Deaths in September 1995

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Contents
← August September October →

The following is a list of notable deaths in September 1995.

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.

September 1995[]

Benay Venuta
Edmond Jouhaud
Eileen Chang
Olga Ivinskaya
Halldis Moren Vesaas
Francesco Messina
Eiji Okada
Gunnar Nordahl
George S. Howard
Orville Redenbacher
Dorothy Dickson
Lenny Hambro
Seger Ellis

1[]

  • Sylvia Gytha de Lancey Chapman, New Zealand doctor, medical superintendent and welfare worker (b. 1896)[1]
  • Ernest Marke, Sierra Leonean seaman and owner of London clubs (b. 1902)[2]
  • Benay Venuta, American actress, singer, and dancer (b. 1910)[3]

2[]

3[]

4[]

  • Chuck Greenberg, American musician who led the Chicago based band Shadowfax (b. 1950)[15]
  • Edmond Jouhaud, one of four French generals who briefly staged a putsch in Algeria in April 1961 (b. 1905)[16]
  • William Kunstler, American radical lawyer and civil rights activist (b. 1919)[17]
  • John Megna, American actor, director and educator best known for the role of "Dill" in the film To Kill a Mockingbird (b. 1952)[18]

5[]

  • Donald M. Anderson, American graphic designer, calligrapher and educator (b. 1915)[19]
  • John Britten, New Zealand mechanical engineer who designed a world-record-setting motorcycle with innovative features and materials (b. 1950)[20]
  • Tom Chisari, American football coach (b. 1922)[21]
  • James "Pigmeat" Jarrett, American singer, pianist, and bluesman (c. 1900)[22]
  • Salil Chowdhury, Indian songwriter, music director, lyricist, writer, and poet (b. 1925)[23]
  • Benyamin Sueb, Indonesian actor, comedian and singer (b. 1939)[24]
  • Francis Showering, English brewer (b. 1912)[25]

6[]

  • Sergio Atzeni, Italian writer (b. 1952)[26]
  • Gianni Caldana, Italian track and field athlete who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics (b. 1913)[27]
  • Buster Mathis, American boxer (b. 1943)[28]
  • Italo Valenti, Italian sculptor (b. 1912)[29]

7[]

  • Michelangelo Borriello, Italian sports shooter and Olympic athlete (b. 1909)[30]
  • John B. Calhoun, American ethologist and behavioral researcher noted for his studies of population density and its effects on behavior (b. 1917)[31]
  • Gordon DeMarco, American writer and activist (b. 1944)[32]

8[]

  • Peter Baxandall, English audio engineer and electronics engineer known for developing the Baxandall tone control circuit (b. 1921)[33]
  • Madge Biggs, Falkland Islands librarian and politician (b. 1902)[34]
  • Paco Campos, Spanish footballer who played as a forward (b. 1916)[35]
  • Eileen Chang, Chinese-born American feminist, essayist, novelist, and screenwriter (b. 1920)[36]
  • Rose Chernin, American communist and activist of Russian birth (b. 1901)[37]
  • Olga Ivinskaya, Russian poet and writer (b. 1912)[38]
  • Safa Khulusi, Iraqi historian, novelist, poet, journalist and broadcaster (b. 1917)[39]
  • Erich Kunz, Austrian operatic bass baritone at the Vienna State Opera and Metropolitan Opera (b. 1909)[40]
  • Halldis Moren Vesaas, Norwegian poet, translator and writer of children's books (b. 1907)[41]

9[]

  • Ole Ålgård, Norwegian diplomat (b. 1921)[42]
  • Rene Anselmo, American television executive who founded Univision and PanAmSat[43]
  • Ida Carroll, British music educator, university administrator, double bassist, and composer (b. 1905)[44]
  • Jamie Whitten, American Democrat politician who represented the state of Mississippi in the United States House of Representatives from 1941 to 1995 (b. 1910)[45]

10[]

  • Harriet Bell, American advocate for disability rights (b. 1923)[46]
  • Charles Denner, French actor (b. 1926)[47]
  • Molly Hide, English cricketer (b. 1913)[48]
  • Derek Meddings, British film and television special effects designer known for his work on the James Bond film series (b. 1931)[49]
  • Shoji Suzuki, Japanese jazz clarinet player and band leader nicknamed the "Benny Goodman of Japan" (b. 1932)[50]

11[]

  • Fred Campbell, Australian politician who was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly (b. 1911)[51]
  • Georges Canguilhem, French philosopher and physician (b. 1904)[52]
  • Anita Harding, Irish-British neurologist who established the first neurogenetics research group in the United Kingdom at the UCL Institute of Neurology (b. 1952)[53]
  • Kieth O'dor, British racing driver (b. 1962)[54]
  • Jerome Theisen, American Abbot Primate of the Benedictine order of monks (b. 1930)[55]

12[]

  • Lubomír Beneš, Czech animator, director, and author, best known as the co-creator of Pat & Mat (b. 1935)[56]
  • Johnny Bothwell, American jazz alto saxophonist and bandleader (b. 1919)[57]
  • Jeremy Brett, English actor (b. 1933)[58]
  • Grahame Clark, British archaeologist who specialised in the study of Mesolithic Europe and palaeoeconomics (b. 1907)[59]
  • Alan Fraenckel, American balloonist is killed by a Mil Mi-24B attack helicopter of the Belarusian Air Force during the Gordon Bennett Cup (b. 1940)[60]
  • Larry Gales, American jazz double-bassist (b. 1936)[61]
  • Geoffrey Stokes, American journalist and writer on music and sports (b. 1940)[62]
  • John Stuart-Jervis, British-born naturalized American balloonist is killed by a Mil Mi-24B attack helicopter of the Belarusian Air Force (b. 1927)[60]

13[]

  • S. K. Amin, Indian freedom fighter and Congress politician (b. 1917)[citation needed]
  • Fritz Bennewitz, German theatre director (b. 1926)[63]
  • Walter Goetz, German, illustrator, cartoonist, and painter active in his native country and the United Kingdom (b. 1911)[64]
  • Francesco Messina, Italian sculptor (b. 1900)[65]
  • Harold Shepherdson, footballer and coach (b. 1918)[66]

14[]

  • Leon Adams, American journalist, publicist, historian and co-founder of the Wine Institute (b. 1905)[67]
  • Maurice K. Goddard, American cabinet officer for six governors of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania commits suicide (b. 1912)[68]
  • Eiji Okada, Japanese actor known for Hiroshima mon amour and The Ugly American, dies of heart failure (b. 1920)[69]

15[]

  • Harry Calder, English cricketer who was name Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1918 (b. 1901)[70]
  • Douglass Cater, American journalist, political aide, and college president (b. 1923)[71]
  • Marguerite Fawdry, British museum curator (b. 1912)[72]
  • Dietrich Hrabak, German fighter pilot (b. 1914)[73]
  • Gunnar Nordahl, Swedish footballer (b. 1921)[74]
  • Sam McCluskie, British trade unionist (b. 1932)[75]
  • Michio Watanabe, Japanese politician who served in a variety of posts, including Deputy Prime Minister of Japan (b. 1923)[76]

16[]

  • Maxine Allen, American bowler (b. 1913)[citation needed]
  • Michael Balfour, English historian and civil servant (b. 1908)[77]
  • Pierre Olaf, French actor(b. 1928)[78]

17[]

  • Gottfried Bermann Fischer, German publisher (b. 1897)[79]
  • Catherine Cobb, British jeweler and silversmith (b. 1903)[80]
  • Yehuda Getz, Israeli rabbi of the Western Wall for 27 years (b. 1924)[81]
  • Grady Sutton, American actor (b. 1906)[82]
  • Lucien Victor, Belgian cyclist (b. 1931)[83]

18[]

  • Doreen Cannon, American teacher of acting at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (b. 1930)[84]
  • Donald Davie, English Movement poet, and literary critic (b. 1922)[85]
  • George S. Howard, American conductor of The United States Air Force Band between 1947 and 1963 (b. 1902)[86]
  • Howard Swan, American choral conductor, writer, and music educator (b. 1906)[87]
  • Oleg Tverdokhleb, Ukrainian track and field athlete (b. 1969)[88]

19[]

  • Nejla Ateş, Turkish belly dancer and actress (b. 1932)[89]
  • Mr. Bo, blues guitarist and singer (b. 1932)[90]
  • Melbourne Brindle, Australian-American illustrator and painter (b. 1904)[91]
  • Walter Gross, Israeli journalist of German birth who worked for Haaretz from 1949 through 1995 (b. 1911)[92]
  • Yevgeni Nikolayevich Khludeyev, Russian cosmonaut (b. 1940)[93]
  • Sir Rudolf Peierls, German-born British physicist (b. 1907)[94]
  • Orville Redenbacher, American entrepreneur and businessman (b. 1907)[95]

20[]

  • Emmy Albus, German sprinter (b. 1911)[96]
  • Mikhail Bogdanov, Russian production designer who was nominated for an Academy Award (b. 1914)[citation needed]
  • Eulie Chowdhury, Indian architect (b. 1923)[97]
  • Walter Haas Jr., President and CEO (1958–1976) and Chairman (1970–1981) of Levi Strauss & Co (b. 1916)[98]
  • Monica Maurice, British industrialist and Managing Director and Chairman of the Wolf Safety Lamp Company, Sheffield (b. 1908)[99]

21[]

  • Andy the Clown, longtime clown associated with the Chicago White Sox (b. 1917)[100]
  • William Murray, British educationist who created the Ladybird Peter and Jane books (b. 1912)[101]
  • Rudy Perpich, American politician who was the 34th and 36th Governor of Minnesota (b. 1928)[102]
  • Peter Shankland, British documentary filmmaker, writer on naval histories and criminal trials, and World War II Royal Navy hero who was awarded an MBE (b. 1901)[103]
  • Irven Spence, American animator (b. 1909)[104]
  • Vernell Perry Townsend, American blues and gospel singer (b. 1930)[105]

22[]

  • Julio Alejandro, Spanish screenwriter (b. 1906)[106]
  • Eigil Axgil, Danish gay rights activist (b. 1922)[107]
  • Arthur Benfield, head of Cheshire CID who became famous for his investigation of the Moors murders (b. 1913)[108]
  • Dolly Collins, English folk musician, arranger and composer (b. 1933)[109]
  • Albert Goodwin, English historian (b. 1906)[110]
  • Konrad Siebach, German double bass player and music educator (b. 1912)[111]
  • Entjar Tjarmedi, Sundanese musician and composer (b. 1924)[112]

23[]

  • Thomas Beck, American film and stage actor (b. 1909)[113]
  • Carmen Bernos de Gasztold, French poet (b. 1919)[114]
  • Booker T. Laury, American boogie-woogie, blues, gospel and jazz pianist and singer (b. 1914)[115]
  • Olu Oguntala, Soho club owner of Nigerian birth (b. 1920)[116]

24[]

  • Peter Butler, New Zealand seaman, trade unionist, communist and local politician (b. 1901)[citation needed]

25[]

  • Dave Bowen, Welsh football player and manager, who captained his country to their only ever World Cup finals, in 1958 (b. 1928)[117]
  • Annie Elizabeth Delany, American dentist and civil rights pioneer (b. 1891)[118]
  • Dorothy Dickson, American actress and dancer on the London stage (b. 1893)[119]
  • Kei Tomiyama, Japanese actor, voice actor, and narrator (b. 1938)[120]

26[]

  • Flora Blanc, theatre school director and painter from Fort Worth, Texas (b. 1916)[121]
  • Jack Broadstock, Australian rules footballer (b. 1920)[122]
  • Xenia Cage, American painter, sculptor, bookbinder, conservator, and musician notable for her surrealist mobiles (b. 1913)[citation needed]
  • Lenny Hambro, American jazz musician (b. 1923)[123]
  • Lynette Roberts, Welsh poet and novelist (b. 1909)[124]

27[]

  • Baha Akşit, Turkish physician and politician (b. 1914)[citation needed]
  • Sasha Argov, Israeli composer (b. 1914)[125]
  • Jean Arnot, Australian women's rights activist, trade unionist, and librarian (b. 1903)[126]
  • Christopher Shaw, British composer (b. 1924)[127]
  • Alison Steele, American disk jockey known as 'Nightbird'[128]

28[]

  • Rabah Belamri, Algerian writer (b. 1946)[129]
  • Edgardo Coghlan, Mexican painter (b. 1928)[130]
  • Olive Gibbs, British Labour politician and anti-nuclear weapons (b. 1918)[131]
  • Eddy Grove, American actor, teacher of acting at Juilliard and Yale, and Insurance Executive (b. c.1917)[132]
  • Lynette Roberts, British poet (b. 1909)[133]

29[]

  • Alfred Felix Landon Beeston, English Orientalist (b. 1911)[134]
  • Gerd Bucerius, German politician, publisher and journalist (b. 1906)[135]
  • Michael Carr, English cricketer (b. 1933)[136]
  • Seger Ellis, American jazz pianist and vocalist (b.1904)[137]
  • Susan Fleetwood, British actress (b. 1944)[138]
  • Francis Frederick Johnson, British architect (b. 1911)[139]
  • Madalyn Murray O'Hair, American activist (b. 1919)[140]
  • George Chesterman Phillips, Royal Navy officer (b. 1904)[141]

30[]

Unknown day[]

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  3. ^ Lawrence Van Gelder (September 2, 1995). "Benay Venuta, 84, an Actress, Singer, Dancer and Sculptor". New York Times. Retrieved March 20, 2012.
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