Deaths in November 2011

The following is a list of notable deaths in November 2011.

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 2011

Danielle Mitterrand 1924-2011

1

  • Gumaa Al-Shawan, 74, Egyptian intelligence agent.
  • Cahit Aral, 84, Turkish engineer and politician, Minister of Industry and Commerce (1983–1987).
  • Fanny Edelman, 100, Argentine politician, President of the PCA.
  • Sam Fink, 95, American calligrapher.
  • André Hodeir, 90, French author, jazz arranger and composer.
  • Christiane Legrand, 81, French jazz singer.
  • Sergio Montiel, 84, Argentine politician, Governor of Entre Ríos (1983–1987; 1999–2003).
  • Dorothy Howell Rodham, 92, American homemaker, mother of Hillary Clinton.
  • Eilaine Roth, 82, American baseball player (AAGPBL), complications from cancer.
  • Héctor Rueda Hernández, 90, Colombian Roman Catholic prelate, Archbishop of Medellín (1991–1997).
  • Seppo Sanaksenaho, 73, Finnish politician, Mayor of Vaasa (1997–2001).
  • Katherine Siva Saubel, 91, American Cahuilla tribal leader and activist, one of the last speakers of the Cahuilla language.
  • Robert A. Scalapino, 92, American political scientist.
  • Ricardo Watty Urquidi, 73, American-born Mexican Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Tepic (since 2008), pancreatic cancer.

2

  • Sydney Andrew, 85, English industrial chemical engineer.
  • Stan Bergstein, 87, American harness racing executive.
  • Sickan Carlsson, 96, Swedish actress and singer.
  • Rijk de Gooyer, 85, Dutch actor, pancreatic cancer.
  • Ilmar Kullam, 89, Estonian Olympic silver medal-winning (1952) basketball player.
  • Lou Maletta, 74, American media executive, founder of Gay Cable Network, liver cancer.
  • Eugene Maslov, 66, Russian billiards coach.
  • Yoko Matsuoka McClain, 87, Japanese-born American professor (University of Oregon), granddaughter of Natsume Sōseki, stroke.
  • Sid Melton, 94, American character actor (The Golden Girls, Green Acres, The Danny Thomas Show), pneumonia.
  • Papa Bue, 81, Danish trombonist and bandleader.
  • Antonio Molino Rojo, 85, Spanish film actor.
  • Nikolay Saksonov, 88, Russian world champion weightlifter, Olympic silver medalist (1952).
  • Leonard Stone, 87, American actor (Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, Soylent Green, L.A. Law), cancer.
  • Lucy Tejada, 91, Colombian painter.

3

  • Matty Alou, 72, Dominican Republic-born American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates, San Francisco Giants, St. Louis Cardinals), diabetes.
  • Rosángela Balbó, 70, Mexican-Italian born actress, lung cancer.
  • Tamás Eszes, 47, Hungarian politician and paramilitary leader, suicide.
  • Bob Forsch, 61, American baseball player (St. Louis Cardinals), aortic aneurysm.
  • H. G. Francis, 75, German science fiction author.
  • Guo Tao, 85, Chinese lieutenant general.
  • Peeter Kreitzberg, 62, Estonian politician, Minister of Culture and Education (1995).
  • Justo Oscar Laguna, 82, Argentinian Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Morón (1980–2004).
  • Ivar Nørgaard, 89, Danish politician, negotiated Denmark's entry to the European Community.
  • John R. Opel, 86, American computer businessman, president and CEO of IBM.
  • Morris Philipson, 85, American book publisher and novelist.
  • Sir Timothy Raison, 82, British politician, Member of Parliament for Aylesbury (1970–1992).
  • Bruno Rubeo, 65, Italian production designer (Platoon, Driving Miss Daisy, Born on the Fourth of July), pneumonia.
  • John Young, 80, Scottish politician, MSP for West of Scotland (1999–2003).

4

  • Alfonso Cano, 63, Colombian guerrilla leader (FARC), shot.
  • Emmanuel de Bethune, 82, Belgian politician, Mayor of Kortrijk (1987–1989, 1995–2000), after long illness.
  • Arnold Green, 91, Estonian politician, President of the Estonian Olympic Committee (1989–1997).
  • Cynthia Myers, 61, American model (Playboy) and actress (Beyond the Valley of the Dolls), lung cancer.
  • Norman Foster Ramsey, Jr., 96, American physicist, Nobel Laureate (1989).
  • Andy Rooney, 92, American journalist (60 Minutes), surgical complications.
  • Theadora Van Runkle, 83, American costume designer (The Godfather Part II, Bonnie and Clyde, Bullitt), lung cancer.
  • Sarah Watt, 53, Australian film director, bone and breast cancer.
  • Tadeusz Walasek, 75, Polish Olympic silver (1960) and bronze (1964) medal-winning boxer.
  • Dieudonné Yougbaré, 94, Burkinabé Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Koupéla (1956–1995).

5

  • Mario Roberto Álvarez, 97, Argentine architect.
  • George Ansbro, 96, American radio announcer.
  • Luigi Belloli, 88, Italian Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of the Anagni-Alatri (1987–1999).
  • Franco Chillemi, 69, Italian actor and voice actor.
  • Les Daniels, 68, American writer.
  • Norton Dodge, 84, American economist and art collector.
  • Loulou de la Falaise, 63, French fashion muse and designer (Yves Saint Laurent).
  • Hannu Haapalainen, 60, Finnish ice hockey player (SM-liiga).
  • Bhupen Hazarika, 85, Indian singer.
  • Sir Gordon Higginson, 81, British educationalist and engineer.
  • Takeo Nishioka, 75, Japanese politician, Minister of Education (1988–1989) and Speaker of the House of Councillors (since 2010), pneumonia.
  • Henry D. Owen, 91, American diplomat.
  • Damaskinos Papandreou, 75, Greek-born Turkish Orthodox hierarch, Metropolitan of Hadrianopolis (since 2003).
  • Yuvan Shestalov, 74, Russian Mansi language writer.

6

  • Géza Alföldy, 76, Hungarian historian.
  • Gordon Beck, 75, British jazz pianist and composer.
  • Isaac Chocrón, 81, Venezuelan playwright.
  • Margaret Field, 89, American actress (The Man from Planet X, Captive Women, The Story of Will Rogers), cancer.
  • Philip Gould, Baron Gould of Brookwood, 61, British advertising executive and political adviser, cancer.
  • Giacomo Gualco, 75, Italian politician, President of Liguria (1990–1992).
  • Mel Hancock, 82, American politician, U.S. Representative from Missouri (1989–1997).
  • Hickstead, 15, Dutch-born Canadian show jumping horse, Olympic champion (2008), ruptured aorta.
  • Hal Kanter, 92, American screenwriter, director and producer (Julia), complications from pneumonia.
  • Peretz Kidron, 78, Israeli writer, journalist and translator.
  • Carl Nyrén, 93, Swedish architect.
  • Allan Peachey, 62, New Zealand politician, Member of Parliament for Tamaki (2005–2011), cancer.
  • William David Lindsay Ride, 85, Australian zoologist.
  • Charles Walton, 89, American electrical engineer, patentee of RFID.

7

  • James E. Barrett, 89, American federal judge.
  • Joe Frazier, 67, American boxer, World Heavyweight Champion (1970–1973), liver cancer.
  • Marie Ljalková, 90, Czech soldier, sniper of the Soviet Union.
  • Lisbeth Movin, 94, Danish actress.
  • Georgi Movsesyan, 66, Russian composer, heart attack.
  • Dov Schwartzman, 90, Russian-born Israeli Haredi rabbi and rosh yeshiva.
  • Tomás Segovia, 84, Spanish-born Mexican poet, cancer.
  • F. Springer, 79, Dutch writer.
  • Takanosato Toshihide, 59, Japanese sumo wrestler.

8

  • Jimmy Adamson, 82, British football player and coach.
  • Al Boeke, 88, American architect, developer of Sea Ranch, California, and Mililani, Hawai'i.
  • Hal Bruno, 83, American journalist, political director of ABC News (1980–1999), heart arrhythmia after a fall.
  • Gene Cantamessa, 80, American sound engineer (E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, Ghostbusters, Young Frankenstein), Oscar winner (1983).
  • Oscar Rolando Cantuarias Pastor, 80, Peruvian Roman Catholic prelate, Archbishop of Piura (1981–2006).
  • Nosson Tzvi Finkel, 68, American-born Israeli Haredi rabbi and rosh yeshiva.
  • Katherine Grant, 12th Countess of Dysart, 93, Scottish peeress.
  • Heavy D, 44, Jamaican-born American rapper ("Now That We Found Love") and actor (The Cider House Rules, Life), pulmonary embolism.
  • Ricky Hui, 65, Hong Kong actor, heart attack.
  • Sir David Jack, 87, Scottish pharmacologist.
  • Bil Keane, 89, American cartoonist (The Family Circus), heart failure.
  • Valentin Ivanov, 76, Russian football player and coach.
  • Ed Macauley, 83, American basketball player (St. Louis Hawks, Boston Celtics).
  • Jimmy Norman, 74, American rhythm and blues and jazz musician and songwriter.
  • Herbert S. Okun, 80, American diplomat.
  • Floyd Rice, 62, American football player (San Diego Chargers, Oakland Raiders), lung cancer.
  • Vladimir Shitov, 60, Russian luger.
  • Lauri Sutela, 93, Finnish military officer, Chief of Defence (1974–1983).
  • Jan Wypiorczyk, 64, Polish Olympic wrestler.

9

  • Shmuel Ben-Artzi, 96, Israeli writer, father-in-law of Benjamin Netanyahu.
  • Bob Carney, 79, American basketball player (Minneapolis Lakers).
  • Roger Christian, 75, American Olympic gold medal-winning (1960) ice hockey player.
  • Har Gobind Khorana, 89, Indian-born American biochemist, Nobel laureate (1968), natural causes.
  • Wilfred G. Lambert, 85, English historian and archaeologist.
  • Ézio Leal Moraes Filho, 45, Brazilian football player, pancreatic cancer.
  • Benny McCoy, 96, American baseball player (Detroit Tigers, Philadelphia Athletics).
  • Sir Robin Mountfield, 72, British civil servant.
  • Dani Wadada Nabudere, 79, Ugandan academic.
  • Jean-Paul Randriamanana, 52, Malagasy Roman Catholic prelate, Auxiliary Bishop of Antananarivo (since 1999).
  • Terry Willers, 76, Irish cartoonist.

10

  • Peter J. Biondi, 69, American politician, member of the New Jersey General Assembly (since 1998), mesothelioma.
  • David Boyd, 87, Australian artist.
  • Manuel Carbonell, 93, Cuban-born American sculptor.
  • Winston C. Doby, 71, American mathematician.
  • Ana Grepo, 36, Croatian model, carbon monoxide asphyxiation.
  • Barbara Grier, 78, American publisher (Naiad Press) and writer, cancer.
  • Andrei Igorov, 71, Romanian sprint canoer.
  • Ivan Martin Jirous, 67, Czech poet and dissident.
  • Alan Keen, 73, British politician, MP for Feltham and Heston (since 1992), cancer.
  • Killer Karl Kox, 80, American professional wrestler.
  • Petar Kralj, 70, Serbian actor.
  • Jacques Lataste, 89, French Olympic fencer.
  • Hiroshi Saito, 78, Japanese Olympic basketball player.
  • Andy Tielman, 75, Dutch Indorock musician, gastric cancer.
  • Adrián Yospe, 41, Argentine actor, cancer.

11

  • Dennis Alexander, 76, English footballer.
  • William Aramony, 84, American charity executive.
  • Francisco Blake Mora, 45, Mexican politician, Secretary of the Interior (since 2010), helicopter crash.
  • Domenico Tarcisio Cortese, 80, Italian Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Mileto-Nicotera-Tropea (1979–2007).
  • John Francis Donoghue, 83, American Roman Catholic prelate, Archbishop of Atlanta (1993–2004), after short illness.
  • Emory Folmar, 81, American politician, Mayor of Montgomery, Alabama (1977–1999), after long illness.
  • Michael Garrick, 78, English jazz pianist and composer, cerebral hemorrhage.
  • Fridtjof Frank Gundersen, 77, Norwegian jurist and politician.
  • Choiseul Henriquez, 51, Haitian politician.
  • Charlie Lea, 54, French-born American baseball player (Montreal Expos), heart attack.
  • Hellmut May, 90, Austrian Olympic figure skater.
  • Bernd Methe, 47, German handball referee, traffic accident.
  • Reiner Methe, 47, German handball referee, traffic accident.
  • David Myers, 73, American politician, Oklahoma State Senator (2002–2011), pneumonia.
  • Pushpa Ratna Sagar, 89, Nepalese grammarian.
  • Nick Strincevich, 96, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates, Boston Braves).

12

  • Gavin Bornholdt, 63, New Zealand Olympic sailor (1976).
  • Doyle Bramhall, 62, American blues musician, heart failure.
  • Alun Evans, 69, Welsh football administrator, General Secretary of the Football Association of Wales (1982–1995), after long illness.
  • George Hazle, 87, South African Olympic athlete.
  • Zbigniew Jaworowski, 84, Polish physicist.
  • Evelyn Lauder, 75, Austrian-born American philanthropist (The Breast Cancer Research Foundation), creator of pink ribbon symbol, complications from ovarian cancer.
  • Julius C. Michaelson, 89, American politician, Rhode Island Attorney General (1975–1979) and State Senator (1962–1974).
  • Eva Monley, 88, German-born Kenyan film location scout (Empire of the Sun, Lawrence of Arabia).
  • Peter Roebuck, 55, British-Australian cricketer and columnist, suicide by defenestration.
  • Jim Sullivan, 43, Canadian curler, world junior champion (1988), suicide.
  • Ilya Zhitomirskiy, 22, Russian-born American Internet entrepreneur, co-founder of Diaspora social network site, apparent suicide.

13

  • Nigel Abbott, 91, Australian politician, member of the Tasmanian House of Assembly for Denison (19641972).
  • Anders John Aune, 87, Norwegian politician.
  • Bobsam Elejiko, 30, Nigerian footballer, traumatic aortic rupture.
  • Guido Falaschi, 22, Argentine racing driver, racing accident.
  • Patrick Ford, 55, former Commonwealth featherweight boxing champion, heart attack.
  • Bayazit Gizatullin, 75, Russian Olympic skier.
  • Masao Nakayama, 70, Micronesian politician and diplomat, complications from a stroke.
  • Pat Passlof, 83, American painter, cancer.
  • Esperanza Pérez Labrador, 89, Cuban-born Argentine human rights activist (Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo).
  • Jamie Pierre, 38, American professional skier, avalanche.
  • Artemio Lomboy Rillera, 64, Philippine Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Bangued (1993–2005) and San Fernando de La Union (since 2005).
  • Solly Tyibilika, 32, South African rugby player, shot.

14

  • Esin Afşar, 75, Turkish singer and stage actress, leukemia.
  • Alan F. Alford, 49-50, British writer and speaker.
  • Franz Josef Degenhardt, 79, German poet, satirist, novelist and folk singer.
  • Guy Dejouany, 90, French businessman.
  • Richard Douthwaite, 69, British economist and ecologist.
  • Alf Fields, 92, English footballer (Arsenal F.C.).
  • Maurice Gaidon, 83, French Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Cahors (1987–2004).
  • Neil Heywood, 41, British businessman, poisoned.
  • Brikt Jensen, 83, Norwegian literary critic and publisher.
  • Jackie Leven, 61, Scottish musician, lung cancer.
  • John Lincoln, 95, Australian judge.
  • Cargill MacMillan Jr., 84, American billionaire businessman.
  • Peter Naigow, Liberian politician, Vice President of Liberia (1991).
  • Teresa P. Pica, 66, American academic and educator.
  • Lee Pockriss, 87, American songwriter ("Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini").
  • Jo Ann Sayers, 93, American actress.
  • Čestmír Vejdělek, 86, Czech writer.

15

  • William Arveson, 76, American mathematician.
  • Lev Borisov, 77, Russian actor, stroke.
  • Oba Chandler, 65, American convicted murderer, executed by lethal injection.
  • Antonio Eceiza, 76, Spanish film director and screenwriter.
  • Dulcie Gray, 95, English actress (Howards' Way) and novelist, bronchial pneumonia.[1]
  • John Hart, 75, English schoolmaster, first man to win Mastermind.
  • Thomas Worrall Kent, 89, Canadian journalist and public servant, cardiac arrest.
  • Moogy Klingman, 61, American rock keyboardist (Utopia) and songwriter, cancer.
  • Ingrid Sandahl, 87, Swedish Olympic gold medal-winning (1952) gymnast.
  • Karl Slover, 93, Slovak-born American actor (The Wizard of Oz)

16

  • Ruslan Akhtakhanov, 58, Chechen poet and academic, shot.
  • Hale Baugh, 87, American Olympic modern pentathlete.
  • Jacobus Duivenvoorde, 83, Dutch-born Indonesian Roman Catholic prelate, Archbishop of Merauke (1972–2004).
  • Djamel Keddou, 59, Algerian football player and manager (USM Alger).
  • Armando Morales, 84, Nicaraguan painter.
  • René A. Morel, 79, French-born American violin luthier.
  • James Fraser Mustard, 84, Canadian doctor and early childhood educator, cancer.
  • Eddy Palchak, 71, Canadian ice hockey trainer and equipment manager.
  • Maureen Swanson, 78, British actress.

17

  • John Booth, 61, Australian politician, member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly (19841991).
  • Olin Branstetter, 82, American politician, Oklahoma State Senator (1987–1991), plane crash.
  • Kurt Budke, 50, American women's basketball coach (Oklahoma State University), plane crash.
  • José de Aquino Pereira, 91, Brazilian Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of São José do Rio Preto (1968–1997).
  • Gary Garcia, 63, American musician (Buckner & Garcia).
  • Enric Garriga i Trullols, 85, Spanish Catalan independentist and defender of Occitan Nation.
  • Richard Kuh, 90, American lawyer.
  • Ng Chiau-tong, 79, Taiwanese activist, chairman of the World United Formosans for Independence (1995–2011), surgical complications.
  • Pham Van Loc, 92, Vietnamese Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Kontum (1975–1995).
  • Peter Reading, 65, English poet.
  • Charles M. Williams, 94, American professor of finance.

18

  • Mark Blaug, 84, British economist.
  • Erik Gjems-Onstad, 89, Norwegian politician and resistance member.
  • Walt Hazzard, 69, American basketball player (Los Angeles Lakers, Atlanta Hawks), complications following heart surgery.
  • David Langdon, 97, British cartoonist.
  • Jones Mwewa, 38, Zambian footballer.
  • Ülo Nugis, 67, Estonian politician and economist.
  • Paul Ezra Rhoades, 54, American spree killer, execution by lethal injection.
  • Daniel Sada, 58, Mexican author and poet, kidney disease.

19

  • Ömer Lütfi Akad, 95, Turkish film director.
  • David Bolstad, 42, New Zealand champion woodchopper.
  • Francis Cabot, 86, American gardener and horticulturist.
  • Gordon S. Clinton, 91, American politician, Mayor of Seattle (1956–1964).
  • Yvan Covent, 71, Belgian Olympic cyclist.
  • Basil D'Oliveira, 80, South African-born English cricketer.
  • Sonny Dixon, 87, American baseball player (Washington Senators, Philadelphia Athletics).
  • Russell Garcia, 95, American-born New Zealand composer.
  • Sanford Garelik, 93, American politician, President of the New York City Council (1970–1973).
  • Ladi Geisler, 83, Czech musician.
  • Michael Hastings, 73, English playwright.
  • Ira Michael Heyman, 81, American lawyer and administrator, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution (1994–2000).
  • Jack Keeney, 89, American federal prosecutor.
  • Marti Kheel, 63, American ecofeminist.
  • Pete Leichnitz, 85, Canadian ice hockey player.
  • Bjarne Lingås, 78, Norwegian Olympic boxer.
  • John Neville, 86, British-born Canadian actor (The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, The X-Files, Little Women), Alzheimer's disease.
  • Ronald E. Poelman, 83, American religious leader, head of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, age-related causes.
  • Vitaly Shlykov, 77, Russian spymaster, deputy minister of defence.
  • Peter Steinwender, 83, Austrian Olympian
  • Ruth Stone, 96, American poet.
  • Roy West, 70, Australian football player, lung cancer.

20

  • Noel Baker, 77, Australian football player.
  • Linda Bebko-Jones, 65, American politician, member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1993–2006).
  • Fabio Betancur Tirado, 73, Colombian Roman Catholic prelate, Archbishop of Manizales (1996–2010).
  • Lasse Brandeby, 66, Swedish journalist, actor and television personality.
  • Frank Leonard Brooks, 100, Canadian artist.
  • David Cargill, 75, Scottish footballer.
  • Shelagh Delaney, 72, English playwright (A Taste of Honey) and screenwriter (Dance with a Stranger), breast cancer and heart failure.
  • Theodore J. Forstmann, 71, American financier (IMG, Topps, Gulfstream) and philanthropist, brain cancer.
  • Alex Ibru, 66, Nigerian newspaper publisher and politician, Minister of Internal Affairs (1993–1995).
  • Lenny Lyles, 75, American football player (Baltimore Colts).
  • Malcolm Mackintosh, 89, British intelligence analyst.
  • Mario Martiradonna, 73, Italian footballer.
  • David Messas, 77, French rabbi.
  • Viktor Modzolevsky, 68, Russian Olympic silver (1968) and bronze-medal winning (1972) fencer, road accident.
  • Larry Munson, 89, American play-by-play radio announcer (Georgia Bulldogs), pneumonia.
  • Javier Pradera, 77, Spanish anti-Franco activist, publisher, political analyst and journalist, founder of El País.
  • Karl Aage Præst, 89, Danish football player.
  • Talaat Sadat, 57, Egyptian politician.
  • Itzhak Schneor, 85, Israeli football player and manager.>
  • Barry Steers, 84, Canadian diplomat, Ambassador to Brazil (1971–1976), Japan (1981–1989), High Commissioner to Bermuda (1976–1979).

21

  • Benjamin Abramowitz, 94, American painter, printmaker, and sculptor.
  • Dave Adams, 91, Canadian football player.
  • Syd Cain, 93, British production designer (From Russia with Love, Lolita, Frenzy).
  • Albert D. Cohen, 97, Canadian businessman.
  • Herb Capozzi, 86, Canadian businessman, sport team owner and provincial politician, tongue cancer.
  • Arie van Deursen, 80, Dutch historian.
  • Theodore Enslin, 86, American poet.
  • George Gallup, Jr., 81, American pollster, liver cancer.
  • Greg Halman, 24, Dutch baseball player (Seattle Mariners), stabbed.
  • Brian Haynes, 60, British Olympic sprint canoer.
  • Eli Hurvitz, 79, Israeli industrialist.
  • John Jukes, 88, English Roman Catholic prelate, Auxiliary Bishop of Southwark (1979–1998).
  • Jim Lewis, 84, English Olympic footballer.
  • Anne McCaffrey, 85, American fantasy writer (Dragonriders of Pern series), stroke.
  • Hal Patterson, 79, American player of Canadian football (Montreal Alouettes, Hamilton Tiger-Cats).

22

  • Svetlana Alliluyeva, 85, Soviet-born American defector and author, daughter of Joseph Stalin, colon cancer.
  • Stan Case, 59, American radio anchor (CNN Radio), road accident.
  • Pío Corcuera, 90, Argentinian football player.
  • Princess Elisabeth, Duchess of Hohenberg, 88, Luxembourgian princess.
  • Ray Flockton, 81, Australian cricketer.
  • Miguel González Avelar, 74, Mexican politician, Secretary of Public Education (1985–1988), heart and renal failure.
  • Robert E. Holthus, 77, American racehorse trainer, heart attack.
  • Carlos Jonguitud Barrios, 87, Mexican union leader and politician, Governor of San Luis Potosí (1979–1985).
  • Sena Jurinac, 90, Bosnian-born Austrian opera singer.
  • Georg Kreisler, 89, Austrian-born American cabarettist, satirist, composer and author.
  • Bud Lewis, 103, American golfer, oldest living member of the Professional Golfers' Association of America, natural causes.
  • Lynn Margulis, 73, American biologist and evolution theorist, stroke.
  • Danielle Mitterrand, 87, French activist, widow of François Mitterrand, First Lady of the French Republic (1981–1995)
  • Dorothy Morris, 89, American actress.
  • Paul Motian, 80, American jazz drummer, myelodysplastic syndrome.
  • Frank Pyke, 69, Australian footballer, sports scientist, academic and sports administrator.
  • Hans Reichel, 62, German guitarist, inventor of the daxophone.
  • Alberto Reynoso, 71, Filipino Olympic basketball player (1968).
  • Oskar Schäfer, 90, German Waffen-SS member.
  • Kristian Schultze, 66, German musician.
  • Bison Smith, 38, American professional wrestler, heart complications.
  • Himie Voxman, 99, American musician.

23

  • Sir Peter Buchanan, 86, British vice admiral and naval secretary.
  • Charles de Wolff, 79, Dutch organist and composer.
  • Montserrat Figueras, 69, Spanish soprano.
  • Oscar Griffin, Jr., 78, American journalist, winner of the 1963 Pulitzer Prize.
  • Ralph E. Haines, Jr., 98, American general, Vice Chief of Staff of the United States Army (1967–1968).
  • Huang Weilu, 94, Chinese engineer, chief designer of JL-1.
  • Luis Fernando Jaramillo Correa, 76, Colombian politician, Minister of Foreign Affairs (1990–1991).
  • Gerald Laing, 75, British pop artist and sculptor.
  • Marion Montgomery, 86, American poet.
  • Carlos Moorhead, 89, American politician, U.S. Representative from California (1973–1997), Alzheimer's disease.
  • Henry Øberg, 80, Norwegian football referee.
  • Jim Rathmann, 83, American racing driver, winner of the 1960 Indianapolis 500.
  • Joseph Sewall, 89, American politician, President of the Maine Senate (1975–1982).
  • Obrad Stanojević, 77, Serbian law professor.
  • Rafiq Tağı, 61, Azerbaijani journalist, stabbed.

24

  • Antonio Domingo Bussi, 85, Argentine general and politician, Governor of Tucumán Province, heart failure.
  • Bill Carow, 87, American Olympic speed skater.
  • Helen Forrester, 92, British-born Canadian writer.
  • Ludwig Hirsch, 65, Austrian singer and actor, suicide by self-defenestration.
  • Rauf Khalid, 53, Pakistani actor, writer, director and producer, road accident.
  • Kishenji, 53, Indian Maoist guerrilla leader, shot.
  • Imants Kokars, 90, Latvian conductor.
  • Ross McManus, 84, English musician, father of Elvis Costello.
  • Humberto Medina, 69, Mexican Olympic footballer (1968).
  • Salvatore Montagna, 40, Canadian mobster, shot.
  • Jeno Paulucci, 93, American businessman (Michelina's), pioneer of ready-made ethnic foods.
  • Anuruddha Ratwatte, 73, Sri Lankan politician and cabinet minister.
  • David Seely, 4th Baron Mottistone, 91, British aristocrat, Lord Lieutenant of the Isle of Wight (1986–1995).
  • Tatyana Shchelkanova, 74, Russian Olympic bronze medal-winning (1964) track and field athlete.
  • Johnny Williams, 76, English footballer (Plymouth Argyle).

25

  • Vasily Alekseyev, 69, Russian Olympic gold-medal winning weightlifter (1972 and 1976), heart failure.
  • Milla Baldo-Ceolin, 87, Italian physicist.
  • John Blades, 51, Australian experimental music artist.
  • Leonid Borodin, 73, Russian novelist, journalist and Soviet dissident.
  • Hugh Burnett, 87, English television producer and cartoonist.
  • Don DeVito, 72, American record company executive and producer.
  • Mihailo Đurić, 86, Serbian philosopher.
  • John Edzerza, 63, Canadian politician, Yukon MLA for McIntyre-Takhini (since 2002), leukemia.
  • Fred Etcher, 79, Canadian Olympic silver medal-winning (1960) ice hockey player.
  • Karel Hubáček, 87, Czech architect, designer of the Ještěd Tower
  • Erling Lægreid, 72, Norwegian author and journalist.
  • Judy Lewis, 76, American actress (General Hospital, The Secret Storm), daughter of Clark Gable and Loretta Young, cancer.


26

  • Judit Bognár, 72, Hungarian Olympic athlete.
  • Manon Cleary, 69, American realist painter, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
  • István Gajda, 30, Hungarian football player, road accident.
  • Ed Harrington, 70, American-born Canadian football player (Toronto Argonauts), cancer.
  • Roland Lacombe, 73, French Olympic cyclist (1960).
  • Iván Menczel, 69, Hungarian Olympic gold-medal winning (1968) footballer.
  • Mak Schoorl, 98, Dutch Olympic rower (1936).
  • Martin Schroyens, 81, Belgian footballer
  • Arthur Schultz, 78, American politician, Mayor of Joliet, Illinois (1991–2011), heart failure.

27

  • Donald Crowdis, 97, Canadian museum curator and broadcaster.
  • Len Fulford, 83, British photographer and television commercial director (Go to work on an egg, Guinness).
  • Sultan Khan, 71, Indian musician, recipient of the 2010 Padma Bhushan, kidney failure.
  • Ken Russell, 84, British film director (Women in Love, Tommy), stroke.
  • Judd Woldin, 86, American Tony Award-winning composer (Raisin), cancer.

28

  • Aruwa Ameh, 20, Nigerian footballer (Bayelsa United).
  • Jaime González, 78, Spanish Olympic sports shooter (1968, 1972, 1976, 1980).
  • Charles Hoeflich, 97, American businessman.
  • Paweł Komorowski, 81, Polish film director.
  • Charles T. Kowal, 71, American astronomer.
  • Lucio Magri, 79, Italian journalist and politician, assisted suicide.

29

  • James Atherton, 83, American photographer, cardiovascular disease.
  • Roberto Casuso, 57, Cuban Olympic handball player.
  • Annetto Depasquale, 73, Maltese Roman Catholic prelate, Titular Bishop of Aradi, Auxiliary Bishop of Malta (since 1998).
  • Donatus Djagom, 92, Indonesian Roman Catholic prelate, Archbishop of Ende (1968–1996).
  • Guillermo O'Donnell, 75, Argentine political scientist, cancer.
  • Patrice O'Neal, 41, American comedian, radio personality, and actor (Web Junk 20, Opie and Anthony), complications from stroke.
  • Mamoni Raisom Goswami, 69, Indian writer and academic, multiple organ failure.

30

  • Jules Ancion, 87, Dutch Olympic silver medal-winning (1952) field hockey player.
  • Viktor Apostolov, 49, Bulgarian Olympic hammer thrower (1988).
  • J. Blackfoot, 65, American soul singer, cancer.
  • Nelly Byl, 92, Belgian songwriter.
  • Ana Daniel, 83, Portuguese poet.
  • Vic Finkelstein, 73, South African disabled rights activist.
  • Gerd Hagman, 92, Swedish actress.
  • Charles Ingabire, Rwandan journalist, shot.
  • Leka, Crown Prince of Albania, 72, Albanian royal and politician, pretender to the Albanian throne (since 1961).
  • Peter Lunn, 97, British Olympic alpine skier (1936) and spymaster.
  • Kuldeep Manak, 62, Indian Punjabi language singer, pneumonia.
  • George McCarty, 96, American college basketball coach (New Mexico State University, UTEP).
  • Chester McGlockton, 42, American football player (Oakland Raiders, Kansas City Chiefs, Denver Broncos), apparent heart attack.
  • Zdeněk Miler, 90, Czech animator and illustrator, creator of The Mole.
  • Carl Robie, 66, American Olympic gold (1968) and silver-medal winning (1964) swimmer.
  • Benyamin Sönmez, 28, German-born Turkish cellist.
  • Bill Waller, 85, American politician, Governor of Mississippi (1972–1976), heart failure.

References

  1. "Film and stage star Dulcie Gray dies". The Stage. Retrieved 7 October 2014.
Preceded by
Deaths in 2010
Deaths by year Succeeded by
Deaths in 2012
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