Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Deaths in November 2007

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The following is a list of notable deaths in November 2007.

Contents

1

  • Sonny Bupp, 79, American child actor (Our Gang, Citizen Kane), last surviving credited cast member of Citizen Kane.
  • Troy Lee James, 83, American politician, member of the Ohio House of Representatives (1967–2000).
  • Meredith Kercher, 21, British murder victim, stabbed.
  • Edith Motridge, 94, American Olympic backstroke swimmer.
  • S. Ali Raza, 85, Indian Bollywood screenwriter, heart failure.
  • Paul Tibbets, 92, American pilot of the Enola Gay which dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, heart failure.
  • Paul Woods, 57, British rugby union and rugby league player.
  • 2

  • Oreste Benzi, 82, Italian Roman Catholic priest.
  • Henry Cele, 58, South African actor (Shaka Zulu) and soccer player.
  • Charmaine Dragun, 29, Australian television news presenter, apparent suicide by jumping.
  • The Fabulous Moolah, 84, American professional wrestler.[84]
  • Lord Michael Fitzalan-Howard, 91, British soldier and courtier, Marshal of the Diplomatic Corps (1972–1981).
  • Don Freeland, 82, American racecar driver (Indianapolis 500).
  • Witold "Vitek" Kiełtyka, 23, Polish drummer (Decapitated), injuries from bus crash.
  • Igor Moiseyev, 101, Russian choreographer, heart failure.
  • Jean Pierre Reguerraz, 68, Argentine actor.
  • Reay Tannahill, 77, British food historian and novelist.
  • S.P. Thamilselvan, 40, Sri Lankan leader of Tamil Tigers, air strike.
  • 3

  • Peter Andren, 61, Australian independent MP, pancreatic cancer.
  • Maurice Noël Léon Couve de Murville, 78, French-born British Roman Catholic Archbishop of Birmingham (1982–1999).
  • Aleksandr Dedyushko, 45, Russian actor, car crash. (Russian)
  • Marilyn Martinez, 52, American stand up comedian, colon cancer.
  • Donald Matthews, 82, American political scientist and author.
  • Martin Meehan, 62, Irish Sinn Féin politician, heart attack.
  • Mary Walker Phillips, 83, American textile artist, Alzheimer's disease.
  • George Ratterman, 80, American professional football player (Cleveland Browns), complications from Alzheimer's disease.
  • Ryan Shay, 28, American long-distance runner, heart attack during Olympic marathon trials. [85]
  • 4

  • Edward Bartels, 82, American basketball player.
  • Cyprian Ekwensi, 86, Nigerian author.
  • Swami Gahanananda, 91, Bangladeshi religious leader, 14th President of the Ramakrishna Order.
  • Hideo Hagiwara, 94, Japanese painter. (Japanese)
  • Dorothy LaBostrie, 79, American songwriter ("Tutti Frutti").
  • Lennart Rönnback, 102, Finnish veteran of the Finnish Civil War, last of the White Guard. (Finnish)
  • Peter Viertel, 86, German-born American author and screenwriter.
  • 5

  • Roberto Bortoluzzi, 86, Italian sports journalist and radio broadcaster.
  • James Brabazon, 84, British author, lung cancer.
  • Thelma Buchholdt, 73, Filipino-born American author and politician, pancreatic cancer.
  • Nils Liedholm, 85, Swedish football midfielder and coach.
  • Paul Norris, 93, American comic book artist, co-creator of Aquaman.
  • Paul Soloway, 66, American five-time world bridge champion, complications of infection.
  • 6

  • Enzo Biagi, 87, Italian journalist.
  • Hilda Braid, 78, British actress (EastEnders, Citizen Smith).
  • John Grenier, 77, American politician, former executive director of the Republican National Committee.
  • George Grljusich, 68, Australian sports broadcaster, lung cancer.
  • Sayed Mustafa Kazemi, c. 48, Afghan politician, former commerce minister, victim of Baghlan factory bombing.
  • Fred W. McDarrah, 81, American photographer (Village Voice), documented the rise of the Beat Generation.
  • George Osmond, 90, American patriarch of the Osmond singing family.
  • Jimmy Staggs, 72, American radio disk jockey, esophageal cancer.
  • Hank Thompson, 82, American country music singer, lung cancer.
  • Hajji Muhammad Arif Zarif, Afghan politician and businessman, victim of Baghlan factory bombing.
  • 7

  • Pekka-Eric Auvinen, 18, Finnish mass murderer, suicide by gunshot.
  • Hobart Brown, 74, American sculptor, founder of the Kinetic Sculpture Race, pneumonia.
  • Earl Dodge, 74, American presidential candidate (Prohibition Party), heart attack.
  • Paul Dojack, 93, Canadian Football League referee.
  • George W. George, 87, American Broadway and film producer (My Dinner With Andre), Parkinson's disease.
  • Salome Gluecksohn-Waelsch, 100, German-American geneticist.
  • Arthur Hezlet, 93, British Royal Navy Vice-Admiral, submariner and naval historian.
  • Lidia Ivanova, 71, Russian TV journalist, announcer and writer, diabetes. (Russian)
  • Alejandra Meyer, 70, Mexican telenovela actress, heart failure. (Spanish)
  • 8

  • John Arpin, 70, Canadian pianist and composer, cancer.
  • Stephen Fumio Hamao, 77, Japanese Roman Catholic cardinal, former bishop of Yokohama, lung cancer.
  • Bobby Harrop, 71, English footballer (Manchester United).
  • Francine Parker, 81, American film director (FTA), heart failure.
  • Dulce Saguisag, 64, Filipino politician, former Secretary of Department of Social Welfare and Development, car accident.
  • David G. P. Taylor, 74, British businessman and public official, Governor of Montserrat (1990–1993).
  • Bungo Tsuda, 89, Japanese politician, former governor of Kanagawa Prefecture, colorectal cancer. (Japanese)
  • Chad Varah, 95, British Anglican priest, founder of the Samaritans.
  • 9

  • Luis Herrera Campins, 82, Venezuelan President (1979–1984), after long illness.
  • Bill Hosokawa, 92, Japanese American author and journalist.
  • Ilya Zbarsky, 94, Russian head of Lenin's Mausoleum. (Russian)
  • 10

  • Laraine Day, 87, American actress (Foreign Correspondent, The High and the Mighty).
  • John Fee, 43, Irish nationalist politician, brain tumour.
  • Augustus F. Hawkins, 100, American member of the U.S. House of Representatives from California (1963–1991).
  • Norman Mailer, 84, American Pulitzer Prize–winning author (The Naked and the Dead, The Executioner's Song), renal failure.
  • John H. Noble, 84, American prisoner in Russian gulag and author (I Was a Slave in Russia), heart attack.
  • John Wilfred Stanier, 82, British Army field marshal, retired Chief of the General Staff.
  • 11

  • Anders Hald, 94, Danish statistician. (Danish)
  • Yukio Hayashida, 91, Japanese politician (House of Councillors), governor of Kyoto, Minister of Justice, heart failure. (Japanese)
  • Kojiro Kusanagi, 78, Japanese actor, interstitial lung disease.
  • Berkeley Lent, 86, American judge on the Oregon Supreme Court, heart attack.
  • Delbert Mann, 87, American film director (Marty, Separate Tables, The Bachelor Party), Oscar winner (1956), pneumonia.
  • Dick Nolan, 75, American NFL player and coach (San Francisco 49ers, New Orleans Saints), father of 49ers coach Mike Nolan.
  • Omwony Ojwok, 60, Ugandan politician, former minister, heart failure.
  • Tadahiro Sekimoto, 80, Japanese electronics engineer and business executive, former president and chairman of NEC, stroke.
  • Trish Williamson, 52, British TV-am weather presenter and producer, car crash.
  • 12

  • Ferdinando Baldi, 80, Italian screenwriter, film director and producer. (Italian)
  • Louis Galen, 82, American philanthropist and banker, heart failure.
  • Ying Hope, 84, Chinese Canadian political.
  • Khanmohammed Ibrahim, 88, Indian test cricketer.
  • Vijay Kumar Khandelwal, 71, Indian parliamentarian.
  • Piet Koornhof, 82, South African politician, former minister and ambassador.
  • Ira Levin, 78, American author (Rosemary's Baby, The Stepford Wives) and playwright (Deathtrap), heart attack.
  • Tinius Nagell-Erichsen, 73, Norwegian publisher (Schibsted group, inc. Aftenposten and Verdens Gang).
  • Janlavyn Narantsatsralt, 50, Mongolian Prime Minister (1998–1999), car crash.
  • A. Palanisamy, 74, Indian volleyball player.
  • Peter "Cool Man" Steiner, 90, Swiss musician and entertainer, fall. (German)
  • Lester Ziffren, 101, American reporter during Spanish Civil War, screenwriter and diplomat, heart failure.
  • 13

  • Wahab Akbar, 47, Filipino politician, representative for Basilan province, victim of 2007 Batasang Pambansa bombing.
  • Harold J. Berman, 89, American Harvard Law School professor (1948–1985).
  • Alec Cooke, Baron Cooke of Islandreagh, 87, British peer and former Northern Ireland Senator.
  • John Doherty, 72, British football player for Manchester United (1952–1957) and Busby Babe.
  • Hugh Gibbons, 91, Irish parliamentarian and Gaelic football player.
  • Tony Harris, 36, American basketball player (Washington State Cougars), possible suicide.
  • Kazuhisa Inao, 70, Japanese Hall of Fame baseball player for the Nishitetsu Lions (1956–1969), cancer.
  • Erik Kurmangaliev, 47, Russian-Kazakh opera singer, liver disease.
  • Sir John Loveridge, 82, British MP (1970–1983).
  • Robert Taylor, 59, American 4 × 100 m relay gold medallist at the 1972 Summer Olympics, cardiac arrhythmia.
  • Monty Westmore, 84, American makeup artist (Hook, Jurassic Park, Star Trek: First Contact).
  • Peter Zinner, 88, American film editor (The Deer Hunter, The Godfather, An Officer and a Gentlemen), Oscar winner (1979).
  • 14

  • Michael Blodgett, 68, American actor and screenwriter (Beyond the Valley of the Dolls), heart attack.
  • Ronnie Burns, 72, American actor, adopted son of George Burns and Gracie Allen, cancer.
  • Hila Elmalich, 33, Israeli fashion model, anorexia nervosa.
  • Bertha Fry, 113, American supercentenarian, third-oldest person in the world, pneumonia.
  • Yadav Pant, 82, Nepalese economist and politician.
  • Pablo Antonio Vega Mantilla, 88, Nicaraguan Roman Catholic Bishop of Juigalpa.
  • 15

  • John Cross Jr, 82, American pastor of the 16th Street Baptist Church, stroke.
  • Sergio del Valle Jiménez, 80, Cuban general and politician, former Army Chief of Staff and minister.
  • Domokos Kosáry, 94, Hungarian historian, president of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (1990–1996).
  • Audrey McCall, 92, American widow of former Governor of Oregon Tom McCall.
  • Lauren S. McCready, 92, American admiral, pioneer of the United States Merchant Marine Academy, heart failure.
  • Joe Nuxhall, 79, American Major League Baseball pitcher and broadcaster for the Cincinnati Reds, cancer.
  • George Van Meter, 75, American Olympic cyclist.
  • 16

  • Harold Alfond, 93, American businessman and philanthropist.
  • Gene H. Golub, 75, American mathematician and computer scientist, myeloid leukemia.
  • Pierre Granier-Deferre, 80, French film director.
  • Grethe Kausland, 60, Norwegian actress and singer, lung cancer.
  • Patrick F. Kelly, 78, American federal judge.
  • Trond Kirkvaag, 61, Norwegian comedian, cancer. (Norwegian)
  • Don Metz, 91, Canadian ice hockey player (Toronto Maple Leafs).
  • James Daniel Niedergeses, 90, American Roman Catholic Bishop of Nashville (1975–1992), hemorrhage.
  • Victor Rabinowitz, 96, American lawyer for left-wing clients and causes.
  • Andrea Stretton, 55, Australian arts journalist and television presenter, lung cancer.
  • Sir Arthur Watts, 76, British lawyer and diplomat.
  • 17

  • Irving Bluestone, 90, American negotiator for UAW, heart failure.
  • Landis Everson, 81, American poet, apparent suicide by gunshot.
  • Oleg Gazenko, 88, Russian space scientist.
  • Hy Lit, 73, American radio disc jockey, Parkinson's disease.
  • Robert Evander McNair, 83, American politician, Governor of South Carolina (1965–1971), brain cancer.
  • Ambroise Noumazalaye, 74, Congolese politician, Prime Minister (1966–1968). (French)
  • R. S. Pathak, 82, Indian jurist, former Chief Justice of India, heart attack.
  • Vernon Scannell, 85, British poet, after long illness.
  • Gail Sheridan, 92, American actress, stroke.
  • 18

  • Hollis Alpert, 91, American film critic, cofounded National Society of Film Critics, pneumonia.
  • Peter Cadogan, 86, British writer and anti-nuclear campaigner.
  • Jim Ford, 66, American singer songwriter.
  • Ellen Preis, 95, Austrian fencer, gold medallist at the 1932 Summer Olympics, kidney failure.
  • Joe Shaw, 79, British footballer, appearance record holder for Sheffield United.
  • Chickie Williams, 88, American country music singer and wife of Doc Williams.
  • 19

  • André Bettencourt, 88, French Resistance fighter and politician.
  • Paul Brodie, 73, Canadian saxophonist.
  • Nyimpine Chissano, 37, Mozambican businessman, son of ex-president Joaquim Chissano, heart attack.
  • Kevin DuBrow, 52, American rock singer (Quiet Riot), accidental cocaine overdose.
  • Wiera Gran, 91, Polish singer and actress.
  • Mike Gregory, 43, British Lions rugby league captain, motor neurone disease.
  • Peter Haining, 67, British author, heart attack.
  • Ken Leek, 72, British international footballer (Wales, Birmingham City).
  • Laulu Fetauimalemau Mata'afa, 79, Samoan educator, community worker, diplomat and former Member of Parliament.
  • Channaiah Odeyar, 91, Indian Lok Sabha MP.
  • Graham Paddon, 57, British footballer (Norwich City, West Ham United).
  • Milo Radulovich, 81, American airman threatened by McCarthyism and championed by Edward R. Murrow, stroke.
  • Jim Ringo, 75, American professional football player (Green Bay Packers) and member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
  • John Straffen, 77, British murderer, Britain's longest serving prisoner (56 years), natural causes.
  • Magda Szabó, 90, Hungarian writer.
  • Dick Wilson, 91, British-born American actor ("Mr. Whipple"), natural causes.
  • 20

  • Nigel Bridge, Baron Bridge of Harwich, 90, British judge.
  • James Lamond, 78, British Lord Provost of Aberdeen, MP (Oldham East, Oldham Central and Royton) (1970–1992), pneumonia.
  • Ernest "Doc" Paulin, 100, American jazz musician.
  • Ian Smith, 88, Rhodesian politician, Prime Minister (1964–1979).
  • Randy Tallman, 67, American voice actor.
  • 21

  • Valda Aveling, 87, Australian pianist, harpsichordist and clavichordist.
  • Fernando Fernán Gómez, 86, Spanish actor.
  • Andrew Foldi, 81, Hungarian opera singer.
  • Tom Johnson, 79, Canadian Hall of Fame hockey player, heart failure.
  • Richard Leigh, 64, American author (The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail).
  • Noel McGregor, 75, New Zealand Test cricketer.
  • Herbert Saffir, 90, American engineer, co-creator of the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale; complications from surgery.
  • 22

  • Maurice Béjart, 80, French choreographer.
  • Jefferson J. DeBlanc, 86, American fighter pilot, Medal of Honor recipient, pneumonia.
  • Takami Eto, 82, Japanese politician, former member of the House of Representatives, heart failure. (Japanese)
  • Verity Lambert, 71, British TV producer, BBC's first female producer (Doctor Who).
  • Richard Nolte, 86, American expert on the Middle East, complications from a stroke.
  • Reg Park, 79, British bodybuilder, Mr. Universe (1951), skin cancer.
  • Dallas Schmidt, 85, Canadian fighter pilot and politician.
  • 23

  • Peter Burgstaller, 43, Austrian football goalkeeper (Austria Salzburg), shot.
  • Patricia M. Byrne, 82, American diplomat, United States Ambassador to Burma (1979–1983), cerebral hemorrhage.
  • Aloysius C. Galvin, 82, American Jesuit priest, President of the University of Scranton (1965–1970), cancer.
  • Frank Guarrera, 83, American baritone with the Metropolitan Opera.
  • Joe Kennedy, 28, American baseball player, hypertensive and valvular heart disease.
  • Vladimir Kryuchkov, 83, Russian former KGB chief, led coup against Mikhail Gorbachev.
  • Óscar Carmelo Sánchez, 36, Bolivian footballer, cancer.
  • William Tallon, 72, British servant to HM Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother.
  • Francesc Candel Tortajada, 82, Spanish Catalan writer, cancer. (Spanish)
  • Henrietta Valor, 72, American Broadway singer and actress, Alzheimer's disease.
  • Robert Vesco, 73, American fugitive financier, lung cancer.
  • Edmund Hoyle Vestey, 75, British businessman.
  • Pat Walsh, 71, New Zealand rugby union player and selector, All Black (1955–1964).
  • 24

  • Farid Babayev, Russian politician with the Yabloko party, homicide by gunshot.
  • Casey Calvert, 26, American guitarist (Hawthorne Heights), accidental combined drug intoxication.
  • Imil Jarjoui, 72, Palestinian member of the Palestinian Legislative Council and the PLO executive committee, heart attack.
  • Antonio Lamer, 74, Canadian lawyer and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada (1990–2000), heart disease.
  • Joseph Minish, 91, American member of the US House of Representatives from New Jersey (1963–1985).
  • William O'Neill, 77, American politician, Governor of Connecticut (1980–1991), complications of emphysema.
  • Emily Sander, 18, American murder victim.
  • David Sheldon, 43, American professional wrestler ("Angel of Death").
  • David H. Shepard, 84, American inventor, bronchiectasis.
  • 25

  • Lola Almudevar, 29, British news reporter, car accident.
  • Agnethe Davidsen, 60, Greenlandic politician, Mayor of Nuuk (1993–2007).
  • Arthur Dimmock, 89, British campaigner for the deaf.
  • John Drury, 80, American television journalist, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
  • Norm Hacking, 57, Canadian musician and author, suspected heart attack.
  • Neil Hope, 35, Canadian actor (Degrassi Junior High, Degrassi High), natural causes.
  • Peter Houghton, 68, British recipient of the first artificial heart transplant, multiple organ failure.
  • Peter Lipton, 53, American philosopher, heart attack.
  • Karl Ohs, 61, American politician, Lieutenant Governor of Montana (2001–2005), brain cancer.
  • David Francis Pocock, 79, British anthropologist.
  • Matt Price, 46, Australian journalist (Nine Network, The Australian), brain tumour.
  • 26

  • Marit Allen, 66, British film costume designer (Mrs. Doubtfire, Eyes Wide Shut, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels), brain aneurism.
  • Buddy Burris, 84, American footballer.
  • George Harris, 84, Australian football administrator, former Carlton president.
  • Bill Hartack, 74, American Hall of Fame jockey, five-time winner of the Kentucky Derby, heart attack.
  • Silvestre S. Herrera, 90, Mexican-born American soldier, Medal of Honor recipient.
  • Takafumi Isomura, 76, Japanese politician, mayor of Osaka (1995–2003), hepatocellular carcinoma.
  • Elaine Lorillard, 93, American socialite, helped start Newport Jazz Festival, infection.
  • Herb McKenley, 85, Jamaican 400 m relay gold medalist at 1952 Summer Olympics.
  • Noel Miller, 94, Australian cricketer.
  • Raleigh Rhodes, 89, American World War II pilot, early leader of the Blue Angels, lung cancer.
  • Stanley Thorne, 89, British politician, Labour MP for Preston South and Preston (1974–1987).
  • Susan Williams-Ellis, 89, British founder of Portmeirion Pottery, bronchial pneumonia.
  • Mel Tolkin, 94, American head writer for Your Show of Shows.
  • 27

  • Philip Allen, Baron Allen of Abbeydale, 95, British civil servant.
  • Bernie Banton, 61, Australian asbestosis compensation campaigner, mesothelioma.
  • Robert Cade, 80, American doctor, inventor of Gatorade, kidney failure.
  • Jack Eliis, 95, British rugby union player.
  • Nicodemus Kirima, 71, Kenyan Roman Catholic Archbishop of Nyeri, kidney failure.
  • Kavungal Chathunni Panicker, 86, Indian classical dancer.
  • Cecil Payne, 84, American saxophonist, prostate cancer.
  • Jane Rule, 76, Canadian author of lesbian-themed works, liver cancer.
  • Sean Taylor, 24, American football player (Washington Redskins), homicide by gunshot.
  • Bill Willis, 86, American football player (Ohio State, Cleveland Browns) and member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
  • 28

  • Albert Asriyan, 56, Azerbaijani-born American violinist, composer, arranger and band leader, leukemia.
  • Jeanne Bates, 89, American film actress (Eraserhead, Die Hard 2), breast cancer.
  • Elly Beinhorn, 100, German pilot and author. (German)
  • Fred Chichin, 53, French musician, songwriter and leader of Les Rita Mitsouko, cancer.
  • Mali Finn, 69, American casting agent, (Titanic, L.A. Confidential, The Matrix), cancer.
  • Lonny Heckman, 38, American songwriter ("When I See Beth Smiling"), pulmonary embolism.
  • Tony Holland, 67, British co-creator of EastEnders.
  • Bob Simpson, 77, Canadian football player, prostate cancer.
  • Petter C.G. Sundt, 62, Norwegian shipping magnate, cancer. (Norwegian)
  • Ashley Titus, 36, South African rapper and TV presenter ("Mr. Fat"), heart problems.
  • James Miles Venne, 89, Canadian northern Saskatchewan First Nations leader.
  • Gudrun Wagner, 63, German co-organizer of the Bayreuth Festival, wife of Wolfgang Wagner.
  • 29

  • James Barber, 84, British-born Canadian cooking show host (The Urban Peasant).
  • Ralph Beard, 79, American college basketball player for the University of Kentucky involved in point-shaving scandal.
  • Henry Hyde, 83, American member of the US House of Representatives from Illinois (1975–2007).
  • Jane Lawton, 63, American Democratic Maryland politician, heart attack.
  • Jim Nesbitt, 75, American country music singer.
  • Roger Bonham Smith, 82, American chairman and CEO of General Motors (1981–1990).
  • 30

  • J. L. Ackrill, 86, British philosopher.
  • Engin Arık, 59, Turkish physicist, plane crash.
  • Seymour Benzer, 86, American genetic biologist, stroke.
  • Ian Crawford, 73, Scottish footballer (Hearts).
  • Evel Knievel, 69, American stunt performer.
  • Ian MacArthur, 82, British politician, MP for Perth and East Perthshire (1959–1974).
  • François-Xavier Ortoli, 82, French President of the European Commission (1973–1977).
  • John Strugnell, 77, American biblical scholar, complications from an infection.
  • Sam Vasquez, 35, American mixed martial arts competitor, brain injury sustained during fight.
  • References

    Deaths in November 2007 Wikipedia