Deaths in June 2002
Appearance
The following is a list of notable deaths in June 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.
June 2002
1
- Michael Alexander, 65, British diplomat (ambassador to Austria, ambassador to NATO).[1]
- Tom Austin, 78, Australian politician.
- Hansie Cronje, 32, South African cricketer, plane crash.[2]
- Joseph Nanven Garba, 58, Nigerian soldier, diplomat and politician.[3]
- James Gathers, 71, American Olympic track and field athlete.[4]
- Tibor Scitovsky, 91, Hungarian-American economist.
2
- Boyd Bennett, 77, American rockabilly songwriter and singer ("Seventeen", "My Boy, Flat Top"), lung ailment.[5]
- Herman Cohen, 76, American film producer (I Was a Teenage Werewolf), esophageal cancer.[6]
- Tim Lopes, 51, Brazilian investigative journalist and television producer, tortured.
- Hugo van Lawick, 65, Dutch wildlife filmmaker and photographer.[7]
- Konrad Wirnhier, 64, German sports shooter (bronze medal in 1968 mixed skeet, gold medal in 1972 mixed skeet).[8]
3
- Charles Antrobus, 69, Governor-General of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, leukemia.
- Cecil Hankins, 80, American gridiron football player.[9]
- Fran Rogel, 74, American football player (Penn State, Pittsburgh Steelers), Parkinson's disease.[10]
- Edward Somers, 73, New Zealand jurist and member of the Privy Council.
- Lew Wasserman, 89, American talent agent and studio executive(Universal Studios, Decca Records, MCA), complications from a stroke.[11]
- Sam Whipple, 41, American actor (Seven Days, The Larry Sanders Show, Open All Night), cancer.[12]
- Brian Woledge, 97, English scholar of medieval French language and literature.[13]
4
- Fernando Belaúnde Terry, 89, Peruvian politician, President of Peru (1963–1968, 1980–1985).[14]
- John W. Cunningham, 86, American author.
- Ann Henderson, 60, Australian politician.[15]
- Pyotr Ivashutin, 92, Soviet Army General and head of the state.
- Bob Lackey, 53, American professional basketball player (Marquette University, New York Nets), cancer.[16]
5
- Curtis Amy, 72, American jazz saxophonist.[17]
- Carlos Berlanga, 42, Spanish musician and painter, liver disease.[18]
- Carmelo Bernaola, 72, Spanish composer and clarinetist.[19]
- Michel Bernholc, 60, French composer, arranger and producer, suicide by gunshot.[20]
- Gaston Geens, 70, Belgian politician, Minister-President of Flanders (1981 -1992).
- Aden Abdullahi Nur, Somali politician and army general.
- Truck Parham, 91, American jazz double-bassist.[21]
- Gwen Plumb, 89, Australian performer and entertainer.
- Dee Dee Ramone, 50, American musician, founding member of The Ramones, heroin overdose.[22]
- M. Sivasithamparam, 78, Sri Lankan Tamil politician.
6
- Peter Cowan, 87, Australian writer.[23]
- Robbin Crosby, 42, American guitarist (Ratt), AIDS-related complications and heroin overdose.[24]
- Bernard Destremau, 85, French tennis player, diplomat and politician.[25]
- Yat Malmgren, 86, Swedish dancer and acting teacher.
- Shanta Shelke, 79, Indian poet and writer in the Marathi language, cancer.
- Holly Solomon, 68, American collector of contemporary art and art dealer, complications from pneumonia.[26]
- Betty Winkler, 88, American radio actor.[27]
7
- Wayne Cody, 65, American sportscaster.[28]
- Donald S. Fredrickson, 77, American medical researcher.[29]
- Signe Hasso, 86, Swedish actress, writer, and composer, pneumonia.
- Rodney Hilton, 85, British medieval historian.[30]
- Basappa Danappa Jatti, 89, Indian politician and acting president of India (1977), kidney cancer.[31]
- James Luisi, 73, American basketball player and actor, cancer.[32]
- Lilian, Princess of Réthy, 85, British-Belgian royal.[33]
- Anselmo Sule, 68, Chilean politician.
- Edmond Séchan, 82, French cinematographer and film director.[34]
8
- Ray Alexander, 77, American jazz drummer and vibraphonist, complications from elective surgery.[35]
- George Mudie, 86, Jamaican cricketer.[36]
- Antonio Oppes, 85, Italian Olympic show jumping rider.[37]
- Lino Tonti, 81, Italian motorcycle engineer.
9
- Elena Burke, 74, Cuban singer of boleros and romantic ballads, cancer.[38]
- Paul Chubb, 53, Australian actor (The Coca-Cola Kid, Stan and George's New Life, The Roly Poly Man, Dirty Deeds), post operative cardiomyopathy complications.[39]
- Hans Janmaat, 67, Dutch far-right politician, heart failure.[40]
- Peter Mokaba, 53, South African politician and political activist, acute pneumonia and respiratory problems.[41]
- Alexander Molodchy, 81, Soviet long-range pilot during World War II.
- Maxwell M. Rabb, 91, American lawyer and diplomat.[42]
- Alexander Vlasov, 70, Soviet/Russian politician.
- James Wheaton, 78, American actor, heart attack.
10
- Dick Brittenden, 82, New Zealand cricket writer.
- Louis Carré, 77, Belgian football player and coach.
- John Gotti, 61, Italian-American gangster and boss of the Gambino crime family, throat cancer.[43]
- Maury Travis, 36, American murderer and serial killer, suicide by hanging.[44]
- John Wansbrough, 74, American historian and professor.[45]
- Benjamin Ward, 75, first African American New York City Police Commissioner.[46]
11
- Tahseen Bashir, 77, Egyptian diplomat, spokesman for Gamal Nasser and Anwar Sadat.[47]
- Regīna Ezera, 71, Polish-Latvian author.
- Bertrand Goldschmidt, 89, French chemist, nuclear physicist and diplomat.[48]
- Margaret E. Lynn, 78, American theater director.[49]
- Jürgen Kraft, 50, German racing cyclist.[50]
- Robert Roswell Palmer, 93, American historian and writer.[51]
12
- Bill Blass, 79, American fashion designer, esophageal cancer.[52]
- Jean de Beaumont, 98, French IOC sports administrator and Olympic sport shooter (men's team shooting at the 1924 Summer Olympics).[53]
- John Tileston Edsall, 99, American biochemist.[54]
- José Serra Gil, 78, Spanish racing cyclist.[55]
- Jeong Seung-hwa, 73, South Korean officer.
13
- Guilford Dudley, 94, American businessman and diplomat (U.S. Ambassador to Denmark).[56]
- Vincent Fago, 87, American comic-book artist and writer, stomach cancer.[57]
- Stanley L. Greigg, 71, American Watergate break-in victim.
- John Hope, 83, American meteorologist, complications of an open heart surgery.
- R. W. B. Lewis, 84, American literary scholar and critic and winner of the Pulitzer Prize.[58]
- Ante Mladinić, 72, Croatian football manager.
- Hideo Murata, 73, Japanese rōkyoku and enka singer.[59]
- Ralph Shapey, 81, American composer and conductor.[60]
- Maia Wojciechowska, 74, Polish-American writer of children's books (Shadow of a Bull).[61]
14
- Albert Band, 78, American film director and film producer, frequently collaborated with John Huston.[62]
- Rino Benedetti, 73, Italian road bicycle racer.[63]
- José Bonilla, 34, Venezuelan boxer, asthma attack.[64]
- Lily Carlstedt, 76, Danish Olympic javelin thrower (bronze medal at 1948 women's javelin throw, 1952 women's javelin throw).[65]
- George William Coventry, 11th Earl of Coventry, 68, British peer and politician.[66]
- W. Nelson Francis, 91, America author, linguist and university professor, scholar of the English language.[67]
- June Jordan, 65, Caribbean-American poet, essayist and activist, breast cancer.[68]
15
- Said Belqola, 45, Moroccan referee of the 1998 FIFA World Cup final, cancer.
- Silas Bissell, 60, American activist and member of The Weatherman, brain cancer.[69]
- Mutal Burhonov, 86, Soviet/Uzbek composer.
- Choi Hong-hi, 83, South Korean Army general and martial artist, purported "father of Taekwon-Do", cancer.[70]
- Big Mello, 33, American rapper from Houston, Texas, traffic collision.
- Hideo Murota, 64, Japanese actor.
- Dick White, 70, English football player.
- Robert Whitehead, 86, Canadian theatre producer, winner of four Tony Awards.[71]
16
- Louis Giguère, 90, Canadian politician.[72]
- Barbara Goalen, 81, British model.[73]
- Kiço Ngjela, 82, Albanian politician.
- Harry Oakman, 96, Australian horticulturalist and writer.[citation needed]
17
- Bill Adair, 89, American baseball manager and coach (Milwaukee Braves, Atlanta Braves, Chicago White Sox, Montreal Expos).
- Louis George Alexander, 70, British teacher and author (New Concept English), a prolific writer of English-language text books.[74]
- Stein Ove Berg, 53, Norwegian singer, songwriter, and journalist.
- J. Carter Brown, 67, American director of the National Gallery of Art from 1969 to 1992, multiple myeloma.[75]
- Willie Davenport, 59, American Olympic hurdler (1968 gold medal, 1976 bronze medal), heart attack.[76]
- John C. Davies II, 82, American politician (U.S. Representative for New York's 35th congressional district).[77]
- Dobri Dzhurov, 86, Bulgarian politician and military leader.[78]
- Francisco Escudero, 89, Basque composer.
- Zora Kolínska, 60, Slovak actress, singer, and presenter.
- Yuri Korneev, 65, Russian basketball player.
- Roger Mackay, 46, Australian golfer, lymphoma.[79]
- Antony C. Sutton, 77, British-American writer, economist, and academic.[80]
- Fritz Walter, 81, German football player, captain of 1954 World Cup winners.[81]
18
- Nancy Addison, 54, American soap actress, cancer.[82]
- Naseem Banu, 85, Indian actress.
- Jack Buck, 77, American sportscaster, best known for announcing MLB games of the St. Louis Cardinals, Parkinson's disease.[83]
- Nilima Ibrahim, 81, Bangladeshi writer.
- Jack Jenkins, 59, American baseball player (Washington Senators, Los Angeles Dodgers).[84]
- Walter Villa, 58, Italian four-time Grand Prix motorcycle road racing world champion, heart attack.
19
- Ross Carter, 88, American gridiron football player (University of Oregon, Chicago Cardinals).[85]
- Margaret Johnston, 87, Australian-British actress.
- Robert W. Lenski, 76, American screenwriter.
- Pascal Mazzotti, 78, French actor (The King and the Mockingbird).[86]
- Dmitry Oboznenko, 71, Soviet Russian painter and graphic artist.
- Count Flemming of Rosenborg, 80, Danish prince.[87]
- Johnny Strzykalski, 80, American gridiron football player.[88]
- N. F. Varghese, 53, Indian actor.
20
- Carlos Badion, 66, Filipino basketball player (basketball at the 1956 Summer Olympics, basketball at the 1960 Summer Olympics), heart attack.[89]
- Heinz Bigler, 76, Swiss football player.[90]
- Erwin Chargaff, 96, Austro-Hungarian biochemist.[91]
- Fred Drake, 44, American musician, lung cancer.
- Timothy Findley, 71, Canadian author (The Wars, Headhunter, Pilgrim, Elizabeth Rex).[92]
- Irene MacDonald, 68, Canadian athlete, sports executive and broadcaster.[93]
- Tinus Osendarp, 86, Dutch sprinter (two-time bronze medal at 1936 Summer Olympics: men's 100 metres, men's 200 metres).[94]
- Enrique Regüeiferos, 53, Cuban boxer (silver medal in light welterweight boxing at the 1968 Summer Olympics).[95]
- Sa'id Akhtar Rizvi, 75, Indian scholar.
- Stanisław Trepczyński, 78, Polish diplomat.
- John Wirth, 66, American professor and historian of Latin American studies.[96]
21
- Sidney Armus, 77, American actor, cancer.[97]
- Matt Dennis, 88, American singer, pianist and composer ("Angel Eyes", "Everything Happens to Me", "Violets for Your Furs").[98]
- Henry Keith, Baron Keith of Kinkel, 80, British jurist.
- Wladimiro Panizza, 57, Italian road bicycle racer.[99]
- Kurt Seibt, 94, East German politician.
- Berl Senofsky, 76, American classical violinist and teacher, lung disease.[100]
- Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri, 70, Australian painter.
22
- Chang Cheh, 79, Hong Kong film director, pneumonia.[101]
- David O. Cooke, 81, American civil servant, Director of Administration and Management at the U.S. Department of Defense.[102]
- Justin Whitlock Dart, Jr., 71, American activist and advocate for people with disabilities.[103]
- Conrad Hansen, 95, German pianist and a piano teacher.[104]
- Darryl Kile, 33, Major League Baseball player (Houston Astros, Colorado Rockies, St. Louis Cardinals), heart attack.[105]
- Ron Kline, 70, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates, Detroit Tigers, Washington Senators).[106]
- Eppie Lederer, 83, American media celebrity and advice columnist known by her pen name Ann Landers, multiple myeloma.[107]
- Helen Nielsen, 83, American author and screen writer (Perry Mason, Alfred Hitchcock Presents).[108]
- Yoshio Okada, 75, Japanese football player.
- Cho Yoon-ok, 62, South Korean football player and manager.
23
- Lionel Bernstein, 82, South African anti-apartheid activist and political prisoner.[109]
- Fadzil Noor, 63, Malaysian politician and religious teacher, complications following heart bypass surgery.
- Carlo Savina, 82, Italian composer and conductor.[110]
- Alice Stewart, 95, British physician and epidemiologist.[111]
24
- Larry Alcala, 75, Filipino editorial cartoonist and illustrator.
- Pedro Alcázar, 26, Panamanian boxer, injuries sustained during title fight.[112]
- Robert Dorfman, 85, American economist.[113]
- Doreen Fernandez, 67, Filipino writer, teacher, cultural historian, food critic and scholar.
- Bernard Longpré, 65, Canadian director and animator.
- Miles Fitzalan-Howard, 17th Duke of Norfolk, 86, 17th Duke of Norfolk.[114]
- Frank Ripploh, 52, German actor, film director, and author, cancer.[115]
- Pierre Werner, 88, Prime Minister of Luxembourg (1959–1974, 1979–1984), considered the "father of the euro".[116]
25
- Syed Ali Ahsan, 82, Bangladeshi poet, writer and academic.
- Joe Antolick, 86, American baseball player (Philadelphia Phillies).[117]
- Gordon Park Baker, 64, American philosopher, focussing on the writings of Ludwig Wittgenstein.[118]
- Turhan Baytop, 82, Turkish botanist and pharmacist.
- Jean Corbeil, 68, Canadian politician (Minister of Labour, Minister of Transport, member of Parliament).[119]
- Derrek Dickey, 51, American basketball player and sportscaster (Cincinnati, Golden State Warriors, Chicago Bulls), heart attack.[120]
26
- Barbara G. Adams, 57, British egyptologist, cancer.[121]
- Humaira Begum, 83, Afghan royal as the last queen consort of Afghanistan, heart failure.
- Arnold Brown, 88, British General of the Salvation Army.[122]
- Donald A. Bullough, 74, British historian and author.[123]
- Dolores Gray, 78, American actress and singer, heart attack.[124]
- Martti Ketelä, 57, Finnish modern pentathlete.[125]
- Henry Jepson Latham, 93, American attorney, politician, and jurist.[126]
- Raoul Rémy, 82, French road bicycle racer.[127]
- Dermot Walsh, 77, Irish actor (Richard the Lionheart, Sea of Sand, The Challenge).[128]
- Philip Whalen, 78, American Beat generation poet and Zen Buddhist priest.[129]
- Turgut Özatay, 74, Turkish film actor, lung cancer.
27
- Qu Bo, 79, Chinese novelist.[130]
- Charles Frederick Carter, 82, British economist and academic administrator.[131]
- John Entwistle, 57, English bassist (The Who), heart attack.[132]
- Ralph Erickson, 100, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates).[133]
- Richard Evonitz, 38, American serial killer, kidnapper, and rapist, suicide by gunshot.
- Muharram Fouad, 68, Egyptian actor and singer, starred in Hassan and Nayima with co-star Soad Hosny.[134]
- Russ Freeman, 76, American bebop and jazz pianist and songwriter.[135]
- Robert L. J. Long, 82, American admiral.[136]
- Georgi Sokolov, 60, Bulgarian football player.[137]
- Timothy White, 50, American rock music journalist and editor (Crawdaddy!, Rolling Stone, Billboard), heart attack.[138]
28
- Anatoly Akimov, 54, Soviet Olympic water polo player (gold medal winner in water polo at the 1972 Summer Olympics).[139]
- William Dufty, 86, American writer, musician, and activist (Lady Sings the Blues, Sugar Blues), cancer.[140]
- Doug Elmore, 62, American professional football player (Ole Miss, Washington Redskins).[141]
- François Périer, 82, French actor, heart attack.[142]
29
- Terry Bourke, 62, Australian screenwriter, producer and director (Spyforce, Night of Fear, The Tourist).[143]
- Rosemary Clooney, 74, American singer and actress ("Come On-a My House", "Hey There", "This Ole House"), lung cancer.[144]
- Ole-Johan Dahl, 70, Norwegian computer scientist, considered one of the fathers of object-oriented programming.[145]
- Alfred Dregger, 81, German politician and a leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU).
- Obby Kapita, 47, Zambian football player and coach, colorectal cancer.[146]
- Roger Lévêque, 81, French road racing cyclist from 1946 to 1953.[147]
- William Edward Ozzard, 87, American politician.
- Jaime Brocal Remohi, 66, Spanish comic book artist.[148]
- Jan Tomasz Zamoyski, 90, Polish political activist, aristocrat and member of anti-Nazi underground resistance.[149]
30
- Claude Berge, 76, French mathematician.[150]
- Josef Buršík, 90, Czech resistance fighter, dissident, and political prisoner.
- W. Maxwell Cowan, 70, South African neurobiologist.[151]
- Pete Gray, 87, American one-armed baseball player (St. Louis Browns).[152]
- Nikolay Haytov, 82, Bulgarian fiction writer, playwright, and publicist, cancer.
- Raúl Sánchez, 71, Cuban-American baseball player (Washington Senators, Cincinnati Redlegs/Reds).[153]
- Roberto Villa, 86, Italian actor (The Fornaretto of Venice), pancreatitis.[154]
- Dave Wilson, 69, American television director (Saturday Night Live), aortic aneurysm.[155]
- Chico Xavier, 92, Brazilian spiritual medium and author, acute heart attack.[156]
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