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Deaths in May 2002

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May
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The following is a list of notable deaths in May 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.

May 2002Edit

1Edit

  • Ebrahim Al-Arrayedh, 94, Bahraini writer and poet.
  • Ade Bethune, 88, American Catholic liturgical artist.
  • John Nathan-Turner, 54, British television producer (Doctor Who).[1]
  • Victor Peirce, 43, Australian criminal, shot.
  • Kevin Quinn, 79, Irish cricket and rugby player.
  • Tom Sutton, 65, American comic book artist (Vampirella, Doctor Strange, Ghost Rider), heart attack.
  • Birger Tvedt, 92, Norwegian sports medical and physiotherapist.

2Edit

  • Peter Thomas Bauer, 86, Hungarian-British economist, known as a Margaret Thatcher spokesman against development aid for the third world.[2]
  • Olive Cook, 90, British writer and artist, cancer.
  • Alfred Gessow, 79, American helicopter and aerospace engineer.
  • Sihung Lung, 72, Taiwanese movie and TV actor, liver failure.[3]
  • Edna Mae Robinson, 86, American dancer, actress, and activist.[4]
  • Richard Stücklen, 85, German politician, President of the Bundestag.
  • Judy Toll, 44, American actress, writer and comedian, melanoma.
  • William Thomas Tutte, 84, Bletchley Park cryptographer and British, later Canadian, mathematician.

3Edit

  • Martin Aronstein, 65, American theatrical lighting designer, five-time nominee for the Tony Award for Best Lighting Design.[5]
  • Livingston L. Biddle Jr., 83, American author and promoter of funding for the arts (chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts).[6]
  • Malcolm Bosse, 75, American author, known for his historical novels set in Asia.[7]
  • Barbara Castle, Baroness Castle of Blackburn, 91, British Labour politician and female life peer.[8]
  • Muhammad Haji Ibrahim Egal, 73, president of Somaliland and former prime minister of the Somali Republic.[9]
  • Mohan Singh Oberoi, 103, Indian hotelier and retailer.[10]
  • Mariana Yampolsky, 76, Mexican photographer.[11]

4Edit

  • Don Allard, 66, American football player (New York Titans, Boston Patriots) and coach.[12]
  • Robert R. Bertrand, 96, American sound engineer.
  • Clarence Boston, 85, American college football coach, head coach of New Hampshire Wildcats from 1949 to 1964.[13]
  • John Hasted, 81, British physicist and folk musician.[14]
  • Elizabeth Russell, 85, American actress.
  • Abu Turab al-Zahiri, 79, Saudi Arabian writer of Arab Indian descent.

5Edit

  • Hugo Banzer, 75, Bolivian politician, Bolivian dictator (1971 to 1978), President of Bolivia (1997 to 2001).[15]
  • Howard C. Bratton, 80, American judge (U.S. District Judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of New Mexico).[16]
  • Dick Farman, 85, American professional football player (Washington State, Washington Redskins).[17]
  • Earl Shaffer, 83, American outdoorsman and author.[18]
  • Sir Clarence Seignoret, 83, president of Dominica (1983–1993).
  • George Sidney, 85, American film director (Bye Bye Birdie, Viva Las Vegas, Anchors Aweigh).
  • Odell Stautzenberger, 77, American football player.[19]
  • Mike Todd, Jr., 72, American film producer, introduced short-lived movie format Smell-O-Vision (Scent of Mystery).[20]
  • Louis C. Wyman, 85, American politician (U.S. Representative for New Hampshire's 1st congressional district).[21]

6Edit

  • Murray Adaskin, 96, Canadian violinist, composer, conductor and teacher.[22]
  • Otis Blackwell, 71, American songwriter, singer and pianist ("Great Balls of Fire", "Don't Be Cruel", "All Shook Up", "Return to Sender").[23]
  • James Lawton Collins Jr., 84, American military historian, brigadier general in the U.S. Army and viticulturist.[24]
  • Harry George Drickamer, 83, American chemical engineer, a pioneer in high-pressure studies of condensed matter.[25]
  • Pim Fortuyn, 54, Dutch politician, assassinated.[26]
  • Bjørn Johansen, 61, Norwegian jazz musician.[27]

7Edit

  • Kevyn Aucoin, 40, American make-up artist and author (The Art of Makeup, Making Faces, Face Forward).[28]
  • Sir Bernard Burrows, 91, British diplomat.[29]
  • Sir Ewart Jones, 91, Welsh chemist.[30]
  • Robert Kanigher, 86, American comic book writer and editor (Wonder Woman, The Flash, Sgt. Rock).
  • Masakatsu Miyamoto, 63, Japanese football player and manager, pneumonia.
  • Xavier Montsalvatge, 90, Spanish composer and music critic.[31]
  • Seattle Slew, 28, last living triple crown winner on 25th anniversary of winning Kentucky Derby.

8Edit

  • Sylvester Barrett, 75, Irish politician (Minister for the Environment, Minister for Defence, Member of the European Parliament).[32]
  • Basil Chubb, 80, English-Irish political scientist and author (The Government and Politics of Ireland), one of Ireland's leading political academics.[33]
  • Sir Edward Jackson, 76, English diplomat, (Ambassador to Cuba, Ambassador to Belgium).[34]
  • Lou Lombardo, 70, American film editor (The Wild Bunch, McCabe & Mrs. Miller, Moonstruck).[35]
  • Boyce McDaniel, 84, American nuclear physicist, worked on the Manhattan Project, heart attack.[36]

9Edit

  • St. Clair Balfour, 82, Canadian businessman.
  • Bernice Layne Brown, 93, American wife of the 32nd Governor of California Edmund "Pat" Brown and the mother of the 34th and 39th Governor of California, Jerry Brown.[37]
  • Dan Devine, 77, American football player and coach (Arizona State, Missouri, Green Bay Packers, Notre Dame).[38]
  • Robert Layton, 76, Canadian politician and a member of Parliament (House of Commons representing Lachine and Lachine—Lac-Saint-Louis, Quebec).[39]
  • James Simpson, 90, British explorer.
  • Sam Walton, 59, American professional football player (East Texas State, New York Jets, Houston Oilers).[40]

10Edit

  • Lynda Lyon Block, 54, American convicted murderer, executed by electric chair in Alabama.
  • George Cates, 90, American music arranger, conductor, songwriter and record producer, known for his work with Lawrence Welk.[41]
  • John Cunniff, 57, American professional hockey player and coach (Hartford Whalers, Boston Bruins, New Jersey Devils).[42]
  • Henry W. Hofstetter, 87, American optometrist.
  • Austen Kark, 75, British television executive, managing director of the BBC World Service.[43]
  • Leslie Dale Martin, 35, American convicted murderer, executed by lethal injection in Louisiana.
  • Tom Moore, 88, American athletics promoter.
  • Yves Robert, 81, French actor, screenwriter, director, and producer.[44]

11Edit

  • Ramblin' Rod Anders, 68, American television presenter, stroke.
  • Joseph Bonanno, 97, Sicilian former Mafia boss.[45]
  • Patrick Fyffe, 60, English female impersonator, known for playing Dame Hilda Bracket of the duo Hinge and Bracket.[46]
  • Hugo Leistner, 99, American hurdler.
  • Sharon Monsky, 48, competitive figure skater as a teenager, Scleroderma.[47]
  • Bill Peet, 87, American animator and screenwriter (Cinderella, Peter Pan, Alice in Wonderland).[48]
  • Steve Rachunok, 85, American baseball player (Brooklyn Dodgers).[49]
  • Nika Turbina, 27, Soviet and Russian poet, fall from window.

12Edit

  • Richard Chorley, 74, English geographer, heart attack.[50]
  • Erich Kulas, 22, American professional wrestler known as "Mass Transit", complications from gastric bypass surgery[51]
  • Wilson Matthews, 80, American football coach.

13Edit

  • Clinton Adams, 83, American artist, art historian and head of the Tamarind Institute at the University of New Mexico.[52]
  • Alan P. Bell, 70, American psychologist (Kinsey Institute), known for his study suggesting that homosexuality has a biological basis.[53]
  • David Chappe, 54, American screenwriter (Gale Force, Beowulf).[54]
  • Ruth Cracknell, 76, Australian actress (Mother and Son).[55]
  • Valery Lobanovsky, 63, Ukrainian football coach.
  • Bill Rodgers, 79, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates).[56]
  • Morihiro Saito, 74, Japanese aikido teacher.

14Edit

  • Sir Derek Birley, 75, British educationist, writer and sports historian.[57]
  • Rawshan Jamil, 71, Bangladeshi actress and dancer.
  • Gordon J. F. MacDonald, 72, American geophysicist.
  • Dale Morey, 83, American basketball player.
  • Sir Laurence Sinclair, 93, Royal Air Force officer during WWII.
  • Ray Stricklyn, 73, American actor and publicist, emphysema.

15Edit

  • Bernard Benjamin, 92, British statistician, a leading figure in the field of demography.[58]
  • Jeannine Guindon, 82, professor of psychology in Quebec, Canada.
  • Darwood Kaye, 72, American child actor (Our Gang), hit and run accident.
  • Arthur Peddy, 85, American comic book artist (Justice Society of America).
  • Bryan Pringle, 67, British actor.
  • Nellie Shabalala, 49, South African singer and wife of leader/founder of Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Joseph Shabalala.
  • Esko Tie, 73, Finnish ice hockey player.

16Edit

  • Alec Campbell, 103, Australia's last surviving ANZAC at the Gallipoli campaign during World War I.[59]
  • James Dewar, 59, Scottish musician, known as the bassist and vocalist for Robin Trower and Stone the Crows.[60]
  • Big Dick Dudley, 34, American professional wrestler (ECW), kidney failure.
  • Kenneth Fung, 90, Hong Kong prominent politician and businessman.[61]
  • Dorothy Van, 74, American actress.
  • Sir Gerald Whent, 75, British businessman (Vodafone).[62]

17Edit

  • Peter Beck, 92, British schoolmaster.
  • Dave Berg, 81, American cartoonist (Mad, The Lighter Side of...).[63]
  • Joe Black, 78, American first Black baseball pitcher to win a World Series game (Brooklyn Dodgers, Cincinnati Redlegs, Washington Senators).[64]
  • Edwin Alonzo Boyd, 88, Canadian bank robber and prison escapee of the 1950s (Citizen Gangster).[65]
  • James Chichester-Clark, 79, Northern Ireland politician, Prime Minister of Northern Ireland from 1969 to 1971.[66]
  • John de Lancie, 80, American oboist, principal oboist of the Philadelphia Orchestra and director of the Curtis Institute of Music.[67]
  • Bobby Robinson, 98, American baseball player.
  • Little Johnny Taylor, 59, American singer.
  • Norman Vaughan, 79, English comedian.

18Edit

  • Charles Brooks, 75, English cricketer.
  • Song Hye-rim, 65, North Korean actress, best.
  • Davey Boy Smith, 39, British professional wrestler, myocardial infarction.
  • Zypora Spaisman, 86, Polish-American actress and Yiddish theatre empresaria.[68]
  • Gene Arden Vance Jr., 38, American soldier and member of a US Special Forces Airborne Reserve Unit, K.I.A.
  • Gordon Wharmby, 68, British actor (Last of the Summer Wine), cancer.[69]

19Edit

  • Sir Ralph Anstruther, 80, British army officer and courtier.
  • Raymond Durgnat, 69, British film critic (Films and Filming, Film Comment, Monthly Film Bulletin) and author.[70]
  • Herbert Familton, 74, New Zealand alpine skier (men's downhill, men's giant slalom at the 1952 Winter Olympics).[71]
  • Sir John Gorton, 90, 19th Prime Minister of Australia.[72]
  • Earl Hammond, 80, American voice actor (Thundercats).
  • Walter Lord, 84, American historian.[73]
  • Otar Lordkipanidze, 72, Georgian archaeologist.

20Edit

  • David Abrahamsen, 98, Norwegian forensic psychiatrist, psychoanalyst and author (Confessions of Son of Sam, Nixon vs. Nixon: An Emotional Tragedy).[74]
  • Anastasios Christodoulou, 70, British-Greek university administrator, founding father of The Open University.[75]
  • Jerry Dunphy, 80, American Los Angeles television news anchor for over four decades.[76]
  • Stephen Jay Gould, 60, American paleontologist, evolutionary biologist and popular science author, cancer.[77]
  • Ramzi Irani, 35, Lebanese student activist, murdered.
  • Conrad L. Raiford, 94, American athlete.
  • Eberle Schultz, 84, American football player.

21Edit

  • Rogers Albritton, 78, American philosopher.[78]
  • Joe Cobb, 86, American child actor, appeared as the original "fat boy" in the Our Gang comedies from 1922 to 1929.[79]
  • Roy Paul, 82, Welsh footballer.
  • Bob Poser, 92, American baseball player (Chicago White Sox, St. Louis Browns).[80]
  • Niki de Saint Phalle, 71, French artist.

22Edit

  • Fritz Ackley, 65, American baseball player (Chicago White Sox).[81]
  • Joe Cascarella, 94, American baseball player (Philadelphia Athletics, Boston Red Sox, Washington Senators, Cincinnati Reds).[82]
  • Faye Dancer, 77, American baseball player (AAGPBL).[83]
  • Paul Giel, 69, American baseball player (New York/San Francisco Giants, Pittsburgh Pirates, Minnesota Twins) and college football player (Minnesota).[84]
  • Warren Hacker, 77, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs, Cincinnati Redlegs, Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago White Sox).[85]
  • Dick Hern, 81, British racehorse trainer.
  • Chandra Levy, 24, U.S. Congressional intern (body discovered on this date)
  • Creighton Miller, 79, American football player and attorney.
  • Patrick Wolrige-Gordon, 66, British (Scottish) politician (Member of Parliament for East Aberdeenshire).[86]

23Edit

  • Umberto Bindi, 70, Italian singer-songwriter, heart disease.
  • Albert Carrier, 82, Italian-American film and television actor.
  • Wally Fromhart, 89, American football player and coach.
  • Ali Imam, Pakistani painter, heart attack.
  • Sam Snead, 89, American professional golfer, complications from a stroke.[87]
  • Dorothy Spencer, 93, American film editor (Stagecoach, Cleopatra, Earthquake).[88]

24Edit

  • Joseph Bau, 81, Polish-Israeli artist, philosopher, animator, comedian, and poet, pneumonia.[89]
  • Susie Garrett, 72, American actress (Punky Brewster) and jazz vocalist, cancer.
  • Toshihito Ito, 40, Japanese actor, Subarachnoid hemorrhage.
  • Euphemia McNaught, 100, Canadian impressionist painter.
  • Antonia Pantoja, 79, Puerto Rican educator, feminist, and civil rights leader, cancer.[90]
  • Xi Zhongxun, 88, Chinese communist revolutionary.

25Edit

  • Josephine Abady, 52, American theater director who staged plays on and off Broadway.[91]
  • Pat Coombs, 75, English actress (Till Death Us Do Part, EastEnders, Ooh... You Are Awful).[92]
  • Zoran Janković, 62, Yugoslavian Olympic water polo player (1964 silver medal, 1968 gold medal, 1972), liver cancer.[93]
  • Nathan Mantel, 83, American biostatistician, heart attack.[94]
  • Jack Pollard, 75, Australian sports journalist.
  • Nancy White, 85, American editor (Harper's Bazaar).[95]

26Edit

  • Jon Bannenberg, English-Australian yacht designer, brain tumour.
  • Carmen Beltrán, 97, Mexican American writer, breast cancer.
  • Lionel Cantú, 36, assistant professor of sociology, Santa Cruz, cardiac arrest.
  • Orlando Carrió, 46, Argentine-Mexican actor, lung cancer.
  • Ivo Maček, 88, Croatian pianist, composer and academian.
  • John Alexander Moore, 86, American biologist.[96]
  • Neil Naismith, 66, Australian pharmacist.
  • Vicente Nebrada, 72, Venezuelan dancer and choreographer.[97]
  • Jean-Jacques Petter, 74, French primatologist.
  • Mamo Wolde, 69, Ethiopian Olympic long-distance runner (1968 gold medal, 1968 silver medal, 1972 bronze medal), liver cancer.[98]

27Edit

  • Ray Mathew, 73, Australian author.
  • Marjorie Ogilvie Anderson, 93, Scottish historian and paleographer.
  • Shabtai Konorti, 58, Israeli actor, traffic collision.[99]
  • Santhananda, 81, Hindu spiritual leader and teacher.
  • Krishna Sen, 45, journalist of Nepal, murdered.
  • Vitaly Solomin, 60, Soviet and Russian actor, director and screenwriter.[100]

28Edit

  • Charles J. Adams, 80, brigadier general in the US Air Force.
  • Napoleon Beazley, 25, American juvenile offender, executed by lethal injection.
  • Mildred Benson, 96, American journalist and author of children's books (Nancy Drew Mystery Stories).[101]
  • Jean Berger, 92, German-American composer and conductor.[102]
  • Ruby Bradley, 94, colonel in the US Army and of the most decorated women in United States military history.[103]
  • Alfred Fleishman, 96, American businessman, co-founded Fleishman–Hillard, one of the world's largest public relations firms.[104]
  • David Parker Ray, 62, suspected American serial killer.
  • Wes Westrum, 79, American baseball player (New York Giants) and manager (New York Mets, San Francisco Giants), cancer.[105]

29Edit

  • Stan Bentham, 87, English footballer, Alzheimer's disease.
  • Charles Ede, 80, English founder of the Folio Society.[106]
  • Bernice Thurman Hunter, 79, Canadian children's author.
  • Sam Page, 86, American baseball player (Philadelphia Athletics).[107]
  • Elémire Zolla, 75, Italian essayist, philosopher and historian.

30Edit

  • Phyllis Pray Bober, 81, American art historian, scholar, and author.
  • Kees Boertien, 74, Dutch politician (Christian Democratic Appeal) and jurist.
  • Kenny Craddock, 52, British instrumentalist (Ringo Starr, Ginger Baker, Gerry Rafferty), composer and producer, car crash.[108]
  • John B. Keane, 73, Irish playwright, novelist and essayist.[109]
  • Mário Lago, 90, Brazilian lawyer, poet, composer and actor.
  • Sándor Mátrai, 69, Hungarian footballer.
  • Takhir Sabirov, 72, Tajik film director, actor, screenwriter, and art director.

31Edit

  • Jeremy Bray, 71, British politician (member of Parliament representing Middlesbrough West, Motherwell and Wishaw and Motherwell South).[110]
  • Subhash Gupte, 72, Indian cricket player.
  • Eleanor D. Wilson, 93, American actress (Weekend, Alice's Restaurant, Reds) and artist.[111]

ReferencesEdit

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  4. ^ "Edna Mae Robinson, 86, Dancer and Boxer's Wife". The New York Times. May 7, 2002. p. A 29. Retrieved August 10, 2021.
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