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Deaths in May 2001

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The following is a list of notable deaths in May 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.

May 2001Edit

1Edit

  • Happy Hairston, 58, American professional basketball player (Cincinnati Royals, Detroit Pistons, Los Angeles Lakers).[1]
  • Ernie Pomfret, 60, British middle-distance runner.
  • Richardson Pratt Jr, 78, American businessman, pancreatic cancer.
  • Ernie Wheelwright, 61, American football player.
  • Jason Miller, 62, American actor (The Exorcist, Rudy) and playwright (That Championship Season), Tony winner (1973), heart attack.

2Edit

  • Dick Jamieson, 63, American minor league baseball player, professional football player (Baltimore Colts, New York Titans) and football coach (Indiana State University).[2]
  • Howard Kahane, 73, American professor of philosophy.[3]
  • Gina Mastrogiacomo, 39, American actress, myocarditis.
  • Ted Rogers, 65, British comedian, complications after open-heart surgery.[4]
  • Theodore Roosevelt III, 86, American banker and government official.
  • Henry Zolinsky, 97, American poet.

3Edit

  • Byrd Brown, 71, American civil rights leader, activist and lawyer.[5]
  • Philip George Houthem Gell, 86, British immunologist.[6]
  • Billy Higgins, 64, American jazz drummer.[7]
  • Karel Kalaš, 90, Czech operatic bass and actor.
  • Princess Rosemary of Salm-Salm, 97, German noblewoman.
  • Hank Schmulbach, 76, American baseball player.[8]

4Edit

  • Anne Anastasi, 92, American psychologist.[9]
  • Bonnie Lee Bakley, 44, American socialite, shot.
  • Gene Grabosky, 64, American professional football player (Syracuse University, Buffalo Bills).[10]
  • Rita Lawrence, 90, British pianist and singer.
  • Stan Newsham, 69, English footballer.
  • Arne Sucksdorff, 84, Swedish film director, pneumonia.

5Edit

  • Charles Black, 85, American constitutional scholar.[11]
  • Boozoo Chavis, 70, American accordion player, singer, songwriter and bandleader (Zydeco).[12]
  • Morris Graves, 90, American expressionist painter.[13]
  • Jules Halfant, 91, American painter and printmaker.
  • Roger P. Hill, British Royal Navy officer during World War II.
  • Cliff Hillegass, 83, American creator of CliffsNotes, stroke.[14]
  • Bill Homeier, 82, American racecar driver (three Indianapolis 500s).[15]
  • David Jamieson, 80, British Army officer, recipient of the Victoria Cross.[16]
  • Agnes Nanogak, 75, Canadian Inuk artist.
  • Aleksandr Petrov, 61, Soviet/Russian basketball player.
  • Wang Yinglai, 93, Chinese biochemist.

6Edit

  • Weldon B. Gibson, 84, American economist and an executive at SRI International.[17]
  • Mike Hazlewood, 59, English singer, composer and songwriter, heart attack.
  • Laïty Kama, 62, Senegalese lawyer and president of the ICTR.
  • Karl Wilhelm Krause, 90, German Waffen-SS officer.
  • Cecil Price, 63, American deputy sheriff and Ku Klux Klan member, fall from a piece of equipment.[18]

7Edit

  • Malati Bedekar, 96, Indian writer.
  • Prem Dhawan, 77, Indian lyricist, music composer, and actor of Bollywood, cardiac arrest.
  • Edwin Finckel, 83, American jazz pianist, composer (George White's Scandals) and music educator.[19]
  • Joseph Greenberg, 85, American linguist, known for his work on linguistic typology and the genetic classification of languages.[20]
  • Dick Kimble, 85, American baseball player.[21]
  • Margaretha Krook, 75, Swedish actress.
  • Jesús Rosas Marcano, 71, Venezuelan journalist, poet and composer of folk songs.
  • Boris Ryzhy, 26, Russian poet and geologist, suicide.
  • Simon Slåttvik, 83, Norwegian Olympic skier (gold medal winner of the Nordic combined at the 1952 Winter Olympics).[22]
  • Al Tucker, 58, American basketball player.
  • Arthur Christopher Watson, 74, British diplomat.

8Edit

  • Larry Hornung, 55, Canadian ice hockey player.[23]
  • Hyman Kreitman, 86, British businessman, philanthropist and art collector.
  • John McMahon, 83, Australian-English cricket player.
  • Wilhelm Meentzen, 86, German naval officer.
  • Piero Natoli, 53, Italian actor and film director.
  • Clay King Smith, 30, American convicted murderer, execution by lethal injection.

9Edit

  • Jay Bailey, American chemical engineer.
  • Marie Cardinal, 72, French novelist.
  • Saul Elkins, 93, American film producer, writer and director.
  • Andrés Framini, 86, Argentine labor leader and politician.
  • Nikos Sampson, 65, Cypriot politician, de facto President of Cyprus (1974).
  • Leslie Sands, 79, British actor.
  • William T. Stearn, 90, British botanist.
  • Smokey Yunick, 77, American mechanic and car designer, leukemia.[24]

10Edit

  • Dorothy Burr Thompson, 100, American classical archaeologist and art historian.[25]
  • Turi Ferro, 80, Italian actor (Liolà, The Seduction of Mimi, Malizia).[26]
  • John H. Maloney, 83, Canadian politician and physician.
  • James E. Myers, 81, American songwriter ("Rock Around the Clock"), actor and director.[27]
  • Sudhakarrao Naik, 66, Indian politician.
  • M. Krishnan Nair, 74, Indian film director.
  • Frank Newby, 75, English structural engineer.
  • Arthur Tange, 86, Australian public servant.
  • Alison Waley, 100, New Zealand poet, journalist artist and writer.
  • Deborah Walley, 57, American actress (Gidget Goes Hawaiian, Beach Blanket Bingo, Spinout) and voice-over artist, esophageal cancer.[28]

11Edit

  • Douglas Adams, 49, British author, works included The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, the two Dirk Gently novels and serials in the series Doctor Who, heart attack.[29]
  • Jesús Aguirre, 66, Spanish intellectual, Jesuit priest, and aristocrat, pulmonary embolism.
  • Michael J. Bird, 72, British writer.
  • Guy Carlton, 47, American Olympic weightlifter (bronze medal winner in heavyweight weightlifting at the 1984 Summer Olympics).[30]
  • Shahid Kabir, 69, Indian poet and writer.
  • Henry Katzman, 89, American musician, composer and painter.
  • Emmett Watson, 82, American newspaper columnist.

12Edit

  • Ollie Cline, 75, American gridiron football player.
  • Perry Como, 88, American singer, actor and television personality.[31]
  • Didi, 72, Brazilian footballer, pneumonia.[32]
  • Juanita Martínez, 76, Argentine vedette.
  • Simon Raven, 73, British writer.[33]
  • Eleanor Sayre, 85, American curator and art historian.[34]
  • Norman C. Skogstad, 80, United States Army Air Forces flying ace during World War II.
  • Alexei Tupolev, 75, Soviet aircraft designer.[35]
  • Corissa Yasen, 27, professional basketball player, suicide.

13Edit

  • Eddra Gale, 79, American actress (8½, What's New Pussycat?, The Graduate, I Love You, Alice B. Toklas, Somewhere in Time).[36]
  • Salvador Garmendia, 72, Venezuelan author,.
  • Peter Garthwaite, 91, English forester.[37]
  • Kinfe Gebremedhin, Ethiopian Chief of Security and Immigration, murdered.
  • Paweł Hertz, 82, Polish writer, poet, and publisher.
  • Jason Miller, 62, American playwright and actor, heart attack.[38]
  • R. K. Narayan, 94, Indian writer.[39]
  • Ray Straw, 67, English footballer.
  • Ralph Tabakin, 79, American actor.

14Edit

  • Mauro Bolognini, 78, Italian film and stage director.
  • Eric Bradbury, 80, British comic artist.
  • Alex Glasgow, 65, English singer-songwriter (On Your Way, Riley!, When the Boat Comes In).[40]
  • Peter Griffith, 67, American child actor.
  • Gil Langley, 81, Australian Test cricketer and politician.
  • Loften Mitchell, 82, American playwright and theatre historian.[41]
  • Armando Nannuzzi, 75, Italian cinematographer and camera operator.
  • Ettore Puricelli, 84, Uruguayan-Italian football player and manager.
  • Mohammed Abdullah Saleh, 71-72, Yemeni major general.
  • Frank Savickas, 66, American politician.

15Edit

  • Jean-Philippe Lauer, 99, French architect and Egyptologist.
  • Juracy Magalhães, 95, Brazilian military officer and politician.
  • Ralph Miller, 82, American college basketball coach.[42]
  • Bobby Murdoch, 56, Scottish professional footballer, stroke.
  • William Oates, 71, English first-class cricketer.
  • Georgy Shakhnazarov, 76, Soviet-Armenian politician and political scientist.

16Edit

  • Charles Coe, 77, American amateur golfer.
  • Loren C. Dunn, 70, American Mormon general authority.
  • Prince Ital Joe, 38, Dominican-American reggae artist, car accident.
  • Brian Pendleton, 57, British guitarist (The Pretty Things), lung cancer.[43]
  • Reg Kesler, 81, Canadian rodeo rider.

17Edit

  • Ike Brown, 59, American baseball player.[44]
  • Alexander Cave, 100, British anatomist.[45]
  • Ikuma Dan, 77, Japanese composer.
  • Enid Hattersley, 96, English Labour Party politician and Lord Mayor of Sheffield.[46]
  • Robert Knapp, 77, American actor (Days of Our Lives, Dragnet, Gunsmoke, The F.B.I.).[47]
  • Jacques-Louis Lions, 73, French mathematician.
  • Murray Murdoch, 96, Canadian ice hockey player and coach.[48]
  • Frank G. Slaughter, 93, American novelist and physician.[49]

18Edit

  • Hazel Larsen Archer, 80, American photographer.
  • Rosa Beddington, 45, British biologist, cancer.[50]
  • Stella Mary Newton, 100, British fashion designer and dress historian.
  • Maurice Noble, 90, American animation artist and designer.[51]
  • William A. S. Ouderland, 83, Dutch-Australian commando officer.
  • Seán Mac Stíofáin, 73, English-Irish chief of staff of the Provisional IRA.
  • Alan Westerman, 88, Australian public servant.
  • Robert F. Woodward, 92, American diplomat.[52]

19Edit

  • Freddy Derby, 61, Surinamese politician and trade unionist.
  • John Joseph Egan, 84, American Roman Catholic priest and social activist.[53]
  • Joe Graydon, 82, American big band vocalist, television host, personal manager and concert producer.[54]
  • Josef Haunzwickel, 86, Austrian Olympic athlete (men's pole vault at the 1936 Summer Olympics).[55]
  • Patricia Hilliard, 85, British stage and film actress.
  • Joe Lovitto, 50, American baseball player.[56]
  • Susannah McCorkle, 55, American jazz singer.[57]
  • Barry Morris, 66, Australian politician.
  • Viktor Petermann, 84, German Luftwaffe flying ace during World War II.
  • Mike Sammes, 73, English musician and vocal session arranger.
  • John Warner, 78, British actor.

20Edit

  • Carl Eric Almgren, 88, Swedish Army general.
  • Renato Carosone, 81, Italian musician.[58]
  • Zhang Jun, 34, Chinese robber and serial killer, executed.
  • Bob Keely, 91, American baseball coach, scout and player.[59]
  • Carlos Lara, 66, Argentine-Mexican footballer and coach.
  • Art Mergenthal, 80, American gridiron football player.
  • Bud Thomas, 90, American baseball player.[60]

21Edit

  • Erkin Bairam, 43, Cypriot-born New Zealand economist.
  • Philip W. Buchen, 85, American attorney and White House Counsel.[61]
  • Mel Hoderlein, 77, American baseball player.[62]
  • Bob Johnson, 65, Australian rules footballer.
  • Heinz Kamnitzer, 84, German writer and historian.
  • George Malcher, 86, Polish writer, historian, and political analyst.
  • Johnny Rainford, 70, English professional footballer.
  • Gabriele Rumi, 61, Italian Formula One team owner, cancer.
  • Tad Szulc, 74, Polish-American journalist.[63]
  • Graham Webster, 87, British archaeologist.

22Edit

  • Lorez Alexandria, 71, American jazz singer.
  • Katharine Bartlett, 93, American physical anthropologist.
  • Jenő Fock, 85, Hungarian communist politician, prime minister (1967-1975).
  • Ralph Hamner, 84, American baseball player.[64]
  • Dmitry Loza, 79, Ukrainian Red Army officer.
  • Whitman Mayo, 70, American actor (Sanford and Son), heart attack.[65]
  • Jack Watling, 78, British actor (The Plane Makers, The Power Game, Pathfinders).[66]

23Edit

  • Ibrahim Abu-Lughod, 72, Palestinian-born American academic.
  • Jean Champion, 84, French film actor.
  • Lita Chevret, 92, American actress.
  • Lee Chiaw Meng, 64, Singaporean politician, cancer.
  • Tommy Eyre, 51, British keyboardist.
  • Walter Eytan, 90, Israeli diplomat.[67]
  • Bob Gaona, 70, American professional football player (Pittsburgh Steelers, Philadelphia Eagles).[68]
  • Douglas Gardiner, 96, Australian architect.
  • Chuck Gelatka, 87, American professional football player (Mississippi State, New York Giants).[69]
  • Boris Gyuderov, 74, Bulgarian Olympic volleyball player (1964).[70]
  • Arno Mohr, 90, German painter and graphic artist.
  • Alessandro Natta, 83, Italian communist politician.
  • Ridvan Qazimi, 37, Kosovar Albanian insurgent nationalist, K.I.A.
  • P. Ramachandran, 79, Indian politician, Governor of Kerala.[71]
  • Harry Townes, 86, American actor (Finian's Rainbow, Gunsmoke, The Twilight Zone, Star Trek) and an Episcopalian priest.[72]
  • Arseny Vorozheykin, 88, Soviet/Russian fighter ace during World War II.

24Edit

  • Lucy Boscana, 85, Puerto Rico actress.
  • Elvin Hutchison, 88, American football player and official.
  • Paul Kor, 74, Israeli painter and children's writer.
  • Margarita Liberaki, 82, Greek writer and dramatist.
  • Patricia Robertson, 38, American physician and a NASA astronaut, plane crash.
  • Javier Urruticoechea, 49, Spanish footballer, car crash.

25Edit

  • Edmund Kara, 75, American fashion illustrator, designer, and sculptor.
  • Alberto Korda, 72, Cuban photographer.
  • Arturo Maly, 61, Argentine actor.
  • Malcom McLean, 87, American businessman and shipper.
  • Fadil Nimani, 34, Kosovar Albanian insurgent nationalist, K.I.A.
  • Brian Pendleton, 57, British guitarist, and member of Pretty Things.
  • Sir Harold Ridley, 94, British ophthalmologist.
  • Paladine Roye, 54, Native American painter.

26Edit

  • Vittorio Brambilla, 63, Italian Formula One race car driver.[73]
  • Anne Haney, 67, American actress (Mrs. Doubtfire, The American President, Liar Liar), heart failure.[74]
  • Moven Mahachi, 53, Zimbabwean Minister of Defence of the Republic of Zimbabwe.[75]
  • Hal Moe, 91, American gridiron football player and coach.

27Edit

  • Raymond Andrew, 79, British physicist.
  • Ramon Bieri, 71, American actor (Sarge, Room 222, Daniel Boone, Gunsmoke).[76]
  • Helen Oakley Dance, 88, Canadian-American jazz journalist, record producer, and music historian.[77]
  • Victor Kiam, 74, American entrepreneur, TV spokesman (Remington Products) and owner of the New England Patriots football team (1988–1991).[78]
  • Ralph Nichols, 90, English badminton player.
  • Agda Rössel, 90, Swedish politician.
  • Robert H. Scanlan, American civil and aeronautical engineer.
  • Jack Scowen, 65, Canadian politician.
  • Nikolai Yeremenko Jr., 52, Soviet/Russian actor and film director.

28Edit

  • Tony Ashton, 55, English rock pianist, music producer and artist.[79]
  • Francis Bebey, 71, Cameroonian writer and composer.[80]
  • Richard Borgnis, 90, English cricketer and Royal Navy officer.
  • Italo Cappabianca, 64, American politician.
  • Joe Moakley, 74, American politician, member of the United States House of Representatives from Massachusetts's 9th congressional district (1973 – 2001).[81]
  • Vulimiri Ramalingaswami, 79, Indian medical scientist.
  • Rockets Redglare, 52, American character actor and comedian (After Hours, Desperately Seeking Susan).[82]
  • Elizabeth S. Russell, 88, American geneticist.
  • Francisco Varela, 54, Chilean biologist, philosopher and neuroscientist.[83]

29Edit

  • John Fleming, 81, British art historian.[84]
  • Eddie Forrest, 79, American professional football player (San Francisco 49ers).[85]
  • Akira Fujita, 93, Japanese Olympic water polo player (men's water polo at the 1932 Summer Olympics).[86]
  • Peter MacLeod, 70, Canadian politician and farmer.
  • Charley Pell, 60, American college football player and coach, lung cancer.[87]
  • Hédi Temessy, 76, Hungarian actress.

30Edit

  • Werner Fricker, 65, German-American soccer player and official.
  • Terry Gathercole, 65, Australian Olympic swimmer (silver medal winner of the men's 4 x 100 metre medley relay at the 1960 Summer Olympics).[88]
  • Inderjit Singh Gill, 79, Indian Army officer.
  • Adrian Hastings, 71, British Roman Catholic priest and historian.
  • Nikolai Korndorf, 54, Russian-Canadian composer and conductor.
  • John Pickering, 56, English footballer.
  • Jaime Benítez Rexach, 92, Puerto Rican author, academic and politician.[89]
  • Renée Schuurman, 61, South African tennis player.
  • Rajko Tomović, 81, Serbian and Yugoslav scientist.
  • Denis Whitaker, 86, Canadian athlete, soldier, and author.[90]

31Edit

  • Arlene Francis, 93, American actress, radio and television talk show host, and game show panelist (What's My Line?), alzheimer's disease and cancer.[91]
  • Jagannath Kaushal, 86, Indian politician.
  • Li Kwoh-ting, 91, Taiwanese economist and politician.[92]
  • Tex McKenzie, 70, American professional wrestler, abdominal aortic aneurysm.
  • Nancy Stevenson, 72, American politician.
  • Rosemary Verey, 82, English garden designer.[93]

ReferencesEdit

  1. ^ Edward Wong (May 2, 2001). "Happy Hairston, 58, Forward On Champion Lakers Team". The New York Times. p. C 15. Retrieved August 7, 2021.
  2. ^ "Dick Jamieson". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
  3. ^ Paul Lewis (May 22, 2001). "Howard Kahane, 73, Philosopher Who Advanced a School of Logic". The New York Times. p. C 18. Retrieved February 13, 2021.
  4. ^ Barker, Dennis (May 4, 2001). "Ted Rogers". The Guardian. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
  5. ^ Pitz, Marylynne (May 4, 2001). "Lawyer Byrd Brown dies; giant in civil rights struggle". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved January 20, 2019.
  6. ^ Hopkins, John (May 22, 2001). "Philip Gell". The Guardian. Retrieved January 26, 2019.
  7. ^ Ben Ratliff (May 4, 2001). "Billy Higgins, 64, Jazz Drummer With Melodic and Subtle Swing". The New York Times. p. A 23. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
  8. ^ "Hank Schmulbach". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved January 1, 2019.
  9. ^ Erica Goode (May 16, 2001). "Anne Anastasi, the 'Test Guru' of Psychology, Is Dead at 92". The New York Times. p. C 19. Retrieved February 13, 2021.
  10. ^ "Gene Grabosky". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  11. ^ Robert D. McFadden (May 8, 2001). "Charles L. Black Jr., 85, Constitutional Law Expert Who Wrote on Impeachment, Dies". The New York Times. p. B 10. Retrieved December 30, 2018.
  12. ^ Thurber, Jon (May 7, 2001). "Boozoo Chavis; Leader in Zydeco Music Scene". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 20, 2019.
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  74. ^ Oliver, Myrna (June 7, 2001). "Anne Haney; Actress". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 8, 2019.
  75. ^ Meldrum, Andrew (May 27, 2001). "Second Mugabe minister dies in a car crash". The Guardian. Retrieved January 8, 2019.
  76. ^ "Ramon A. Bieri". Hartford Courant, Legacy.com. June 3, 2001. Retrieved January 8, 2019.
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  78. ^ Jayson Blair (May 29, 2001). "Victor Kiam, 74, Entrepreneur Who 'Bought the Company'". The New York Times. p. C 13. Retrieved January 8, 2019.
  79. ^ Clayson, Alan (July 19, 2001). "Tony Ashton". The Guardian. Retrieved January 8, 2019.
  80. ^ "Francis Bebey; African-Music Expert, 72". The New York Times. June 7, 2001. p. A 31. Retrieved February 13, 2021.
  81. ^ David Stout (May 29, 2001). "Joe Moakley, Congressman From South Boston, Dies at 74". The New York Times. p. C 13. Retrieved January 8, 2019.
  82. ^ "Rockets Redglare, 52, Film Actor and Comedian". The New York Times. June 6, 2001. p. A 29. Retrieved January 19, 2019.
  83. ^ Palacios, Adrián G.; Bacigalupo, Juan (2003). "Francisco Varela (1946-2001):: Filling the mind - brain gap: A life adventure". Biological Research. 36 (1): 9–12. doi:10.4067/S0716-97602003000100002. PMID 12795203.
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  85. ^ "Eddie Forrest". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved January 24, 2019.
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  88. ^ Terry Gathercole, Sports-Reference / Olympic Sports
  89. ^ Paul Lewis (June 1, 2001). "Jaime Benítez, 92, Educator And Puerto Rican Politician". The New York Times. p. C 15. Retrieved February 13, 2021.
  90. ^ Richard Goldstein (June 9, 2001). "Denis Whitaker, 86, Highly Decorated Canadian War Hero". The New York Times. p. A 13. Retrieved February 13, 2021.
  91. ^ Daniel J. Wakin (June 2, 2001). "Arlene Francis, 93, Mainstay Of 'What's My Line?' on TV". The New York Times. p. B 7. Retrieved January 8, 2019.
  92. ^ Wolfgang Saxon (June 2, 2001). "Li Kwoh-ting, 91, of Taiwan Dies; Led Effort to Transform Economy". The New York Times. p. B 7. Retrieved February 13, 2021.
  93. ^ Anne Raver (June 7, 2001). "Rosemary Verey, 82, Dies; Grew Legendary Gardens in England and Tutored America". The New York Times. p. A 31. Retrieved February 13, 2021.
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