Deaths in 2007
Appearance
The following is a list of notable deaths in 2007. Names are listed under the date of death, not the date it was announced. Names under each date are listed in alphabetical order by family name.
A typical entry appears in the following sequence:
- Name, age, country of citizenship and reason for notability, established cause of death, reference.
- John Biffen, 76, British Conservative member of the House of Lords, septicaemia. [1]
- Tikhon Khrennikov, 94, Russian composer. [2] (Russian).
- Brian "Crush" Adams, 43, American professional wrestler. [3]
- Brooke Astor, 105, American philanthropist, pneumonia. [4]
- Bill Farr, 97, American pioneer of Colorado-Big Thompson project. [5]
- Yone Minagawa, 114, Japanese woman recognized as the world's oldest person. [6]
- Clifton Neita, 92, Jamaican newspaper editor, Jamaica Gleaner (1954–1979). [7]
- Phil Rizzuto, 89, American baseball shortstop and broadcaster for the New York Yankees. [8]
- Merv Griffin, 82, American talk show host, real estate tycoon, creator of game shows (Jeopardy!, Wheel of Fortune), prostate cancer. [9]
- Asa Hilliard, 73, American educationalist, historian and psychologist, malaria. [10]
- Ron McGregor, 83, New Zealand rugby league player and administrator. [11]
- Elizabeth Murray, 66, American artist, lung cancer. [12]
- Alwyn Rice Jones, 73, British Archbishop of Wales (1991–1999). [13]
- Mike Wieringo, 44, American comic book artist, heart attack. [14]
- Franz Antel, 94, Austrian film director. [15] (German)
- McDonald Gallion, 94, American politician, Attorney General of Alabama (1959–1963, 1967–1971). [16]
- Joe Jimenez, 81, American professional golfer, won 1978 Senior PGA Championship, renal failure brought on by lung cancer. [17]
- Bronko Lubich, 81, American professional wrestler and referee for the NWA, WCCW and USWA. [18]
- Sukadji Ranuwihardjo, 76, Indonesian President of Gadjah Mada University (1973–1981). [19]
- Lluís Maria Xirinacs, 75, Catalan political activist and priest, suicide. [20] (Spanish)
- Zhang Shuhong, 49 or 50, Chinese company co-owner involved in Fisher-Price toy recall, suicide by hanging. [21]
- Sonny Day, 64, New Zealand Maori blues singer (The Sharks, The Sundowners), emphysema. [22]
- James E. Faust, 87, American second counselor in the First Presidency of The LDS Church. [23]
- Germán Pedro Ibáñez, 79, Cuban guitarist and director of the Septeto Habanero. [24] (Spanish)
- Irene Kirkaldy, 90, United States civil rights campaigner, complications of Alzheimers disease. [25]
- Joe O'Donnell, 85, American photographer, stroke. [26]
- Jean Rédelé, 85, French creator of the Alpine automobile brand. [27]
- Tony Wilson, 57, British owner of Factory Records, radio and TV presenter, journalist, cancer. [28] [29]
- Murray Abbott, 57, New Zealand judge, Christchurch District Court. [30]
- Richmond Flowers Sr., 88, American Attorney General of Alabama (1963–1967). [31]
- Timothy Garden, Baron Garden, 63, British Air Marshal and Liberal Democrat peer, cancer. [32]
- Joe O'Donnell, 85, American presidential photographer, took early picture after Hiroshima bombing, complications of a stroke.[33]
- Ulrich Plenzdorf, 72, German author.[34]
- Warren Stute, 85, American horse trainer. [35]
- Nicolau Casaus, 94, Spanish vicepresident of Futbol Club Barcelona. [36] (Spanish)
- Ma Lik, 55, Hong Kong Legislative Council member and chair of the DAB, colon cancer. [37]
- Melville Shavelson, 90, American film director and screenwriter. [38]
- Ernesto Alonso, 90, Mexican television producer and actor, pneumonia. [39] (Spanish)
- Hal Fishman, 75, American television news anchor since 1960, KTLA Prime News anchor since 1975, cancer. [40] [41]
- Gato Del Sol, 28, American racehorse, won 1982 Kentucky Derby, euthanized. [42]
- Russell Johnson, 83, American acoustics designer for Jazz at Lincoln Center. [43]
- Miklós Páncsics, 63, Hungarian football player (Ferencvárosi TC). [44]
- Wolfgang Sievers, 93, Australian photographer. [45]
- Sir Angus Tait, 88, New Zealand electronics innovator and businessman. [46]
- William F. Walker, 69, American president of Auburn University (2001–2004), complications of cancer. [47]
- Heinz Barth, 86, German Nazi war criminal. [48]
- Willie Booker, 65, American basketball coach at Florida A&M (1984–1993). [49]
- Thomas Farrow, 82, American FBI agent, ended hijack at Baltimore airport, heart failure. [50]
- Moe Fishman, 92, American representative of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, pancreatic cancer. [51]
- Irving Huie, 78, American transport engineer. [52]
- Ah Jook Ku, 97, American journalist and writer. [53]
- Bill McCarroll, 62, Irish General Secretary of the Northern Cricket Union. [54]
- Elie de Rothschild, 90, French banker, member of Rothschild dynasty, heart attack. [55]
- Paul Rutherford, 67, British trombonist. [56]
- Atle Selberg, 90, Norwegian mathematician. [57]
- Joaquim Saraiva Abrantes, 82, Portuguese Roman Catholic Prior of the municipality of São José (Lisbon). [58] (Portuguese)
- Henri Amouroux, 87, French journalist and historian. [59] (French)
- Oliver Hill, 100, American lawyer, lead attorney on the Brown v. Board of Education case. [60]
- Ernest Loveless, 84, American judge, Maryland seventh judicial circuit (1960–1992). [61]
- Jean-Marie Cardinal Lustiger, 80, French Jewish-born Roman Catholic Archbishop Emeritus of Paris, cancer. [62]
- Amos Manor, 89, Israeli head of Shin Bet (1953–1963). [63]
- David Osier, 62, American journalist, cancer. [64]
- Florian Pittiş, 63, Romanian actor and folk singer, prostate cancer. [65] (Romanian)
- António "Vini Vini" Venâncio, 48, Angolan singer, diabetes and tuberculosis. [66]
- Lee Hazlewood, 78, American country music singer and songwriter ("These Boots Are Made for Walkin' "), renal cancer. [67]
- Raul Hilberg, 81, Austrian Jewish Holocaust historian, lung cancer. [68]
- Frank Mancuso, 89, American major league baseball player, Houston City Councillor. [69]
- Santos Padilla Ferrer, 50, Puerto Rican mayor of Cabo Rojo, heart attack. [70]
- Jose Miguel Battle, Sr., 77, Cuban founder and nominal leader of the "Cuban Mafia". [71].
- Ron Brown, 67, British Labour Party Member of Parliament (1979–1992), liver failure. [72]
- James T. Callahan, 76, American actor (Charles in Charge), cancer. [73].
- John Gardner, 80, British thriller writer and James Bond continuation novelist, suspected heart failure. [74]
- Nasho Kamungeremu, 34, Zimbabwean golfer, heart attack. [75]
- Kafeel Ahmed, 28, Indian terrorist involved in the 2007 Glasgow International Airport attack, third degree burns. [76]
- Haitham al-Badri, Iraqi al Qaeda emir of Salahuddin province and Golden Dome bomber, airstrike. [77]
- Chauncey Bailey, 58, American journalist, editor of The Oakland Post, shot. [78]
- Ed Brown, 78, American football quarterback Chicago Bears, Pittsburgh Steelers, prostate cancer. [79]
- Franco Dalla Valle, 62, Brazilian Roman Catholic Bishop of Juína. [80] (Portuguese)
- Evan Enwerem, 71, Nigerian Senate President (1999). [81]
- Peter Eriksson, 48, Swedish neuroscientist. [82] (Swedish)
- Holden Roberto, 84, Angolan founder and leader of the FNLA (1962–1999), after long illness. [83]
- Frank Rosenfelt, 85, American executive at MGM. [84]
- Revis Sisney, 94, American newspaper reporter and editor Kansas City Star. [85]
- Yuu Aku, 70, Japanese songwriter, urethral cancer. [86] (Japanese)
- Sergei Antonov, 59, Bulgarian accused of involvement in attempt by Mehmet Ali Ağca to kill Pope John Paul II. [87]
- Ryan Cox, 28, South African professional road racing cyclist, ruptured artery following vascular surgery. [88]
- Hugo Guerra, 25, Portuguese professional fencer, hit by train. [89] (Portuguese)
- Veikko Karvonen, 81, Finnish athlete, bronze medalist in the 1956 Summer Olympics marathon. [90]
- Tommy Makem, 74, Irish folk musician (The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem), lung cancer. [91]
- Dillwyn Miles, 91, British historian, Herald Bard of the Gorsedd (1966-1996). [92]
- Pete Naktenis, 93, American baseball player. [93]
- Walter Oppenheimer, 92, American businessman, heart condition. [94]
- Philip S. Paludan, 69, American history professor, authority on Abraham Lincoln and the American Civil War. [95]
- Safi, Iraqi al Qaeda emir of Mosul, shot. [96]
- Norman Adrian Wiggins, 83, American third president of Campbell University. [97]
See Deaths in July 2007.
See Deaths in June 2007.
See Deaths in May 2007.
See Deaths in April 2007.
See Deaths in March 2007.
External links
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- Obituaries on the Web
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For earlier deaths, see Deaths in 2006, Deaths in 2005, Deaths in 2004, Deaths in 2003, Deaths in 2002, Deaths in 2001, 2000, 1999, 1998, 1997, 1996, 1995, 1994, 1993, 1992, 1991, 1990, 1989, 1988, ...