Deaths in April 2002
Appearance
The following is a list of notable deaths in April 2002.
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.
April 2002
[edit]1
[edit]- Albert F. Canwell, 95, American politician and anti-communist.[1]
- Tonino Cervi, 72, Italian film director, screenwriter and producer, heart attack.[2]
- Simo Häyhä, 96, Finnish sniper during World War II.
- James Karales, 71, American photographer and photo-essayist.[3]
- K. V. Narayanaswamy, 78, Indian musician.
- John S. Samuel, 88, American Air Force general.[4]
2
[edit]- Levi Celerio, 91, Filipino composer and lyricist, and National Artist of the Philippines.[5]
- Vladimir Cernik, 84, Czechoslovakian tennis player.
- Ike Clarke, 87, English football player and manager.[6]
- Jack Kruschen, 80, Canadian actor (The Apartment, The War of the Worlds, Webster).[7]
- John R. Pierce, 92, American engineer and author who coined the term "transistor", pneumonia.[8]
- Betty Jane Rase, 74, American singer and songwriter, stroke.[9]
- Henry Slesar, 74, American author, playwright, and copywriter.[10]
- Shigeo Sugimoto, 75, Japanese football player.
- Robert Lawson Vaught, 75, American mathematician, and one of the founders of model theory.[11]
3
[edit]- Heinz Drache, 79, German film actor, lung cancer.[12]
- Fad Gadget, 45, English singer-songwriter, heart attack.[13]
- Roy Huggins, 87, American novelist and television producer (Maverick, The Fugitive, The Rockford Files).[14]
- Norm Lee, 81, Australian politician.
- Bobby Managoff, 84, Armenian-American professional wrestler, heart failure.
- Roy Nichols, 81, American baseball player (New York Giants).[15]
- Ernst Stojaspal, 77, Austrian football player, heart failure.
- Karl Swanson, 101, American baseball player (Chicago White Sox).[16]
4
[edit]- Leo Brooks, 54, American gridiron football player (University of Texas, Houston Oilers, St. Louis Cardinals), esophageal cancer.[17]
- Leo Laakso, 83, Finnish Olympic ski jumper.[18]
- Pierre Marchand, 62, French publisher, cancer.[19]
- Joe Massot, 69, American writer and film director.
- Qazi Mujahidul Islam Qasmi, 66, Indian Mufti, Qadhi and Islamic scholar.
- Jack Tanuan, 36, Filipino basketball player, kidney failure.
- Charles Winquist, 57, American theologian.[20]
5
[edit]- Herbert A. Cahn, 87, German-Swiss archaeologist, numismatist and antiquities-dealer.[21]
- Paul Erickson, 86, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs, Philadelphia Phillies, New York Giants).[22]
- Bargil Pixner, 81, Italian-American monk, biblical scholar and archaeologist.
- Sheriff Robinson, 80, American baseball player.[23]
- Layne Staley, 34, American singer (Alice in Chains), drug overdose.[24]
- Ben Warley, 65, American professional basketball player (Philadelphia 76ers, Baltimore Bullets, Anaheim Amigos), liver cancer.[25]
- Kim Won-gyun, 85, North Korean composer and politician, heart failure.
6
[edit]- Silvia Derbez, 70, Mexican film and television actress, lung cancer.
- Petru Dumitriu, 77, Romanian novelist.[26]
- Oliver Eggimann, 83, Swiss football player.
- Kevin Kelley, 59, American drummer (Rising Sons, The Byrds, Fever Tree).
- Ralph J. Marino, 74, American lawyer and politician from New York.[27]
- Nobu McCarthy, 67, Canadian actress, aortic aneurysm.[28]
- Martin Sperr, 57, German dramatist and actor.[29]
- Tom Sunkel, 89, American baseball player (St. Louis Cardinals, New York Giants, Brooklyn Dodgers).[30]
- Judith Wood, 95, American film actress.[31]
7
[edit]- John Agar, 81, American actor, starred in Western and Sci-Fi movies, first husband of Shirley Temple, pulmonary emphysema.[32]
- Bobby Astyr, 64, American pornographic film actor.
- Bhavanam Venkatarami Reddy, 70, Indian politician, chief minister of Andhra Pradesh.
- Georges van Coningsloo, 61, Belgian racing cyclist.[33]
- Conny Vandenbos, 65, Dutch singer, lung cancer.[34]
8
[edit]- Nigel Bagnall, 75, British field marshal, professional head of the British Army (Chief of the General Staff).[35]
- Eloy Fominaya, 76, American composer, music educator, conductor, violinist and luthier (Augusta Symphony).[36]
- María de los Angeles Felix Güereña, 88, Mexican film star, considered "the most beautiful face in the history of Mexican cinema", heart attack.[37]
- Giacomo Mancini, 85, Italian politician.
- Harvey Quaytman, 64, American painter, cancer.[38]
- Francisco Zamora Salinas, 63, El Salvador football player.
- Josef Svoboda, 81, Czech artist and scenic designer.[39]
- Laurel Rose Willson, 60, American author and con artist.
9
[edit]- Dorothy Love Coates, 74, American gospel singer, considered one of gospel's great performers.[40]
- Harold Coates, 84, Australian politician, member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly (1965–1976).[41]
- Thomas Dinger, 49, German drummer, singer and songwriter.[42]
- Roy Dwight, 69, English footballer.[43]
- Pat Flaherty, 76, American professional racecar driver, won the Indianapolis 500 in 1956.[44]
- Weldon Irvine, 58, American composer, playwright, poet, and pianist, suicide by gunshot.[45]
- Kazuo Nakamura, 75, Japanese-Canadian painter and sculptor.[46]
- Leopold Vietoris, 110, Austrian mathematician, World War I veteran, and supercentenarian.
10
[edit]- Haim Cohn, 91, Israeli jurist and politician.[47]
- Ed Fleming, 68, American professional basketball player (Niagara University, Rochester Royals, Minneapolis Lakers).[48]
- Géza Hofi, 75, Hungarian humorist.[49]
- Atanda Fatai Williams, 83, Nigerian jurist and Chief Justice of Nigeria (1979–1983).
11
[edit]- Elmer Angsman, 76, American gridiron football player (Notre Dame, Chicago Cardinals) and football color commentator, heart attack.[50]
- Branko Bauer, 81, Croatian film director.
- William Brandon, 87, American author, wrote on Native Americans and the American West.[51]
- Bubba Brooks, 79, American jazz tenor saxophonist, a member of Bill Doggett's ensemble.[52]
- Héctor Rojas Herazo, 81, Colombian novelist, poet, journalist and painter.
- Delphi Lawrence, 76, English actress.[53]
- Do Mau, 85, Vietnamese officer in the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN).
- J. William Stanton, 78, American politician (U.S. Representative for Ohio's 11th congressional district).[54]
- Stanley Weston, 82, American publisher, sportswriter, artist and photographer, cancer.[55]
12
[edit]- Hans Neurath, 92, Austrian-American biochemist and academic.[56]
- Gabriel Raksi, 63, Romanian football player.[57]
- Yadollah Sahabi, 97, Iranian scholar, writer, reformist and politician.
- Kondapalli Seetharamaiah, 87, Indian communist leader, Parkinson's disease.
- George Shevelov, 93, Ukrainian scholar.[58]
- Safet Zhulali, 59, Albanian Minister of Defence.[59]
13
[edit]- Alex Baroni, 35, Italian singer, traffic accident.
- Scipio Colombo, 91, Italian dramatic baritone, and was.[60]
- Ivan Desny, 79, RussianSwiss film actor-, appeared in more than 150 films, pneumonia.[61]
- Franz Krienbühl, 73, Swiss speed skater.[62]
- Oreste Piccioni, 86, Italian-American physicist.[63]
- Álvaro Salvadores, 73, Chilean-Spaniard basketball player.[64]
- Vlajko Stojiljković, 65, Serbian politician, suicide by gunshot.
- Desmond Titterington, 73, British racing driver from Northern Ireland.
14
[edit]- Edmée Abetel, 79, Swiss Olympic alpine skier (1952 Winter Olympics women's slalom).[65]
- Buck Baker, 83, American stock car race driver and member of the NASCAR Hall of Fame.[66]
- Gustave Blouin, 89, Canadian politician and a member of Parliament (House of Commons).[67]
- Mark Ermler, 69, Russian conductor (Bolshoi Theatre, Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra).[68]
- Joop Haex, 90, Dutch politician.[69]
- Michael Kerr, 81, British jurist.
- Monal, 21, Indian actress, suicide by hanging.[70]
- Fausto Radici, 48, Italian alpine skier, suicide by gunshot.
15
[edit]- Sándor Gáspár, 85, Hungarian communist politician and trade unionist.
- Moe Keale, 62, American musician of Hawaiian music, and actor, heart attack.
- Dave King, 72, English comedian, actor and singer.
- Damon Knight, 79, American science fiction author, editor and critic.[71]
- Hans-Henrik Krause, 84, Danish actor and film director.
- Ram Singh Thakur, 87, Indian freedom fighter, musician and composer.
- Byron White, 84, American lawyer and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, pneumonia.[72]
16
[edit]- Billy Ayre, 49, English footballer, cancer.[73]
- Ramiro de León Carpio, 60, Guatemalan politician, diabetic coma.
- Janusz Kasperczak, 74, Polish Olympic boxer.[74]
- Claudio Slon, 58, Brazilian jazz drummer, lung cancer.
- Marcel Stern, 80, Swiss competitive sailor and Olympic medalist.[75]
- Robert Urich, 55, American actor (Vega$, Spenser: For Hire, Lonesome Dove, S.W.A.T.), cancer.[76]
- Hugh Franklin Waters, 69, American judge (U.S. District Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Arkansas).[77]
- Herbert Wernicke, 56, German opera director and set and costume designer.[78]
17
[edit]- James Copeland, 83, Scottish actor (The 39 Steps, The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes).[79]
- Betsy Curtis, 84, American science fiction and fantasy writer.[80]
- Srul Irving Glick, 67, Canadian composer, radio producer, and conductor.[81]
- Stevan Kragujević, 80, Serbian photojournalist and art photographer.
18
[edit]- Mitsos Dimitriou, 54, Greek football player.
- Jerry Heidenreich, 52, American competition swimmer and Olympic champion, suicide by drug overdose.[82]
- Thor Heyerdahl, 87, Norwegian anthropologist, brain cancer.[83]
- Wayne Hightower, 62, American basketball player, heart attack.
- Cy Laurie, 75, British musician.
- Wahoo McDaniel, 63, American gridiron football player and wrestler, complications from diabetes and kidney failure.[84]
19
[edit]- William E. Barber, 82, U.S. Marine Corps colonel and Medal of Honor recipient, bone marrow cancer.[85]
- Alberto Beltrán, 79, Mexican painter, engraver and political cartoonist.[86]
- Jean-Pierre Destrumelle, 61, French football player and manager.[87]
- Reginald Rose, 81, American film and television writer, complications of heart failure.[88]
- Ross Whicher, 84, Canadian politician and businessman (member of Parliament representing Bruce, Ontario).[89]
20
[edit]- Vlastimil Brodský, 81, Czech actor, suicide by gunshot.[90]
- Alan Dale, 76, American singer ("Heart of My Heart", "Cherry Pink and Apple Blossom White").[91]
- Joe Geri, 77, American gridiron football player.[92]
- Sarvepalli Gopal, 78, Indian historian, renal failure.[93]
- Stig-Göran Johansson, 58, Swedish ice hockey player.[94]
- Pierre Rapsat, 53, Belgian singer-songwriter, cancer.[95]
21
[edit]- Sam Dente, 79, American baseball player (Boston Red Sox, St. Louis Browns, Washington Senators, Chicago White Sox, Cleveland Indians).[96]
- Thomas Joseph Grady, 87, American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church.
- Verné Lesche, 84, Finnish speed skater.
- Mohammad Nabi Mohammadi, 65, Afghan politician and mujahideen leader.
- Red O'Quinn, 76, American professional football player (Wake Forest, Chicago Bears, Philadelphia Eagles).[97]
- Ogden Phipps, 93, American stockbroker, thoroughbred horse racing owner/breeder and philanthropist.[98]
- Terry Walsh, 62, British stuntman.
22
[edit]- Albrecht Becker, 95, German production designer and actor.
- Janet Fox, 89, American actress (Stage Door, Dinner at Eight).[99]
- Soja Jovanović, 80, Serbian and Yugoslav film director.
- Linda Lovelace, 53, American porn star turned political activist, car crash.[100]
- Fran Minkoff, 87, American lyricist.
- Allen Morris, 92, American historian.[101]
- Christopher Price, 34, English journalist and presenter, meningoencephalitis.
- Victor Weisskopf, 93, Austrian-American theoretical physicist, worked on the Manhattan Project.[102]
23
[edit]- Bob Baker, 75, American heavyweight boxer.[103]
- Bob Faught, 82, American professional basketball player (University of Notre Dame, Cleveland Rebels).[104]
- Sam Francis, 88, American football player (Nebraska, Chicago Bears, Brooklyn Dodgers) and coach, and Olympic shot putter.[105]
- Ted Kroll, 82, American professional golfer, won eight PGA Tour events, Parkinson's disease.[106]
- Tibor Simon, 36, Hungarian football player and manager, blunt trauma.[107]
24
[edit]- Gloria Escoffery, 78, Jamaican artist, poet, teacher, art critic and journalist.[108]
- Barbara Grizzuti Harrison, 67, American journalist, essayist and memoirist, COPD.[109]
- Eric McKitrick, 82, American historian.
- Robert McQueeney, 83, American actor.[110]
- Lucien Wercollier, 93, Luxembourg sculptor.[111]
- Nadezhda Zhurkina, 81, Russian radio operator and gunner during World War II.
25
[edit]- Michael Bryant, 74, British actor (Mumsy, Nanny, Sonny and Girly, The Stone Tape, The Ruling Class, Gandhi).[112]
- Mario Casilli, 71, American photographer.
- Indra Devi, 102, Russian "yoga teacher to the stars".[113]
- Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes, 30, American singer and member of girl group TLC, car crash.[114]
- Athanasios Papoulis, 81, Greek-American engineer and applied mathematician.
26
[edit]- Vincenzo Caianiello, 69, Italian jurist.
- Alton Coleman, 46, American convicted spree killer, execution by lethal injection.[115]
- John Davis, 86, American baseball player (New York Giants).[116]
- Del Sharbutt, 90, American radio announcer.[117]
- Tore Svensson, 74, Swedish football goalkeeper.
- Steve Tshwete, 63, South African politician and activist, pneumonia and liver failure.[118]
27
[edit]- Guila Bustabo, 86, American concert violinist.[119]
- George Alec Effinger, 55, American science fiction writer (When Gravity Fails, "Schrödinger's Kitten").[120]
- Ruth Handler, 85, inventor of the Barbie doll, colorectal cancer.[121]
- Robert L. Joseph, 79, American theatre producer, playwright, and screenwriter.[122]
- Arthur Owen, 87, British racing driver (born 1915).
- Hans Heinrich Thyssen-Bornemisza, 81, German Industrialist and art collector, cardiovascular disease.
- Felix Villars, 81, Swiss-American emeritus professor of physics at MIT.[123]
- Jerry Witte, 86, American baseball player (St. Louis Browns).[124]
28
[edit]- Albert Béchard, 79, Canadian politician and a member of Parliament (House of Commons for Bonaventure, Quebec).[125]
- Robert M. Gagné, 85, American educational psychologist.
- Alexander Lebed, 52, Russian general and politician, aviation accident.[126]
- Peter Parker, 77, British businessman.[127]
- Liu Qiong, 88, Chinese film director and actor, liver cancer.[128]
- Lou Thesz, 86, American professional wrestler, complications caused by triple bypass surgery.[129]
- John Wilkinson, 82, American sound mixer (Platoon, Saturday Night Fever, Days of Heaven), Oscar winner (1987).[130]
- Gordon Willey, 89, American anthropologist, known for creation of the field of "settlement pattern studies".[131]
29
[edit]- Bob Akin, 66, American businessman and professional race car driver (two-time Sebring winner).[132]
- Sune Andersson, 81, Swedish football player and manager (gold medal winner in football at the 1948 Summer Olympics).[133]
- Sverre Bratland, 84, Norwegian military leader and commander during the invasion of Normandy during World War II.[134]
- Michael Camille, 44, English art historian, specializing in art of the European Middle Ages, brain tumor.[135]
- Noel DaCosta, 72, Nigerian-Jamaican composer, jazz violinist, and choral conductor.[136]
- Santiago Álvarez Gómez, 89, Spanish communist politician.[137]
- Ihar Hermianchuk, 41, Belarusian journalist and political activist, cancer.
- Pete Jacobsen, 51, English jazz pianist.[138]
- Stan Lynn, 73, English football player.[139]
- Lor Tok, 88, Thai, comedian and actor Thailand National Artist.
30
[edit]- Kathryn Albertson, 93, American philanthropist.[140]
- Howard Alvin Crum, 79, American botanist, expert on North American bryoflora.
- Ida Engel, 98, American actress, television commercial star in her 90s.[141]
- Leslie Melville, 100, Australian economist, academic and public servant.
- Robert Mosley, 74 or 75, American bass-baritone.
- Nitsa Tsaganea, 100, Greek actress of theatre and film.
- Charlotte von Mahlsdorf, 74, German LGBT writer and museum director, heart attack.[142]
References
[edit]- ^ Oliver, Myrna (April 8, 2002). "Albert F. Canwell, 95; Anti-Communist Zealot". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 20, 2019.
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- ^ Stuart Lavietes (May 23, 2002). "Jack Kruschen, 80, a Stalwart Of Radio, TV and the Movies". The New York Times. p. C 14. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
- ^ Oliver, Myrna (April 8, 2002). "John Pierce, 92; Engineer, Inventor, Teacher, Author". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
- ^ Cromelin, Richard (April 13, 2002). "B.J. Baker, 74; Backed Top Singers of '50s, '60s". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 12, 2019.
- ^ "Henry Slesar - Social Networks and Archival Context". snaccooperative.org. Retrieved October 22, 2023.
- ^ "IN MEMORIAM Robert Lawson Vaught Professor of Mathematics, Emeritus UC Berkeley 1926 – 2002". University of California Academic Senate. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
- ^ "Heinz Drache". catalogue.bnf.fr (in French). Bibliothèque nationale de France. Retrieved October 22, 2023.
- ^ Perrone, Pierre (April 8, 2002). "Fad Gadget". The Independent, London. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
- ^ William H. Honan (April 6, 2002). "Roy Huggins, Creator of Hits In TV's First Years, Dies at 87". The New York Times. p. A 16. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
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- ^ "Pierre Marchand". data.bnf.fr (in French). Bibliothèque nationale de France. Retrieved October 22, 2023.
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- ^ Robert D. McFadden (April 8, 2002). "Ralph J. Marino, Former State Senate Leader, Dies at 74". The New York Times. p. B 7. Retrieved October 25, 2023.
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- ^ "Damon Knight, 79, a Writer And Editor of Science Fiction". The New York Times. April 17, 2002. p. A 21. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
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- ^ "Billy Ayre". worldfootball.net. Retrieved October 22, 2023.
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- ^ "Olympedia – Marcel Stern". olympedia.org. OlyMADMen. Retrieved October 22, 2023.
- ^ "Urich Recalled as Actor and Friend". Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. April 20, 2002. Retrieved April 29, 2019.
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- ^ Sutcliffe, Tom (April 19, 2002). "Herbert Wernicke". The Guardian. Retrieved April 30, 2019.
- ^ "James Copeland". The Herald, Glasgow, Scotland. April 23, 2002. Retrieved April 2, 2019.
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- ^ "Srul Irving Glick - Social Networks and Archival Context". snaccooperative.org. Retrieved October 22, 2023.
- ^ Keller, Julia (May 17, 2002). "The descent of an Olympic champion". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on November 3, 2021. Retrieved August 17, 2024.
- ^ John Noble Wilford (April 19, 2002). "Thor Heyerdahl Dies at 87; His Voyage on Kon-Tiki Argued for Ancient Mariners". The New York Times. p. A 25. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
- ^ "Wahoo McDaniel Stats - Pro-Football-Reference.com". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved October 22, 2023.
- ^ Douglas Martin (April 26, 2002). "W.E. Barber, 82, Medal Winner in Korea Siege". The New York Times. p. A 27. Retrieved March 13, 2019.
- ^ "Alberto Beltran Garcia, 80; Political Cartoonist and Engraver in Mexico". Los Angeles Times. April 23, 2002. Retrieved March 14, 2019.
- ^ "matchID - Jean-Pierre Destrumelle". Fichier des décès (in French). Retrieved October 22, 2023.
- ^ Tina Kelley (April 21, 2002). "Reginald Rose, 81, TV Writer Noted for 'Twelve Angry Men'". The New York Times. p. 1 40. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
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- ^ Bergan, Ronald (May 7, 2002). "Vlastimil Brodsky". The Guardian. Retrieved March 18, 2019.
- ^ "Alan Dale, 75; Pop Singer Hosted Early TV Variety Show". Los Angeles Times. April 25, 2002. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
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