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Deaths in April 2023


Deaths in April 2023


The following is a list of notable deaths in April 2023.

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.

April 2023

1

  • Leonard Abrams, 68, American journalist (East Village Eye), heart attack.
  • Lúcio Ignácio Baumgaertner, 91, Brazilian Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Toledo (1983–1995) and archbishop of Cascavel (1995–2007).
  • Kwame Brathwaite, 85, American photojournalist and activist.
  • Ken Buchanan, 77, Scottish boxer, undisputed world lightweight champion (1971), complications from dementia.
  • Christopher Budd, 85, British Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Plymouth (1986–2013), cancer.
  • Dario Campeotto, 84, Danish singer (Eurovision Song Contest 1961), actor (Peters baby, Han, hun, Dirch og Dario), and entertainer, cancer.
  • Hans Ettmayer, 76, Austrian football player (Wacker Innsbruck, VfB Stuttgart, national team) and manager.
  • Ken Girard, 86, Canadian ice hockey player (Toronto Maple Leafs).
  • Amarasiri Kalansuriya, 82, Sri Lankan actor (Hanthane Kathawa, Akkara Paha, Bambaru Avith).
  • Yasumichi Kushida, 46, Japanese voice actor (The Aquatope on White Sand, Demon Prince Enma, Planetarian: The Reverie of a Little Planet).
  • Michael Lipton, 86, British economist.
  • Luo Zhijun, 71, Chinese politician, chairman of the agriculture and rural affairs committee (since 2019), governor of Jiangsu (2008–2010) and mayor of Nanjing (2001–2003).
  • Fay Miller, 75, Australian politician, Northern Territory MLA (2003–2008), primary myelofibrosis.
  • Albert Ndele, 92, Congolese economist and politician, chairman of the board of commissioners-general (1960) and minister of finance (1970).
  • Swarna Ram, 83, Indian politician, Punjab MLA (1997–2002, 2007–2012).
  • Red Robinson, 86, Canadian disc jockey.
  • John Sainty, 77, English footballer (Tottenham Hotspur, AFC Bournemouth) and manager (Chester City).
  • Włodzimierz Schmidt, 79, Polish chess grandmaster.
  • Moshe Shaul, 93, Turkish-born Israeli journalist and researcher.
  • Alicia Shepard, 69, American journalist and writer, complications from lung cancer.
  • Klaus Teuber, 70, German board game designer (Catan, Drunter und Drüber, Hoity Toity).
  • Trần Quang Khôi, 93, Vietnamese military officer.
  • Roger Vinson, 83, American jurist, judge (since 1983) and chief judge (1997–2004) of the U.S. District Court for Northern Florida, prostate cancer.

2

  • Jean Argles, 97, British World War II cryptographer.
  • Gilbert Bailliu, 86, Belgian footballer (Cercle Brugge, Club Brugge).
  • José Jovêncio Balestieri, 83, Brazilian Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Humaitá (1991–1998), coadjutor bishop (1998–2000) and bishop (2000–2008) of Rio do Sul.
  • Bushwhacker Butch, 78, New Zealand Hall of Fame professional wrestler (WWF, WWC, PNW).
  • Rochelle Chronister, 83, American politician, member of the Kansas House of Representatives (1979–1995).
  • Max Crabtree, 90, English professional wrestler and promoter (Joint Promotions).
  • Salim Durani, 88, Afghan-born Indian cricketer (Gujarat, Rajasthan, India national team), cancer.
  • Toni Elling, 94, American burlesque dancer.
  • Judy Farrell, 84, American actress (M*A*S*H, Fame) and television writer (Port Charles), complications from a stroke.
  • Gail D. Fosler, 75, American businesswoman.
  • Greg Francis, 48, Canadian Olympic basketball player (2000).
  • Wolfgang Gerz, 70, German Olympic sailor (1984).
  • Frank Gilliam, 89, American football player (Iowa Hawkeyes, Winnipeg Blue Bombers).
  • Evert Gummesson, 87, Swedish marketing and management professor.
  • Stefán Arnar Gunnarsson, 45, Icelandic handball player and coach. (body discovered on this date)
  • Aram Karam, 93, Iraqi footballer (national team).
  • Haziqul Khairi, 91, Pakistani jurist, chief justice of the Federal Shariat Court (2006–2009).
  • Pedro Lavirgen, 92, Spanish tenor.
  • Hans Edvard Nørregård-Nielsen, 78, Danish art historian.
  • Raúl Padilla López, 68, Mexican academic, rector of the University of Guadalajara (1989–1995), suicide by gunshot.
  • William Persson, 95, British Anglican prelate, bishop of Doncaster (1982–1992).
  • Luigi Raffin, 86, Italian football player (Biellese, Venezia, Brescia) and manager.
  • Michael Saywell, 80, British Olympic equestrian (1972).
  • Seymour Stein, 80, American Hall of Fame music executive, co-founder of Sire Records, cancer.
  • Garn Stephens, 78, American actress (Phyllis, Halloween III: Season of the Witch, The Sunshine Boys).
  • Vladlen Tatarsky, 40, Russian blogger, explosion.
  • Igor Vysotsky, 69, Russian boxer.
  • Ian Watson, 88, Canadian politician, MP (1963–1984).

3

  • William M. Barker, 81, American jurist, chief justice of the Tennessee Supreme Court (1995–2009).
  • Nigel Lawson, Baron Lawson of Blaby, 91, British politician, MP (1974–1992) and member of the House of Lords (1992–2022), chancellor of the Exchequer (1983–1989), bronchopneumonia.
  • Neal Boenzi, 97, American photographer.
  • Mario Božić, 39, Bosnian footballer (Slovan Bratislava, Videoton Fehérvár, national team).
  • Nico Cirasola, 71, Italian film director, screenwriter and actor (The Wholly Family).
  • Tom Dimmick, 91, American football player (Philadelphia Eagles, Hamilton Tiger-Cats).
  • David Finfer, 80, American film editor (The Fugitive, Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey, The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause), complications from a heart attack.
  • Heklina, 55, American drag queen and actor.
  • Rena Koumioti, 81, Greek new wave singer.
  • Jane LaTour, 76, American labor activist and journalist, lung cancer.
  • Roy McGrath, 53, American public official and fugitive, chief of staff to the governor of Maryland (2020), shot.
  • Enrique Mendoza, 77, Venezuelan politician, governor of Miranda (1995–2004) and mayor of Sucre Municipality (1989–1995), leukemia.
  • Wallace Mgoqi, 73, South African lawyer and activist.
  • Kristaq Mitro, 77, Albanian film director.
  • T. B. Radhakrishnan, 63, Indian jurist, judge of the Kerala High Court (2004–2017), chief justice of Calcutta High Court (2019–2021) and Chhattisgarh High Court (2017–2018).
  • Michael Roberts, 75, British fashion journalist.
  • Gershon Rorich, 49, South African Olympic volleyball player (2004), cancer.
  • Herb Rule, 87, American politician, member of the Arkansas House of Representatives.
  • Konstantinos Staikos, 80, Greek architect and historian.
  • Tu Tongjin, 108, Chinese military officer and neurosurgeon, president of the Academy of Military Medical Sciences (1977–1983).
  • Jack Vreeswijk, 59, Swedish singer and composer (Cornelis), colon cancer.
  • Neeraj Yadav, Indian politician, Bihar MLA (2015–2020), heart attack.
  • Galarrwuy Yunupingu, 74, Australian indigenous land rights activist.
  • Marjorie Ziff, 93, British philanthropist.

4

  • Rockstar Ramani Ammal, 69, Indian playback singer (Kathavarayan, Haridas, Nenjamundu Nermaiyundu Odu Raja).
  • David Bartholomae, 75, American scholar, head and neck cancer.
  • Bokito, 27, German-born Dutch western gorilla, heart failure.
  • Ethan Boyes, 44, American track cyclist, traffic collision.
  • Craig Breedlove, 86, American racecar driver, cancer.
  • Suneet Chopra, 81, Indian trade unionist.
  • Cui Naifu, 94, Chinese politician, minister of civil affairs (1982–1993).
  • R. H. W. Dillard, 85, American poet, author and critic.
  • Andrés García, 81, Dominican-Mexican actor (Tú o nadie, The Bermuda Triangle, Manaos).
  • Birger Jensen, 72, Danish footballer (Club Brugge, national team).
  • Bob Lee, 43, American tech executive, founder of Cash App, stabbed.
  • Marian Marzyński, 85, Polish-American documentary filmmaker.
  • Tea Petrin, 78, Slovenian economist, politician, and diplomat, minister of economic affairs (2000–2004), ambassador to the Netherlands (2004–2008).
  • Maria Sebaldt, 92, German actress (Ich heirate eine Familie, Die Wicherts von nebenan, The Story of Anastasia).
  • Vivian Trimble, 59, American musician (Luscious Jackson, Dusty Trails, Kostars), cancer.
  • Billy Waugh, 93, American Special Forces army soldier.

5

  • Albert Edward Baharagate Akiiki, 93, Ugandan Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Hoima (1969–1991).
  • Malika El Aroud, 64, Belgian-Moroccan jihadist.
  • Harrison Bankhead, 68, American jazz double bassist.
  • Bill Butler, 101, American cinematographer (Jaws, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Grease).
  • Daylami, 28, Irish-bred French Thoroughbred racehorse, winner of the Breeders' Cup Turf (1999), Cartier Horse of the Year (1999).
  • Nancy Detert, 78, American politician, member of the Florida Senate (2008–2016) and House of Representatives (1998–2006).
  • Jan Dorrestein, 77, Dutch golfer.
  • Paul Dundas, 71, British Indologist.
  • Anne Agius Ferrante, 97, Maltese politician, MP (1980–1981).
  • Bernard Ford, 75, English Olympic ice dancer (1968).
  • Duško Gojković, 91, Serbian jazz trumpeter, composer, and arranger.
  • Sergio Gori, 77, Italian footballer (Inter, Cagliari, Juventus).
  • Masanori Hata, 87, Japanese zoologist, essayist and film director (The Adventures of Milo and Otis).
  • Cedric Henderson, 57, American basketball player (Atlanta Hawks, Albany Patroons, Olympique Antibes).
  • Ismail Mahmud Hurre, 80, Somali politician, minister of foreign affairs (2000–2002, 2006–2007).
  • Leon Levine, 85, American businessman, founder of Family Dollar.
  • Bennett L. Lewis, 96, American Army lieutenant general.
  • Ian McIntosh, 84, Zimbabwean rugby union coach (Natal, South Africa national team, Zimbabwe national team), cancer.
  • Ross Murray, 89, New Zealand amateur golfer.
  • Khalid Naciri, 77, Moroccan politician, minister of communications (2007–2012).
  • Sudhir Naik, 78, Indian cricketer (Mumbai, national team).
  • Booker Newberry III, 67, American singer ("Love Town") and keyboardist.
  • Martin Polden, 94, English solicitor.
  • Kiumars Pourahmad, 73, Iranian film director (Strange Sisters, The Night Bus, Blade and Termeh), screenwriter, and producer, suicide by hanging.
  • Rokia Afzal Rahman, 82, Bangladeshi women's rights activist.
  • Alan Ramsbottom, 86, English racing cyclist.
  • Hugo Rodríguez Chinchilla, 47, Guatemalan politician, deputy (since 2020), pneumonia.

6

  • Jim Caldwell, 80, American basketball player (New York Knicks), heart condition.
  • Paul Cattermole, 46, English singer (S Club 7).
  • Rawle Douglin, 90, Trinidadian Anglican clergyman, bishop of Trinidad and Tobago (1993–2001).
  • Juanjo Ferreiro Suárez, 79, Spanish union leader and politician, member of the Parliament of Catalonia (1980–1984) and City Council of Barcelona (1983–1995).
  • Nora Forster, 80, German music promoter (The Slits, Sex Pistols, The Clash), complications from Alzheimer's disease.
  • Bill Hellmuth, 69, American architect, chairman of HOK (since 2005).
  • Nicola Heywood-Thomas, 67, Welsh broadcaster and journalist (BBC Radio Wales, HTV).
  • Ingvar Hirdwall, 88, Swedish actor (Beck, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Children's Island).
  • Ewan Hooper, 87, Scottish actor (Dracula Has Risen from the Grave, Hi-de-Hi!, The Avengers).
  • Hobie Landrith, 93, American baseball player (New York Mets, Cincinnati Reds, San Francisco Giants).
  • Jagarnath Mahto, 56, Indian politician, Jharkhand MLA (since 2014), complications from lung transplant.
  • Jim McKeever, 92, Northern Irish Gaelic footballer (Derry, Ballymaguigan, Newbridge).
  • Nei Paulo Moretto, 86, Brazilian Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Cruz Alta (1973–1976), coadjutor bishop (1976–1983) and bishop (1983–2011) of Caxias do Sul.
  • Kent C. Nelson, 85, American businessman, CEO of United Parcel Service (1989–1996), complications from COVID-19.
  • Bruce Petty, 93, Australian cartoonist and animator (Leisure).
  • Josep Piqué, 68, Spanish businessman and politician, minister of foreign affairs (2000–2002) and twice of industry, chairman of Vueling (2007–2013), cancer.
  • Norman Reynolds, 89, British production designer (Star Wars, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Empire of the Sun), Oscar winner (1978, 1982).
  • Mimi Sheraton, 97, American food critic (The New York Times, The Daily Beast).
  • Volodymyr Stretovych, 64, Ukrainian politician, MP (1994–1998, 2002–2012), traffic collision.
  • Taeko Tomioka, 87, Japanese writer.
  • Howard E. Wasdin, 61, American naval sailor and author, plane crash.

7

  • Pam Alexander, 68, British businesswoman, ovarian cancer.
  • Ian Bairnson, 69, Scottish musician (The Alan Parsons Project, Pilot, Kate Bush).
  • Larisa Bergen, 73, Kazakh volleyball player, Olympic silver medallist (1976).
  • Hannelore Bollmann, 97, German film actress (The Congress Dances, The Happy Village, Emperor's Ball).
  • Philippe Bouvatier, 58, French Olympic cyclist (1984), complications from a stroke.
  • Hans Capel, 86, Dutch theoretical physicist.
  • Kalamandalam Devaki, 76, Indian Ottan Thullal dancer.
  • Ben Ferencz, 103, Hungarian-American lawyer (Einsatzgruppen trial).
  • Carl Fischer, 98, American art director and photographer.
  • Susan Frykberg, 68, New Zealand electroacoustic composer.
  • Prabir Ghosh, 78, Indian writer and skeptic, founder of the Science and Rationalists' Association of India.
  • Billy Hahn, 69, American basketball coach (Ohio Bobcats, La Salle Explorers, West Virginia Mountaineers).
  • Bruce Haigh, 77, Australian diplomat and political commentator, cancer.
  • Tracy Johnson, 56, American football player (Houston Oilers, Atlanta Falcons, Seattle Seahawks), cancer.
  • Kidd Jordan, 87, American jazz saxophonist.
  • William Myles Knighton, 91, British civil servant.
  • Elisabeth Kopp, 86, Swiss politician, member of the Federal Council and minister of justice and police (1984–1989).
  • Harry Lorayne, 96, American magician.
  • Peter Hugoe Matthews, 89, British linguist and historian.
  • Steve H. Murdock, 74, American sociologist, director of the United States Census Bureau (2008–2009).
  • Elizabeth Murray, 63, British medical practitioner and academic, breast cancer.
  • Jim Pines, 77, American-British film historian, author, and filmmaker. (death announced on this date)
  • Rachel Pollack, 77, American author (Unquenchable Fire) and comic book writer (Doom Patrol, New Gods), Hodgkin lymphoma.
  • John Regan, 71, American bass guitarist (Frehley's Comet).
  • Gareth Richards, 43, British comedian and radio host, injuries sustained in a traffic collision.
  • Inés Sánchez, 91, Cuban-Costa Rican journalist.
  • Charles Scriver, 92, Canadian pediatrician and geneticist.
  • Priyani Soysa, 97, Sri Lankan paediatrician.
  • Antonio Tarín García, 47, Mexican politician, suicide by jumping.
  • James W. Valentine, 96, American evolutionary biologist.
  • Lasse Wellander, 70, Swedish guitarist (ABBA).
  • Wolfgang Wild, 92, German nuclear physicist and academic administrator, president of the Technical University of Munich (1980–1986).

8

  • Bola Ajibola, 89, Nigerian jurist, minister of justice and attorney general (1985–1991), judge of the International Court of Justice (1991–1994).
  • Walter Asbil, 90, Canadian Anglican clergyman, bishop of Niagara (1991–1997).
  • Matt Baldwin, 96, Canadian curler.
  • Deborah Brown, 95, Northern Irish sculptor.
  • Dan Callikan, 75, Mauritian politician, political adviser, and author, director general of the Mauritius Broadcasting Corporation (1986–1988, 2009–2014).
  • Djene Kaba Condé, 62–63, Guinean socialite, first lady (2010–2021).
  • Simon France, 64, New Zealand jurist, judge of the High Court (2005–2022) and Court of Appeal (2022–2023).
  • Bob Heatlie, 76, Scottish songwriter ("Japanese Boy", "Cry Just a Little Bit", "Merry Christmas Everyone") and record producer.
  • Elizabeth Hubbard, 89, American actress (The Doctors, As the World Turns, Ordinary People), cancer.
  • Khalil Hachimi Idrissi, 66, Moroccan journalist, director of the Maghreb Arabe Press (since 2011).
  • Michael Lerner, 81, American actor (Barton Fink, Eight Men Out, Elf), complications from brain seizures.
  • Frankie Lucas, 69, Vincentian boxer.
  • Kenneth McAlpine, 102, English racing driver.
  • Rami Meir, 60, Azerbaijani-born Israeli artist, poet, and singer.
  • Andreas K. W. Meyer, 64, German dramaturge, playwright and opera manager (Oper Bonn), heart failure.
  • Judith Miller, 71, British antiques expert and broadcaster (Antiques Roadshow).
  • William Newton-Smith, 79, Canadian philosopher, throat cancer.
  • Valérie Oka, 56, Ivorian artist and designer.
  • Edward L. Rissien, 98, American production company executive and producer (Snow Job, Saint Jack, Castle Keep).
  • Paulo de Tarso Sanseverino, 63, Brazilian judge and academic, magistrate of the Superior Court of Justice (since 2010), cancer.
  • Mickey Slaughter, 81, American football player (Denver Broncos).
  • Otto Thomas Solbrig, 92, Argentine evolutionary biologist and botanist.
  • Norman H. Stahl, 92, American jurist, judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit (since 1992) and the U.S. District Court for New Hampshire (1990–1992).
  • Rebecka Teper, 50, Swedish actress (Solsidan, Morden i Sandhamn, Bonus Family).
  • Isi Yanouka, Israeli diplomat, ambassador to Ivory Coast (2013–2016) and Cameroon (since 2016).
  • András Zsinka, 75, Hungarian Olympic middle-distance runner (1972).

9

  • Baker Abdel Munem, 80, Palestinian diplomat, ambassador to Japan (1983–1995) and Canada (since 1995).
  • Dario Acquaroli, 48, Italian mountain bike racer, heart attack.
  • Muhammad Rapsel Ali, 51, Indonesian businessman and politician, MP (since 2019), heart attack.
  • Jere L. Bacharach, 84, American historian.
  • Nicolás Eduardo Becerra, 80, Argentine attorney.
  • Karl Berger, 88, German-American jazz pianist, composer, and educator (Creative Music Studio).
  • Bruria David, 84, American-Israeli rebbetzin, founder of Beth Jacob Jerusalem.
  • Valter Dešpalj, 75, Croatian cellist.
  • Alexander J. Dessler, 94, American planetary scientist.
  • Donald W. Ernst, 89, American film editor (The Brave Little Toaster, The Lord of the Rings) and producer (Fantasia 2000).
  • Ettore Fiorini, 89, Italian physicist.
  • Roberto Frigerio, 84, Swiss footballer (Basel, Bellinzona, national team).
  • Max Hazelton, 95, Australian aviator and businessman, founder of Hazelton Airlines.
  • Paul Hinrichs, 97, American baseball player (Boston Red Sox).
  • Claire Lamont, 81, British academic, complications from vascular dementia.
  • Anatoly Makagonov, 90, Russian volleyball player (Soviet Union national team) and coach.
  • Jaap Murre, 93, Dutch mathematician.
  • Richard Ng, 83, Hong Kong actor (The Private Eyes, Winners and Sinners, Beyond the Sunset), cardiac arrest.
  • Huub Oosterhuis, 89, Dutch theologian and poet ("Ik sta voor U in leegte en gemis").
  • Fred Pancoast, 90, American football coach (Vanderbilt Commodores, Memphis State Tigers, Tampa Spartans).
  • Valda Setterfield, 88, British-born American dancer, pneumonia.
  • Dick Springer, 75, American politician, member of the Oregon House of Representatives (1981–1989) and Senate (1989–1995), heart attack.
  • Andrew Phillips, Baron Phillips of Sudbury, 84, British solicitor and politician, member of the House of Lords (1998–2015), complications from Alzheimer's disease.
  • Holger Sundström, 97, Swedish sailor, Olympic bronze medallist (1964).
  • Wladimir Tchertkoff, 87–88, Italian journalist.
  • James Timlin, 95, American Roman Catholic prelate, auxiliary bishop (1976–1984) and bishop (1984–2003) of Scranton.
  • Jalabala Vaidya, 86, Indian stage actress, respiratory failure.
  • Philip Wilcocks, 69, British Royal Navy rear admiral.
  • Gayatri Devi Yadav, Indian politician, Bihar MLA (1970–1977, 1980–1995, 2000–2005).
  • Hidehiko Yamamoto, 87, Japanese politician, governor of Yamanashi Prefecture (2003–2007), mayor of Kōfu (1991–2002).
  • Tom Yurkovich, 87, American Olympic ice hockey player (1964).

10

  • Gad Barzilai, 65, Israeli lawyer and political scientist.
  • Andrzej Bławdzin, 84, Polish Olympic cyclist (1964, 1968).
  • Nimi Briggs, 79, Nigerian academic.
  • Jane Davis Doggett, 93, American graphic designer.
  • Paul Furlan, 60, Belgian politician, Wallonia MP (1999–2009), cancer.
  • Richard Ieyoub, 78, American politician, attorney general of Louisiana (1992–2004).
  • Al Jaffee, 102, American cartoonist (Mad, Trump, Humbug), multiple organ failure.
  • Pierre Lacotte, 91, French ballet dancer and choreographer, sepsis.
  • Frank Lasky, 81, American football player (New York Giants, Montreal Alouettes).
  • Pat Magner, 82, Irish politician, senator (1981–1982, 1983–1987, 1993–1997).
  • Alphonse Mattia, 75–76, American furniture designer.
  • Anne Perry, 84, British author (Thomas Pitt, William Monk) and convicted murderer.
  • Fernando Sánchez Dragó, 86, Spanish writer and journalist, heart attack.
  • Raymond Sawada, 38, Canadian ice hockey player (Dallas Stars), heart attack.
  • Stephen Stiles, 88, Canadian politician, Alberta MLA (1982–1986), complications from multiple system atrophy.
  • John Joe Walsh, 82, Irish Gaelic footballer (St Laurence's, St Mary's Rochfortbridge, Kildare).
  • Ronald Whyte, 80, American jurist, judge of the U.S. District Court for Northern California (since 1992).
  • Rick Wolff, 71, American writer and radio host, brain cancer.

11

  • George Bobolas, 95, Greek media executive (Mega Channel).
  • Zafrullah Chowdhury, 81, Bangladeshi public health activist.
  • Joan Clark, 88, Canadian author (The Hand of Robin Squires).
  • Miguel Escobar, 77, Colombian footballer (Deportivo Cali, Independiente Santa Fe, national team).
  • Archibald Hardy, 86, American politician, member of the South Carolina House of Representatives (1979–1983), stroke.
  • Alan Herbert, 78, Canadian politician, member of the Vancouver City Council (1996–1999).
  • Emlain Kabua, 95, Marshallese artist, first lady (1979–1996) and designer of the national flag.
  • Lotti Krekel, 81, German actress (The True Jacob, Willy the Private Detective, Robert and Bertram) and singer.
  • Carol Locatell, 82, American actress (Friday the 13th: A New Beginning, Coffy, The Family Stone), cancer.
  • Jerry Mander, 86, American activist and author (Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television).
  • Chinwoke Mbadinuju, 77, Nigerian politician, governor of Anambra State (1999–2003).
  • Jim McManus, 82, British actor (The Treacle People, Trouble in Mind, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix).
  • Dana Němcová, 89, Czech psychologist and dissident (Charter 77, Committee for the Defense of the Unjustly Prosecuted).
  • John Olsen, 95, Australian visual artist.
  • John O'Shaughnessy, 95, British academic.
  • Lou Pappan, 92, Greek-born American restaurateur.
  • Freddie Scappaticci, 76, Northern Irish PIRA leader. (death announced on this date)
  • Meir Shalev, 74, Israeli author and newspaper columnist (Yedioth Ahronoth), cancer.
  • Donald Voet, 84, American biochemist.
  • Maya Wildevuur, 78, Dutch painter.

12

  • Ivo Babuška, 97, Czech-American mathematician (Babuška–Lax–Milgram theorem, Ladyzhenskaya–Babuška–Brezzi condition).
  • Eduard Bagirov, 47, Russian writer, radio presenter, and politician, multiple organ failure.
  • Carolyn Long Banks, 82, American civil rights activist and politician, member of the Atlanta City Council (1980–1997).
  • Uttara Baokar, 79, Indian actress (Ek Din Achanak, Sardari Begum, Samhita).
  • James Bradley, 67, American basketball player (Pallacanestro Trieste).
  • Ambra Danon, 75, Italian costume designer (La Cage aux Folles), cancer.
  • Michael Denneny, 80, American author and editor (And the Band Played On).
  • Jacques Gaillot, 87, French Roman Catholic prelate and social activist, bishop of Évreux (1982–1995).
  • Louis Gaskin, 56, American convicted murderer, execution by lethal injection.
  • Salem Abdul Salem Ghereby, 62, Libyan Guantanamo Bay detainee, complications from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
  • Michael L. Grieco, 88, American politician, member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives (1976–1978).
  • David Hurles, 78, American gay pornography distributor.
  • Radoslav Kunzo, 48, Slovak footballer (Inter Bratislava, Kapfenberger SV). (body discovered on this date)
  • Tibisay Lucena, 63, Venezuelan civil servant, president of the national electoral council (2006–2020).
  • Keshub Mahindra, 99, Indian automotive executive, chairman of Mahindra Group (1963–2012).
  • Tamilla Nasirova, 86, Azerbaijiani mathematician.
  • Rustem Nureev, 72, Russian scientist and economist.
  • Senan Louis O'Donnell, 96, Irish Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Maiduguri (1993–2003).
  • Bryn Parry, 66, British cartoonist and charity worker, co-founder of Help for Heroes, pancreatic cancer.
  • Jeffrey Burton Russell, 88–89, American historian and religious studies scholar.
  • Jah Shaka, 75, Jamaican dub and reggae sound system operator.
  • Yō Takeyama, 76, Japanese screenwriter, septic shock.
  • Megan Terry, 90, American playwright (Viet Rock).
  • Blair Tindall, 63, American oboist and journalist, heart disease.
  • G. I. Williamson, 97, American theologian, pastor, and author.
  • Takaaki Yamazaki, 79, Japanese politician, mayor of Kōtō (since 2007).

13

  • Mike Baxes, 92, American baseball player (Kansas City Athletics).
  • Len Beel, 77, English footballer (Shrewsbury Town, Bath City, Trowbridge Town).
  • Craig Breen, 33, Irish rally driver, rally car collision.
  • Michael W. Bruford, 59, Welsh molecular ecologist and conservation biologist.
  • Willie Callaghan, 56, Scottish footballer (Dunfermline Athletic, Cowdenbeath, Livingston).
  • Tibor Debreceni, 76, Hungarian Olympic road racing cyclist (1972).
  • Eduardo Heras León, 82, Cuban writer.
  • Lorenzo Holzknecht, 38, Italian ski mountaineer, world champion (2010), avalanche.
  • Nizar Issaoui, 35, Tunisian footballer (US Monastir), self-immolation.
  • Julia Ituma, 18, Italian volleyball player (Igor Gorgonzola Novara, national team), fall.
  • Norm Kent, 73, American attorney and gay rights activist, pancreatic cancer.
  • Stanko Klinar, 89, Slovenian writer and translator.
  • Eberhard W. Kornfeld, 99, Swiss auctioneer, author, and art dealer.
  • Larry LeGrande, 83, American baseball player (Memphis Red Sox, Detroit Stars, Kansas City Monarchs).
  • Don Leppert, 91, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates, Washington Senators).
  • Marilyn McReavy, 78, American Olympic volleyball player (1968).
  • Rabey Hasani Nadwi, 93, Indian Islamic scholar, chancellor of Darul Uloom Nadwatul Ulama (since 2000) and president of AIMPLB (since 2002).
  • Dame Mary Quant, 93, British fashion designer.
  • Josef Schütz, 102, Lithuanian-born German Nazi concentration camp guard (Sachsenhausen).
  • Robert C. Smith, 76, American political scientist.
  • Helen Thorington, 94, American radio artist and composer, founder of New Radio and Performing Arts.
  • Thubten Zopa Rinpoche, 76, Nepali Tibetan Buddhist lama, founder of FPMT, respiratory failure.

14

  • Egil Abrahamsen, 100, Norwegian marine engineer.
  • Emad Afroogh, 65, Iranian sociologist and politician, MP (2004–2008), cancer.
  • Ken Archer, 95, Australian cricketer (Queensland, national team) and broadcaster, heart failure.
  • Mark Arneson, 73, American football player (St. Louis Cardinals).
  • Juan Avilés Farré, 73, Spanish historian, cancer.
  • Irma Blank, 88, German-Italian painter and graphic artist.
  • Enore Boscolo, 93, Italian footballer (Triestina, Padova, Udinese).
  • Bill Bradbury, 73, American politician, secretary of state of Oregon (1999–2009), member (1985–1995) and president (1993–1994) of the State Senate.
  • Voldemar Dundur, 85, Russian Olympic rower (1960).
  • Emmanuel Ebiede, 45, Nigerian footballer (SC Heerenveen, Ashdod, national team).
  • Sylvie Fanchon, 70, Kenyan-born French contemporary painter.
  • Shane Gough, 5th Viscount Gough, 81, British hereditary peer, member of the House of Lords (1951–1999).
  • George van Heukelom, 73, Dutch politician, member of the provincial executive of Zeeland (2003–2015).
  • Ed Koren, 87, American cartoonist (The New Yorker), lung cancer.
  • Peter Lin Jiashan, 88, Chinese Roman Catholic prelate, coadjutor bishop (1997–2010) and archbishop (since 2010) of Fuzhou.
  • Joan McCall, 83, American screenwriter, producer and actress (People Toys, Act of Vengeance, Grizzly).
  • Luigi Mele, 85, Italian racing cyclist.
  • Murray Melvin, 90, English actor (Alfie, Lisztomania, Barry Lyndon).
  • Kensei Mizote, 80, Japanese politician, MP (1993–2019), complications from a stroke.
  • Lonnie Napier, 82, American politician, member of the Kentucky House of Representatives (1985–2013).
  • Abel Posse, 89, Argentine novelist and diplomat, ambassador to Peru (1998–2002) and Spain (2002–2004).
  • Luc Sala, 73, Dutch businessman and writer.
  • Mark Sheehan, 46, Irish guitarist (The Script) and songwriter ("Breakeven", "Hall of Fame").
  • James M. Skibo, 63, American archaeologist.
  • Bernadine Strik, 60, Dutch-born Canadian-American horticulturalist, ovarian cancer.
  • Marilyn Ruth Take, 95, Canadian Olympic figure skater (1948).
  • George Verwer, 84, American evangelist, founder of Operation Mobilisation, sarcoma.
  • Bob Vidler, 66, Australian cricketer (New South Wales), motor neuron disease.
  • Yorick Wilks, 83, British computer scientist.
  • Vanik Zakaryan, 87, Armenian mathematician and chess player.

15

  • Atiq Ahmed, 60, Indian politician and gangster, MP (2004–2009) and Uttar Pradesh MLA (1989–2004), shot.
  • Khalid Azim, Indian politician and gangster, Uttar Pradesh MLA (2005–2007), shot.
  • Peter Badie, 97, American jazz bass player.
  • James Credle, 78, American veterans and LGBT rights activist.
  • Mario Fratti, 95, Italian playwright.
  • Maryellen Goodwin, 58, American politician, member of the Rhode Island Senate (since 1987), colorectal cancer.
  • Roger Hambright, 74, American baseball player (New York Yankees).
  • Doktor Haze, 66, British circus owner and performer.
  • Bob Higgins, 97, American jazz trumpeter and songwriter.
  • Marie C. Ingalls, 87, American politician, member of the South Dakota House of Representatives (1987–1992).
  • V. T. Joseph, 89, Indian actor (Puthradharmam).
  • Johannes Karavidopoulos, 86, Greek biblical scholar.
  • Heinrich Köberle, 76, German athlete, four-time Paralympic marathon gold medalist.
  • Beatrice Marshoff, 65, South African politician, MP (1994–1999) and premier of the Free State (2004–2009).
  • Lynda Myles, 83, American television writer (Santa Barbara, Loving, As the World Turns), actress and playwright.
  • Abdul Shakoor, 55, Pakistani politician, minister for religious affairs and inter-faith harmony (since 2022) and MP (since 2018), traffic collision.
  • Bill Thomas, 91, American college basketball coach (Missouri State Bears).
  • Faith Thomas, 90, Australian cricketer (South Australia, national team).
  • Kanithi Viswanatham, 90, Indian politician, MP (1989–1996).
  • Francisco Viti, 89, Angolan Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Menongue (1975–1986) and archbishop of Huambo (1986–2003).
  • Rebekah Williams, 73, Canadian politician, Nunavut MLA (2000–2004), cancer.
  • Zuiho Yamaguchi, 97, Japanese Buddhologist and Tibetologist, pneumonia.

16

  • Paul Aizley, 87, American politician, member of the Nevada Assembly (2009–2017).
  • Robert Bruce, 74, Canadian politician, Yukon MLA (1996–2000).
  • Chuck Ciprich, 81, American racing driver, cancer.
  • Eddie Colquhoun, 78, Scottish footballer (Bury, West Bromwich Albion, Sheffield United).
  • Gary Eddy, 78, Australian Olympic sprinter (1964).
  • Rod Hebron, 80, Canadian Olympic alpine skier (1964, 1968).
  • Ahmad Jamal, 92, American jazz pianist, prostate cancer.
  • Slobodan Lalović, 68, Serbian politician, minister of labour, employment, and social policy (2004–2007).
  • Darryl Lenox, 57, American comedian, heart attack.
  • Harry J. Mott III, 93, American brigadier general.
  • Antônio Celso Queiroz, 89, Brazilian Roman Catholic prelate, auxiliary bishop of São Paulo (1975–2000) and bishop of Catanduva (2000–2009).
  • Bernice Rose, 87, American art historian and curator.
  • Gregorios Elias Tabé, 82, Syrian Syriac Catholic prelate, auxiliary bishop (1996–1997), coadjutor archbishop (1997–1999) and archbishop (2001–2019) of Damascus.
  • Pat Wright, 82, English footballer (Shrewsbury Town, Birmingham City, Derby County).

17

  • Oleh Barna, 55, Ukrainian human rights activist and politician, MP (2014–2019), shot.
  • Bob Berry, 81, American football player (Minnesota Vikings, Atlanta Falcons).
  • Ivan Conti, 76, Brazilian drummer (Azymuth) and composer.
  • Viktoriya Divak, 29, Russian handball player (Astrakhanochka, Kuban Krasnodar), fall.
  • Valerii Dorokhov, 31, Ukrainian entrepreneur and soldier, military combat.
  • Josip Duvančić, 87, Croatian football player (Partizan, İzmirspor) and manager (Sarıyer).
  • Dave Frost, 70, American baseball player (California Angels).
  • Rein Jansma, 63, Dutch architect (ZJA).
  • Maxine Klibingaitis, 58, Australian actress (Prisoner, Neighbours, Hampton Court).
  • Lázár Lovász, 80, Hungarian hammer thrower, Olympic bronze medallist (1968).
  • James Melcher, 83, American hedge fund manager and Olympic fencer (1972).
  • Ernst Oberaigner, 90, Austrian Olympic alpine skier (1960).
  • Randy Seiler, 76, American attorney, U.S. attorney for the district of South Dakota (2015–2017), complications from a heart attack.
  • Pavlo Shkapenko, 50, Ukrainian footballer (Dynamo Kyiv, Torpedo Moscow, national team).
  • Chris Smith, 31, American football player (Jacksonville Jaguars, Cincinnati Bengals, Cleveland Browns).
  • April Stevens, 93, American singer ("Deep Purple", "Whispering"), Grammy winner (1964).
  • Nikita Storojev, 73, Russian-American operatic singer.
  • Ronald R. Thomas, 74, American academic administrator, president of the University of Puget Sound (2003–2016).
  • Virgilio Tosi, 97, Italian documentary filmmaker.
  • Bente Træen, 64, Norwegian sexologist, cerebral hemorrhage.
  • Shlomo Yitzhaki, 79, Iraqi-born Israeli economist, director of the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics (2002–2012).

18

  • Väino Aren, 89, Estonian actor and ballet dancer.
  • Abdul Azeem, 62, Indian cricketer (Hyderabad), kidney failure.
  • Joe Cattini, 100, British soldier.
  • Stephan Cohen, 51, French pocket billiards player, heart attack.
  • Boris Fausto, 92, Brazilian historian.
  • Alfred L. Goldberg, 80, American biochemist and academic.
  • Pablo González Casanova, 101, Mexican lawyer, sociologist, and historian.
  • Terrence Hardiman, 86, English actor (Gandhi, Sahara, Mask of Murder).
  • Stephen Hill, 77, British academic.
  • Evan Jones, 95, Jamaican poet, playwright and screenwriter (Eva, Modesty Blaise, Escape to Victory).
  • Koko Da Doll, 35, American rapper, subject of Kokomo City, shot.
  • Víctor Marrero Padilla, 84, Puerto Rican politician, senator (1993–2000).
  • Willie McCarter, 76, American basketball player (Los Angeles Lakers, Portland Trail Blazers) and coach (Detroit Mercy Titans).
  • Don McIlhenny, 88, American football player (Detroit Lions, Green Bay Packers, Dallas Cowboys).
  • Nimrod Mkono, 79, Tanzanian politician, MP (2000–2015).
  • Chandita Mukherjee, 70, Indian documentary film director (Bharat Ki Chhap).
  • Colm Murphy, 70, Irish republican and convicted arms trafficker (Omagh bombing), degenerative lung disease.
  • Harold Riley, 88, English painter.
  • Albert del Rosario, 83, Filipino diplomat, secretary of foreign affairs (2011–2016) and ambassador to the United States (2001–2006).
  • Anita Sanders, 81, Swedish actress and model.
  • Vadym Shevchenko, 66, Ukrainian football player (Avanhard Rivne, CSKA Kyiv, Nyva Bereshany) and referee.
  • Ajai Singh, 88, Indian military officer, governor of Assam (2003–2008).
  • Charles Stanley, 90, American pastor and televangelist, president of the Southern Baptist Convention (1984–1986) and founder of In Touch Ministries.
  • Lensley Wolfe, 85, Jamaican jurist, chief justice (1996–2007).

19

  • Boris Bjarni Akbashev, 89, Soviet-born Icelandic handball player (Soviet Union national team) and coach (Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Valur).
  • Alfonso Araújo Cotes, 99, Colombian politician, governor of Cesar Department (1968–1970, 1975–1977).
  • Emilio Berroa, 76, Dominican Olympic weightlifter (1972).
  • Bob Berry, 81, American football player (Minnesota Vikings, Atlanta Falcons).
  • Finbar Cafferkey, 45, Irish political activist and soldier, mortar fire.
  • Robert Dean, 67, American Olympic handball player (1976).
  • Walter Demel, 77, German four-time Olympic cross-country skier.
  • Yehonatan Geffen, 76, Israeli author, poet and songwriter.
  • Todd Haimes, 66, American artistic director.
  • Ron Hamilton, 72, American Christian singer-songwriter, preacher, and voice actor.
  • Lee Harding, 86, Australian photographer and writer.
  • Elain Harwood, 64, English architectural historian.
  • Marvin L. Kay, 84, American football coach.
  • Shahidul Haque Khan, 74, Bangladeshi film director and lyricist, cancer.
  • Michael A. Lebowitz, 85, American-born Canadian economist.
  • Lin Hui, 21, Chinese-born Thai giant panda.
  • Bob Maguire, 88, Australian Roman Catholic priest, subject of In Bob We Trust.
  • Peter Martin, 81, English actor (Emmerdale, The Royle Family, Brassed Off).
  • Volodymyr Melnychenko, 91, Ukrainian visual artist, sculptor, and architect.
  • Moonbin, 25, South Korean singer (Astro), actor (Boys Over Flowers, At Eighteen) and dancer.
  • John Newman, 86, English architectural historian.
  • Jeremy Nobis, 52, American Olympic alpine skier (1994).
  • Harriet Nordlund, 68, Swedish actress.
  • Charles-Ferdinand Nothomb, 86, Belgian politician, twice president of the Chamber of Representatives, minister of foreign affairs (1980–1981) and the interior (1981–1986).
  • Robert O'Neill, 86, Australian historian.
  • Coulter Osborne, 88, Canadian Olympic basketball player (1956) and arbitrator, integrity commissioner of Ontario (2001–2007).
  • Elena Pampoulova, 50, Bulgarian Olympic tennis player (1992).
  • Dmitry Petrov, 33, Russian anarchist activist, ethnographer and historian.
  • Martin Petzold, 67, German classical tenor (Thomanerchor).
  • Ed Picson, 69, Filipino sportscaster (Philippine Basketball Association), sports administrator, and columnist.
  • Luc Portelance, 63, Canadian police officer, president of the Canada Border Services Agency (2010–2015).
  • Richard Riordan, 92, American investment banker, businessman and politician, mayor of Los Angeles (1993–2001).
  • Federico Salvatore, 63, Italian singer-songwriter and comedian, complications from a cerebal haemorrhage.
  • Takeo Shiina, 93, Japanese business executive.
  • Bud Shuster, 91, American politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1973–2001), complications from a fractured hip.
  • Ann M. Torr, 88, American politician, member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives (1984–1998).
  • Gloria Cranmer Webster, 91, Canadian writer, activist, and museum curator.
  • I Ketut Wiana, 77, Indonesian Hindu scholar.
  • Dave Wilcox, 80, American Hall of Fame football player (San Francisco 49ers).
  • Richard Woldendorp, 96, Dutch-born Australian aerial photographer. (death announced on this date)

20

  • Sir Frank Blackman, 96, Barbadian civil servant.
  • Pamela Chopra, 75, Indian playback singer (Kabhi Kabhie, Kaala Patthar, Chandni), pneumonia.
  • David Ellis, 90, English composer.
  • Marek Fila, 63, Slovak mathematician.
  • Josep Maria Fusté, 82, Spanish footballer (Barcelona, Hércules, national team).
  • Salma Khadra Jayyusi, 95, Palestinian poet and anthropologist, founder of PROTA.
  • Ivar Kristianslund, 89, Norwegian preacher and politician, leader of the New Future Coalition Party (1998–2001).
  • Khalil Oghab, 99, Iranian wrestler and circus performer.
  • Roy Tuckman, 84, American radio host (Something's Happening).
  • John Wright, 79, American film editor (The Hunt for Red October, Speed, X-Men), cancer.
  • Kenji Yonekura, 88, Japanese Olympic boxer (1956).

21

  • Enver Baig, 77, Pakistani politician, senator (2003–2009) and chairperson of the BISP (2013–2014).
  • Ernie Barrett, 93, American basketball player (Boston Celtics).
  • Ernő Béres, 94, Hungarian Olympic long-distance runner (1952).
  • James B. Busey IV, 90, American admiral.
  • Mahulena Čejková, 86, Czech physician and politician, MP (1990–1992).
  • Maria Charles, 93, English actress (Agony, Hot Fuzz, Never the Twain).
  • Peter Cole, 81, American linguist.
  • Mike Coulman, 78, English rugby league (Salford, national team) and union (national team) player.
  • John A. Curry, 88, American academic administrator, president of Northeastern University (1989–1996).
  • Stanley Deser, 92, Polish-born American physicist.
  • Dream Alliance, 22, British Thoroughbred racehorse, Welsh Grand National winner (2009).
  • Cornell Fleischer, 72, American historian.
  • Mirella Giai, 93, Italian politician, senator (2008–2013).
  • Trilochan Kanungo, 82, Indian politician, MP (1999–2004).
  • Dalia Kuodytė, 61, Lithuanian historian and politician, MP (2008–2016).
  • Emily Meggett, 90, American chef and author.
  • Ivan Moscovich, 96, Yugoslav-born Dutch toy and game designer and Holocaust survivor.
  • Viktor Olsen, 99, Norwegian Olympic long-distance runner (1952).
  • John O'Sullivan, 90, Australian Olympic cyclist (1956).
  • Ken Potts, 102, American World War II veteran, survivor of the attack on the USS Arizona.
  • Sergio Rendine, 68, Italian composer, cultural manager and theatre director (Teatro Marrucino).
  • Ted Richards, 76, American cartoonist, lung cancer.
  • Jane Ritchie, 87, New Zealand academic.
  • Juan Carlos Sarnari, 81, Argentine footballer (River Plate, Santa Fe, national team).
  • Kate Saunders, 62, English author (Winnie-the-Pooh: The Best Bear in All the World), journalist and actress (Angels), cancer.
  • Mark Stewart, 62, English musician (The Pop Group) and songwriter ("She Is Beyond Good and Evil", "This Is Stranger Than Love").
  • John Tranter, 79, Australian poet, founder of Jacket.

22

  • Edward S. Ayensu, 87, Ghanaian environmental scientist.
  • Mudar Badran, 89, Jordanian politician, prime minister (1976–1979, 1980–1984, 1989–1991).
  • Sir Alan Bailey, 91, British civil servant.
  • István Bajkai, 59, Hungarian politician, MP (since 2018).
  • Hugh Byrne, 83, Irish politician, TD (1969–1982).
  • Ron Cahute, 68, Canadian singer-songwriter and accordionist.
  • James Chan Soon Cheong, 96, Malaysian Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Melaka-Johor (1973–2001).
  • Herb Douglas, 101, American long jumper, Olympic bronze medalist (1948).
  • Bernard Geary, 89, Irish composer, teacher and pianist.
  • Marcela González Salas, 75, Mexican politician, president of the Chamber of Deputies (2006), cancer.
  • Len Goodman, 78, English ballroom dancer, television presenter, and coach (Strictly Come Dancing, Dancing with the Stars), bone cancer.
  • Greg Howard, 58, American Chapman Stick player.
  • Barry Humphries, 89, Australian comedian (Dame Edna Everage) and actor (Bedazzled, Finding Nemo), complications from hip surgery.
  • Ju Ming, 85, Taiwanese sculptor, suicide.
  • Rambahadur Limbu, 83, Nepali soldier, recipient of the Victoria Cross, heart and kidney failure.
  • Mick Loftus, 93, Irish Gaelic footballer (Mayo) and sports administrator, president of the Gaelic Athletic Association (1985–1988).
  • Dale Meeks, 48, English actor (Emmerdale, Byker Grove), heart failure.
  • Catherine Morris, 94, British figure skater.
  • Bob Page, 69, American blues musician.
  • Sunil Kumar Podder, 86, Indian molecular biologist and biophysicist.
  • Frank Shu, 79, Chinese-American astrophysicist (density wave theory), president of the National Tsing Hua University (2002–2006) and member of the National Academy of Sciences.
  • Emanuel V. Soriano, 86, Filipino engineer and academic administrator, president of the University of the Philippines (1979–1981).
  • Ulf Sundqvist, 78, Finnish politician, minister of education (1972–1975) and trade (1979–1981).
  • Art Uytendaal, 92, Dutch-born Australian equestrian.
  • Werner Voigt, 75, German football player and coach (1. FC Union Berlin).
  • Juhn Atsushi Wada, 99, Japanese-born Canadian neurologist.
  • Carol Wall, 69-70, Canadian labor and social justice activist.

23

  • Anatoly Akentyev, 81, Russian Olympic cross-country skier (1968).
  • Nikolay Bortsov, 77, Russian politician, MP (since 2003).
  • Tori Bowie, 32, American athlete, Olympic champion (2016), complications from childbirth.
  • Robert Forrest-Webb, 94, British author (And to My Nephew Albert I Leave the Island What I Won off Fatty Hagan in a Poker Game, The Great Dinosaur Robbery) and journalist.
  • Keith Gattis, 52, American country music singer, songwriter ("El Cerrito Place", "When I See This Bar"), and producer, tractor accident.
  • Randor Guy, 85, Indian lawyer, columnist (The Hindu, The Indian Express) and film historian.
  • Yvonne Jacquette, 88, American painter.
  • Zahoor Hussain Khoso, Pakistani politician, speaker of the Provincial Assembly of Balochistan (1990), lung cancer.
  • Alton H. Maddox Jr., 77, American lawyer.
  • Boris Markarov, 88, Russian water polo player, Olympic bronze medallist (1956).
  • John Miller, 79, American baseball player (New York Yankees, Los Angeles Dodgers, Chunichi Dragons).
  • Warren Monson, 48, Australian sidecar speedway racer, race collision.
  • Billy Oatman, 57, American ten-pin bowler, complications from a stroke.
  • Rainer Osselmann, 62, German water polo player, Olympic bronze medallist (1984).
  • Robert Patrick, 85, American playwright, poet, and lyricist.
  • Jej Perfekcyjność, Polish sociologist, author, and social activist.
  • Gemini Shankaran, 98, Indian circus owner.
  • Dick Towers, 92, American football coach (Southern Illinois Salukis).
  • Dzhasharbek Uzdenov, 56, Russian politician, MP (since 2021).
  • Frank Welsh, 91, British historian and writer.

24

  • Tomas Alibegov, 85, Russian banker, director general of Eurobank (1982–1987).
  • Alfredo Arreguín, 88, Mexican-American painter.
  • David E. Carter, 80, American entrepreneur and writer, lymphoma.
  • Șerban Ciochină, 83, Romanian Olympic triple jumper (1964, 1968). (death announced on this date)
  • Ann Crowley, 93, American singer and actress.
  • Fumio Demura, 84, Japanese martial artist.
  • José Aníbal Díaz, 52, Puerto Rican politician, member of the House of Representatives (since 2015), cancer.
  • Peter Enahoro, 88, Nigerian journalist (New African).
  • Tarek Fatah, 73, Pakistani-Canadian journalist (Toronto Sun) and writer, cancer.
  • Aftandil Israfilov, 82, Azerbaijani garmon player.
  • Senahid Halilović, 65, Bosnian linguist, member of the ANUBH.
  • Alejandro Hamed, 89, Paraguayan diplomat and politician, minister of foreign affairs (2008–2009).
  • Ernst Huberty, 96, German-Luxembourgish sports journalist (Sportschau).
  • Donald Lambro, 82, American journalist.
  • Sir Basil Markesinis, 78, Greek-British legal scholar, complications from dementia.
  • Brian Frank Martin, 86, Australian judge, chief justice of the Northern Territory (1993–2003).
  • Arlie Neaville, 85, American singer and songwriter.
  • Joe Novsek, 83, American football player (Oakland Raiders).
  • Mike Pride, 76, American journalist (Concord Monitor) and writer.
  • Ove Krogh Rants, 96, Danish Olympic cyclist (1952).
  • Dennis Ribant, 81, American baseball player (New York Mets, Pittsburgh Pirates, Detroit Tigers).
  • Gilbert Sheldon, 96, American Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Steubenville (1992–2002) and auxiliary bishop of Cleveland (1976–1992).
  • Casper R. Taylor Jr., 88, American politician, speaker (1994–2003) and member (1975–2003) of the Maryland House of Delegates.

25

  • Sir Norman Adsetts, 92, British businessman.
  • Frank Agrama, 93, American film director (Queen Kong, Dawn of the Mummy) and producer, founder of Harmony Gold USA.
  • Parkash Singh Badal, 95, Indian politician, minister of agriculture (1977) and four-time chief minister of Punjab, complications from bronchial asthma.
  • Harry Belafonte, 96, American Hall of Fame musician ("The Banana Boat Song", "Jump in the Line"), actor (Odds Against Tomorrow), and civil rights activist, heart failure.
  • Sir Winfried Bischoff, 81, German-born British banker, chairman of Citigroup (2007–2009) and Lloyds Banking Group (2009–2014).
  • Gennadi Bogachyov, 78, Russian actor (Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson, Speed, Simple Things).
  • Himangshu Mohan Choudhury, 83, Indian civil servant.
  • John Cockcroft, 88, English journalist (Financial Times, The Daily Telegraph) and politician, MP (1974–1979).
  • Billy "The Kid" Emerson, 97, American singer-songwriter ("Red Hot", "When It Rains, It Really Pours").
  • Obaro Ikime, 86, Nigerian historian.
  • Hanna Johansen, 83, German-born Swiss writer (7×7 Tales of a Sevensleeper).
  • Vera Krepkina, 90, Ukrainian long jumper, Olympic champion (1960).
  • François Léotard, 81, French politician, minister of culture (1986–1988) and defence (1993–1995).
  • Alapati Lui Mataeliga, 70, Samoan Roman Catholic prelate, archbishop of Samoa-Apia (since 2003) and superior of Tokelau (since 2015).
  • Robin Mathews, 91, Canadian poet and activist.
  • Edwin Teague, 88, American Olympic sport shooter (1964).
  • Pamela Turnure, 85, American press secretary (Jacqueline Kennedy), lung cancer.
  • Paul van Vliet, 87, Dutch comedian and UNICEF goodwill ambassador.
  • Manfred Weiss, 88, German composer.
  • Morison Zuill, 86, Scottish cricketer (national team).

26

  • Jerry Apodaca, 88, American politician, governor of New Mexico (1975–1979) and chair of the PCPFS (1978–1980).
  • Željko Bilecki, 72, Canadian soccer player (Toronto Metros-Croatia, Tulsa Roughnecks, national team).
  • Michel Biron, 89, Canadian politician, senator (2001–2009).
  • Ronald Bradley, 93, British physician and inventor.
  • Boris Budnikov, 81, Russian sailor, Olympic silver medallist (1980).
  • Chandan Ram Das, 65, Indian politician, Uttarakhand MLA (since 2007), cardiac arrest.
  • Cilia van Dijk, 81, Dutch film producer (Anna & Bella), Oscar winner (1986).
  • Tony Dreyfus, 84, French lawyer and politician, deputy (1997–2012).
  • Eqtidaar, 7, Irish-bred British Thoroughbred racehorse, winner of the Commonwealth Cup (2018), euthanized. (death announced on this date)
  • Isidore Fernandes, 76, Indian Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Allahabad (1988–2013), heart attack.
  • Stefano Gentili, 65, Italian politician, president of the Province of Grosseto (1995–1999).
  • Sonny Gordon, 57, American football player (Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Hamilton Tiger-Cats, Saskatchewan Roughriders), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
  • George Greenamyer, 83, American sculptor (Milwaukee).
  • Doris Gregory, 102, Canadian writer and activist.
  • Maja Hug, 95, Swiss Olympic figure skater (1948).
  • A. Majeed Khan, 93, Bangladeshi politician and diplomat, minister of education (1982–1984).
  • Sami Khayat, 79, Lebanese stage actor and comedian, bone cancer.
  • Roger Lise, 95, French politician, senator (1977–1995).
  • Martin Lönnebo, 93, Swedish Lutheran clergyman, bishop of Linköping (1980–1994).
  • Jay Mala, 64, Indian political activist, fall.
  • Mamukkoya, 76, Indian actor (Sanmanassullavarkku Samadhanam, Perumazhakkalam, Innathe Chintha Vishayam) and comedian, heart attack.
  • Stina Rautelin, 59, Finnish-Swedish actress (Beck, Fallet, Rederiet).
  • Adela Ringuelet, 93, Argentine astronomer.
  • Alzira Rufino, 73, Brazilian writer and social activist.
  • Samarveer Singh, 33, Indian academic, suicide.
  • Abbas-Ali Soleimani, 75, Iranian ayatollah, member of the Assembly of Experts (since 2005), shot.
  • Tangaraju Suppiah, 46, Singaporean drug trafficker, execution by hanging.
  • Too Too, 32, Burmese Lethwei fighter.
  • Wang Shaojun, 67, Chinese military officer, director of the Central Guard Bureau (2015–2021) and deputy (2017–2022).
  • Dee Dee Wood, 95, American choreographer (Mary Poppins, The Sound of Music, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang).
  • Belén Clarisa Velutini, 99, Venezuelan businesswoman and banker.
  • Dimitris Xistras, 68, Cypriot actor.
  • Zhang Jihui, 96, Chinese air force officer, deputy commander of PLAAF (1973–1978).

27

  • David Henry Breaux, 50, American unhoused man, stabbed.
  • Banko Brown, 24, American homeless transgender man, shot.
  • Neville Chesters, 77, American rock music manager and road manager (Jimi Hendrix, The Who).
  • Jean-Paul Costa, 81, French jurist, president of the European Court of Human Rights (2007–2011).
  • Dame Rosemary Cramp, 93, English archaeologist and academic.
  • Ólafur Garðar Einarsson, 90, Icelandic politician, member (1971–1999) and speaker (1995–1999) of the Althing, minister of education, science and culture (1991–1995).
  • Girma Yeshitila, Ethiopian politician, shot.
  • Dick Groat, 92, American baseball (Pittsburgh Pirates, St. Louis Cardinals) and basketball player (Fort Wayne Pistons), World Series champion (1960, 1964), complications from a stroke.
  • Wee Willie Harris, 90, English rock and roll singer.
  • Dominic Kwiatkowski, 69, English medical researcher and geneticist.
  • Giovanni Lombardo Radice, 68, Italian actor (The House on the Edge of the Park, Cannibal Apocalypse, City of the Living Dead).
  • Francis Macnab, 91, Australian Christian minister and psychologist, founder of the Cairnmillar Institute.
  • Ray Minus, 58, Bahamian boxer, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
  • Gerald Nesbitt, 91, American football player (Ottawa Rough Riders, Arkansas Razorbacks).
  • Ramiro Oliveros, 82, Spanish actor (Cannibal Apocalypse, Naked Therapy, Death's Newlyweds).
  • Beata Maria Kitsikis Panagopoulos, 97, Greek-born American professor of art.
  • Dennis Reid, 80, Canadian art historian and curator, heart failure.
  • Kaur Singh, 74, Indian boxer.
  • Jerry Springer, 79, British-born American television host (Jerry Springer, America's Got Talent) and politician, mayor of Cincinnati (1977–1978), pancreatic cancer.
  • Wiktor Wysoczański, 84, Polish Old Catholic prelate, superior of the Polish Catholic Church (since 1995).
  • Barbara Young, 92, English actress (Coronation Street, I, Claudius, Last of the Summer Wine).

28

  • Andrea Augello, 62, Italian politician, senator (2006–2018, since 2022).
  • Tim Bachman, 71, Canadian guitarist (Bachman–Turner Overdrive, Brave Belt).
  • LeRoy Carhart, 81, American physician, subject of After Tiller.
  • Agnes G. Doody, 93, American academic.
  • Helge Engelke, 61, German guitarist (Fair Warning), colon cancer.
  • Renyldo Ferreira, 99, Brazilian four-time Olympic equestrian.
  • Jim Fox, 81, British modern pentathlete, Olympic champion (1976).
  • Martyn Gough, 57, British Anglican priest.
  • Robson Gracie, 88, Brazilian jujutsu master.
  • Claude Gray, 91, American country music singer-songwriter ("Family Bible").
  • Ranajit Guha, 99, Indian historian.
  • David Jacobs, 45, Indonesian table tennis player, Paralympic bronze medallist (2012, 2020).
  • Taini Jamison, 95, New Zealand netball coach (national team).
  • Harold Kushner, 88, American rabbi and author (When Bad Things Happen to Good People, Overcoming Life's Disappointments, When All You've Ever Wanted Isn't Enough).
  • Peter Lilienthal, 93, German film director (David, Das Autogramm, Dear Mr. Wonderful).
  • Bengt Lindqvist, 89, Swedish Olympic ice hockey player (1960).
  • Sergio Ottolina, 80, Italian Olympic sprinter (1964, 1968).
  • Yuri Petrov, 48, Russian footballer (RKC, Twente, Volendam).
  • Vincent Stewart, 64, Jamaican-born American Marine Corps general, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (2015–2017).
  • Ben Tompkins, 93, American football referee (NFL).
  • Ken Westbury, 96, British cinematographer (The Singing Detective).

29

  • Sylvia Bacon, 91, American judge, associate judge of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (1970–1991), pulmonary fibrosis.
  • Adam Brace, 43, British playwright and director, complications from a stroke.
  • S. S. Chakravarthy, 55, Indian film producer (Raasi, Vaalee, Kadhal Sadugudu), cancer.
  • Padma Desai, 91, Indian-American development economist.
  • Edward J. Garcia, 94, American jurist, judge of the U.S. District Court for Eastern California (since 1984).
  • Janet G. Mullins Grissom, 73, American lobbyist, White House director of political affairs (1992–1993), assistant secretary of state for legislative affairs (1989–1992).
  • David L. Holmes, 90, American church historian.
  • Rod Kedward, 86, British historian.
  • Hermann Kerckhoff, 85, German-born Canadian Olympic slalom canoeist (1972).
  • Sergei Kolesnikov, 68, Russian actor (Man with an Accordion, Daddy, A Good Day to Die Hard) and television presenter.
  • Yuri Korolyov, 60, Russian artistic gymnast, nine-time world champion.
  • Nicolae Neagoe, 81, Romanian bobsledder, Olympic bronze medallist (1968).
  • Abu al-Hussein al-Husseini al-Qurashi, Islamist militant, caliph of the Islamic State (since 2022).
  • Larry Rivers, 73, American basketball player (Harlem Globetrotters), cancer.
  • Eero Saari, 94, Finnish Olympic ice hockey player (1952).
  • Don Sebesky, 85, American composer, arranger, and conductor (Giant Box, The Rape of El Morro).
  • Mike Shannon, 83, American baseball player (St. Louis Cardinals) and broadcaster, World Series champion (1964, 1967), stroke.
  • Ralph Taaviri, 68, French Polynesian trade unionist, independence activist, and environmentalist.
  • István Vágó, 74, Hungarian television host and political activist.
  • Ralfe Whistler, 92, British naturalist.
  • Richard B. Woodward, 70, American arts critic, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.

30

  • Ralph Boston, 83, American long jumper, Olympic champion (1960), stroke.
  • Elizabeth Scott, Duchess of Buccleuch, 68, Scottish noble and philanthropist.
  • Ian Crowden, 90, Australian cricketer (Tasmania).
  • Tony Doyle, 64, British racing cyclist, pancreatic cancer.
  • George I. Fujimoto, 102, American chemist.
  • Patricia Hamilton, 86, Canadian actress (Road to Avonlea, My Bloody Valentine, Middle Age Crazy).
  • Havre de Grace, 16, American Thoroughbred racehorse.
  • Ron Hazelton, 80, American television host.
  • Ntate Daniel Kgwadi, 55–56, South African academic administrator, rector (2004–2014) and vice-chancellor (2014–2021) of the North-West University.
  • Luis Larrosa, 65, Uruguayan Olympic basketball player (1984).
  • Albert Lightfoot, 87, English cricketer (Northamptonshire).
  • Chris Qua, 71, Australian jazz musician.
  • Broderick Smith, 75, English-born Australian musician (Carson, The Dingoes) and actor.
  • Lance Ten Broeck, 67, American professional golfer and caddie.
  • Mihails Vasiļonoks, 74, Latvian ice hockey player (Dinamo Riga, Soviet Union national team), coach, and executive (HK Liepājas Metalurgs).
  • Vyacheslav Zaitsev, 85, Russian fashion designer, gastrointestinal disease.
  • Jock Zonfrillo, 46, Scottish-Australian chef and television presenter (Restaurant Revolution, MasterChef Australia).

References


Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Deaths in April 2023 by Wikipedia (Historical)


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