean Bidder, 98, British zoologist and academic.
  • Surendranath Dwivedy, 88, Indian politician, journalist and social worker.
  • Kenny Greene, 32, American singer-songwriter, AIDS.
  • Gregory Hemingway, 69, American physician and son of Ernest Hemingway, hypertension and cardiovascular disease.
  • Leroy Snyder, 70, American serial killer.
  • Mickey Trotman, 26, Trinidad and Tobago football player, car crash.

2[]

  • Manny Albam, 79, American jazz baritone saxophone player, composer, arranger and producer.[2]
  • Pat Ast, 59, American actress and model.
  • Franz Biebl, 95, German classical music composer.[3]
  • Donald J. Cohen, 61, American psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, melanoma.[4]
  • Fernando Mendes, 55, Portuguese cyclist.
  • Tommy McCulloch, 79, Scottish footballer.[5]
  • Seymour Milstein, 81, American real estate developer and philanthropist.

3[]

  • Alfie Almario, 38, Filipino basketball player, heart attack.
  • Ricky Belmonte, 54, Filipino actor, cerebral hemorrhage caused by a stroke.
  • Homer Elias, 46, American gridiron football player (Detroit Lions).[6]
  • Alessandro Fersen, 89, Polish-Italian dramatist, actor, and theater director.
  • Philip Goldson, 78, Belizean newspaper editor, activist and politician.
  • Paul E. Ison, 84, United States Marine Corps infantryman during World War II.
  • Gregorio Peralta, 66, Argentine boxer.
  • Jean Rankin, 96, Scottish naturalist and courtier.[7]

4[]

  • Blaise Alexander, 25, American race car driver, race crash.[8]
  • Patsy Burt, 73, British racing driver.
  • George Claydon, 68, British actor and mascot of the England Football Team in 1966.
  • John Collins, 88, American jazz guitarist.
  • Arthur Daniels, 79, Welsh rugby league player.
  • Al Ham, 76, American composer and jingle writer.
  • Gerd Larsen, 80, Norwegian ballerina.
  • Ahron Soloveichik, 84, American Torah scholar and rabbi.[9]

5[]

  • América Barrios, 84, Cuban actress.
  • Peter Burge, 69, Australian cricketer.
  • Clyde L. Choate, 81, American politician from Southern Illinois and decorated soldier.[10]
  • Brian Edgar, 65, British rugby league player.
  • Fereydoon Forooghi, 50, Iranian singer, musician and composer, heart attack.
  • Woody Jensen, 94, American baseball player.[11]
  • Jan Lenica, 73, Polish graphic designer and cartoonist.
  • Mike Mansfield, 98, American politician and diplomat (U.S. Representative from Montana, U.S. Senator from Montana, Senate Majority Leader).[12]
  • Egbert van 't Oever, 74, Dutch speed skater, colon cancer.
  • Emilie Schindler, 93, German wife of Oskar Schindler who helped save the lives of 1,200 Jews during World War II.
  • Robert Stevens, 63, American photo editor and anthrax attack victim.

6[]

7[]

  • Christopher Adams, 46, English wrestler and judoka, brother of Olympic Judo star Neil Adams, shot.
  • Gaby Basset, 99, French film actress.
  • Alf Gover, 93, English test cricketer.
  • Herblock, 91, American editorial cartoonist (The Washington Post).[15]
  • Stewart Imlach, 69, Scottish football player.
  • Jimmie Logsdon, 79, American country and rockabilly singer, songwriter and radio DJ.
  • Polly Rowles, 87, American actress (The Defenders, Sweet Liberty, Power).[16]

8[]

  • Leonora Arye, American sculptor and writer.
  • Ross T. Dwyer, 82, United States Marine Corps major general.
  • Kenneth L. Hale, 67, American linguist, known for study and preservation of endangered aboriginal languages.[17]
  • Caryl Parker Haskins, 93, American scientist, author, inventor, philanthropist, and entomologist[18]
  • Seymour Heller, 87, American talent agent and manager (represented Liberace).[19]
  • Javed Iqbal, 45, Pakistani serial killer.
  • Sankaradi, 77, Indian actor.

9[]

  • Roberto Campos, 84, Brazilian economist, writer, diplomat, and politician, heart attack.[20]
  • Dagmar, 79, American actress, model, and television personality.[21]
  • Norris Houghton, 91, American theatre manager and producer.[22]
  • Herbert Ross, 74, American stage choreographer, and film director and producer (Funny Lady, The Turning Point).[23]
  • Károly Simonyi, 84, Hungarian physicist and writer.

10[]

  • Eddie Futch, 90, American boxing trainer (Joe Frazier, Ken Norton, Larry Holmes, Trevor Berbick).[24]
  • Luis Antonio García Navarro, 60, Spanish conductor (Music Director of the Teatro Real).[25]
  • Cal Gardner, 76, Canadian professional ice hockey player (New York Rangers, Toronto Maple Leafs, Chicago Black Hawks, Boston Bruins).[26]
  • Dave Gerard, 65, American baseball player.[27]
  • Vasily Mishin, 84, Soviet rocket designer.[28]
  • Samuel Ndhlovu, 64, Zambian footballer and coach.
  • Bérangère Vattier, 60, French comedian, cancer.

11[]

  • Franco Committeri, 77, Italian film producer.
  • Tommy Harris, 76, English footballer.
  • Nada Mamula, 74, Yugoslavian singer.
  • Beni Montresor, 75, Italian artist, illustrator and set designer.[29]
  • Thomas C. Wales, 49, American prosecutor and gun control advocate, murdered.

12[]

  • Richard Buckle, 85, British ballet critic.[30]
  • Ruth Goetz, 89, American playwright (The Heiress) and screenwriter.[31]
  • Lord Hailsham of St Marylebone, (Quintin Hogg), 94, British lawyer and politician.[32]
  • John T. Robinson, 78, South African palaeontologist.
  • Hikmet Şimşek, Turkish orchestra conductor.
  • Otis Young, 69, American actor (The Outcasts, The Last Detail).[33]

13[]

  • Peter Doyle, 52, Australian pop singer (The New Seekers).[34]
  • Ubi Dwyer, 68, Irish anarchist.
  • Fritz Fromm, 88, German Olympic field handball player (gold medal winner of the men's team handball competition at the 1936 Summer Olympics).[35]
  • B. L. Graham, 87, American college basketball player and coach (Ole Miss).[36]
  • Glenn Johnson, 79, American professional football player (New York Yankees, Green Bay Packers, Winnipeg Blue Bombers).[37]
  • David Neil MacKenzie, 75, British linguist.
  • Pal Mirashi, 75, Albanian football player.
  • Olga Oleinik, 76, Soviet/Russian mathematician.

14[]

  • Sir Philip Adams, 85, British diplomat.
  • Willam Christensen, 99, American ballet dancer, choreographer and founder of the San Francisco Ballet and Ballet West in Salt Lake City, Utah.[38]
  • Eugene Grebenik, 82, British academic and demographer.[39]
  • Vernon Harrison, 89, British photographer and parapsychologist.
  • David Lewis, 60, American philosopher.[40]
  • Ben Sankey, 94, American baseball player.[41]
  • Sergei Stvolov, 37, Soviet/Russian military officer, car accident.

15[]

  • Jamie Cann, 55, British Labour Party politician, liver disease.
  • Chang Hsueh-liang, 100, Chinese warlord and military figure.[42]
  • Justus Cornelias Dirks, 90, South African author.
  • Ralph Levy, 80, American producer, film and television director.
  • Anne Ridler, 89, British poet and editor.
  • Janet Shaw, 82, American actress, Alzheimer's disease

16[]

  • Gotthold Gloger, 77, German writer and painter.
  • Etta Jones, 72, American jazz singer, cancer.[43]
  • Yuri Ozerov, 80, Soviet film director and screenwriter.

17[]

  • Frank Anscombe, 83, English statistician.[44]
  • Cornelius Casey, 72, Irish-American football player.
  • Jay Livingston, 86, American composer (Academy Award for Best Original Song for "Buttons and Bows", "Mona Lisa" and "Que Sera, Sera").[45]
  • Micheline Ostermeyer, 78, French Olympic champion at the 1948 Summer Olympics and concert pianist.[46]
  • Jack Smith, 77, American NASCAR driver, congestive heart failure.
  • Neil Tillotson, 102, American inventor.[47]
  • Rehavam Ze'evi, 75, Israeli army general and politician.[48]

18[]

  • Paul J. Bailey, 79, American jockey in thoroughbred racing, brain tumor.
  • Ferris Fain, 80, American baseball player, complications from leukemia and diabetes.[49]
  • János Kulka, 80, Hungarian conductor and composer.
  • Ray Lovejoy, 62, British film editor, heart attack.
  • Dan Nugent, 48, American gridiron football player (Washington Redskins), leukemia.
  • Rambeer Singh Tomar, 31, Indian Army Non Commissioned Officer, K.I.A.
  • A. T. Ummer, 68, Indian music composer.

19[]

  • Kay Dick, 86, English journalist, novelist and autobiographer.[50]
  • Woody Dumart, 84, Canadian ice hockey player (Boston Bruins).
  • Leslie Johnston, 81, Scottish football player.
  • Jagernath Lachmon, 85, Surinamese politician.[51]
  • Hugh Mulcahy, 88, American baseball player.[52]
  • Joe Murray, 80, American baseball player.[53]

20[]

  • Marko Hirsma, 36, Finnish musician, outlaw biker and gangster, shot.
  • Frank Hodgkinson, 82, Australian painter and graphic artist.
  • Patricia Locke, 73, Native American educator-activist, heart-failure.[54]
  • Kaviyoor Murali, Indian activist.
  • Nebojša Popović, 78, Serbian basketball player and coach.
  • John H. Terry, 76, American lawyer and politician.
  • Andrew Waterhouse, 42, English poet and musician, suicide.

21[]

  • George Feyer, 92, Hungarian-American cafe pianist and entertainer.[55]
  • Margaret Hope MacPherson, 93, Scottish crofter, politician, author, and activist.
  • Paul Mickelson, 73, American organist, arranger, and record label executive, heart attack.
  • Sir John Plumb, 90, British historian.[56]
  • David Lowell Rich, 81, American film director and producer.

22[]

  • Howard Finster, 84, American artist and baptist minister.[57]
  • Ernest Hilgard, 97, American psychologist and professor at Stanford University.[58]
  • Samuel Khachikian, 78, Iranian film director, author, and film editor.
  • Norman Lessing, 90, American television screenwriter and producer, playwright, and chess master.
  • Jan Glastra van Loon, 81, Dutch politician.
  • Bertie Mee, 82, English footballer.
  • Ramakrishna, 62, Indian actor.
  • Ed Vijent, 38, Dutch football player, stabbed.
  • Georgy Vitsin, 84, Soviet/Russian actor.
  • Diana Van der Vlis, 66, Canadian-American actress, cardiac arrest.[59]

23[]

  • Ken Aston, 86, British football referee.[60]
  • Marian Fischman, 62, American psychologist, complications from colon cancer.[61]
  • Josh Kirby, 72, British artist.[62]
  • Sylvester Perry Ryan, 83, Canadian lawyer and politician.
  • Linden Travers, 88, British actress (The Lady Vanishes, No Orchids for Miss Blandish).[63]
  • Daniel Wildenstein, 84, French art dealer, historian and owner-breeder of thoroughbred race horses.[64]

24[]

  • Kathleen Ankers, 82, American theatrical and television set and costume designer (Late Night with David Letterman, The Rosie O'Donnell Show).[65]
  • Kim Gardner, 53, English musician (Badger, Ashton, Gardner & Dyke, The Birds, The Creation).[66]
  • Eugenio Granell, 88, Spanish painter (often described as "the last Spanish surrealist painter").[67]
  • Jaromil Jireš, 65, Czechoslovak filmmaker.[68]
  • Eamon Kelly, 87, Irish actor.
  • Bill Mueller, 80, American baseball player.[69]
  • Seishiro Shimatani, 62, Japanese football player and manager, cirrhosis.
  • Stephen Wurm, 79, Hungarian-Australian linguist.

25[]

  • Jack Blackwell, 91, English footballer.
  • Marvin Harris, 74, American anthropologist.[70]
  • Yoritsune Matsudaira, 94, Japanese composer.
  • René Philombé, 70, Cameroonian writer, journalist, poet, and playwright.
  • Alan Pultz, 64, American television director.

26[]

  • Larry Aldrich, 95, American fashion designer and art collector.[71]
  • Soraya Esfandiary-Bakhtiary, 69, queen consort of Iran as wife of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
  • Charlie van Gelderen, 88, South African journalist and Trotskyist, and the last surviving participant of Leon Trotsky's 4th International in 1938.[72]
  • Laszlo Halasz, 96, Hungarian-American music director (New York City Opera).[73]
  • Abdul Haq, 43, Afghan mujahideen commander, executed by the Taliban.[74]
  • Eugene Jackson, 84, American child actor (Our Gang, The Big Town, Shootin' Injuns, Little Annie Rooney, The Addams Family).[75]
  • Elizabeth Jennings, 75, English poet.[76]
  • Maya Kamath, 50, Indian cartoonist.
  • Kris Kovick, 50, California-based writer, cartoonist, and printer, breast cancer.
  • Olga Lehmann, 89, Chilean-British visual artist.
  • John Platts-Mills, 95, British politician and lawyer.
  • Richard Seifert, 90, Swiss-British architect.
  • Gerald Solomon, 71, American businessman and politician.[77]
  • Barbara Tropp, 53, American orientalist, chef, and food writer, ovarian cancer.[78]
  • Audrey Withers, 96, English journalist.

27[]

  • Fr. Abel, 81, Indian Catholic CMI priest, cardiac arrest.
  • Maragatham Chandrasekar, 84, Indian politician and Member of Parliament.
  • Seán Condon, 78, Irish hurler.
  • Dirk Willem van Krevelen, 86, Dutch chemical engineer.
  • Pradeep Kumar, 76, Indian actor.
  • John P. Roberts, 56, American businessman, promoter of the Woodstock Festival.[79]

28[]

  • Fulvio Balatti, 63, Italian rower.
  • Richard Halsey Best, 91, United States Navy dive bomber pilot during World War II.
  • Grigory Chukhray, 80, Soviet/Russian film director and screenwriter, heart failure.
  • Jallouli Fares, 92, Tunisian politician.
  • Gerard Hengeveld, 90, Dutch pianist, composer and educator.[80]
  • Hans Hohenester, 84, German Olympic bobsledder (two-man bobsleigh at the 1956 Winter Olympics).[81]
  • Leonard Melfi, 69, American playwright and actor, congestive heart failure.
  • Sir John Mogg, 88, British army general.

29[]

  • Maura Fay, 43, Australian casting director.
  • Angelo Ippolito, 78, Italian-American painter (Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art).[82]
  • Freddie Silva, 63, Sri Lankan actor, singer.
  • K. P. Ummer, 67, Indian film actor.

30[]

31[]

  • Colin Campbell, 59, Canadian video artist.
  • Régine Cavagnoud, 31, French Olympic and World Cup alpine ski racer (2001 World Champion in Super G).[84]
  • Warren Elliot Henry, 92, American physicist, made significant contributions to radar technology and the physical properties of materials.[85]
  • Jenny Laird, 89, British actress.
  • Angus MacVicar, 93, British author.
  • Braj Kumar Nehru, 90, Indian diplomat and ambassador.[86]
  • Bill Le Sage, 74, British musician.
  • Art Wall Jr., 77, American professional golfer (1959 winner of the Masters Tournament).[87]
  • Paul Warnke, 81, American diplomat.[88]

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