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Deaths in September 2003

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The following is a list of notable deaths in September 2003.

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.

deaths in September in england

September 2003Edit

1Edit

  • Rand Brooks, 84, American film actor (Gone with the Wind, Babes in Arms, The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin).[1]
  • Sir Terry Frost, 87, British artist.[2]
  • John Gould, 94, American columnist, humorist and essayist, published in most major American newspapers and magazines.[3]
  • Sir John Gray, 66, British diplomat.
  • Héctor Rodríguez, 83, Cuban baseball player (Chicago White Sox).[4]
  • Ramón Serrano Suñer, 101, Spanish politician.

2Edit

  • Thomas Neville Bonner, 80, American medical historian, institution president: New Hampshire, Union College, Wayne State[5]
  • Katherine Sui Fun Cheung, 98, Chinese aviator.
  • Hroar Dege, 82/83, Norwegian restaurateur.
  • George Chubb, 3rd Baron Hayter, 92, British politician and industrialist.
  • Nehemiah Levanon, 88, Israeli intelligence agent and diplomat.
  • Pravin Singh, 48, Fijian politician, traffic collision.
  • Bruce Waibel, 45, American musician and bass guitar player (FireHouse, Gregg Allman Band, Santana).[6]
  • Peter West, 83, British BBC presenter and sports commentator, best known for his cricket, tennis and rugby coverage.[7]

3Edit

  • Jack Daniels, 79, American politician.
  • Raymond G. Davis, 88, United States Marine Corps four-star-general, heart attack.[8]
  • Paul Hill, 49, American anti-abortion activist; executed for a double murder.
  • Rudolf Leiding, 88, German chairman of the Volkswagen automobile company.
  • Andrzej Nartowski, 71, Polish basketball player (basketball at the 1960 Summer Olympics).[9]
  • Elias Petropoulos, 75, Greek author, folklorist and urban historian, cancer.
  • Norman Porteous, 104, theologian and writer on Old Testament issues.

4Edit

  • Ben Aris, 66, English actor (Hi-de-Hi!, The Charge of the Light Brigade, Stepping Out).[10]
  • Béla H. Bánáthy, 83, Hungarian-American educator, systems and design scientist and author.[11]
  • Susan Chilcott, 40, English opera singer, breast cancer.[12]
  • Penny Dwyer, 49, English comedian.
  • Charles A. Gabriel, 75, Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force, Alzheimer's disease.[13]
  • David P. Robbins, 61, American mathematician.[14]
  • Tibor Varga, 82, Hungarian violinist, conductor and pedagogue.[15]
  • Evangelos Yannopoulos, 85, Greek lawyer and politician (Minister of Justice).[16]

5Edit

  • Gordon Binkerd, 87, American composer, pianist and professor.[17]
  • C. H. Sisson, 89, British writer and poet.[18]
  • Harley Grossman, 73, American baseball player (Washington Senators).[19]
  • Sir Richard Harrison, 82, New Zealand politician.
  • Sir Ian Hunter, 84, British classical music impresario.[20]
  • Gisele MacKenzie, 76, Canadian-born singer and entertainer.[21]
  • James Rachels, 62, American philosopher, cancer.[22]
  • Benny Schnoor, 80, Danish Olympic cyclist.

6Edit

  • Charles E. Bennett, 92, American politician (U.S. Representative for Florida's 2nd and 3rd congressional districts).[23]
  • Marshall Joseph Caifano, 92, Italian-American Chicago Outfit and Las Vegas mobster.[24]
  • Jules Engel, Jules Engel, 94, American filmmaker, visual artist, and film director.[25]
  • Marie Foster, 85, American civil rights movement leader.[26]
  • Harry Goz, 71, American musical theater actor (Fiddler on the Roof) and voice actor (Sealab 2021).[27]
  • Kevin Morgan, 82, Australian politician.
  • John Ross, 62, Australian politician.
  • Wilbur Snapp, 83, American musician, stadium organist for the Clearwater Phillies and the Philadelphia Phillies.

7Edit

  • Great Antonio, 77, Croatian-Canadian strongman, wrestler, actor and eccentric.[28]
  • Basant Kumar Biswal, 67, Indian politician.
  • Lloyd Humphreys, 89, American psychologist and methodologist.
  • Ivan Margitych, 82, Ukrainian Greek Catholic bishop.
  • Joe McDonald, 74, Scottish footballer.
  • Rudy Mobley, 81, American football player.
  • Mohammad Oraz, Iranian mountaineer, avalanche.
  • Robert Weinman, 88, American sculptor and "one of the nation's most accomplished medallic artists".[29]
  • Merv Wellington, 62, New Zealand politician (Member of Parliament for Manurewa, Papakura).[30]
  • Warren Zevon, 56, American singer and songwriter, cancer.[31]

8Edit

  • Jaclyn Linetsky, 17, Canadian voice actress (Caillou, 15/Love, What's with Andy?), road accident.
  • Doris Ogilvie, 91, Canadian diver and Olympian.[32]
  • Gulabrai Ramchand, 76, Indian cricketer.
  • Leni Riefenstahl, 101, German filmmaker.[33]
  • Caroline St John-Brooks, 56, Anglo-Irish education journalist.

9Edit

  • Thomas Allibone, 99, English physicist, focused on high voltage phenomena, nuclear fusion and particle physics.[34]
  • David Applebaum, 51, American-born Israeli physician, suicide bomb victim.[35]
  • Larry Hovis, 67, American actor (Hogan's Heroes).[36]
  • Sir Francis Purchas, 84, British jurist.
  • Edward Teller, 95, American physicist, "Father of the H-Bomb".[37]
  • Marthe Vogt, 100, German neuroscientist, contributed to the understanding of neurotransmitters in the brain.[38]
  • Don Willesee, 87, Australian politician, member of the Australian Senate representing Western Australia.[39]

10Edit

  • Tata Esteban, 48, Filipino film producer and director, heart attack.
  • Ruth Hill Useem, 88, American sociologist and anthropologist.
  • Lee Kyung-hae, South Korean farmer and activist, suicide.
  • Martin Page, 65, British writer and journalist, heart problems.[40]

11Edit

  • Ben Bril, 91, Dutch boxer (men's flyweight boxing at the 1928 Summer Olympics).[41]
  • James Edward Fitzgerald, 64, American Roman Catholic prelate.
  • Stuart Golland, 58, English actor (Heartbeat).[42]
  • Anna Lindh, 46, Swedish foreign minister, stabbed.[43]
  • John Ritter, 54, American actor (Three's Company, Clifford The Big Red Dog, 8 Simple Rules), Emmy winner (1984), aortic dissection.[44]

12Edit

  • Johnny Cash, 71, American Hall of Fame country singer ("Folsom Prison Blues", "I Walk the Line", "Ring of Fire"), diabetes.[45]
  • David Dahlin, 86, American physician and pathologist.
  • Chappie Fox, 90, American circus historian.
  • Brian Plummer, 67, British writer and dog breeder.
  • Patrick Wilson, 75, American librarian, philosopher, professor and author.[46]

13Edit

  • Inam Ahmed, 71, Bangladeshi actor.
  • George Boothman, 86, Canadian professional ice hockey player (Toronto Maple Leafs).[47]
  • Ron Burton, 67, American professional football player (Northwestern, Boston Patriots).[48]
  • Howard D. Graves, 64, United States Army officer, cancer.[49]
  • Frank O'Bannon, 73, American politician, Governor of Indiana (since 1997).
  • Kenneth Walter, 63, South African cricketer.
  • Johnny Welaj, 89, American baseball player (Washington Senators, Philadelphia Athletics).[50]

14Edit

  • Donald O. Clifton, 79, American psychologist, author, researcher, and entrepreneur.
  • Garrett Hardin, 88, American ecologist and philosopher.[51]
  • Ken Kifer, 57, American cyclist and writer.
  • Yetunde Price, 31, half-sister of Venus and Serena Williams, murdered in a shooting.
  • John Serry Sr., 88, Italian American musician composer and arranger.
  • Taya Zinkin, 84, English journalist and author.[52]

15Edit

  • Garner Ted Armstrong, 73, American television evangelist.[53]
  • Jack Brymer, 88, British clarinetist (Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, BBC Symphony Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra).[54]
  • Donald Cameron, 75, Scottish rugby union player.
  • Arnold Doren, 68, American photographer.

16Edit

  • Donald Deacon, 83, Canadian politician, leukemia.
  • John Orrell, 68, British author, theatre historian and English professor, cancer.[55]
  • Sheb Wooley, 82, American actor (High Noon, Rawhide) and singer (The Purple People Eater).[56]

17Edit

  • Yitzhak Artzi, 82, Israeli politician.
  • Derek Bryan, 92, British diplomat, sinologist and teacher.[57]
  • Lewis Clark, 79, Canadian politician.
  • George Gale, 74, British cartoonist.
  • Leendert Ginjaar, 75, Dutch politician.
  • Erich Hallhuber, 52, German actor.
  • Ray Harvey, 74, Australian rules footballer.
  • George Sawaya, 80, American actor and stuntman.
  • Neal Wood, 81, American-British political theorist and author.[58]

18Edit

  • Robert G. Bartle, 75, American mathematician, specialized in real analysis, known for writing popular mathematics textbooks.[59]
  • Harry Birrell, 75, South African cricketer and schoolmaster.
  • Samuel Delbert Clark, 93, Canadian sociologist.
  • Pauline Crawley, 79, American baseball player (AAGPBL)[60]
  • Jean Dieuzaide, 82, French photographer.[61]
  • Emil Fackenheim, 87, German Jewish philosopher and Reform rabbi.[62]
  • Richard A. Howard, 86, American botanist and plant taxonomist.
  • Don Reese, 52, American professional football player (Miami Dolphins, New Orleans Saints), liver cancer.[63]

19Edit

  • Slim Dusty, 76, Australian country music singer-songwriter, guitarist and producer.
  • Alfred Grislawski, 83, German fighter pilot during World War II.
  • Ellen Idelson, 42, American television producer, television writer and actress, complications from cancer and Crohn's disease.
  • Arthur Kinoy, 82, American attorney and civil rights leader.[64]
  • Herbert Kutscha, 86, German Luftwaffe fighter ace and recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross during World War II.
  • Frank Lowe, 60, American jazz saxophonist, lung cancer.[65]
  • Adrian Shelford, 39, New Zealand rugby footballer, heart attack.
  • Jim Thompson, 67, British Anglican bishop.

20Edit

  • Ghulam Ahmad, 80, Pakistani forestry official.
  • Robert Blake, Baron Blake, 86, English historian and life peer, known for his biography of Benjamin Disraeli.[66]
  • Tom Busby, 66, Canadian actor (The War Lover, The Dirty Dozen, Heavenly Pursuits).[67]
  • Lorenzo Calonga, 74, Paraguayan footballplayer.
  • Sonora Webster Carver, 99, American entertainer.
  • Gordon Mitchell, 80, American actor and bodybuilder.[68]
  • Simon Muzenda, 80, Zimbabwean politician and vice-President of Zimbabwe.[69]
  • Maurizio Romano, 37, Italian voice actor, traffic collision.[70]
  • Vernon Singer, 84, politician in Ontario, Canada.
  • Russell L. De Valois, 76, American psychological and cognitive scientist, pioneering research on spatial and color vision.[71]
  • Gareth Williams, Baron Williams of Mostyn, 62, British Cabinet minister, Leader of the House of Lords.[72]

21Edit

  • Robert H. Lochner, 84, American journalist and interpreter of John F. Kennedy with the "Ich bin ein Berliner" speech.
  • Pamela Gordon, 66, American actress.[73]
  • Lu Ann Simms, 71, American singer.
  • Otis A. Singletary, 81, American historian.

22Edit

  • Howard Austen, 74, American companion, long-time confidant and companion of Gore Vidal.[74]
  • Sir Allan Gilmour, 86, Scottish soldier and politician.
  • Gordon Jump, 71, American actor (WKRP in Cincinnati).[75]
  • Tony Shryane, 84, British radio producer.
  • Hugo Young, 64, British journalist and political commentator (The Guardian, The Observer).[76]

23Edit

  • Rosalie Allen, 79, American country musician and television and radio host, known as Queen of the Yodelers.[77]
  • Earl Brown, 87, American football and basketball player and coach (Auburn).[78]
  • Zofia Chądzyńska, 91, Polish writer and translator.
  • Simcha Dinitz, 74, Israeli statesman and politician.
  • Donald Nicol, 80, English Byzantinist.
  • Sarah Parkinson, 41, British producer and writer, breast cancer.
  • Mirta Plá, 63, Cuban dancer.
  • Zubayr Al-Rimi, 29, militant in al-Qaeda's Saudi wing, killed by Saudi security forces.
  • Rex Robbins, 68, American actor of stage and screen, stroke.[79]
  • Yuri Senkevich, 66, Soviet doctor and scientist, heart failure.

24Edit

  • Yoshinobu Ashihara, 85, Japanese architect.
  • Lyle Bettger, 88, American actor (The Greatest Show on Earth, Nevada Smith, Hawaii Five-O).[80]
  • Hugh Gregg, 85, American politician, Governor of New Hampshire (1953-1955)
  • Derek Prince, 88, English biblical scholar and author.
  • Edward Said, 67, Palestinian scholar, leukemia.[81]

25Edit

  • Alastair Borthwick, 90, Scottish author and broadcaster.[82]
  • John Clayton, 63, Australian actor.
  • Dai Davies, 78, Welsh rugby player.
  • Herb Gardner, 68, American artist and writer.
  • Franco Modigliani, 85, Italian Nobel Prize-winning economist.[83]
  • Donald Nicol, 80, English Byzantine scholar.[84]
  • George Plimpton, 76, American author, editor, socialite & actor.
  • Bill Wolfgramm, 77, Tongan musician, specialized in lap steel guitar and Hawaiian music.[85]

26Edit

  • Olle Anderberg, 84, Swedish wrestler (1948 Olympic silver medal, 1952 Olympic gold medal).[86]
  • Glyn Gilbert, 83, British Army general.
  • Shawn Lane, 40, American guitarist and composer.
  • Robert Palmer, 54, British singer, heart attack.[87]
  • Robert Raymond, 81, Australian television pioneer.
  • David Williams, 77, Welsh advertising executive and crime writer.[88]

27Edit

  • Red Barbary, 83, American baseball player (Washington Senators).[89]
  • Robert Albert Bauer, 93, Austrian-American U.S. Foreign Service officer, Voice of America announcer, editor and author.[90]
  • Tom Brennan, 81, American ice hockey player (Boston Bruins).[91]
  • Paul Burlison, 74, American rockabilly guitarist and a founding member of The Rock and Roll Trio.[92]
  • Donald J. Mitchell, 80, American politician and member of the United States House of Representatives for New York.[93]
  • Donald O'Connor, 78, American actor, singer and dancer (Singin' in the Rain, Yes Sir, That's My Baby).[94]
  • Wendy Wyland, 38, American Olympic diver (bronze medal in women's 10 metre platform at the 1984 Summer Olympics).[95]
  • Masahiro Yoshimura, 66, Japanese Olympic swimmer (silver medal in 200 metre breaststroke at the 1956 Summer Olympics).[96]

28Edit

  • Knud Albjerg, 73, Danish sprint canoer (men's 1000 metres K-1 single-man sprint kayaks at the 1952 Summer Olympics).[97]
  • Dany Bébel-Gisler, 68, Guadeloupean sociolinguist, ethnologist and author, preservationist of Creole languages.[98]
  • Sir Christopher Foxley-Norris, 86, British Air Chief Marshal.
  • Althea Gibson, 76, African-American tennis player.
  • Elia Kazan, 94, American film director (A Streetcar Named Desire, On the Waterfront, East of Eden).
  • Ephraim Oshry, 94/95, Lithuanian-American Orthodox rabbi, author and Holocaust-survivor.[99]
  • Marshall Rosenbluth, 76, American academic and plasma physicist.[100]

29Edit

  • Andrei Folbert, 72, Romanian basketball player.
  • Wesley Tuttle, 85, American country music singer.[101]
  • Raoul Gregory Vitale, 75, Syrian musicologist .
  • Jack Wedley, 85–86, Canadian football player.
  • Beatrice Blyth Whiting, 89, American anthropologist, a pioneer in the comparative study of child development.[102]

30Edit

  • Yusuf Bey, 67, American Black Muslim activist and leader, cancer.[103]
  • Ronnie Dawson, 64, American rockabilly singer, guitarist and drummer.
  • Ashley Greenwood, 91, British soldier, lawyer, and judge.
  • John Hawkesworth, 82, English television/film producer and writer.
  • Robert Kardashian, 59, American criminal defense lawyer, esophageal cancer.
  • John Rosenbaum, 70, American kinetic sculptor.
  • Edouard Wah, Haitian painter.
  • Helen Van Pelt Wilson, 101, American garden writer.

ReferencesEdit

  1. ^ McLellan, Dennis (September 4, 2003). "Rand Brooks, 84; Actor Had Roles in Westerns, 'Gone With the Wind'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 10, 2019.
  2. ^ Ken Johnson (September 8, 2003). "Terry Frost, 87, British Painter Known for Energetic Abstraction". The New York Times. p. B 8. Retrieved August 18, 2021.
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  6. ^ "Former FireHouse bassist Bruce Waibel dies at age 45". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. September 6, 2003. Retrieved April 23, 2019.
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  70. ^ Maurizio Romano (in Italian)
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