The following is a list of notable deaths in September 1993.
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 1993
1
- Hasan Abdullayev, 75, Soviet and Azerbaijani physicist and academic.
- Thomas Brodie, 89, British Army officer.
- Odell M. Conoley, 79, American Marine Corps brigadier general.
- Fritz Cremer, 86, German sculptor.[1]
- Hew Lorimer, 86, Scottish sculptor.
- Bernie Lowe, 75, American musician.[2]
- Neon Park, 52, American painter, comics artist and illustrator, ALS.[3]
- Michael Sobell, 100, British businessman, philanthropist, and thoroughbred racehorses owner.
- Aleksey Vakhonin, 58, Russian weightlifter and Olympic champion, injuries sustained during brawl.[4]
2
- Eric Berry, 80, British actor, cancer.
- Dragotin Cvetko, 81, Slovenian composer and musicologist.[5]
- Carl Anthony Fisher, 47, American Roman Catholic prelate, colorectal cancer.
- Ingvar Moe, 56, Norwegian poet, novelist and children's writer.
- Russel B. Nye, 80, American professor of English and Pulitzer Prize winner.[6]
3
- Eric Batten, 79, English rugby player.
- David Brown, 89, English industrialist.[7]
- Josep Maria de Porcioles i Colomer, 89, Spanish politician and mayor of Barcelona, heart attack.
- Don Corbitt, 69, American gridiron football player.[8]
4
- Tommy Cheadle, 74, English football player.
- Baltasar Lobo, 83, Spanish artist, anarchist and sculptor.[9]
- Johnny Rae, 59, American jazz drummer and vibraphonist.
- Hervé Villechaize, 50, French-American actor (Fantasy Island, The Man with the Golden Gun, Airplane II: The Sequel) and painter, suicide.[10]
- Aaron Wildavsky, 63, American political scientist, lung cancer.[11]
5
- Baek Du-jin, 84, South Korean politician and Prime Minister of South Korea.
- Samim Kocagöz, 77, Turkish novelist.
- Edwin Malindine, 83, British politician.[12]
- Virgilio Mortari, 90, Italian composer and teacher.[13]
- Claude Renoir, 79, French cinematographer.[14]
- John Truscott, 57, Australian actor and production- and costume designer, complications during heart surgery.
6
- Pete Bennett, 65, Canadian football player.
- Bjarne Liller, 57, Danish jazz musician, singer-songwriter, and actor.
- A. L. F. Rivet, 77, British archaeologist and cartographer.[15]
- Paul Arthur Schilpp, 96, German-American philosopher and educator.[16]
7
- Eugen Barbu, 69, Romanian writer and journalist.[17]
- Hall Bartlett, 70, American film producer, director, and screenwriter.[18]
- Jean-Pierre Büchler, 85, Luxembourgian politician.
- Lefty Dizz, 56, American chicago blues guitarist and singer, esophageal cancer.[19]
- Bruno Giorgi, 88, Brazilian sculptor.[20]
- Christian Metz, 61, French film theorist, suicide.
8
- Vincent Dethier, 78, American physiologist and entomologist.[21]
- Peter Higgins, 64, British athlete and Olympic medalist.[22]
- Zaki Naguib Mahmoud, 88, Egyptian intellectual and philosopher.[23]
- Tor Skjønsberg, 90, Norwegian resistance leader during World War II.
9
- Jimmy Deuchar, 63, Scottish jazz trumpeter and big band arranger.[24]
- Art Mooney, 80, American singer and bandleader.
- Helen O'Connell, 73, American big band singer and actress, liver cancer.[25]
- David Tendlar, 84, American animator.[26]
10
- Garnet Ault, 87, Canadian swimmer and Olympic medalist.[27]
- Nicholas Bayard Dill, 87, Bermudian politician and military officer, heart attack.
- Julien Freund, 72, French sociologist and philosopher.[28]
- Hajime Hana, 63, Japanese actor.
- Charles Harris, 79, American tennis player.
- Cal Howard, 82, American cartoon story artist and animator.[29]
- Rita Karin, 73, Polish-American actress (Sophie's Choice).[30]
- Meinrad Miltenberger, 68, German sprint canoer and Olympian.[31]
- Josef Odložil, 54, Czech middle-distance runner and Olympic medalist, complications after fight.[32]
- Krister Wickman, 69, Swedish politician.
11
- Luis Antonio Escobar, 68, Colombian composer and musicologist.[33]
- Antoine Izméry, Haitian businessman and pro-democracy activist, shot.
- Charles Lamont, 98, American filmmaker, pneumonia.[34]
- Erich Leinsdorf, 81, Austrian-American conductor.[35]
- Mary Jane Reoch, 48, American cycling champion, road accident.[36]
12
- Raymond Burr, 76, Canadian-American actor (Perry Mason, Rear Window, Ironside), Emmy winner (1959, 1961), kidney cancer.[37]
- Hitendra Kanaiyalal Desai, 78, Indian politician.
- Baligh Hamdi, 61, Egyptian composer, liver disease.[38]
- Granny Hamner, 66, American Major League Baseball player.[39]
- Harold Innocent, 60, English actor (Henry V, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, Buster).[40]
- Edith Kiel, 89, German film producer, screenwriter, and director.
- Walter Ganshof van der Meersch, 93, Belgian jurist and politician.
13
- Austregésilo de Athayde, 94, Brazilian writer and journalist.[41]
- Steve Jordan, 74, American jazz guitarist.[42]
- Pavel Kouba, 55, Czech football player.[43]
- Yasushi Sasaki, 85, Japanese film director.
- Carl Voss, 86, American ice hockey player.[44]
14
- Adrianne Allen, 86, English stage actress, cancer.[45]
- Geo Bogza, 85, Romanian avant-garde theorist, poet, and journalist.[46]
- Erling Asbjørn Kongshaug, 78, Norwegian rifle shooter and Olympic champion.[47]
- Sheelagh Murnaghan, 69, Northern Irish politician.
- Glenn E. Smiley, 83, American clergyman and civil rights leader.[48]
- Peter Tranchell, 71, British composer.[49]
- Solange Térac, 86, French screenwriter and film director.[50]
15
- Ethan Allen, 89, American baseball player.[51]
- Maurice Allingham, 97, Australian rules football player.
- Pino Puglisi, 56, Italian Roman Catholic priest, killed by the mafia.
- Yulian Semyonov, 61, Soviet and Russian writer, scriptwriter and poet.
- Shinsaku Tsukawaki, 62, Japanese gymnast and Olympian.[52]
- Maurice Yaméogo, 71, President of Republic of Upper Volta (1959-1966).[53]
16
- František Jílek, 80, Czech conductor, composer and pianist.[54]
- Sid Kuller, 82, American comedy writer, producer and composer.[55]
- Henri LaBorde, 84, American discus thrower and Olympian.[56]
- J. R. Monterose, 66, American jazz saxophonist.[57]
- Oodgeroo Noonuccal, 72, Aboriginal Australian political activist and artist.[58]
- Vera Orlova, 75, Soviet and Russian actress.
- Rok Petrovič, 27, Yugoslav and Slovenian alpine skier and Olympian, drowned.[59]
17
- Thomas Robert Shannon Broughton, 93, Canadian classical scholar and Latin prosopographer.[60]
- James Griffith, 77, American actor, musician and screenwriter, cancer.[61]
- Jon Jelacic, 56, American gridiron football player.[62]
- Willie Mosconi, 80, American pool player, heart attack.[63]
- Christian Nyby, 80, American film director (The Thing from Another World).[64]
- Tarzie Vittachi, 71, Sri Lankan journalist, liver cancer.
18
- Aris Konstantinidis, 80, Greek modernist architect.[65]
- Henrietta Leaver, 77, American beauty pageant contestant, cancer.[66]
- Hans Schwarzenbach, 80, Swiss equestrian and Olympic medalist.[67]
- Asit Sen, 76, Indian Hindi film director and comedian.
19
- Helen Adam, 83, Scottish poet, collagist and photographer.[68]
- Art Burris, 69, American basketball player.[69]
- John E. Dimon, 77, American politician.[70]
- Marcel Mariën, 73, Belgian artist and filmmaker, cancer.[71]
- András Mihály, 75, Hungarian cellist, composer and academic teacher.[72]
- Mufti Muhammad Waqaruddin, 78, Pakistani Islamic scholar.
20
- Edwin Blunt, 75, English football player.
- Erich Hartmann, 71, German fighter pilot and most successful fighter ace during World War II, brain cancer.
- Zlatko Mašek, 64, Yugoslav sports shooter and Olympian.[73]
- Leonard Parkin, 64, British television journalist and newscaster, cancer.
- Hans Suess, 83, Austrian physicist.[74]
- Cyrus Leo Sulzberger II, 80, American journalist, diarist, and non-fiction writer.[75]
21
- Joe Daher, 80, American college basketball and football coach.
- Fernand Ledoux, 96, Belgian-French film and theatre actor.[76]
- Antonio Quintana Simonetti, 74, Cuban modernist architect.
- Francis Weldon, 80, British equestrian and Olympic champion.[77]
22
- Maurice Abravanel, 90, American classical music conductor.[78]
- Emilio Botín, 90, Spanish banker.[79]
- Niklaus Meienberg, 53, Swiss writer and investigative journalist, suicide.
- Mihai Tänzer, 88, Romanian football player.[80]
23
- Tommy Bogan, 73, Scottish football player.[81]
- William Cort, 57, American actor, cancer.[82]
- Myer Galpern, 90, Scottish politician.
- Koichi Hirakida, 55, Japanese swimmer and Olympic medalist.[83]
- Charles Loughlin, 79, British politician.[84]
24
- Ian Stuart Donaldson, 36, English neo-Nazi musician and frontman of punk rock band Skrewdriver, car crash.
- Zita Johann, 89, Austrian-American actress.[85]
- Bruno Pontecorvo, 80, Italian and Soviet nuclear physicist, Parkinson's disease.[86]
- Tamara Talbot Rice, 89, Russian-English art historian.[87]
25
- Willy Fitz, 75, Austrian football player and coach.
- Francis Raymond Fosberg, 85, American botanist.[88]
- John Moores, 97, English businessman, politician and philanthropist.[89]
- Manlio Scopigno, 67, Italian football player and coach, heart attack.[90]
26
- Nina Berberova, 92, Russian writer, fall.[91]
- Frank Dunlap, 69, Canadian football player.
- Semyon Pavlovich Ivanov, 86, Soviet general and Hero of the Soviet Union.
- Edith Meiser, 95, American author and actress.[92]
- John Pennel, 53, American pole vaulter, Olympian, and world record holder, cancer.[93]
27
- Paolo Caldarella, 29, Italian water polo player, motorcycle accident.[94]
- Jimmy Doolittle, 96, American military general, aviation pioneer and recipient of the Medal of Honor.[95]
- Fraser MacPherson, 65, Canadian jazz musician.
- Milan Muškatirović, 59, Yugoslav water polo goalkeeper.[96]
- Notable people killed during the Sukhumi massacre[97]
- Mamia Alasania, 50, Georgian Armed Forces colonel
- Alexander Berulava, 47, Georgian journalist, writer, and human rights activist
- Raul Eshba, 49, Georgian politician[98]
- Guram Gabiskiria, 46, Georgian politician and mayor of Sukhumi[99]
- Zhiuli Shartava, 49, Georgian politician and Prime Minister of Abkhazia[100]
- Andrey Soloviev, 40, Soviet and Russian war photographer
28
- Peter De Vries, 83, American editor and novelist.[101]
- Chandrashekhar Dubey, 69, Indian actor and radio personality.
- Paul Giguet, 78, French racing cyclist.[102]
- Crawford Greenewalt, 91, American chemical engineer, stroke.[103]
- Galina Makarova, 73, Soviet and Belarusian theater and film actress.
- Dumitru Pavlovici, 81, Romanian football player.[104]
29
- Matej Bor, 80, Slovenian writer.
- Ian Burn, 53, Australian conceptual artist, drowned.[105]
- Gordon Douglas, 85, American film director and actor, cancer.[106]
- Tatjana Gsovsky, 92, German ballet dancer and choreographer.[107]
- Moses Simwala, 44, Zambian football player and coach.
- Ghulam Haider Wyne, 43, Pakistani politician, murdered.
30
- Ronnie Aldrich, 77, British easy listening and jazz musician, prostate cancer.[108]
- Jean Brun, 67, Swiss cyclist.[109]
- Dick Harris, 81, Australian rules football player and coach.
- Alex Lyon, 61, British politician, Alzheimer's disease.[110]
- Carlo Vinci, 87, American animator.[111]
References
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