The following is a list of notable deaths in November 2021.
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.
November 2021
1
- Brian Adair, 86, Scottish sports administrator, president (1983) and chair (1986) of the Scottish Cricket Union.[1]
- Gulraiz Akhtar, 78, Pakistani field hockey player, Olympic champion (1968).[2]
- Giacomo Babini, 92, Italian Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Pitigliano-Sovana-Orbetello (1991–1996) and Grosseto (1996–2001).[3]
- Aaron Beck, 100, American psychiatrist (cognitive therapy, Beck Depression Inventory), co-founder of the Beck Institute for Cognitive Behavior Therapy.[4]
- Emmett Chapman, 85, American jazz musician, inventor of the Chapman Stick.[5]
- Ezio Cini, 76, Italian Olympic sport shooter.[6]
- Pundlik Hari Danve, 95, Indian politician, MP (1977–1979, 1989–1991).[7]
- Semra Dinçer, 56, Turkish actress (Elephants and Grass, Kavak Yelleri, Kuzey Güney), lung cancer.[8]
- Hugo Dittfach, 85, German-born Canadian jockey.[9]
- Temirkhan Dosmukhanbetov, 72, Kazakhstani politician, mayor of Astana (2003–2004) and MP (since 2012).[10] (death announced on this date)
- Nelson Freire, 77, Brazilian classical pianist.[11]
- Tori Geib, 35, American cancer patient advocate.[12]
- Jonathan Gledhill, 72, English Anglican prelate, bishop of Southampton (1996–2003) and Lichfield (2003–2015).[13]
- Gilberto Grácio, 85, Portuguese guitar maker.[14]
- Minoru Hara, 91, Japanese writer and Indologist.[15]
- Alan Igglesden, 57, English cricketer (Kent, Western Province, national team), brain cancer.[16]
- Yuri Klepikov, 86, Russian screenwriter (The Ascent, The Seventh Companion) and actor (The Beginning).[17]
- Denis Lapalme, 62, Canadian Paralympic swimmer (1976) and actor.[18]
- Jessie Lichauco, 109, Cuban-born American-Filipino philanthropist.[19]
- Princess Marie Alix of Schaumburg-Lippe, 98, German noblewoman, Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein (1965–1980).[20]
- Pat Martino, 77, American jazz guitarist and composer.[21]
- Poerio Mascella, 71, Italian footballer (Varese, Ternana, Pistoiese).[22]
- Bruno Moretti, 80, Australian athlete, Paralympic champion (1968).[23]
- Seeco Patterson, 90, Cuban-born Jamaican percussionist (Bob Marley and the Wailers).[24]
- Maurice Price, 83, Irish football player and coach.[25]
- Arvinder Singh Lovely, 56, Indian politician, Delhi MLA (2008–2013), heart attack.[26]
- Lawrence Donald Soens, 95, American Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Sioux City (1983–1998).[27]
- William R. Spaulding, 97, American politician, member of the Council of the District of Columbia (1975–1987).[28]
- Bill Stern, 95, American botanist.[29]
2
- John Aiken, 89, American ice hockey player (Montreal Canadiens).[30]
- José Álvarez, 95, United States Virgin Islands Olympic sport shooter.[31]
- Cyrus Amouzgar, 87, Iranian politician, acting minister of intelligence and tourism (1978–1979).[32]
- Molana Azizullah Bohio, 75, Pakistani Islamic scholar and politician.[33]
- Jane Brown Grimes, 80, American Hall of Fame tennis executive, president of the USTA (2007–2008).[34]
- Rabiranjan Chattopadhyay, 81, Indian politician, West Bengal MLA (since 2011).[35]
- Flora D. Crittenden, 97, American educator and politician, member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1993–2004).[36]
- Ali Fadhul, 81, Ugandan military officer and convicted war criminal, chief of army staff (1979), complications from diabetes.[37]
- Sabah Fakhri, 88, Syrian tenor singer.[38]
- Des Ferguson, 91, Irish Gaelic footballer (Gaeil Colmcille, Dublin).[39]
- Federico Granja Ricalde, 79, Mexican politician, three-term deputy, mayor of Mérida (1976–1978), and governor of Yucatán (1994–1995).[40]
- Bettina Grossman, 94, American conceptual artist.[41]
- Kenneth Holmes, 86, British molecular biologist.[42]
- Irene Lalji, Surinamese lawyer and television presenter, COVID-19.[43]
- Tomas Leandersson, 55, Swedish Hall of Fame ten-pin bowler.[44]
- Clive Lee, 82, British design engineer (Exeter hip).[45]
- Carlos Lélis, 90, Portuguese politician, MP.[46]
- Li Zehou, 91, Chinese philosopher and political activist.[47]
- Paul A. Libby, 100, American fluid dynamicist and academic.[48]
- Tshitenge Lubabu, 66, Congolese journalist and writer.[49]
- Sir Alistair MacFarlane, 90, Scottish electrical engineer and academic administrator, principal of Heriot-Watt University (1989–1996).[50]
- John Marshall, 76, American football player (San Francisco 49ers, Seattle Seahawks, Green Bay Packers).[51]
- Tom Matte, 82, American football player (Baltimore Colts), Super Bowl champion (1971).[52]
- Alf Mayer, 83, Canadian Olympic sports shooter (1968, 1972).[53]
- Gerard V. Middleton, 90, Canadian geologist.[54]
- Dennis Moore, 75, American politician and lawyer, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1999–2011), cancer.[55]
- Hamdullah Mukhlis, Afghan military officer, bombing.[56]
- Declan Mulligan, 83, Irish-born American rock musician (The Beau Brummels).[57]
- Ed Nickla, 88, American football player (Chicago Bears, Montreal Alouettes, Toronto Argonauts), CFL East All-Star (1962, 1963).[58]
- Hiroshi Ogawa, 72, Japanese politician, governor of Fukuoka Prefecture (2011–2021), lung cancer.[59]
- John Joe O'Hagan, 91, Irish Gaelic footballer (Clonoe O'Rahilly's).[60]
- Alf Patrick, 100, English footballer (York City).[61]
- Jacques Pimpaneau, 87, French sinologist.[62]
- Luciano Piquè, 86, Italian footballer (Udinese, Genoa, Entella).[63]
- Viktor Putyatin, 80, Ukrainian fencer, Olympic silver medalist (1968, 1972).[64]
- Ruby Richman, 87, Canadian Olympic basketball player (1964).[65]
- Mohamed Soukhane, 90, Algerian footballer (Le Havre, national team).[66]
- Neal Smith, 101, American politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1959–1995).[67]
- Patricija Šulin, 55, Slovenian politician, MEP (2014–2019).[68]
- Abhay Vakil, 71, Indian billionaire businessman.[69]
- Ernest Wilson, 69, Jamaican reggae singer (The Clarendonians).[70]
3
- Hassan Al Alfi, 85, Egyptian politician, minister of interior (1993–1997).[71]
- Eileen Anderson, 93, American politician, mayor of Honolulu (1981–1985).[72]
- Bob Baker, 82, British screenwriter (Wallace and Gromit, Doctor Who, K-9).[73]
- François Blank, 90, Swiss Olympic ice hockey player (1952).[74]
- Joanna Bruzdowicz, 78, Polish composer.[75]
- Wilma Chan, 72, American politician, member of the Alameda County Board of Supervisors (1995–2000, since 2011) and the California State Assembly (2000–2006), traffic collision.[76]
- Sam Forse Collins, 93, American politician.[77]
- Georgie Dann, 81, French singer, complications from surgery.[78]
- Anne Emerman, 84, American disability rights activist, pneumonia.[79]
- Pablo Armando Fernández, 91, Cuban poet and novelist.[80]
- Hermann Haverkamp, 79, German Olympic water polo player (1968, 1972).[81]
- Yasuro Kikuchi, 92, Japanese Go player.[82]
- Helga Lindner, 70, German swimmer, Olympic silver medalist (1968).[83]
- Michael Marai, 73, Papua New Guinean Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Goroka (1988–1994).[84]
- Abdul Muhib Mazumder, 89, Indian politician, Assam MLA (1983–1991, 1996–2001, 2011–2016).[85]
- Víctor Manuel Ortiz, 56, Puerto Rican politician, mayor of Gurabo (2005–2016).[86]
- Jean Pierson, 80, Tunisian-born French engineer.[87]
- Warren Powers, 80, American football player (Oakland Raiders) and coach (Missouri Tigers, Washington State Cougars).[88]
- Andrei Redkous, 64, Russian footballer (Zenit, Torpedo Moscow, Torpedo Vladimir).[89]
- Cecilia Robinson, 97, English cricketer (Kent, national team).[90]
- Boris Sádecký, 24, Slovak ice hockey player (HK Orange 20, HC Slovan Bratislava, Bratislava Capitals), cardiac arrest.[91]
- Sharon Smith Kane, 89, American cartoonist, illustrator and children's author.[92]
- Stanisław Szostecki, 53, Polish Olympic wrestler.[93]
- Tang Yao-ming, 80, Taiwanese military officer, minister of national defense (2002–2004) and chief of the general staff (1999–2002).[94]
- Kurt Thyboe, 81, Danish journalist and sports commentator, pneumonia.[95]
- Eric Franklin Wood, 74, Canadian-American hydrologist, cancer.[96]
4
- Vanessa Angel, 27, Indonesian actress, traffic collision.[97]
- Sir Brian Bender, 72, British civil servant.[98]
- Lionel Blair, 92, Canadian-born British actor (The Limping Man, A Hard Day's Night), choreographer and television presenter (Give Us a Clue).[99]
- Michel Braun, 91, Luxembourgian Olympic sport shooter.[100]
- Barbara-Rose Collins, 82, American politician, member of the Detroit City Council (1982–1991, 2001–2009) and the U.S. House of Representatives (1991–1997), COVID-19.[101]
- Herman LeRoy Emmet, 78, American photojournalist and visual artist, complications of Parkinson's disease.[102]
- Amela Fetahović, 35, Bosnian footballer (Sarajevo, Spartak Subotica, national team).[103]
- Aaron Feuerstein, 95, American industrialist and philanthropist, CEO of Malden Mills.[104]
- Yutaka Gibbons, 77, Palauan activist.[105]
- Francis Huré, 105, French World War II Resistance member, diplomat, and writer.[106]
- Károly Király, 91, Romanian politician, senator (1990–1992).[107]
- Heorhiy Kryuchkov, 92, Ukrainian politician, deputy (1998–2006).[108]
- Mario Lavista, 78, Mexican composer and writer.[109]
- Amatsia Levkovich, 83, Israeli footballer (Hapoel Tel Aviv, national team).[110]
- June Lindsey, 99, British-Canadian biochemist.[111]
- Ruth Ann Minner, 86, American politician, member of the Delaware House of Representatives (1975–1983) and Senate (1983–1993), governor of Delaware (2001–2009).[112]
- Subrata Mukherjee, 75, Indian politician, West Bengal MLA (1971–1977, 1982–1991, 1996–2006, since 2011) and mayor of Kolkata (2000–2005), heart attack.[113]
- Eugenio Pazzaglia, 72, Italian footballer (Pisa, Civitavecchia, Siena).[114]
- Mike Pitts, 61, American football player (Philadelphia Eagles, Atlanta Falcons, New England Patriots).[115]
- Devwrat Singh, 52, Indian politician, Chhattisgarh MLA (1998–2008, since 2018) and MP (2007–2009), heart attack.[116]
- Thein Aung, 56, Burmese businessman, CFO of Mytel, shot.[117]
- Jack Vitty, 98, English footballer (Workington, Brighton & Hove Albion).[118]
- Ian Wallace, 87, British ornithologist.[119]
- Claude Nelson Warren, 89, American anthropologist.[120]
- Roger Zatkoff, 90, American football player (Green Bay Packers, Detroit Lions).[121]
5
- Charles Brackeen, 81, American jazz saxophonist.[122]
- James A. Brundage, 92, American historian.[123]
- Walter Brune, 95, German architect.[124]
- Charlie Burns, 85, American-born Canadian ice hockey player (Minnesota North Stars, Boston Bruins, Pittsburgh Penguins), world champion (1958).[125]
- A. O. J. Cockshut, 94, British academic and author.[126]
- Bob Dollin, 92, Australian politician, Queensland MLA (1989–1998).[127]
- Russell Ebert, 72, Australian football player (Port Adelaide, North Melbourne) and coach, leukaemia.[128]
- Lizzie Emeh, 44, British artist and songwriter.[129]
- Ryszard Grzegorczyk, 82, Polish footballer (Polonia Bytom, Lens, national team).[130]
- Erich Isaac, 93, German-born Israeli Lehi militant and geographer.[131]
- Mei Jones, 68, Welsh scriptwriter and actor (C'mon Midffîld!).[132] (death announced on this date)
- Robert S. Kiss, 63, American politician, member (1989–2007) and speaker (1997–2007) of the West Virginia House of Delegates, cancer.[133]
- Andris Kolbergs, 82, Latvian writer and screenwriter (Defenders of Riga).[134]
- Norman Macfarlane, Baron Macfarlane of Bearsden, 95, Scottish industrialist and life peer, member of the House of Lords (1991–2016).[135]
- Luigi Maldera, 75, Italian footballer (Monza, Milan, Catanzaro).[136]
- Marília Mendonça, 26, Brazilian singer, Grammy winner (2019), airplane crash.[137]
- Vidadi Muradov, 65, Azerbaijani carpet specialist and academic.[138]
- Palakkeezh Narayanan, 81, Indian writer, academic and political activist.[139]
- Nguon Nhel, 78, Cambodian politician, minister of agriculture (1989–1993) and MP (since 1993).[140]
- Beldina Odenyo Onassis, 31, Kenyan-British musician.[141]
- Dušan Pašek, 36, Slovak ice hockey player (HC Slovan Bratislava, HC Košice, ŠHK 37 Piešťany), suicide by hanging.[142]
- Jerome Schutzer, 91, American politician, member of the New York State Assembly (1961–1965) and Senate (1966).[143]
- Khawaja Muhammad Sharif, 71, Pakistani jurist, justice (1998–2009) and chief justice (2009–2010) of Lahore High Court.[144]
- Siluyan, 82, Russian Orthodox Old-Rite prelate, bishop of Novosibirsk (since 2015).[145]
- Flip Stapper, 76, Dutch footballer (FC Twente, AZ Alkmaar).[146]
- Ross Tolleson, 65, American politician, member of the Georgia State Senate (2003–2015).[147]
- Paul Torcello, 67, Italian-born Australian advertising photographer.[148]
- Kinji Yoshimoto, 55, Japanese animator, writer and director (Megazone 23, Plastic Little, Queen's Blade).[149]
6
- Keld Andersen, 75, Danish Olympic handball player (1972), cancer.[150]
- Peter Aykroyd, 65, Canadian comedian (Saturday Night Live) and actor (Coneheads, Nothing but Trouble), sepsis.[151]
- László Bélády, 93, Hungarian-American computer scientist, dementia.[152]
- Maureen Cleave, 87, British journalist, conducted John Lennon's "more popular than Jesus" interview.[153]
- Kambiz Derambakhsh, 79, Iranian graphic designer, COVID-19.[154]
- Edward Fender, 79, Polish Olympic luger (1964).[155]
- Jim Kerray, 85, Scottish footballer (Raith Rovers, Stirling Albion, St Johnstone).[156]
- Geoff Martin, 81, English footballer (Chesterfield, Workington, Grimsby Town).[157]
- Pavol Molnár, 85, Slovak footballer, 1962 FIFA World Cup silver medalist, 1960 European Nations' Cup bronze medalist.[158]
- Angelo Mosca, 84, American Hall of Fame football player (Hamilton Tiger-Cats, Ottawa Rough Riders) and professional wrestler (NWA).[159]
- Shawn Rhoden, 46, Jamaican-American professional bodybuilder, Mr. Olympia (2018), heart attack.[160]
- Raúl Rivero, 75, Cuban poet, cancer.[161]
- Marinko Rokvić, 67, Serbian folk singer, pancreatic cancer.[162]
- Clifford Rose, 92, British actor (Tell Me Lies, Work Is a Four-Letter Word, Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides).[163]
- Erich Saling, 96, German gynaecologist, pioneer of maternal–fetal medicine.[164]
- Luíz Antônio dos Santos, 57, Brazilian Olympic long-distance runner (1996), cardiac arrest.[165]
- Cissé Mariam Kaïdama Sidibé, 73, Malian politician, prime minister (2011–2012).[166]
- Tarak Sinha, 70, Indian cricket coach, lung cancer.[167]
- Harvey White, 83, American football player (Boston Patriots).[168]
- Muamer Zukorlić, 51, Serbian politician and Islamic cleric, member (2016–2020) and vice-president (since 2020) of the National Assembly, co-founder of BANU, heart attack.[169]
- Yukhym Zvyahilsky, 88, Ukrainian politician, mayor of Donetsk (1992–1993), acting prime minister (1993–1994), and deputy (1990–2019), COVID-19.[170]
7
- Ian Adams, 84, Canadian author (S: Portrait of a Spy) and playwright, stroke.[171]
- Alarm, 20, South Korean Overwatch player.[172] (death announced on this date)
- Peter Hamilton Bailey, 94, Australian public servant and academic.[173]
- Liudmila Belavenets, 81, Russian chess player, COVID-19.[174]
- Sir John Butterfill, 80, British politician, MP (1983–2010).[175]
- Hasan Čengić, 64, Bosnian politician, MP (1998–2002) and president of the parliament of the Islamic Community (2015–2019).[176]
- Frank Coad, 91, Australian racing driver.[177]
- James F. Fries, 83, American rheumatologist and author, complications from a stroke.[178]
- Sunit Ghosh, 87, Indian cricket umpire.[179]
- Sir James Gobbo, 90, Australian judge, governor of Victoria (1997–2000).[180]
- Robin Greiner, 89, American Olympic pair skater (1956).[181]
- Carmel Holmes, 75, Australian politician, Tasmania MHA (1984–1986).[182]
- Barry Jackson, 83, English footballer (York City).[183]
- Aliya Khambikova, 21, Russian volleyball player.[184]
- Béla Kovács, 84, Hungarian clarinetist.[185]
- Carmen Laffón, 87, Spanish painter and sculptor.[186]
- Jacques Limouzy, 95, French politician, deputy (1967–1969, 1973–1981, 1986–2002).[187]
- Bopol Mansiamina, 72, Congolese musician (Les Quatre Étoiles), stroke.[188]
- Vadim Morozov, 67, Russian politician and writer, minister of railways (2003–2004), COVID-19.[189]
- Igor Nikulin, 61, Russian hammer thrower, Olympic bronze medallist (1992).[190]
- Jai Narayan Poonia, 87, Indian politician, Rajasthan MLA (1977–1980, 1985–1990), cardiac arrest.[191]
- Brian Renwood, 86, Australian footballer (Collingwood).[192]
- Enrique Rocha, 81, Mexican actor (Satánico pandemonium, Yo compro esa mujer, El Privilegio de Amar).[193]
- Pappu Sain, 95, Pakistani dhol player, liver cancer.[194]
- Sergei Shmatko, 55, Russian politician, minister of energy (2008–2012), COVID-19.[195]
- Zena Stein, 99, South African epidemiologist.[196]
- Dean Stockwell, 85, American actor (Quantum Leap, Married to the Mob, Paris, Texas).[197]
- John Tabinaman, 69, Papua New Guinean politician, vice-president (2007–2009) and acting president (2008–2009) of the Autonomous Region of Bougainville.[198]
- Bas van der Vlies, 79, Dutch politician, member of the Second Chamber (1981–2010) and leader of the Reformed Political Party (1986–2010), cancer.[199]
- John White, 97, British art historian.[200]
- Ronnie Williams, 59, American basketball player (Florida Gators, Tampa Bay Thrillers, Mississippi Jets), brain cancer.[201]
8
- Amalia Aguilar, 97, Cuban-born Mexican actress (Ritmos del Caribe, Al son del mambo, Amor perdido) and dancer.[202]
- Rinus Bennaars, 90, Dutch footballer (DOSKO, Feyenoord, national team).[203]
- Keith Bradshaw, 58, Australian cricket player (Tasmania) and administrator, multiple myeloma.[204]
- Annette Chalut, 97, French World War II Resistance member.[205]
- Abdul Wahab Dalimunthe, 82, Indonesian politician, MP (2009–2014, since 2017).[206]
- Medina Dixon, 59, American basketball player (Old Dominion Lady Monarchs), Olympic bronze medalist (1992), pancreatic cancer.[207]
- Pedro Feliciano, 45, Puerto Rican baseball player (New York Mets, Fukuoka Daiei Hawks).[208]
- Seán FitzPatrick, 73, Irish businessman (Anglo Irish Bank hidden loans controversy), cardiac arrest.[209]
- Abdoulkarim Goukoye, 57, Nigerien militant and politician, spokesperson of the CSRD (2010–2011).[210]
- Margo Guryan, 84, American singer-songwriter ("Sunday Mornin'").[211]
- Mike Harris, 82, South African racing driver (Formula One).[212]
- Kazuko Hosoki, 83, Japanese fortune teller and writer, respiratory failure.[213]
- Stu Kennedy, 90, Canadian football player (Ottawa Rough Riders).[214]
- Desiet Kidane, 21, Eritrean racing cyclist, traffic collision.[215]
- Kirsi Kunnas, 96, Finnish children's author.[216]
- Odd F. Lindberg, 76, Norwegian journalist and seal inspector.[217]
- Sylvère Lotringer, 83, French literary critic and cultural theorist, founder of Semiotext(e).[218]
- Mahlagha Mallah, 104, Iranian environmentalist, founder of the Women's Society Against Environmental Pollution.[219]
- Ahad Miah, 65, Bangladeshi politician, MP (1988–1991).[220]
- Gennady Muravin, 90, Russian-Finnish translator and journalist.[221]
- Wilhelm Schraml, 86, German Roman Catholic prelate, auxiliary bishop of Regensburg (1986–2001) and bishop of Passau (2001–2012).[222]
- Franz Streitwieser, 82, German-born American trumpet player, complications from Alzheimer's disease.[223]
- Chittaranjan Das Thakur, Indian politician, West Bengal MLA (1996–2011).[224]
- Muhammad Zada, 32, Pakistani anti-drug activist and blogger, shot.[225]
- Peter Zimroth, 78, American attorney.[226]
9
- John Bean, 94, British political activist and writer.[citation needed]
- Jamshid Behnam, 93, Iranian sociologist.[227]
- Mariano Castillo Alcalá, 73, Spanish politician, mayor of Villacañas (1983–1987) and member of the Cortes of Castilla–La Mancha (1987–1991).[228]
- Gela Charkviani, 82, Georgian diplomat.[229]
- Max Cleland, 79, American politician, senator (1997–2003), administrator of veterans affairs (1977–1981), and Georgia secretary of state (1983–1996).[230]
- Austin Currie, 82, Irish civil rights activist and politician, TD (1989–2002) and minister of state for justice (1994–1997).[231]
- Jerry Douglas, 88, American actor (The Young and the Restless).[232]
- Erika Fisch, 87, German runner and Olympic long jumper (1956).[233]
- Willis Forko, 37, Liberian-American footballer (Real Salt Lake, Bodø/Glimt, national team).[234]
- Bob Gill, 90, American illustrator and graphic designer.[235]
- Larry Gordon, 76, American musician, injuries sustained in traffic collision.[236]
- Loucif Hamani, 71, Algerian Olympic boxer (1972).[237]
- Dianne Hamilton, 87, American politician, member of the New Mexico House of Representatives (1999–2017).[238]
- Roy Holder, 75, English actor (Sorry!, Pride & Prejudice, War Horse), cancer.[239]
- John Kinsella, 89, Irish composer.[240]
- Richard Kyanka, 45, American blogger, founder of Something Awful, suicide.[241]
- Memo Luna, 91, Mexican baseball player (Tijuana Potros, San Diego Padres, St. Louis Cardinals).[242]
- Amkat Mai, 59, Papua New Guinean politician, MP (2012–2013, since 2015).[243]
- Lloyd McCuiston, 103, American politician, member (1961–1994) and speaker (1981–1983) of the Arkansas House of Representatives.[244]
- Koneru Ramakrishna Rao, 89, Indian psychologist.[245]
- Iris Rezende, 87, Brazilian politician, minister of agriculture (1986–1990), governor of Goiás (1983–1986, 1991–1994), and senator (1995–2003), complications from a stroke.[246]
- Aldo Rizzo, 86, Italian politician and magistrate, deputy (1979–1992) and mayor of Palermo (1992).[247]
- Ethel Grodzins Romm, 96, American author, journalist, and businesswoman.[248]
- Herbert Salcher, 92, Austrian politician, minister of finance (1981–1984) and MP (1983).[249]
- Walter G. Schroeder, 94, American politician.[250]
- Jakucho Setouchi, 99, Japanese Buddhist nun and writer, heart failure.[251]
- Laurie Sheffield, 82, Welsh footballer (Newport County, Doncaster Rovers, Luton Town).[252]
- Duane Wilson, 87, American baseball player (Boston Red Sox).[253]
10
- Syed Iftikhar Bokhari, 86, Pakistani cricketer (Punjab, Lahore) and politician, senator (1988–1991).[254]
- Delma Cowart, 80, American racing driver.[255]
- Clyde Emrich, 90, American Olympic weightlifter (1952) and football coach (Chicago Bears).[256]
- Spike Heatley, 88, British jazz double bassist.[257]
- Jun Hong Lu, 62, Chinese-born Australian religious leader.[258]
- Ed Lucas, 82, American sportswriter (New York Yankees).[259]
- Håkon Øverby, 79, Norwegian Olympic wrestler (1968, 1972).[260]
- Otto Pendl, 70, Austrian politician, MP (1998–2017).[261]
- Farouq Qasrawi, 79, Jordanian politician, minister of foreign affairs (2005).[262]
- Ignatius Shixwameni, 55, Namibian politician, MP (since 1999).[263]
- Gerald Sinstadt, 91, British television sports commentator and presenter (Granada Television).[264]
- Gazbia Sirry, 96, Egyptian painter.[265]
- Miroslav Žbirka, 69, Slovak singer and songwriter (Modus), pneumonia.[266]
11
- Germain Belzile, 63–64, American economist.[267]
- Marcel Bérard, 88, Canadian politician, Quebec MNA (1973–1976).[268]
- Per Aage Brandt, 77, Danish writer, linguist, and musician.[269]
- Aleksander Ciążyński, 76, Polish Olympic field hockey player (1972).[270]
- F. W. de Klerk, 85, South African politician, state president (1989–1994) and deputy president (1994–1996), Nobel Peace Prize laureate (1993), mesothelioma.[271]
- Glen de Vries, 49, American businessman and space tourist (Blue Origin NS-18), plane crash.[272]
- Graeme Edge, 80, English Hall of Fame drummer (The Moody Blues), songwriter and poet, cancer.[273]
- Carl von Essen, 81, Swedish fencer, Olympic champion (1976).[274]
- Harris Fawell, 92, American politician, member of the Illinois Senate (1963–1977) and the U.S. House of Representatives (1985–1999), complications from Alzheimer's disease.[275]
- Mark Gillespie, Australian singer-songwriter.[276]
- John Goodsall, 68, American-British rock guitarist (Atomic Rooster, Brand X).[277]
- Renee Grant-Williams, 78, American vocal coach.[278]
- Agus Hamdani, 51, Indonesian politician, regent of Garut (2013–2014).[279]
- Joe Hickey, 93, Australian footballer.[280]
- João Isidório, 29, Brazilian singer and politician, Bahia MLA (since 2019), drowned.[281]
- Hilmar Kopper, 86, German banker, chairman of Deutsche Bank (1989–1997).[282]
- Jay Last, 92, American physicist.[283]
- Lee Ying-yuan, 68, Taiwanese politician, member of the Legislative Yuan (1996–2000, 2012–2016), carcinoma of the ampulla of Vater.[284]
- Cristiana Lôbo, 64, Brazilian journalist (GloboNews), multiple myeloma.[285]
- Lee Maracle, 71, Canadian First Nations writer (Ravensong), activist and academic.[286]
- Aga Mikolaj, 50, Polish operatic soprano, COVID-19.[287]
- Bernard Morel, 75, French economist, academic, and politician, vice-president of the Regional Council of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur (since 2012).[288]
- Joseph Wilson Morris, 99, American attorney and jurist, judge (1974–1978) and chief judge (1975–1978) of the U.S. District Court for Eastern Oklahoma.[289]
- Dino Pedriali, 71, Italian photographer.[290]
- Edward L. Sadowsky, 92, American politician, member of the New York City Council (1962–1985).[291]
- Sergei Shulgin, 65, Russian politician, deputy (1994–1995).[292]
- Art Stewart, 94, American baseball scout.[293]
- Mario Tosi, 79, Italian-born American painter and cinematographer (Carrie, The Stunt Man, Sybil).[294]
- Buzz Tyler, 79, American professional wrestler.[295]
- Elfrida von Nardroff, 96, American game show fraudster (Twenty-One).[296]
- Phyllis Webb, 94, Canadian poet and radio broadcaster.[297]
- Clive Wilderspin, 91, Australian tennis player.[298]
- Winter, 16, American dolphin with a prosthetic tail, subject of Dolphin Tale.[299]
- Henry Woolf, 91, British actor (The Bed Sitting Room, The Rocky Horror Picture Show, Gorky Park).[300]
12
- Bob Bondurant, 88, American Hall of Fame racing driver (Formula One) and instructor.[301]
- Ramuntxo Camblong, 82, French politician, president of the Basque Nationalist Party (2004–2008).[302]
- Yevgeniy Chazov, 92, Russian physician, minister of health (1987–1990).[303]
- Lothar Claesges, 79, German cyclist, Olympic champion (1964).[304]
- Geoffrey Cormack, 92, Australian cricketer.[305]
- Humphrey T. Davies, 74, British translator.[306]
- Stephen H. Davis, 82, American mathematician.[307]
- Matthew Festing, 71, English Roman Catholic official, Prince and Grand Master of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta (2008–2017).[308]
- Ron Flowers, 87, English footballer (Wolverhampton Wanderers, Northampton Town, national team), world champion (1966).[309]
- Jim Fouras, 83, Greek-born Australian politician, member (1977–1986, 1989–2006) and speaker (1990–1996) of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland, heart attack.[310]
- Gian Piero Galeazzi, 75, Italian competition rower, sports journalist, and television personality (90º minuto, Domenica in), complications from diabetes.[311]
- Paul Gludovatz, 75, Austrian football manager (SV Ried, TSV Hartberg), COVID-19.[312]
- Dave Hickey, 82, American art critic.[313]
- Sir Ted Horlick, 96, British Navy vice admiral.[314]
- Wasfi Kabha, 62, Palestinian politician, minister of prisoners' affairs (2006–2007) and state (2007), COVID-19.[315] (death announced on this date)
- Jusuf Serang Kasim, 77, Indonesian politician, mayor of Tarakan (1999–2009).[316]
- Bashir Momin Kavathekar, 74, Indian poet and writer.[317]
- Kyozi Kawasaki, 91, Japanese physicist.[318]
- Takeshi Koba, 85, Japanese baseball player (Hiroshima Carp, Nankai Hawks).[319]
- Viktor Koklyushkin, 75, Russian satirist and television host.[320]
- Hugh Leatherman, 90, American politician, member (since 1981) and president pro tempore (2014–2019) of the South Carolina Senate, cancer.[321]
- Aleksandr Lenyov, 77, Russian footballer (Torpedo Moscow, Torpedo Kutaisi, Soviet Union national team).[322]
- Bill Reichart, 86, Canadian-born American Olympic ice hockey player (1964).[323]
- Rock Hard Ten, 20, American racehorse and sire.[324]
- Leopold Sánchez, 73, Spanish artist.[325]
- Miloš Šibul, 44, Serbian politician, member of the Assembly of Vojvodina (2012–2016).[326]
- Mikhail Sobolev, 84, Russian diplomat, ambassador to Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago (1989–1995).[327]
- Jörn Svensson, 85, Danish-born Swedish politician, MP (1971–1988), MEP (1995–1999).[328]
- John Toye, 79, British economist.[329]
- Wilf Wedmann, 73, German-born Canadian Olympic high jumper (1968).[330]
- Lakshman Wijesekara, 73, Sri Lankan actor, singer and composer (Miss Jenis).[331]
- Abd-al-Hafid Mahmud al-Zulaytini, 83, Libyan banker, governor of the Central Bank of Libya (1990–1996, 2011).[332]
13
- Hadiya Khalaf Abbas, 63, Syrian politician, speaker of the People's Assembly (2016–2017), heart attack.[333]
- Sohail Asghar, 67, Pakistani actor (Laag).[334]
- Louis Bimpson, 92, English footballer (Liverpool, Blackburn Rovers, Rochdale).[335]
- Sir Alexander Boswell, 93, British Army officer, lieutenant governor of Guernsey (1985–1990).[336]
- Ed Bullins, 86, American playwright (Goin' a Buffalo), complications from dementia.[337]
- Michael Corballis, 85, New Zealand psychologist and author.[338]
- Frank Drew, 91, American brigadier general.[339]
- Dragoș Petre Dumitriu, 57, Romanian journalist and politician, deputy (2004–2008), post-COVID-19 heart attack.[340]
- David Fox, 80, Canadian actor (Mama, Grey Owl, X-Men), cancer.[341]
- Grigori Galitsin, 64, Russian erotic photographer.[342]
- Ivo Georgiev, 49, Bulgarian footballer (Debrecen, Korabostroitel, national team), heart failure.[343]
- Gilbert Harman, 83, American philosopher.[344]
- Sam Huff, 87, American Hall of Fame football player (New York Giants, Washington Redskins) and commentator.[345]
- Jack Kiddey, 92, New Zealand cricketer (Canterbury).[346]
- Lidia Lupu, 68, Moldovan economist and politician, deputy (2014–2019).[347]
- Keith Mann, 89, New Zealand fencer and sports administrator.[348]
- Philip Margo, 79, American musician (The Tokens).[349]
- Petra Mayer, 46, American book review editor (NPR), pulmonary embolism.[350]
- Ernie Michie, 88, Scottish rugby union player (Leicester Tigers, British & Irish Lions, national team).[351]
- John Edwin Midwinter, 83, British electrical engineer and academic.[352]
- Jarosław Pacoń, 49, Polish footballer (Stal Stalowa Wola).[353]
- John Pearson, 91, British author (The Life of Ian Fleming, James Bond: The Authorized Biography of 007).[354]
- Anatoliy Saulevych, 62, Ukrainian footballer (Karpaty Lviv, SKA Lviv, FC Bălți).[355]
- Wilbur Smith, 88, Zambian-born South African novelist (When the Lion Feeds, The Courtney Novels, The Ballantyne Novels).[356]
- Milind Teltumbde, Indian guerrilla, shot.[357]
- Yūji Tokizaki, 81, Japanese politician, member of the House of Representatives (1990–1993).[358]
- Bruno Vella, 88, Italian politician, president of the Province of Rieti (1975–1982), mayor of Rieti (1982–1983), and senator (1983–1992).[359]
- Emi Wada, 84, Japanese costume designer (Ran, Hero, House of Flying Daggers), Oscar winner (1986).[360]
- William Wright, 69, American-born Australian Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Maitland-Newcastle (2011–2021), lung cancer.[361]
14
- Etel Adnan, 96, Lebanese-American poet, novelist (Sitt Marie Rose), and visual artist.[362]
- Emmanuel Quaye Archampong, 88, Ghanaian surgeon and academic.[363]
- Bertie Auld, 83, Scottish football player (Celtic, national team) and manager (Partick Thistle), complications from dementia.[364]
- Bart the Bear 2, 21, American Kodiak bear actor (Into the Wild, We Bought a Zoo, Pete's Dragon).[365]
- László Z. Bitó, 87, Hungarian physiologist and writer.[366]
- W. Sterling Cary, 94, American Christian minister, president of the National Council of Churches (1972–1975).[367]
- Jorge Cervós-Navarro, 91, Spanish pathologist.[368]
- Bobby Clark, 77, American actor (Casey Jones, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Ransom!).[369]
- Sani Dangote, 61, Nigerian businessman, vice-president of the Dangote Group.[370]
- Alex D. Dickson, 95, American Anglican prelate, bishop of West Tennessee (1983–1994).[371]
- Roger Elliott, 72, American politician.[372]
- Heath Freeman, 41, American actor (Raising the Bar, Bones, Skateland), combined drug intoxication.[373]
- Gene C. Howard, 95, American politician.[374]
- Simon Khaya-Moyo, 76, Zimbabwean diplomat and politician, ambassador to South Africa (2007–2011), chairman of ZANU–PF (2011–2014), and minister of media, information and broadcasting services (2017–2018), cancer.[375]
- Luis Koster, 79, Uruguayan Olympic basketball player.[376]
- John Lees, 91, English bodybuilder.[377]
- Tore Lindholt, 80, Norwegian economist and politician, director of the Government Pension Fund (1990–2004).[378]
- Virginio Pizzali, 86, Italian racing cyclist, Olympic champion (1956).[379]
- Somkiat Pongpaiboon, 71, Thai politician, deputy (2007–2011) and co-founder of the Mass Party, cerebral hemorrhage.[380]
- Thomas Porteous, 74, American jurist, judge of the U.S. District Court for Eastern Louisiana (1994–2010).[381]
- Pierre Reid, 73, Canadian politician, Quebec MNA (2003–2018) and minister of education (2003–2005).[382]
- Georgiy Roedov, 82, Russian diplomat, ambassador to Laos (1990–1993) and Kyrgyzstan (1997–2002).[383]
- Rašid Šemšedinović, 80, Serbian Olympic ice hockey player (1964).[384]
- Gamini Susiriwardana, 58, Sri Lankan singer and actor (Sirasa Superstar, Mago Digo Dai), cancer.[385]
- Satya Vrat Shastri, 91, Indian Sanskrit scholar.[386]
- Chanmyr Udumbara, 73, Russian intelligence officer and politician, senator (2001–2002).[387]
- Marek Vokáč, 62, Czech chess grandmaster.[388]
- Vladimir Zhutenkov, 59, Russian businessman and politician, deputy (2016–2017).[389]
15
- Dzifa Attivor, 65, Ghanaian politician, minister of transport (2013–2015).[390]
- Yasser Al-Awadi, 43, Yemeni politician, member of the House of Representatives (since 2003), heart attack.[391]
- Heber Bartolome, 73, Filipino folk singer.[392]
- Mannu Bhandari, 90, Indian writer.[393]
- Katarina Blagojević, 78, Serbian chess player.[394]
- Tony Buck, 84, British Olympic wrestler (1964).[395]
- Werner Burger, 85, German numismatist.[396]
- Giovanni Colonnelli, 70, Italian footballer (Parma, Reggiana).[397]
- Valeriy Dolinin, 68, Russian rower, Olympic silver medallist (1980).[398]
- Clarissa Eden, Countess of Avon, 101, British memoirist, spouse of the prime minister (1955–1957).[399]
- Estrella Blanca, 83, Mexican professional wrestler (EMLL).[400]
- Oldřich Hamera, 77, Czech artist.[401]
- Keith Harding, 82, British politician.[402]
- Larry J. Hopkins, 88, American politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1979–1993).[403]
- Hasan Azizul Huq, 82, Bangladeshi novelist (Agunpakhi).[404]
- Jerry Johnson, 77, American baseball player (Philadelphia Phillies, San Francisco Giants, San Diego Padres), Lewy body dementia and COPD.[405]
- Bernard Judge, 90, American architect.[406]
- Michael Kaser, 95, British-Swiss economist.[407]
- Julio Lugo, 45, Dominican baseball player (Houston Astros, Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Boston Red Sox), World Series champion (2007), heart attack.[408]
- Bengt Madsen, 79, Swedish football executive (Malmö), cancer.[409]
- Osman Öcalan, 63, Turkish militant and political activist, commander of the PKK, COVID-19.[410]
- Roger Phillips, 88, British botanist and writer.[411]
- Jason Plummer, 52, Australian Olympic swimmer (1988).[412]
- Babasaheb Purandare, 99, Indian writer, historian and theatre personality, pneumonia.[413]
- Alamin Mohammed Seid, 74, Eritrean politician, minister of information (1993–1996).[414]
- Daulet Sembaev, 86, Kazakhstani politician and banker, first deputy prime minister (1992–1993), chairman of the National Bank (1993–1996), and senator (1996–1997).[415]
- Sir Rod Weir, 94, New Zealand businessman.[416]
16
- Brian Clark, 89, British playwright (Whose Life Is It Anyway?) and screenwriter, aortic aneurysm.[417]
- Bobby Collins, 88, American football coach (Southern Miss Golden Eagles, SMU Mustangs).[418]
- Ferenc Czvikovszki, 89, Hungarian Olympic fencer (1960).[419]
- Tony Dron, 75, British motor racing driver and writer, complications from COPD.[420]
- Kamil Durczok, 53, Polish journalist.[421]
- Jim Fenwick, 87, Australian photojournalist.[422]
- Richard Finn, 88, American baseball player and coach (Toledo, Ohio State).[423]
- David Frank, 63, Kenyan-born British media executive, co-founder of RDF Media.[424] (death announced on this date)
- Drew Gibbs, 59, American football coach (Kean Cougars), complications from surgery.[425]
- Md. Akabbar Hossain, 65, Bangladeshi politician, MP (since 2001).[426]
- Stephen Holgate, 49, English rugby league player (Workington Town, Wigan Warriors, national team).[427]
- Sezai Karakoç, 88, Turkish writer and philosopher.[428]
- Jyrki Kasvi, 57, Finnish politician, MP (2003–2011, 2015–2019), cancer.[429]
- Alexander Losyukov, 78, Russian diplomat, ambassador to New Zealand (1992–1993), Australia (1993–1997), and Japan (2004–2006).[430]
- John Luxton, 75, New Zealand politician, MP (1987–2002).[431]
- Renate Mann, 68, Austrian politician, member of the Landtag of Upper Austria (2008–2009).[432]
- E. J. Miller Laino, 73, American poet.[433]
- Shakeel ur Rahman, 52, Pakistani jurist, judge of the Lahore High Court (since 2018), cancer.[434]
- Ri Yong-suk, 105, North Korean revolutionary and politician, deputy (1998–2009).[435] (death announced on this date)
- James Victor Rowell, 82, American politician.[436]
- Nadrian Seeman, 75, American nanotechnologist and crystallographer.[437]
- Mieczysław Szostek, 88, Polish politician, deputy (1985–1989).[438]
17
- Abdul Ghafar Atan, 65, Malaysian politician, Malacca State MLA (2004–2021), COVID-19.[439]
- Afsaruddin Ahmad, 81, Bangladeshi politician, MP (1996–2001).[440]
- Keith Allison, 79, American musician (Paul Revere & the Raiders).[441]
- Leonid Bartenyev, 88, Ukrainian sprinter and coach, Olympic silver medalist (1956, 1960).[442]
- John Vernon Bartlett, 94, British civil engineer (Channel Tunnel, Victoria line).[443]
- Gene Carter, 86, American lawyer and jurist, judge (since 1983) and chief judge (1989–1996) of the U.S. District Court for Maine.[444]
- Tom Colley, 68, Canadian ice hockey player (Minnesota North Stars).[445]
- Ken Colvin, 82, Australian footballer (South Melbourne), COVID-19.[446]
- Igor Denisov, 80, Russian physician and politician, Soviet minister of health (1990–1991).[447]
- Gilbert Dragon, 52, Haitian police chief and guerilla commander, suspect in the assassination of Jovenel Moïse, complications from COVID-19.[448]
- Jimmie Durham, 81, American sculptor and poet.[449]
- Dave Frishberg, 88, American jazz pianist and songwriter ("I'm Just a Bill").[450]
- Jacques Hamelink, 82, Dutch poet, novelist, and literary critic.[451]
- Karel Havlík, 77, Czech politician, minister without portfolio (1990).[452]
- Peter Iacangelo, 73, American actor (Fight Club, The Rat Pack, Look Who's Talking Now).[453]
- Theuns Jordaan, 50, South African singer-songwriter, leukaemia.[454]
- Reg Kent, 77, Australian footballer (Footscray).[455]
- Teresa Kodelska, 92, Polish Olympic alpine skier (1952).[456]
- Art LaFleur, 78, American actor (Field of Dreams, The Sandlot, The Santa Clause 2), Parkinson's disease.[457]
- Christine Laszar, 89, German actress (Geschwader Fledermaus, Before the Lightning Strikes, For Eyes Only).[458]
- Antonio Leal Labrín, 71, Chilean politician, member (1998–2010) and president (2006–2007) of the Chamber of Deputies.[459]
- R. N. R. Manohar, Indian film director (Maasilamani, Vellore Maavattam) and actor (Sutta Pazham), COVID-19.[460]
- Arsenio Moreno Mendoza, 68, Spanish academic, writer, and politician, mayor of Úbeda (1983–1989).[461]
- Max Olding, 92, Australian pianist and teacher.[462]
- Zuhair Ramadan, 62, Syrian actor, pneumonia.[463]
- Stu Rasmussen, 73, American politician, mayor of Silverton, Oregon (2009–2015), prostate cancer.[464]
- Igor Savochkin, 58, Russian actor (Night Watch, Admiral, Leviathan) and television presenter.[465]
- Mohsen Mojtahed Shabestari, 84, Iranian Shiite cleric and politician, MP (1980–1988, 1992–2000), member of the Assembly of Experts (since 1983), cardiac arrest.[466]
- Max Sopacua, 75, Indonesian politician and sportscaster (TVRI), MP (2004–2014).[467]
- Tom Stoddart, 68, British photographer, cancer.[468]
- Levan Tsutskiridze, 95, Georgian monumentalist artist, illustrator, and painter.[469]
- Young Dolph, 36, American rapper, shot.[470]
18
- Latif al-Ani, 89, Iraqi photographer.[471]
- Peter Buck, 90, American restaurateur, co-founder of Subway.[472]
- George Eogan, 91, Irish archaeologist.[473]
- Geoffrey Giudice, 73, Australian jurist, judge of the Federal Court (1997–2012).[474]
- Richard Goldbloom, 96, Canadian pediatrician and academic, chancellor of Dalhousie University (2001–2008).[475]
- Slide Hampton, 89, American jazz trombonist.[476]
- Jørgen Haugen Sørensen, 87, Danish sculptor.[477]
- Novy Kapadia, 68, Indian football journalist, motor neuron disease.[478]
- Al Noor Kassum, 97, Tanzanian politician, MP.[479]
- Ali Haydar Kaytan, 69, Turkish militant, co-founder of the PKK, shot.[480]
- Glenn Keeney, 79, American martial artist.[481]
- Paul Kehinde, 33, Nigerian powerlifter, Paralympic champion (2016), 65kg world record-holder (since 2016).[482]
- İmran Kılıç, 64, Turkish politician, MP (since 2015), COVID-19.[483]
- Dzyanis Kowba, 42, Belarusian footballer (Lokomotiv Vitebsk, Krylia Sovetov Samara, national team), COVID-19.[484]
- Joe Laidlaw, 71, English footballer (Middlesbrough, Carlisle United, Doncaster Rovers).[485]
- Fabiola Letelier, 92, Chilean lawyer (assassination of Orlando Letelier) and human rights activist, stroke.[486]
- Leif Terje Løddesøl, 86, Norwegian banker, CEO of Den norske Creditbank (1980–1988) and Statoil (1996–2003).[487]
- Kovi Manisekaran, 94, Indian scholar, film director and actor.[488]
- Levy Mkandawire, 60, Zambian politician, traffic collision.[489]
- Frank R. Pfetsch, 85, German political scientist.[490]
- Sue Picus, 73, American contract bridge player.[491]
- Ragnhild Pohanka, 89, Swedish politician, spokesperson of the Green Party (1984–1986) and MP (1988–1991, 1994–1998).[492]
- Lori-Jane Powell, 50, Canadian racquetball player, heart attack.[493]
- Mick Rock, 72, British photographer.[494]
- Ack van Rooyen, 91, Dutch jazz trumpeter and flugelhornist.[495]
- William Evan Sanders, 101, American Episcopalian prelate, bishop of East Tennessee (1985–1992).[496]
- Kim Suominen, 52, Finnish football player (Turun Palloseura, IFK Norrköping, national team) [497]
- John Taylor, 89, Scottish Episcopal prelate, bishop of Glasgow and Galloway (1991–1996).[498]
- Zenon Trzonkowski, 64, Polish football player (Śląsk Wrocław, Zagłębie Lubin) and manager (Odra Opole).[499]
- María Elsa Viteri, 56, Ecuadorian economist, minister of finance (2008–2010) and of economy and finance (2018), pancreatic cancer.[500]
- Ardeshir Zahedi, 93, Iranian politician and diplomat, minister of foreign affairs (1966–1971), ambassador to the U.K. (1962–1966) and U.S. (1960–1962, 1973–1979), COVID-19 and pneumonia.[501]
- Zvi Zilker, 88, German-born Israeli politician, mayor of Ashdod (1969–1983, 1989–2008), cancer.[502]
19
- Nina Agapova, 95, Russian actress (Seven Old Men and a Girl, The Invisible Man, Forgotten Melody for a Flute).[503]
- Abderrahmane Amalou, 83, Moroccan politician, minister of justice (1995–1997).[504]
- Enrico Bacher, 80, Italian Olympic ice hockey player (1964).[505]
- Julie Belaga, 91, American politician, member of the Connecticut House of Representatives (1977–1987).[506]
- Rod Blackburn, 82, American ice hockey player (New Hampshire Wildcats).[507]
- Ian Fishback, 42, American army officer and whistleblower.[508]
- Costantino Fittante, 87, Italian politician, deputy (1983–1987).[509]
- Josée Forest-Niesing, 56, Canadian politician, senator (since 2018), complications from COVID-19.[510]
- Hank von Hell, 49, Norwegian singer (Turbonegro) and actor (Cornelis).[511]
- Sylvia Kantaris, 85, British-Australian poet.[512]
- Sirilal Kodikara, 97, Sri Lankan journalist, novelist and poet.[513]
- Don Kojis, 82, American basketball player (Detroit Pistons, San Diego Rockets, Seattle SuperSonics).[514]
- Edgardo Labella, 70, Filipino politician, mayor of Cebu City (since 2019).[515]
- Ken Moffett, 90, American federal mediator and union official, executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association (1982–1983).[516]
- Guillermo Morón, 95, Venezuelan writer and historian.[517]
- Ricky Nelson, 62, American baseball player (Seattle Mariners), complications from COVID-19.[518]
- Pivotal, 28, British Thoroughbred racehorse and sire.[519]
- Alex Rebar, 81, American actor (The Incredible Melting Man).[520]
- Cedric Robinson, 88, British walking guide, Queen's Guide to the Sands (1963–2019).[521]
- Bernard Rollin, 78, American philosopher and academic.[522]
- Will Ryan, 72, American voice actor (The Land Before Time, The Little Mermaid, An American Tail) and singer, cancer.[523]
- György Schöpflin, 81, Hungarian politician, MEP (2004–2019).[524]
- John Sewell, 85, English football player (Charlton Athletic, Crystal Palace) and manager (St. Louis Stars), dementia.[525]
- Norman Webster, 80, Canadian journalist and editor (The Globe and Mail), complications from Parkinson's disease.[526]
- Marie Lovise Widnes, 91, Norwegian poet and politician, MP (1989–1993).[527]
20
- Gbenga Aluko, 58, Nigerian politician, senator (1999–2003).[528]
- Rudy Croes, 74, Aruban politician, MP (1989–2001), minister of justice (2001–2009).[529]
- Diomid, 60, Russian Orthodox prelate, bishop of Anadyr and Chukotka (2000–2008), traffic collision.[530]
- Burgess Gardner, 85, American jazz trumpeter.[531]
- Valery Garkalin, 67, Russian actor (Katala, Tsar Ivan the Terrible, Shirli-myrli), COVID-19.[532]
- Andreas Georgiou, 68, Cypriot politician, MP (1987–1996).[533]
- Don Grimes, 84, Australian politician, senator (1974–1987), minister of social security (1983–1984) and community services (1984–1987).[534]
- Abdiaziz Mohamud Guled, Somali journalist (Radio Mogadishu), bombing.[535]
- Ted Herold, 79, German singer and actor, house fire.[536]
- Billy Hinsche, 70, American musician (Dino, Desi & Billy, The Beach Boys), giant cell carcinoma.[537]
- Alberto Labarthe, 93, Chilean Olympic sprinter (1948).[538]
- Rita Letendre, 93, Canadian painter.[539]
- David Longdon, 56, British singer and musician (Big Big Train).[540]
- Carlo Maria Mariani, 90, Italian painter.[541]
- Ray McLoughlin, 82, Irish rugby union player (Gosforth, Barbarians, national team).[542]
- Merima Njegomir, 68, Serbian folk and sevdah singer.[543]
- Nobuaki Sekine, 87, Japanese voice actor (.hack//Legend of the Twilight), cerebral infarction.[544]
- Toyonoumi Shinji, 56, Japanese sumo wrestler.[545]
- Steve Smith, 57, American football player (Los Angeles Raiders, Seattle Seahawks), complications from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.[546]
- Kojo Tsikata, 85, Ghanaian military officer, head of national security and foreign affairs of the PDNC (1982–1995).[547]
21
- Asongo Alalaparu, 79, Surinamese traditional leader, granman of the Tiriyó (since 1997), COVID-19.[548]
- Ruben Altunyan, 82, Armenian composer and conductor.[549]
- Soher Al Bably, 84, Egyptian actress (Madrast Al-Mushaghebeen).[550]
- Yul Anderson, 63, American musician.[551]
- Gurmeet Bawa, 77, Indian folk singer.[552]
- Robert Bly, 94, American poet (Iron John: A Book About Men, The Sibling Society).[553]
- Lou Brooks, 77, American graphic artist and cartoonist.[554]
- Mary Brown, 86, American politician, member of the Michigan House of Representatives (1977–1994).[555]
- Marietta Chudakova, 84, Russian literary critic, historian, and writer, COVID-19.[556]
- Gordon Crosse, 83, English composer.[557]
- Lou Cutell, 91, American actor (Pee-wee's Big Adventure, Betty White's Off Their Rockers, Honey, I Shrunk the Kids).[558]
- Bert de Leon, 74, Filipino television director (Bubble Gang, Eat Bulaga!, Okay Ka, Fairy Ko!).[559]
- Antonio Escohotado, 80, Spanish philosopher and writer.[560]
- Verawaty Fadjrin, 64, Indonesian badminton player, world champion (1980), lung cancer.[561]
- Guy W. Fiske, 97, American businessman, deputy secretary of commerce (1982–1983).[562]
- Bakhtiyor Ikhtiyarov, 81, Uzbek actor (Yor-yor, The Seventh Bullet, Shikari).[563]
- Vincenzo La Russa, 83, Italian politician, senator (1979–1983, 1994–1996) and deputy (1983–1987).[564]
- Marcella LeBeau, 102, American Lakota politician, nurse and World War II veteran, member of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribal Council (1991–1995).[565]
- Ralph Miller, 88, American Olympic alpine skier (1956), cancer.[566]
- Leonid Pilunsky, 74, Ukrainian politician, member of the Verkhovna Rada of Crimea (2006–2014), COVID-19.[567]
- Scott Robbe, 66, American television and film producer (Seven and a Match, Queer Eye), complications from blood cancer.[568]
- Nina Ruslanova, 75, Russian actress (Afonya, Tears Were Falling, Be My Husband), COVID-19 and pneumonia.[569]
- Jean-Pierre Schumacher, 97, French monk, survivor of the Tibhirine massacre.[570]
- Leane Suniar, 73, Indonesian Olympic archer (1976), colon cancer.[571]
- Bengt Waller, 86, Swedish Olympic sailor (1960).[572]
- Sherif Zaki, Egyptian-born American pathologist.[573]
22
- E. C. Alft, 96, American historian and politician, mayor of Elgin, Illinois (1967–1971).[574]
- Miquel Barceló, 73, Spanish science fiction writer and translator.[575]
- James M. Bobbitt, 91, American chemist (Bobbitt reaction), traffic collision.[576]
- Igor Bugayev, 88, Russian politician.[577]
- Paul Burbridge, 89, British Anglican clergyman, dean of Norwich (1983–1995).[578]
- Art Clemente, 96, American politician, member of the Washington House of Representatives (1973–1979).[579]
- Erhaab, 30, American Thoroughbred racehorse.[580]
- Aldo Falivena, 93, Italian journalist.[581]
- Kim Friele, 86, Norwegian LGBT rights activist.[582]
- Fayez Ghosn, 71, Lebanese politician, minister of defense (2011–2014).[583]
- Margaret Giannini, 100, American physician and medical researcher.[584]
- Noah Gordon, 95, American novelist (The Physician).[585]
- Doug Hill, 71, American meteorologist (WUSA, WJLA-TV).[586]
- Bernard Holley, 81, British actor (Z-Cars, Doctor Who).[587]
- Susan V. John, 64, American politician, member of the New York State Assembly (1991–2010), cancer.[588]
- Doug Jones, 64, American baseball player (Milwaukee Brewers, Cleveland Indians, Oakland Athletics), COVID-19.[589]
- Kim Young-jung, 92, South Korean politician, MP (1985–1988).[590]
- Mimi Kyprianou, 89, Cypriot public figure, first lady (1977–1988).[591]
- Volker Lechtenbrink, 77, German actor (Iron Gustav, Der Hausgeist, By Way of the Stars) and singer.[592]
- Ryo Mabuchi, 88, Japanese Olympic diver (1956, 1960), emphysema.[593]
- Doug MacLeod, 62, Australian author and screenwriter (The Comedy Company, Dogstar, Full Frontal).[594]
- Stuart Macintyre, 74, Australian historian.[595]
- Omar Malavé, 58, Venezuelan baseball manager (Dunedin Blue Jays, Algodoneros de Unión Laguna).[596]
- Pa Nderry Mbai, Gambian-American journalist.[597]
- Hilda Múdra, 95, Austrian-born Slovak figure skating coach.[598]
- Paolo Pietrangeli, 76, Italian singer-songwriter, film director (Pigs Have Wings) and screenwriter.[599]
- Ned Rea, 77, Irish hurler (Faughs, Limerick).[600]
- Hiroichi Sakai, 92, Japanese politician, member of the House of Representatives (1969–1993).[601]
- Joanne Shenandoah, 64, American Oneida Indian singer and composer.[602]
- Babette Smith, 79, Australian historian.[603]
- William L. Stearman, 99, American foreign service officer.[604] (death announced on this date)
- Asya Sultanova, 98, Azerbaijani composer.[605]
- Baba Suwe, 63, Nigerian actor and comedian.[606]
- Marie Versini, 81, French actress (A Holiday with Piroschka, The Brides of Fu Manchu, Is Paris Burning?).[607]
- Sylvia Weinstock, 91, American baker.[608]
23
- Barrie Aitchison, 84, English footballer (Tottenham Hotspur, Colchester United, Cambridge City).[609]
- Christopher Boehm, 90, American cultural anthropologist.[610]
- Janet Campbell Hale, 75, Native American writer and teacher, complications from COVID-19.[611]
- Tatyana Chudova, 77, Russian composer.[612]
- Chun Doo-hwan, 90, South Korean military officer and politician, president (1980–1988), multiple myeloma.[613]
- Mary Collinson, 69, Maltese-British model (Playboy) and actress (Twins of Evil), bronchopneumonia.[614]
- Robert Ellis, 92, British-born New Zealand artist.[615]
- Bob Essery, 91, British railway modeller and historian.[616]
- Dan Georgakas, 83, American anarchist poet and historian.[617]
- Nikolai Golyushev, 91, Russian opera singer.[618]
- Marko Grilc, 38, Slovenian snowboarder, accidental head trauma.[619]
- Hasan Fehmi Güneş, 87, Turkish politician, minister of interior (1979).[620]
- Miran Györek, 69, Slovenian politician, MP (2008–2011).[621]
- Amman Jalmaani, 72, Filipino Olympic swimmer (1964, 1968, 1972).[622]
- Jan Kawulok, 75, Polish Olympic skier (1968).[623]
- Simon Kistemaker, 80, Dutch football manager (Drechtsteden '79, De Graafschap, SC Telstar).[624]
- Bjørn Larsson, 97, Norwegian Olympic wrestler (1952).[625]
- Sadhu Charan Mahato, 48, Indian politician, Jharkhand MLA (2014–2019), throat cancer.[626]
- Sir James Fitz-Allen Mitchell, 90, Vincentian politician, premier (1972–1974) and prime minister (1984–2000).[627]
- Riuler, 23, Brazilian footballer (J.FC Miyazaki, Shonan Bellmare), heart attack.[628]
- Hans Rosendahl, 76, Swedish Olympic swimmer (1964).[629]
- Romuald Schild, 85, Polish archaeologist.[630]
- Teata Semiz, 87, American Hall of Fame bowler, complications of broken hip.[631]
- Don Shondell, 92, American volleyball coach.[632]
- Melvin Tinker, 66, British clergyman, pancreatic cancer.[633]
- Rosalie Trombley, 82, Canadian music director (CKLW).[634]
- Andrew Vachss, 79, American crime fiction author (Strega, Batman: The Ultimate Evil) and attorney.[635]
- Bill Virdon, 90, American baseball player (St. Louis Cardinals, Pittsburgh Pirates) and manager (Houston Astros), World Series champion (1960, 1971).[636]
- Allin Vlasenko, 83, Ukrainian conductor.[637]
- Martin Wood, 94, British electrical engineer and entrepreneur.[638]
24
- Aron Atabek, 68, Kazakhstani writer, poet and dissident, COVID-19.[639]
- Hermann Bausinger, 95, German cultural scientist.[640]
- Mārtiņš Brauns, 70, Latvian composer ("Saule, Pērkons, Daugava"), COVID-19.[641]
- Lisa Brown, 67, American actress (As the World Turns, Guiding Light).[642]
- Frank Burrows, 77, Scottish football player (Swindon Town, Scunthorpe United) and manager (Portsmouth).[643]
- Ian Curteis, 86, British dramatist (The Falklands Play).[644]
- Luis Díaz, 76, Colombian Olympic cyclist (1972), cancer.[645]
- Ennio Doris, 81, Italian banker, founder of Banca Mediolanum.[646]
- Guillermo Echevarría, 73, Mexican Olympic swimmer (1964, 1968).[647]
- U. L. Gooch, 98, American aviator and politician, member of the Kansas Senate (1993–2004).[648]
- Wiesław Hartman, 71, Polish show jumping equestrian, Olympic silver medallist (1980).[649]
- Sandy MacIntyre, 86, Canadian fiddler.[650]
- Cliff Marshall, 66, English footballer (Miami Toros, Southport, Everton).[651]
- Marilyn McLeod, 82, American singer-songwriter ("Love Hangover", "You Can't Turn Me Off (In the Middle of Turning Me On)").[652]
- Keith Morton, 87, English footballer (Darlington).[653]
- Raif Nagm, 94–95, Jordanian civil engineer and politician, minister of public works and housing (1984–1985).[654]
- Aryeh Nehemkin, 96, Israeli politician, member of the Knesset (1981–1988) and minister of agriculture (1984–1988).[655]
- Allan Roy Oliver, 85, Canadian politician.[656]
- Daniel L. Overmyer, 86, Canadian academic, cancer.[657]
- Musafir Paswan, 66, Indian politician, Bihar MLA (since 2020).[658]
- Jeannette Ramos, 89, Puerto Rican judge, first lady (1967–1969).[659]
- Betty Jean Robinson, 88, American singer.[660]
- Ivan Stanchov, 92, Bulgarian diplomat and politician, ambassador to the U.K. (1991–1994) and minister of foreign affairs (1994–1995).[661]
- Jim Warren, 85, American computer scientist, co-founder of the West Coast Computer Faire and Dr. Dobb's Journal.[662]
- Yvonne Wilder, 84, American actress (West Side Story, Seems Like Old Times, Full House).[663]
25
- Theodorus Dekker, 94, Dutch mathematician.[664]
- Carol Gould, 68, American writer and broadcaster.[665]
- John Hall, 88, American businessman, chairman and CEO of Ashland Oil Inc. (1981–1997).[666]
- Dieter B. Herrmann, 82, German astronomer.[667]
- Taras Hryb, 69, Canadian Olympic wrestler.[668]
- Galal Ibrahim, Egyptian football executive, president of Zamalek (1992–1996, 2010–2011).[669]
- Risto Kala, 80, Finnish Olympic basketball player (1964).[670]
- Peter Kanis, 90, Australian footballer (Hawthorn).[671]
- Julien Le Bas, 97, French Olympic sprinter (1948).[672]
- Justin Lekoundzou, 80, Congolese politician, minister of finance (1983–1987) and MP (1992–1993, 2002–2012).[673]
- Bohdan Levkiv, 71, Ukrainian politician, mayor of Ternopil (2002–2006).[674]
- Charles Moose, 68, American author and police officer (D.C. sniper attacks), chief of the Montgomery County Police Department (1999–2003).[675]
- Peeter Olesk, 67, Estonian literary scholar and politician, minister of population and ethnic affairs (1993–1994) and culture (1994–1995).[676]
- Oleksandr Omelchenko, 83, Ukrainian politician, mayor of Kyiv (1999–2006) and deputy (2007–2012), COVID-19.[677]
- Don Phillips, 80, American casting director (Dog Day Afternoon, Fast Times at Ridgemont High) and producer (Melvin and Howard).[678]
- Abani Roy, 82, Indian politician, MP (1998–2011).[679]
- Anne Rudin, 97, American politician, mayor of Sacramento (1983–1992), pneumonia.[680]
- Numan al-Samarrai, 86, Iraqi Muslim scholar and politician, secretary-general of the Iraqi Islamic Party (1960).[681]
- Sananta Tanty, 69, Indian Assamese poet.[682]
- Augusto Zweifel, 100, Italian footballer (Novara) and tennis player.[683]
26
- Norman Allen, 93, Irish hurler and Gaelic footballer (St Vincents).[684]
- Mohan Bhandari, 84, Indian writer.[685]
- Óscar Catacora, 34, Peruvian film director, screenwriter, and cinematographer (Eternity), appendicitis.[686]
- Siobhan Cattigan, 26, Scottish rugby union player (Stirling County, national team).[687]
- Doug Cowie, 95, Scottish footballer (Dundee, Greenock Morton, national team).[688]
- Keith De Lacy, 81, Australian politician, Queensland MLA (1983–1998) and treasurer (1989–1996), cancer.[689]
- Michael Fisher, 90, English physicist.[690]
- Roger Fritz, 85, German actor (Cross of Iron) and film director, stroke.[691]
- Buster Guzzardo, 98, American politician, member of the Louisiana House of Representatives (1987–1996).[692]
- Hamdi Hassan, 65, Egyptian politician, MP (2005–2010).[693]
- Kwon Jung-dong, 89, South Korean politician, minister of labor (1980–1982) and MP (1985–1988).[694]
- Ruslan Mostovyi, 47, Ukrainian football player (Avanhard Zhydachiv, Spartak Nalchik) and manager (Prykarpattia Ivano-Frankivsk), traffic collision.[695]
- Nguyễn Hồng Nhị, 84, Vietnamese fighter pilot (VPAF).[696]
- Mark Roth, 70, American bowler, pneumonia.[697]
- Stephen Sondheim, 91, American composer and lyricist (West Side Story, Company, Sweeney Todd), nine-time Tony winner, cardiovascular disease.[698]
- Bichu Thirumala, 80, Indian lyricist (Thrishna, Krishnagudiyil Oru Pranayakalathu, Kadinjool Kalyanam) and poet, heart attack.[699]
- Aleksandr Timoshinin, 73, Russian rower, Olympic champion (1968, 1972).[700]
- German Zonin, 95, Russian football player (Dynamo Leningrad) and manager (Myanmar national team, Soviet Union national team).[701]
27
- Adolfo, 98, Cuban-born American fashion designer.[702]
- Apetor, 57, Norwegian YouTuber, drowned.[703]
- Tony Ayres, 54, English darts player.[704]
- Donald Caspar, 94, American structural biologist.[705]
- Jacques Cinq-Mars, 79, Canadian archaeologist.[706]
- Curley Culp, 75, American Hall of Fame football player (Kansas City Chiefs, Houston Oilers, Detroit Lions), Super Bowl champion (1970), complications from pancreatic cancer.[707]
- Beverley Dunn, 88, Australian actress (The Flying Doctors, Prisoner, Dogstar).[708]
- Almudena Grandes, 61, Spanish writer, cancer.[709]
- Teppo Hauta-aho, 80, Finnish double bassist.[710]
- Gregory J. Hobbs Jr., 76, American jurist, associate justice on the Colorado Supreme Court (1996–2015).[711]
- Matti Keinonen, 80, Finnish Hall of Fame ice hockey player (Lukko, HJK, national team), cancer.[712]
- Frederick C. Luebke, 94, American historian.[713]
- Ken Lyotier, 74, Canadian social worker.[714]
- Lubomyra Mandziy, 48, Ukrainian educator and civil servant, acting minister of education and science (2020).[715]
- Shirley McBay, 86, American mathematician and activist.[716]
- Ed McClanahan, 89, American novelist and essayist.[717]
- Eddie Mekka, 69, American actor (Laverne & Shirley, Blansky's Beauties, Top of the World).[718]
- Milutin Mrkonjić, 79, Serbian politician, minister of infrastructure, energy and transportation (2008–2013).[719]
- Jimmy O'Dea, 86, Irish-born New Zealand trade unionist and activist.[720]
- Ruy Ohtake, 83, Brazilian architect, myelodysplastic syndrome.[721]
- Park Jong-soo, 80, South Korean taekwondo practitioner, original master of taekwondo.[722]
- Francis Routh, 94, British composer and author.[723]
- Giampaolo Tronchin, 80, Italian Olympic rower (1972).[724]
- Monique Vinh Thuy, 75, French diplomat, princess of Vietnam in-exile.[725]
- Colin Young, 94, British film educator, chairman of the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television.[726]
28
- Virgil Abloh, 41, American fashion designer, founder and CEO of Off-White (since 2012), cancer.[727]
- Brian Barnes, 77, English artist.[728]
- Pat Barrett, 85, Irish professional wrestler (NWA).[729]
- Mustafa Cengiz, 71, Turkish football executive, president of Galatasaray (2018–2021), cancer.[730]
- Jacqueline Danno, 90, French actress.[731]
- Lee Elder, 87, American golfer.[732]
- Paul Lawrence Farber, 77, American science historian.[733]
- August von Finck Jr., 91, German businessman.[734]
- Justo Gallego Martínez, 96, Spanish monk and builder.[735]
- Alexander Gradsky, 72, Russian rock singer, musician, and composer, stroke.[736]
- Laila Halme, 87, Finnish singer ("Muistojeni laulu").[737]
- Doyle Hamm, 64, American convicted murderer and botched execution survivor, cancer.[738]
- Chuck Hazama, 89, American politician, mayor of Rochester, Minnesota (1979–1995).[739]
- Johnny Hills, 87, English footballer (Tottenham Hotspur, Bristol Rovers).[740]
- C. J. Hunter, 52, American Olympic shot putter (1996) and coach, world champion (1999).[741]
- Lalthlamuong Keivom, 82, Indian writer and diplomat, cancer.[742]
- Trevor Kennedy, 79, Australian businessman.[743] (death announced on this date)
- Nakamura Kichiemon II, 77, Japanese actor (Kuroneko, Double Suicide, Onihei Hankachō) and kabuki performer, heart failure.[744]
- Emmit King, 62, American Olympic sprinter (1984, 1988), shot.[745]
- Tommy Lane, 83, American actor (Shaft, Live and Let Die, Shamus), COPD.[746]
- Jean-Paul LeBlanc, 98, Canadian politician, New Brunswick MLA (1970–1974).[747]
- Henry Longs, Nigerian politician, Plateau State MHA, surgery complications.[748]
- Carrie Meek, 95, American politician, member of the Florida House of Representatives (1979–1982) and Senate (1982–1992) and the U.S. House of Representatives (1993–2003).[749]
- Meñique, 87, Panamanian singer and songwriter.[750]
- Emily Mkamanga, 71, Malawian writer and political commentator.[751]
- François Moncla, 89, French rugby union player (Racing 92, Section Paloise, national team).[752]
- Günter Oberhuber, 67, Austrian Olympic ice hockey player.[753]
- Norodom Ranariddh, 77, Cambodian politician and law academic, prime minister (1993–1997), member (1998–2006, 2017–2018) and president (1998–2006) of the National Assembly.[754]
- Prince Andrew Romanoff, 98, Russian-American aristocrat and writer, disputed head of the House of Romanov (since 2016).[755]
- Guillermo Roux, 92, Argentine painter.[756]
- Patu Tiava'asu'e Falefatu Sapolu, 71, Samoan judge, chief justice (1992–2019), attorney-general (1988–1991).[757]
- Russ Sainty, 85, English pop singer.[758]
- Phil Saviano, 69, American children's rights advocate and child abuse whistleblower, gallbladder cancer.[759]
- K. Sivasankar, 72, Indian choreographer (Poove Unakkaga, Vishwa Thulasi, Uliyin Osai) and actor, COVID-19.[760]
- Anthony Smith, 83, British broadcaster, author and academic, president of Magdalen College, Oxford (1988–2005), renal failure.[761]
- Mira J. Spektor, 93, German-born American composer and poet.[762]
- Jiří Srnec, 90, Czech theatre director and artist.[763]
- Jolene Unsoeld, 89, American politician, member of the Washington (1985–1989) and the U.S. Houses of Representatives (1989–1995).[764]
- Herman-Hartmut Weyel, 88, German politician, mayor of Mainz (1987–1997).[765]
- Sir Frank Williams, 79, British motor racing team owner and constructor (Williams Racing).[766]
29
- Constance Ahrons, 84, American psychotherapist, assisted suicide.[767]
- Jagdish Lal Ahuja, 86, Indian social worker, cancer.[768]
- Otis Anderson Jr., 23, American football player (UCF Knights), shot.[769]
- Kinza Clodumar, 76, Nauruan politician, MP (1971–1979, 1983–1989, 1995–2003) and president (1997–1998).[770]
- Arlene Dahl, 96, American actress (Journey to the Center of the Earth, A Southern Yankee, Reign of Terror).[771]
- Don Demeter, 86, American baseball player (Los Angeles Dodgers, Philadelphia Phillies, Detroit Tigers).[772]
- William Fulco, 85, American Jesuit priest.[773]
- Jim Gerhardt, 92, American Olympic triple jumper (1952).[774]
- David Gulpilil, 68, Australian actor (Walkabout, Charlie's Country, Crocodile Dundee), lung cancer.[775]
- Mike Holland, 65, American professional golfer.[776]
- LaMarr Hoyt, 66, American baseball player (Chicago White Sox, San Diego Padres), cancer.[777]
- Nurul Islam Jihadi, 73, Bangladeshi Islamic scholar, secretary general of Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh (since 2020).[778]
- Bruce William Kauffman, 86, American jurist, judge of the U.S. District Court for Eastern Pennsylvania (1997–2009).[779]
- Bob Kilger, 77, Canadian politician, MP (1988–2004) and mayor of Cornwall (2006–2014), stomach cancer.[780]
- Jack Lemley, 86, American architect and engineering manager (Channel Tunnel).[781]
- Frits Louer, 90, Dutch footballer (NOAD, Willem II, national team).[782]
- Jake Millar, 26, New Zealand entrepreneur and businessman.[783]
- Vladimir Naumov, 93, Russian film director (The Wind, Peace to Him Who Enters, Teheran 43), screenwriter and producer.[784]
- Allan Rechtschaffen, 93, American sleep researcher.[785]
- Ayako Shirasaki, 52, Japanese-American jazz pianist and composer, cancer.[786]
- Robert Farris Thompson, 88, American art historian and writer, Parkinson's disease complicated by COVID-19.[787]
- Alexander Zaitsev, 76, Russian astronomer.[788]
- Muhammad Ziauddin, 83, Pakistani journalist (Pakistan & Gulf Economist, The News International, The Express Tribune).[789]
- Sandor Zicherman, 86, Hungarian artist.[790]
30
- Sir Max Bingham, 94, Australian politician, deputy premier of Tasmania (1982–1984).[791]
- Marie-Claire Blais, 82, Canadian writer (Mad Shadows, A Season in the Life of Emmanuel) and poet.[792]
- Oriol Bohigas, 95, Spanish architect (MBM Arquitectes) and urban planner, Barcelona city councilor (1991–1994) and president of Fundació Joan Miró (1981–1988).[793]
- H. Jackson Brown Jr., 81, American author.[794]
- Albert Bustamante, 86, American judge and politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1985–1993).[795]
- Barney Carr, 98, Northern Irish Gaelic footballer (Warrenpoint).[796]
- Sirisena Cooray, 90, Sri Lankan politician, mayor of Colombo (1979–1989), MP (1989–1994) and minister of housing (1989–1994).[797]
- Chuck Dobson, 77, American baseball player (Oakland Athletics, California Angels).[798]
- Dave Draper, 79, American bodybuilder, actor (Lord Love a Duck, Don't Make Waves), and author, heart failure.[799]
- Phil Dwyer, 68, Welsh footballer (Cardiff City, national team).[800]
- Patrocinio González Garrido, 87, Mexican politician, senator (1982–1988), governor of Chiapas (1988–1993), and secretary of the interior (1993–1994).[801]
- Peter Greenwood, 97, English footballer (Chester City) and cricketer (Lancashire).[802]
- Janis Hansen, 81, American talent manager and actress (The Odd Couple).[803]
- Philip Heymann, 89, American lawyer, deputy attorney general (1993–1994).[804]
- Rafiqul Islam, 87, Bangladeshi educationist, president of Bangla Academy (since 2021), chairman of Nazrul Institute (since 2018) and vice-chancellor of JUST (2008–2009).[805]
- Ray Kennedy, 70, English footballer (Liverpool, Arsenal, national team), complications from Parkinson's disease.[806]
- Pampi Laduche, 66, French Basque pelota player.[807]
- Marcus Lamb, 64, American televangelist, founder of Daystar, COVID-19.[808]
- Mary Maher, 81, American-born Irish trade unionist, feminist and journalist.[809]
- Edison Misla Aldarondo, 79, Puerto Rican politician, member (1977–2002) and speaker (1993–2000) of the House of Representatives.[810]
- C. Herbert Oliver, 96, American pastor and civil rights activist.[811]
- Jonathan Penrose, 88, English chess player.[812]
- John Pett, 94, British television producer and director.[813]
- Ernesta G. Procope, 98, American investment banker.[814]
- Klaus Reinhardt, 80, German military officer.[815]
- Charles Revet, 84, French politician, senator (1995–2019).[816]
- Klaus Rainer Röhl, 92, German journalist and author.[817]
- Kal Rudman, 91, American disc jockey, color commentator and philanthropist, cofounder of the Kal and Lucille Rudman Foundation.[818]
- Sirivennela Seetharama Sastry, 66, Indian lyricist (Sirivennela, Swarnakamalam, Nuvvostanante Nenoddantana), lung cancer.[819]
- John Seddon, 86, New Zealand politician.[820]
- John Sillett, 85, English football player (Chelsea, Coventry City) and manager (Hereford United).[821]
- David Smith, 81, English cricketer (Derbyshire, Orange Free State).[822]
- Pamela Helen Stephen, 57, British mezzo-soprano, cancer.[823]
- Marjorie Tallchief, 95, American ballerina.[824]
- Jože Urankar, 82, Slovenian Olympic weightlifter (1972).[825] (death announced on this date)
- Joseph Wayas, 80, Nigerian politician, president of the senate (1979–1983).[826]
- Erwin Wilczek, 81, Polish football player (Górnik Zabrze, Valenciennes, national team) and manager.[827]
- G. Yafit, 70, Israeli advertising executive, cancer.[828]
References
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