Deaths in September 2002
Appearance
The following is a list of notable deaths in September 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.
September 2002
[edit]1
[edit]- Yuji Ichioka, 66, American historian and civil rights activist, cancer.[1]
- B. V. Karanth, 72, Indian actor and director.[2]
- Turk Van Lake, 84, American arranger, composer and jazz guitarist.[3]
- Rodney Taylor, 62, Australian Navy officer, lung cancer.
2
[edit]- Leon Campbell, 75, American gridiron football player (University of Arkansas, Chicago Bears, Pittsburgh Steelers).[4]
- Abe Lemons, 79, American college basketball player and coach, complications from Parkinson's disease.[5]
- Ken Menke, 79, American basketball player.[6]
- Rodica Ojog-Brașoveanu, 63, Romanian writer, severe lung problems.[7]
- Ahmad Rahi, 78, Pakistani poet and writer.
- F.X. Toole, 72, American boxing trainer and short story writers.[8]
- Robert Wilson, 75, British astrophysicist, known for his research in optical and solar plasma spectroscopy.[9]
3
[edit]- Dirk ter Haar, 83, Anglo-Dutch physicist.[10]
- Kenneth Hare, 83, Canadian scientist.[11]
- Ted Ross, 68, American actor (The Wiz, Arthur, Police Academy).[12]
- William Clement Stone, 100, American businessman, philanthropist and self-help book author.[13]
- Len Wilkinson, 85, British cricketer.[14]
4
[edit]- Frankie Albert, 82, American professional football player (Stanford, San Francisco 49ers), Alzheimer's disease.[15]
- Dave Baker, 65, American professional football player (University of Oklahoma, San Francisco 49ers).[16]
- Jerome Biffle, 74, American Olympic long jumper (gold medalist 1952), pulmonary fibrosis.[17]
- Jim Constable, 69, American baseball player (New York/San Francisco Giants, Cleveland Indians, Washington Senators, Milwaukee Braves).[18]
- Andrew Forge, 78, American painter, art critic and professor of painting at Yale University.[19]
- Vlado Perlemuter, 98, Lithuanian-French pianist and teacher.[20]
- Fozia Soomro, 36, Pakistani regional folk singer, kidney failure.
5
[edit]- K. T. Achaya, 78, Indian oil and food scientist and writer.
- Robert W. Brooks, 49, American mathematics professor, known for his work in spectral geometry and fractals.[21]
- William Cooper, 92, English novelist.[22]
- Cliff Gorman, 65, American actor (The Boys in the Band, All That Jazz, Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai), Tony winner (1972), leukemia.[23]
- Frank Hewitt, 66, American hard bop jazz pianist.
- Jackie Kelk, 79, American actor and stand-up comedian, lung infection.[24]
- Amon Nikoi, 72, Ghanaian economist and diplomat.
- Ingeborg Taschner, 72, German film editor.
- David Todd Wilkinson, 67, American cosmologist, known for thermal cosmic background radiation, cancer.[25]
6
[edit]- Michael Argyle, 77, British psychologist, a pioneer of social psychology in Britain.[26]
- Gabriel Camps, 75, French archaeologist and social anthropologist.[27]
- Bobby Clancy, 75, Irish singer and musician, pulmonary fibrosis.
- Rafael Druian, 79, American violinist and conductor (New York Philharmonic, Cleveland Orchestra).[28]
- Orvan Hess, 96, American physician.[29]
- Géza Hollósi, 64, Hungarian Olympic wrestler.[30]
- Philip LaBatte, 91, American ice hockey player.[31]
- Martin Matsbo, 90, Swedish cross-country skier and Olympic medalist.[32]
- Janet Young, Baroness Young, 75, British politician (Leader of the House of Lords), cancer.[33]
7
[edit]- Katrin Cartlidge, 41, English actress (Brookside, Before the Rain, Breaking the Waves), complications from pneumonia and sepsis.[34]
- Jonathan Charney, 59, American academic, author, and lawyer.
- Eugenio Coșeriu, 81, linguist specialized in Romance languages.[35]
- Michael Elphick, 55, English actor (Boon, EastEnders, Gorky Park, Private Schulz), heart attack.[36]
- Cyrinda Foxe, 50, American actress, model and publicist, brain cancer.
- John Paul Frank, 84, American lawyer and scholar, helped shape U.S. Supreme Court cases (Brown v. Board of Education, Miranda v. Arizona).[37]
- Erma Franklin, 64, American gospel and soul singer ("Piece of My Heart"), older sister of Aretha Franklin, laryngeal cancer.[38]
- Uziel Gal, 78, German-Israeli firearm designer who invented the Uzi submachine gun, cancer.[39]
8
[edit]- Georges-André Chevallaz, 87, Swiss historian and politician.
- Rulon Jeffs, 92, American polygamist and religious leader.
- Lucas Moreira Neves, 76, Brazilian Roman Catholic prelate.[40]
- Henri Rol-Tanguy, 94, French communist and a leader in the Resistance during World War II.[41]
- Marco Siffredi, 23, French snowboarder (last seen on this date).
- Laurie Williams, 33, West Indian cricketer, car accident.[42]
9
[edit]- Tom Bradley, 76, British politician (member of Parliament representing Leicester North East and Leicester East).[43]
- Geoffrey Dummer, 92, English electronics engineer, built the first prototype of the integrated circuit.[44]
- Gerald W. Johnson, 83, US Air Force lieutenant general and flying ace during World War II.
- José Luis Massera, 87, Uruguayan mathematician.[45]
10
[edit]- Augusto Lamo Castillo, 63, Spanish football referee.
- René Cousineau, 72, Canadian politician (member of Parliament representing Gatineau, Quebec).[46]
- Sandor Elès, 66, Hungarian actor.
- Alexander Farrelly, 78, American politician, governor of the United States Virgin Islands from 1987 to 1995.[47]
- David Grene, 89, Irish-American professor of classics.[48]
- Kuo Pao Kun, 63, Chinese playwright, theatre director, and arts activist, kidney and liver cancer.
- Žarana Papić, 53, Serbian social anthropologist and feminist theorist.
- T. Viswanathan, 75, Indian musician specializing in the carnatic flute and voice.[49]
11
[edit]- Kim Hunter, 79, American actress (A Streetcar Named Desire, Planet of the Apes, The Edge of Night), Oscar winner (1952), heart attack.[50]
- Howard Levi, 85, American mathematician.
- Howard T. Odum, 78, American ecologist.[51]
- Johnny Unitas, 69, American gridiron football player and a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, cardiovascular renal disease.[52]
- David Wisniewski, 49, American writer and illustrator of children's books.[53]
12
[edit]- Lloyd Biggle, Jr., 79, American musician and author, leukemia and cancer.[54]
- Mitsuo Ikeda, 67, Japanese freestyle wrestler and Olympic gold medalist.[55]
- Sheikh Mohammad Rashid, 87, Pakistani politician.
- Neil Shields, 83, British politician and businessman.[56]
13
[edit]- Sir Douglas Black, 89, British physician, played a key role in the development of the National Health Service.[57]
- Richard Foster, 83, American modernist architect.[58]
- George Hills, 84, British journalist and historian.
- Alexander Kazantsev, 96, Soviet and Russian science fiction writer, ufologist and chess composer.
- Charles Herbert Lowe, 82, American biologist.[59]
- William Phillips, 94, American editor, writer and public intellectual.[60]
- Brooks Richards, 84, British diplomat and SOE operative.[61]
- Blanca de Silos, 88, Spanish film actress.
- George Stanley, 95, Canadian historian and public servant.[62]
14
[edit]- Jim "Bad News" Barnes, 61, American basketball player (gold medal at the 1964 Summer Olympics, Los Angeles Lakers, Boston Celtics), heart problems.[63]
- Frederic Bennett, 83, British journalist, barrister politician (member of Parliament for Torbay, Torquay and Reading North).[64]
- Roberto Cavanagh, 87, Argentine polo player.[65]
- Michael Greer, 64, American actor, comedian and cabaret performer, cancer.
- Jim McKee, 55, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates), traffic collision.[66]
- LaWanda Page, 81, American actress (Sanford and Son), diabetes.[67]
- Lolita Torres, 72, Argentine film actress and soprano.[68]
- Paul Williams, 87, African American jazz and blues saxophonist, bandleader, and songwriter ("The Huckle-Buck").[69]
15
[edit]- Kay Espenhayn, 34, German paralympic swimmer, complications to lung, kidney and heart disease.
- Jenny Maakal, 89, South African freestyle swimmer and Olympic medalist.[70]
- James Mitchell, 76, British writer, principally of crime fiction and spy thrillers.[71]
- Jean Rousset, 92, Swiss literary critic.[72]
16
[edit]- James Gregory, 90, American actor (Barney Miller, The Manchurian Candidate, The Lawless Years).[73]
- Archibald Hall, 78, British criminal known as the "Killer Butler", stroke.
- Jiří Javorský, 70, Czech tennis player.
- Raymond Reiter, 63, Canadian computer scientist and logician.
- Mary Stott, 95, British journalist and feminist.[74]
- Nguyen Van Thuan, 74, Vietnamese Roman Catholic prelate, cancer.[75]
- Jean Vernette, 73, French Roman Catholic prelate and researcher of cults.[76]
17
[edit]- Eileen Colwell, 98, British author and librarian.[77]
- Jack Ferguson, 78, Australian politician (Deputy Premier of New South Wales), mesothelioma.[78]
- Denys Fisher, 84, British inventor of the Spirograph.
- James Macdonald, 83, Scottish-Australian ornithologist.[79]
- Dodo Marmarosa, 76, American jazz pianist, composer, and arranger.[80]
- Govind Perumal, 76, Indian field hockey player and Olympic champion.[81]
- Edvaldo Alves de Santa Rosa, 68, Brazilian football player and manager, cancer.
18
[edit]- Hazel Brooks, 78, American actress.[82]
- Andreas Burnier, 71, Dutch writer who focussed on homosexuality, transsexuality and discrimination, intracranial hemorrhage.[83]
- Boris Carmi, 88, Russian-Israeli photographer.
- Bob Hayes, 59, American football player Dallas Cowboys and a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, prostate cancer.[84]
- Mauro Ramos, 72, Brazilian football player, intestinal cancer.[85]
- Shivaji Sawant, 62, Indian novelist in the Marathi language.
- Herbert Schmidt, 88, German rower and Olympic medalist.[86]
- Margita Stefanović, 43, Serbian musician, complications from HIV.
19
[edit]- Albert Ando, 72, Japanese-American economist, leukemia.[87]
- John Arundel, 74, Canadian ice hockey player (Toronto Maple Leafs).[88]
- Robert Guéï, 61, Ivorian politician and its military ruler (1999-2000), murdered along with his family.[89]
- Duncan Hallas, 76, British communist politician and Marxist theorist.[90]
- Ian Hutchinson, 54, English football player.[91]
- Francisco Lojacono, 66, Italian Argentine football player and manager.
- Priya Tendulkar, 47, Indian actress, social activist and writer, heart attack.
- Carl W. Thompson, 88, American lawyer and Democratic politician.
- Tatyana Velikanova, 70, Soviet dissident and mathematician.
20
[edit]- Les Auge, 49, American professional ice hockey player (Colorado Rockies).[92]
- Sergey Bodrov, Jr., 30, Russian movie star, Kolka-Karmadon rock ice slide, accidental death.[93]
- Bruce Edwards, 90, American actor and photographer.
- Necdet Kent, 91, Turkish diplomat and humanitarian.
- Eduardo Gudiño Kieffer, 66, Argentine writer.
- Joan Littlewood, 87, English theatre director.[94]
- Pat Saward, 74, English football player, Alzheimer's disease.[95]
- Bob Wallace, 53, American computer scientist, helped invent "shareware" software marketing.[96]
21
[edit]- Henry Pybus Bell-Irving, 89, Canadian World War II commander and Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia.[97]
- Angelo Buono, 67, American serial killer, kidnapper and rapist (the "Hillside Strangler"), heart attack.[98]
- Robert L. Forward, 70, American physicist and science fiction author, founded Tethers Unlimited to manufacture tethers for NASA.[99]
- Peter Kowald, 58, German free jazz double bassist and tubist, heart attack.[100]
- Maurice Manson, 89, Canadian actor.[101]
- Rocco Rock, 49, American professional wrestler, heart attack.
- Robert White, 81, American sculptor, professor and poet.[102]
22
[edit]- Don Carlsen, 75, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs, Pittsburgh Pirates).[103]
- Jan de Hartog, 88, Dutch-American novelist and playwright.[104]
- Anthony Lancelot Dias, 92, Indian politician.
- Harry Glancy, 98, American competition swimmer and Olympic champion.[105]
- Antonio Haro, 91, Mexican Olympic épée and sabre fencer.[106]
- Pierre Jacquinot, 92, French physicist.[107]
- Joseph Nathan Kane, 103, American historian and author.[108]
- Anthony Milner, 77, British musician, multiple sclerosis.[109]
- Marga Petersen, 83, German athlete.[110]
- Julio Pérez, 76, Uruguayan football player.
- William Rosenberg, 86, American entrepreneur, bladder cancer.[111]
- Anel Sudakevich, 95, Soviet silent film actress.
23
[edit]- James Scarlett, 8th Baron Abinger, 87, British peer.[112]
- Vernon Corea, 75, Sri Lankan-born British radio broadcaster.[113]
- George Georges, 82, Australian politician.[114]
- Eduard Gufeld, 66, Soviet/Russian International Grandmaster of chess and chess author, heart attack.[115]
- Erich Oberdorfer, 97, German biologist specializing in phytosociology and phytogeography.
- John Wu, 77, Hong Kong Roman Catholic cardinal, diabetes.[116]
24
[edit]- Hobbs Adams, 99, American football player and coach (USC, Kansas State).[117]
- Tetsuya Ayukawa, 83, Japanese literary critic and novelist.
- Sergio Bergonzelli, 78, Italian director, screenwriter, producer and actor.[118]
- Robert Anthony Buell, 62, American serial killer, child murderer and serial rapist, execution by lethal injection.[119]
- Leon Hart, 73, American football player.[120]
- Tim Rose, 62, American singer and songwriter, heart attack.
- Mike Webster, 50, American football player (Pittsburgh Steelers) and a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, heart attack.[121]
25
[edit]- Jacques Borel, 76, French author.[122]
- Ray Hayworth, 98, American baseball player (Detroit Tigers, Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Giants, St. Louis Browns).[123]
- Roman Pucinski, 83, American Democratic politician.[124]
- Arnold Ross, 96, American mathematician.
- Naeem Siddiqui, 86, Pakistani Islamic scholar, writer and politician.
26
[edit]- Enzo Andronico, 78, Italian actor and comedian.
- Eleonore Bjartveit, 78, Norwegian politician.
- Nils Bohlin, 82, Swedish mechanical engineer, invented the three-point car safety belt.[125]
- Ricardo Calvo, 58, Spanish chess master and historian and author on chess, esophageal cancer.[126]
- Henry Larsen, 86, Danish rower.[127]
- Thomas Sidney Smith, 84, American politician, member of the New Jersey General Assembly.
- Philippe Tailliez, 97, French diving pioneer, underwater photographer and colleague of Jacques Cousteau.[128]
27
[edit]- Lidia Chmielnicka-Żmuda, 63, Polish volleyball player (bronze medal in women's volleyball at the 1968 Summer Olympics).[129]
- Wally Dreyer, 79, American gridiron football player (Chicago Bears, Green Bay Packers) and college football coach.[130]
- Charles Henri Ford, 94, American poet, novelist, and filmmaker.[131]
- David Granger, 99, American Olympic bobsledder and businessman.[132]
- Attila Keresztes, 74, Hungarian fencer and Olympic champion.[133]
- Per Axel Lundgren, 91, Swedish art director.
- Anna Murià, 98, Spanish Catalan narrator, literary critic, and journalist.
- Bill Pearson, 80, New Zealand writer.
- Glen Rounds, 96, American author and illustrator.[134]
28
[edit]- Alicia Barrié, 86, Chilean actress.
- Whitney Blake, 76, American actress (Hazel), director and producer (One Day at a Time), esophageal cancer.[135]
- John Cannady, 79, American gridiron football player (Indiana University, New York Giants).[136]
- Patsy Mink, 74, American lawyer and politician, viral pneumonia.[137]
- Hartland Molson, 95, Canadian statesman, senator and businessman.
- Maurice Novarina, 95, French architect;.[138]
29
[edit]- Bob Cobbing, 82, British poet.[139]
- Zvi Kolitz, 89, Lithuanian-American writer and film and theatrical producer.[140]
- Ellis Larkins, 79, American jazz pianist, pneumonia.[141]
- Mickey Newbury, 62, American songwriter and recording artist, emphysema.[142]
- Giuliana Tesoro, 81, American organic chemist.
30
[edit]- Robert Battersby, 77, British businessman and politician, member of the European Parliament.[143]
- Ron Duhamel, 64, Canadian politician (member of Parliament representing Saint Boniface, Manitoba, Senator for Manitoba).[144]
- Göran Kropp, 35, Swedish adventurer and mountaineer, fall.
- Miloš Macourek, 75, Czech poet, playwright, author and screenwriter.[145]
- Germana Malabarba, 88, Italian gymnast and Olympic medalist.[146]
- Meinhard Michael Moser, 78, Swiss mycologist, heart attack.
- Ewart Oakeshott, 86, British illustrator.
- Hans-Peter Tschudi, 88, Swiss politician and minister.
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- ^ "Len Wilkinson profile and biography, stats, records, averages, photos and videos". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved November 18, 2023.
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- ^ "Jim Constable". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved February 22, 2019.
- ^ Roberta Smith (September 7, 2002). "Andrew Forge, 78, Painter And a Former Dean at Yale". The New York Times. p. A 16. Retrieved April 18, 2019.
- ^ Anthony Tommasini (September 7, 2002). "Vlado Perlemuter, French Classical Pianist, Dies at 98". The New York Times. p. A 16. Retrieved August 11, 2021.
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- ^ "Rafael Druian, 80, Violinist and Conductor". The New York Times. September 23, 2002. p. B 8. Retrieved April 7, 2019.
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- ^ Cavalier, Rodney (September 18, 2002). "Ferguson, Laurie John (Jack) (1924–2002)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Retrieved April 17, 2019.
- ^ "James Macdonald - Social Networks and Archival Context". snaccooperative.org. Retrieved November 18, 2023.
- ^ Peter Keepnews (September 27, 2002). "Dodo Marmarosa, 76, an Early Bebop Pianist". The New York Times. p. A 29. Retrieved August 11, 2021.
- ^ "Olympedia – Govind Perumal". olympedia.org. OlyMADMen. Retrieved November 18, 2023.
- ^ "Hazel Brooks". catalogue.bnf.fr (in French). Bibliothèque nationale de France. Retrieved November 18, 2023.
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- ^ Frank Litsky (September 20, 2002). "Bob Hayes, Stellar Sprinter and Receiver, Is Dead at 59". The New York Times. p. B 9. Retrieved August 11, 2021.
- ^ "Mauro Ramos". worldfootball.net. Retrieved November 18, 2023.
- ^ "Olympedia – Herbert Schmidt". olympedia.org. OlyMADMen. Retrieved November 18, 2023.
- ^ "Albert Ando - Social Networks and Archival Context". snaccooperative.org. Retrieved November 18, 2023.
- ^ John Arundel, Sports-Reference / Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved 2019-03-12.
- ^ "Ex-ruler is killed in coup attempt". The Telegraph. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
- ^ Jim Higgins (September 30, 2002). "Duncan Hallas". The Guardian. Retrieved November 18, 2023.
- ^ "Ian Hutchinson". worldfootball.net. Retrieved November 18, 2023.
- ^ Les Auge, Sports-Reference / Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved 2019-03-12.
- ^ Beumers, Birgit (October 10, 2002). "Sergei Bodrov". The Guardian. Retrieved March 16, 2019.
- ^ Benedict Nightingale (September 24, 2002). "Joan Littlewood, British Theater Pioneer Of 'Oh What a Lovely War,' Dies at 87". The New York Times. p. B 8. Retrieved August 11, 2021.
- ^ "Pat Saward". worldfootball.net. Retrieved November 18, 2023.
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