The following is a list of notable deaths in December 2004.
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.
December 2004
1
- Fathi Arafat, 71, Palestinian physician, founder of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society, stomach cancer.[1]
- Prince Bernhard of Lippe-Biesterfeld, 93, Dutch royal, lung and colon cancer.[2]
- Norman Newell, 85, English record producer.[3]
- Damon Simonelli, 45, American planetary scientist, led pioneering studies in the exploration of the satellites of the Solar System with spacecraft.[4]
- David Vienneau, 53, Canadian journalist, pancreatic cancer.[5]
2
- Larry Buchanan, 81, American B-movie director, producer and writer, complications of collapsed lung.[6]
- Elizabeth Azcona Cranwell, 71, Argentine poet and translator.[7]
- Cachita Galán, 61, Argentine singer, cancer.[8]
- Dame Alicia Markova, 94, English ballerina.[9]
- Charles McLelland, 74, British radio executive.[10]
- Nadine Shamir, 32, American techno singer/songwriter, complications in childbirth.[11]
- Mona Van Duyn, 83, American poet, US Poet Laureate (1992), bone cancer.[12]
3
- Shiing-Shen Chern, 93, Chinese mathematician, heart failure following heart attack.[13]
- Gerald FitzGerald, 8th Duke of Leinster, 90, Irish nobleman.[14]
- Pavel Pavlov, 52, Bulgarian Olympic sprinter (men's 200 metres and men's 4 × 100 metres relay at the 1980 Summer Olympics).[15]
- Maria Perschy, 66, Austrian film, stage and TV actress, cancer.[16]
- Helmut Rix, 78, German linguist, car accident.[17]
- Josef Schwammberger, 92, German former Nazi labor camp commander.[18]
- Marek Stachowski, 68, Polish composer.[19]
4
- Carl Esmond, 102, Austrian film and stage actor.[20]
- Tom Fitzgerald, 53, American soccer coach (University of Tampa), injuries from motorcycle accident.[21]
- Elena Souliotis, 61, Greek operatic soprano, heart failure.[22]
- Matthew Troy, 75, American lawyer and politician, Parkinsons Disease.[23]
5
- Big Boy Henry, 83, American blues guitarist, singer and songwriter.
- Seymour Ginsburg, 76, American computer scientist, Alzheimer's disease.[24]
- Neil Hallett, 80, Belgian-English actor.
- Cristiano Júnior, 24, Brazilian footballer, cardiac arrest after on-field collision.[25]
- Jose Pellissery, 53–54, Indian film and theatre actor.
- Hicham Zerouali, 27, Moroccan footballer, car accident.[26]
6
- Frank Reginald Carey, 92, British World War II fighter ace.[27]
- Raymond Goethals, 83, Belgian soccer coach.[28]
- Manzanita, 48, Spanish singer and guitarist.[29]
- Adrian Morris, 75, English painter.[30]
- John Norton, 86, American United States Army general.[31]
- Enrique Salinas, 52, Mexican businessman, asphyxiation.[32]
7
- Pacita Abad, 58, Filipino painter.[33]
- Frederick Fennell, 90, American conductor, founder of Eastman Wind Ensemble.[34]
- Floyd Nattrass, 86, Canadian Olympic sports shooter (men's trap shooting at the 1964 Summer Olympics).[35]
- Oscar M. Ruebhausen, 92, American prominent New York City lawyer, adviser to Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller and president of the New York City Bar Association.[36]
- Jerry Scoggins, 93, American musician ("The Ballad of Jed Clampett"), natural causes.[37]
- Jay Van Andel, 80, American co-founder and former chairman of Amway, Parkinson's disease.[38]
8
- Dimebag Darrell, 38, American heavy metal guitarist (Pantera, Damageplan), shot.[39]
- Cleve Gray, 86, American abstract painter.[40]
- Jackson Mac Low, 82, American poet, composer and performance artist, complications from stroke.[41]
- Leslie Scarman, Baron Scarman, 93, British jurist, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary (1977–1986).[42]
- Edgar Toppin, 76, American historian.[43]
9
- Henny Backus, 93, American actress.[44]
- David Brudnoy, 64, American radio talk show host (Boston), Merkel cell carcinoma.[45]
- Paul Edwards, 81, Austrian-born American philosopher.[46]
- Sir Peter Emery, 78, British Conservative politician (Honiton, 1967–1997; East Devon, 1997–2001).[47]
- Philippe Gigantès, 81, Canadian former senator, cancer.[48]
- Andrea Absolonová, 27, Czech diver and adult model known as Lea De Mae, brain cancer.[49]
- Sergey Voychenko, 49, Belarusian artist and designer.[citation needed]
10
- Norman Borrett, 87, English sportsman.[50]
- Emilio Cruz, 66, Cuban-American artist, pancreatic cancer.[51]
- Bob King, 81, American college basketball coach.[52]
- Brian Ernest Maitland Prophet, 76, British civil servant.
- Homi Wadia, 93, Indian film director and producer.
- Gary Webb, 49, American investigative reporter ("Dark Alliance"), apparent suicide.[53]
11
- Christopher Blake, 55, English actor and screenwriter, Non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
- Bum Bright, 84, American businessman and philanthropist.
- José Luis Cuciuffo, 42, Argentinian footballer and 1986 Football World Cup champion, hunting accident.[54]
- Arthur Lydiard, 87, New Zealand marathon runner and athletics coach.[55]
- Harry Roesli, 53, Indonesian singer-songwriter, heart attack.
- Margaret Fay Shaw, 101, American photographer and folklorist.
- M. S. Subbulakshmi, 88, Indian Carnatic musician, heart irregularities.[56]
- Masao Yazawa, 89, Japanese Olympic sprinter.
12
- Joseph Beyrle, 81, United States Army and Soviet Red Army soldier.
- Antonio Paredes Candia, 81, Bolivian folklorist and writer.[57]
- Pramod Chakravorty, 75, Indian film producer and director.
- Simon Combes, 64, British wildlife artist, gored by a buffalo.[58]
- Herbert Dreilich, 62, German rock musician, cancer.
- George Ephgrave, 86, English footballer.
- Rollin Hotchkiss, 93, American biochemist and molecular genetics pioneer.[59]
- Harry McNally, 68, English football player, coach and manager, heart attack.
- Phaswane Mpe, 34, South African novelist, after short illness.[60]
- Fabian O'Dea, 86, Canadian lawyer and politician, Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland and Labrador.[61]
- Syed Mir Qasim, 83, Indian politician, Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir (1971–1975).[62]
- William B. Rosson, 86, United States Army general, heart attack.
- Bernarda Bryson Shahn, 101, American painter, lithographer, widow of Ben Shahn.[63]
- Pavlo Vasylyk, 78, Ukrainian Greek Catholic hierarch.
13
- Donald S. Jones, 76, American admiral.[64]
- Andre Rodgers, 70, Bahamian baseball player, first Bahamian to play in Major League Baseball.[65]
- Tom Turesson, 62, Swedish footballer.[66]
- David Wheeler, 77, English computer scientist.[67]
14
- Harry Bowcott, 97, Welsh rugby union player (London Welsh, Wales) and president of the Welsh Rugby Union.[68]
- Candice Daly, 38, American film and TV actress (The Young and the Restless).[69]
- Danny Doyle, 87, American baseball player (Boston Red Sox).[70]
- Rod Kanehl, 70, American baseball player who hit the first grand slam in the New York Mets history, heart attack.[71]
- Alexey Korneyev, 65, Russian footballer.[72]
- Fernando Poe Jr., 65, Filipino actor and former presidential candidate, stroke.[73]
- Agostino Straulino, 90, Italian Olympic sailor (mixed two person keelboat: 1952 gold medal winner, 1956 silver medal winner).[74]
- Robert Watson, 81, American artist, cancer.[75]
15
- Chiang Fang-liang, 88, Russian-born widow of Chiang Ching-kuo and First Lady of the Republic of China on Taiwan (1978–1988), pulmonary and cardiac failure.[76]
- Harry Errington, 94, British firefighter, recipient of the George Cross.[77]
- Vassal Gadoengin, 61, Nauruan politician and then-incumbent Speaker of Parliament, heart attack.[citation needed]
- Pauline LaFon Gore, 92, American lawyer.[78]
- Jiban Ghosh, 69, Indian cricket umpire.[79]
- Sidonie Goossens, 105, British harpist.[80]
- Jim Holliday, 55–56, American pornographic film producer and historian, complications from diabetes.[81]
- Rodney O'Gliasain Kennedy-Minott, 76, American diplomat, former United States Ambassador to Sweden, complications of pancreatitis.[82]
- Lorenzo "Larry" J. Ponza Jr., 86, American baseball pitching machine innovator, cancer-related illness.[83]
16
- Ted Abernathy, 71, American baseball player.[84]
- Laxmikant Berde, 50, Indian actor.[85]
- Richard B. Fisher, 68, American banker, cancer.[86]
- Stefano Madia, 49, Italian actor.[87]
- Agnes Martin, 92, American abstract painter, pneumonia.[88]
- Bobby Mattick, 89, American former baseball player and manager, stroke.[89]
- Yehudit Naot, 60, Israeli scientist and politician, throat cancer.[90]
- Lawrence D. O'Brien, 53, Canadian politician, member of the House of Commons of Canada, cancer.[91]
- Freddie Perren, 61, American two-time Grammy Award-winning record producer.[92]
- William Silverman, 87, American physician, known for making important contributions to neonatology.[93]
- Athena Starwoman, 59, Australian astrologer, breast cancer.[94]
17
- Dick Heckstall-Smith, 70, British saxophone player (Colosseum, John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers), cancer.[95]
- Ib Mossin, 71, Danish actor, singer and director.
- Janina Niedźwiecka, 82, Polish film editor.[96]
- Tom Wesselmann, 73, American pop artist, following heart surgery.[97]
- Sir James Wilson, 83, British army general.[98]
18
- Noel Beaton, 78, Australian MP (Bendigo, 1960–1969) and journalist, after short illness.[99]
- John W. Downey, 77, American classical musician.[100][better source needed]
- Vijay Hazare, 89, Indian cricketer, Captain of India (1951–1953), illness following intestinal cancer.[101]
- Albert Nordengen, 81, Norwegian Conservative politician, Mayor of Oslo (1976–1990), heart failure.[102]
- Anthony Sampson, 78, British journalist and author, official biographer of Nelson Mandela, heart attack.[103]
- Princess Takamatsu, 92, Japanese member of the imperial family, blood poisoning.[104]
- Glenn Vaughan, 60, American baseball player (Houston Colt .45s).[105]
19
- Michael Alexander, 84, British soldier and Prominente German Prisoner of War.[106]
- Gretchen Bender, 53, American video artist, cancer.[107]
- Richard Best, 88, British film editor.[108]
- Herbert C. Brown, 92, British Nobel Prize-winning chemist (Chemistry, 1979), heart attack.[109]
- Mel Gabler, 89, American conservative textbook critic, brain hemorrhage after fall.[110]
- Sir Charles Pereira, 91, British hydrologist, stroke.[111]
- Renata Tebaldi, 82, Italian opera singer, after short illness.[112]
- Thomas Yamamoto, 87, American artist.[113]
20
- Howard Feuer, 56, American casting director, colon cancer.[114]
- Ernő Gottesmann, 97, son of Ernő Gottesmann and Paula Manoilovich.
- Liliane Maigné, 76, French actress.[115]
- Helge Pukema, 87, American football player.
- Son Seals, 62, American blues musician, complications of diabetes.[116]
21
- Lennart Bernadotte, 95, Swedish prince.[117]
- Michael Forrest, 72, Welsh television actor.
- Richard Hamilton, 83, American actor (Men in Black, Pale Rider, Bret Maverick).
- Jack Newfield, 66, American journalist (Village Voice, New York Daily News, New York Post), metastatic kidney cancer.[118]
- Mack Vickery, 66, American musician and songwriter, heart attack.[119]
- Zvonimir Vučković, 88, Yugoslav Chetnik military commander.
22
- Yusuf Soalih Ajura, 114, Ghanaian Islamic scholar, political activist and sect leader.[120]
- Doug Ault, 54, American Major League Baseball player (Toronto Blue Jays), suicide by gunshot.[121]
- Pauline Clotworthy, 92, Irish teacher of fashion design.[122]
- Joseph Bennet Odunton, 83, Ghanaian public servant.
- John Tiedtke, 97, American farmer, professor, businessman and philanthropist.
23
- Richard Abel Smith, 71, British Army officer and landowner, stroke.[123]
- Reuven Adiv, 74, Israeli actor, director and drama teacher, heart attack.[124]
- Richard Barnet, 75, American political activist.[125]
- John W. Duarte, 85, British classical guitarist and writer, cancer.[126]
- Ifor James, 73, British horn player.[127]
- Roger Moorey, 67, British archaeologist and historian.[128]
- P. V. Narasimha Rao, 83, Indian Prime Minister (1991–1996), heart attack.[129]
- Anne Truitt, 83, American sculptor.[130]
24
- Capt. Richard Annand, 90, British soldier, first Victoria Cross recipient of World War II.[131]
- Sir Anthony Meyer, 84, British Conservative MP (West Flintshire, 1970–1983; Clwyd North-West, 1983–1992), cancer.[132]
- Johnny Oates, 58, American Major League Baseball catcher (Baltimore Orioles, New York Yankees) and manager (Baltimore Orioles, Texas Rangers), brain tumor.[133]
- Pete Palangio, 96, Canadian ice hockey player.[134]
- Dame Rosemary Rue, 76, British physician and civil servant.[135]
- Elwira Seroczynska, 73, Polish Olympic speed skater (silver medal winner in women's 1500 metres at the 1960 Winter Olympics).[136]
- Lauri Silvennoinen, 88, Finnish Olympic cross-country skier (1948 silver medal winner in men's 4 x 10 kilometre cross-country skiing relay).[137]
25
- Sandy Cameron, 66, Canadian politician.[138]
- Nripen Chakraborty, 99, Indian politician.[139]
- James Hunter Blair, 78, Scottish historic preservationist.[140]
- Jane Muskie, 77, American model and bookkeeper, widow of politician Edmund Muskie, Alzheimer's disease.[141]
- Donald Pederson, 79, American electrical engineer, complications from Parkinson's disease.[142]
- Antony Preston, 66, British naval historian and writer.[143]
- Eddie Spicer, 82, English footballer (Liverpool).[144]
- Gennady Strekalov, 64, Russian cosmonaut, Hero of the Soviet Union, cancer.[145]
26
- Sir Tristan Antico, 81, Australian businessman and arts patron.
- Charles Biederman, 98, American abstract artist.[146]
- Jonathan Drummond-Webb, 45, South African paediatric heart surgeon, suicide by overdose.[147]
- Garard Green, 80, British actor.[148]
- Marianne Heiberg, 59, Norwegian diplomat, Oslo Accords mediator, heart attack.[149]
- Eddie Layton, 77, American organist (New York Yankees), after short illness.[150]
- David McKay, 83, Australian journalist and racing driver, cancer.[151]
- Don Nygord, 68, American Olympic sports shooter (50 metre 1984, 10 metre 1988, 50 metre 1988).[152]
- Sir Angus Ogilvy, 76, British businessman, husband of HRH Princess Alexandra, The Honourable Lady Ogilvy, throat cancer.[153]
- Frank Pantridge, 88, British physician and cardiologist.[154]
- Reggie White, 43, American football player (Philadelphia Eagles, Green Bay Packers) and member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, cardiac arrhythmia.[155]
- Notable people killed in the 2004 Asian tsunami:
- Jane Attenborough, 49, British arts administrator, daughter of actor Richard Attenborough
- Troy Broadbridge, 24, Australian Football League player (Melbourne).[156]
- Kristina Fröjmark, 47, Swedish reality TV star.[157]
- Bhumi Jensen, 21, Thai prince.[158]
- Sujeewa Kamalasuriya, 39, Sri Lankan cricketer.[159]
- Sigurd Køhn, 45, Norwegian composer.[160]
- Markus Sandlund, 29, Swedish cellist.[161]
- Aki Sirkesalo, 42, Finnish musician.[162]
- Mieszko Talarczyk, 30, Swedish musician.[163]
- Robert Whymant, 60, British journalist (The Times) and author.[164]
27
- Eneko Arieta, 71, Spanish footballer.
- Mabel Blythe, 74, Sri Lankan actress and singer.
- Hank Garland, 74, American studio guitarist (Elvis Presley, Charlie Parker), staphylococcus infection.[165]
- Ernest Groth, 82, American baseball player (Cleveland Indians, Chicago White Sox).[166]
- Donald L. Hollowell, 87, American civil rights attorney, heart failure.
- Heorhiy Kirpa, 58, Ukrainian industrialist and politician (Transport Minister since 2002), shot.[167]
28
- Jacques Dupuis, 81, Belgian Jesuit priest and theologian.
- Jerry Orbach, 69, American actor (Law & Order, Beauty and the Beast, Dirty Dancing), Tony winner (1969), prostate cancer.[168]
- Johnny Pawk, 94, American basketball player.
- Susan Sontag, 71, American author, literary theorist and activist, acute myeloid leukemia.[169]
- Tzvi Tzur, 81, Israeli officer.
29
- Julius Axelrod, 92, American Nobel Prize-winning biochemist (Medicine, 1970), natural causes.[170]
- William Boyett, 77, American actor (Adam-12), complications from pneumonia and kidney failure.[171]
- John Bridgeman, 88, British sculptor.[172]
- Ken Burkhart, 89, American Major League Baseball pitcher and umpire, emphysema.[173]
- Arthur B. Chapman, 96, British-born American geneticist.[174]
- Liddy Holloway, 57, New Zealand actress (Shortland Street) and writer, liver cancer.[175]
- Gus Niarhos, 84, American baseball player (New York Yankees, Chicago White Sox, Boston Red Sox, Philadelphia Phillies).[176]
30
- Biswajit Das, 68, Indian playwright, short story writer, film director and script writer.
- Mark Fiennes, 71, English photographer and illustrator.[177]
- Masao Kato, 57, Japanese go player.[178]
- Mary Tuthill Lindheim, 92, American sculptor and studio potter.
- Meta Rosenberg, 89, American television producer and talent agent.
- Artie Shaw, 94, American jazz musician, complications of diabetes.[179]
31
- M. E. H. Mohamed Ali, 77, Ceylonese politician.
- Aladi Aruna, 71, Indian politician, murdered.
- John Chataway, 57, Canadian politician, complications from stroke.[180]
- Charlie Cozart, 85, American baseball player (Boston Braves).[181]
- Gérard Debreu, 83, French-born American Nobel Prize-winning economist (Economics, 1983), natural causes.[182]
- Jack Karwales, 84, American football player.
- Balkrishan Singh, 71, Indian Olympic field hockey player (gold medal winner in men's field hockey at the 1956 Summer Olympics).[183]
- George Wackenhut, 85, American businessman, founder of Wackenhut Corporation, heart failure.[184]
References
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