Deaths in April 2006
The following is a list of notable deaths in April 2006.
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, reason for notability, cause of death, and reference.
April 2006
1
- Gary Dineen, 62, Canadian ice hockey player and coach.
- Annesley Kingsford, 93, Canadian rower and Olympian.
- In Tam, 83, Cambodian politician.
- Oscar Treadwell, 79, American jazz radio journalist and presenter.
2
- Sir Anthony Beaumont-Dark, 73, British politician, former Conservative Member of Parliament.
- Mohammed al-Maghout, 72, Syrian poet and playwright.
- Bernard Seigal, 48, American musician and essayist with the stage name Buddy Blue, co-founder of the Beat Farmers, heart attack.
- Nina von Stauffenberg, 92, German widow of Hitler's would-be assassin.
3
- Tom Abercrombie, 75, American National Geographic photographer, complications from open-heart surgery.
- Barry Bingham, Jr., 72, American television and radio executive, former editor and publisher of the Louisville Courier-Journal and the Louisville Times.
- Lou Carrol, 83, American traveling salesman, gave Checkers to Richard Nixon.
- Doug Coombs, 48, American extreme skier, ski accident in the French Alps.
- Ewan Fenton, 76, Scottish footballer.
- Martin Gilks, 41, English musician, former drummer with The Wonder Stuff, motorcycle accident.
- Marshall Goldberg, 88, American football player, former NFL running back of the Chicago Cardinals, complications due to a head injury.
- Albert Harker, 95, American soccer player, last surviving member of the US 1934 FIFA World Cup soccer team.
- Genzō Murakami, 96, Japanese novelist.
- Walter Ristow, 97, American map librarian at the New York Public Library and the Library of Congress.
- Sir Andrew Stark, 89, British diplomat, Ambassador to Denmark.
- Ida Vos, 74, Dutch writer.
4
- Mary Boyce, 85, British authority on Iran.
- Toddie Byrne, 71, Irish politician.
- Fred Christensen, 84, American fighter ace in World War II.
- Eckhard Dagge, 58, former German WBC junior middleweight champion.
- Sir Roy Denman, 81, British civil servant and diplomat.
- Denis Donaldson, 55-56, British former head of Sinn Féin at Stormont, and British double-agent, found shot dead at his home.
- Gary Gray, 69, American child actor of the 1940s, cancer.
- John de Courcy Ireland, 94, Irish maritime historian and political activist.
- John George Macleod, 90, Scottish physician.
- Jürgen Thorwald, 90, German writer.
- Vickery Turner, 61, British actress of the 60's.
- Frederick B. Williams, 66, American minister of the Church of the Intercession in Harlem, New York City.
5
- Alain de Boissieu, 91, French General and son-in-law of Charles De Gaulle.
- J. B. Fuqua, 87, American entrepreneur and philanthropist.
- George Savalla Gomes, 90, Brazilian entertainer who performed as "Carequinha" the clown.
- Allan Kaprow, 78, American artist and art theorist, natural causes.
- Armando Labra, 62, Mexican economist.
- Pasquale Macchi, 82, Italian Roman Catholic archbishop, former private secretary to Pope Paul VI.
- Abdul-Salam Ojeili, 88, Syrian novelist.
- Gene Pitney, 66, American singer and songwriter, heart disease.
6
- Augustyn Bloch, 76, Polish composer and organist.
- Maggie Dixon, 28, American women's basketball coach at United States Military Academy, cardiac arrhythmia.
- Francis L. Kellogg, 89, American diplomat.
- Leslie Norris, 84, Welsh poet and professor at Brigham Young University.
7
- Roger Arnaldez, 94, French professor of Islamic studies.
- Bobbie Nudie, 92, American fashion designer, wife of Nudie Cohn.
- Jim Clack, 58, American gridiron football player, heart attack.
- Adamas Golodets, 72, Soviet football player and manager.
- Théogène Ricard, 96, Canadian politician.
8
- Henry Lewy, 79, German-American sound engineer and record producer.
- Richard Pearlman, 68, American theatre and opera director, director of the Lyric Opera Center for American Artists.
- Gerard Reve, 82, Dutch author, Alzheimer's disease.
- Valentine Telegdi, 84, Hungarian-American physicist.
9
- Christian Compton, 76, American jurist, justice of the Supreme Court of Virginia.
- Frank Gibney, 81, American writer and journalist on Asia.
- Billy Hitchcock, 89, American Major League Baseball infielder, coach, manager, and scout, natural causes.
- Robin Orr, 96, Scottish classical composer and conductor.
- Jimmy Outlaw, 93, American baseball third baseman/outfielder.
- Georges Rawiri, 74, Gabonese politician, president of the Senate and former foreign minister.
- Hermann Schild, 93, German cyclist, National Champion.
- Vilgot Sjöman, 81, Swedish film director, complications from brain haemorrhage.
- Natalia Troitskaya, 55, Russian operatic soprano.
10
- Joe Faragalli, 76, Canadian Football League head coach with the Saskatchewan Roughriders and Edmonton Eskimos.
- Jean Grosjean, 93, French poet, writer and translator.
- Bishop Charles Henderson, 81, Irish retired Catholic Auxiliary Bishop of Southwark, England, KC*HS, cancer.
- Notable Kenyans killed in the 2006 Kenyan Air Force Harbin Y-12 crash:
- *Bonaya Godana, 54, politician, MP for North Horr Constituency, minister of foreign affairs.
- *William Waqo, Anglican prelate, assistant bishop of Kirinyaga.
11
- Leonard Dommett, 77, Australian violinist and conductor.
- Les Foote, 81, Australian Football Hall of Fame member.
- Siobhán O'Hanlon, 43, Northern Irish Sinn Féin politician, cancer.
- Winand Osiński, 92, Polish Olympic runner.
- June Pointer, 52, American singer, former member of The Pointer Sisters, lung cancer.
- Proof, 32, American rapper, homicide.
- Shin Sang-ok, 80, Korean film producer, liver problems.
- Sergey Tereshchenkov, 67, Soviet Olympic cyclist.
- Angus Wells, 63, English fiction writer.
12
- Muhsin Musa Matwalli Atwah, 41, Egyptian militant, killed by Pakistani forces.
- Richard Bebb, 79, British actor.
- William Sloane Coffin, 81, American minister and peace activist, congestive heart failure.
- Andy Duncan, 83, American basketball player.
- Paulina Kernberg, 71, Chilean-born American child psychiatrist, professor at Cornell University.
- Kazuo Kuroki, 75, Japanese film director.
- Shekhar Mehta, 60, Kenyan rally driver, five-time winner of the Safari Rally & president of the FIA's World Rally Championship commission, illness relating to complications from an old injury.
- Puggy Pearson, 77, American poker player.
- Albert E. Radford, 88, American botanist.
- Rajkumar, 76, Indian actor, cardiac arrest.
- William Woo, 69, first Asian-American to be editor of a major American daily newspaper, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, professor at Stanford University.
13
- John Read, 85, British television producer and cinematographer.
- Dame Muriel Spark, 88, British novelist,.
- Bruce Weber, 54, Australian rules football executive who was president of the Port Adelaide Football Club.
- Arthur Winston, 100, American Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority employee, famous for serving for 76 years and retiring at age 100.
14
- Mahmut Bakalli, 70, Kosovo ethnic Albanian politician.
- Henry Callow, Isle of Man jurist.
- A. B. A. Ghani Khan Choudhury, 78, Indian politician.
- Tom Ferguson, 62, American medical doctor and author.
- Miguel Reale, 95, Brazilian philosopher of law, heart attack.
- Eberhardt Rechtin, 80, American electrical engineer and telecommunications expert.
15
- Raúl Corrales, 81, Cuban photographer.
- Lord Eliot (Jago Eliot), 40, English aristocrat, surfer and cyber artist, epilepsy.
- Calum Kennedy, 77, Scottish traditional singer.
- Pavel Koutecký, 49, Czech documentary film maker, accidental fall.
- Louise Smith, 89, American NASCAR racer, first woman inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame, known as "the first lady of racing," complications from cancer.
- Vusumzi Make, 75, South African politician
16
- Francisco Adam, 22, Portuguese actor, traffic collision.
- Lorraine Borg, 82, American baseball player
- Philippe Castelli, 80, Franch actor.
- Richard Eckersley, 65, English graphic designer.
- Morton Freedgood, 93, American author under the pseudonym of John Godey.
- Brett Goldin, 27, South African actor, killed by a head shot together with friend, fashion designer Richard Bloom, 27.
- Poopak Goldarreh, 34, Iranian actress, traffic collision.
- Harold Horwood, 82, Canadian writer and former Newfoundland politician, cancer.
- Stephen Marshall, 20, American double murderer, suicide by gunshot.
- Daniel Schaefer, 70, American politician, former Republican United States Representative from Colorado served 1983–1999, cancer.
- Jake Seamer, 92, English cricketer.
- Silvia Caos, 72, Cuban-Mexican actress.
17
- Jean Bernard, 98, French hematologist.
- Scott Brazil, 50, American television producer and director, Lou Gehrig's disease.
- Peter Cadbury, 88, British entrepreneur and one of the founders of commercial TV broadcasting in the UK.
- Elford Albin Cederberg, 88, American politician, former Republican United States Representative from Michigan from 1953 to 1978 and former mayor of Bay City, Michigan.
- Henderson Forsythe, 88, American actor.
- Arthur Hertzberg, 84, Polish-born American rabbi and scholar of Judaism.
- Vaishnavi, 22, Indian Bollywood actress, suicide by hanging.
18
- Bindhyabasini Devi, 86, Indian folk singer.
- Ken Jones, 84, Welsh rugby union player, Wales and British Lion rugby union player and silver medal Olympiad.
- John Lyall, 66, British football manager with West Ham United F.C. and Ipswich Town F.C., heart attack.
- Grady McWhiney, 77, American historian.
- Dick Rockwell, 85, American cartoonist, assistant on Steve Canyon, nephew of Norman Rockwell.
19
- John F. Cosgrove, 56, American politician, member of the Florida House of Representatives.
- Scott Crossfield, 84, American X-15 test pilot, plane crash.
- Bob Dove, 85, American NFL defensive lineman and member of the College Football Hall of Fame.
- Andrés María Rubio Garcia, 81, Uruguayan Roman Catholic bishop.
- June Knox-Mawer, 75, British writer and radio broadcaster.
- Ellen Kuzwayo, 91, South African author, anti-apartheid activist, and member of Parliament, diabetes.
- Sir Ian Morrow, 93, British accountant and businessman.
20
- Kathleen Antonelli, 85, Irish computer programmer, one of the ENIAC original computer programmers, cancer.
- Cy Bahakel, 87, American media magnate.
- Stanley Hiller, Jr., 81, American helicopter designer.
- Igor Kuljerić, 68, Croatian composer and conductor.
- Miguel Zacarías Nogaim, 101, Mexican film director.
- Anna Svidersky, 17, Russian teenager, murdered while working at McDonald's, stabbed.
- Wolfgang Unzicker, 80, German chess grandmaster.
- Robert Wegman, 87, American businessman, chairman and former CEO of Wegmans Food Markets, Inc., philanthropist.
21
- Sir Richard Bayliss, 89, British physician, Physician to the Queen.
- Jacob Kovco, 25, first Australian Defence Force service person killed in Iraq.
- T. K. Ramakrishnan, 84, Indian politician.
- Telê Santana, 74, Brazilian football coach, complications from an intestinal infection.
22
- Henriette Avram, 86, American library systems analyst, developed MARC cataloging format.
- Ed Davis, 89, American California State Senator and former Los Angeles police chief.
- Enriqueta Harris, 95, English art historian.
- Nobby Lawton, 65, English footballer, midfielder & former captain of Preston North End, cancer.
- Jobie Nutarak, 58, Canadian politician, snowmobile accident.
- Satyadeow Sawh, 50, Guyanese Minister of Fisheries, Crops and Livestock. Shot by masked gunmen.
- Ronnie Sox, 67, American drag racing pioneer.
- Alida Valli, 84, Italian actress.
- Fausto Vitello, 59, Argentine-American businessman and magazine publisher, founding publisher of the skateboarding magazine Thrasher, heart attack.
23
- Ghafar Baba, 81, Malaysian former Deputy Prime Minister.
- Susan Browning, 65, American actress.
- Harvey Bullock, 84, American television writer and producer.
- Johnny Checketts, 94, New Zealand World War II flying ace.
- Willie Finnigan, 93, Scottish footballer.
- Boris Fraenkel, 85, French Trotskyist.
- Barry Gibbs, 73, South Australian cricket official.
- William Gottlieb, 89, American jazz photographer.
- Jennifer Jayne, 74, British TV and film actress.
- Florence Mars, 83, American civil rights activist, author of Witness in Philadelphia.
- Ian Nelson, 50, English saxophone and clarinet musician, died in his sleep.
- David Peckinpah, 54, American television producer and director, heart attack.
- Phil Walden, 66, American founder of Capricorn Records, cancer.
- Isaac Witkin, 69, South African-born American sculptor.
24
- Erik Bergman, 94, Finnish composer.
- Peter Ellis, 58, British television director.
- Nasreen Pervin Huq, 47, Bangladeshi women's activist and Director of Action Aid, from getting hit by a car.
- Brian Labone, 66, English footballer, Everton and England player, heart attack.
- Bonnie Owens, 76, American country music singer.
- Jimmy Sharman, 94, Australian boxing troupe impresario.
- Dr. Rajkumar, 76, Legendary Indian Kannada Cinema Actor, heart attack.
- Sibby Sisti, 85, American MLB player with the Boston Braves.
- Steve Stavro, 78, Canadian grocery store magnate and a former owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs, heart attack.
- Moshe Teitelbaum, 91, Hungarian-born Hasidic rebbe, of Satmar, one of the largest Hassidic Jewish groups in the world.
25
- Ronald Girdwood, 89, Scottish physician.
- Joseph S. Iseman, 89, American lawyer, educator and former president of Bennington College, cardiac arrest.
- Jane Jacobs, 89, American-born Canadian urban activist and author, stroke.
- John Kerr, 81, Irish ballad singer.
- Peter Law, 58, Welsh politician, independent MP and AM, brain tumor.
- Tabe Slioor, 79, Finnish socialite.
26
- Moshe Halberstam, 74, Israeli Rabbi, Dean of Tshakava Yeshivah and prominent member of the Edah Charedis Rabbinical Court of Jerusalem.
- Daryl Mack, 47, American convicted murderer, execution by lethal injection.
- Yuval Ne'eman, 80, Israeli physicist, founder of the Israel Space Agency, science minister, and President of Tel Aviv University.
- Russ Swan, 42, American former Major League Baseball pitcher.
27
- Wacław Latocha, 69, Polish Olympic cyclist.
- Pat Marsden, 69, Canadian sportscaster, lung cancer.
- Strini Moodley, 60, South African founding member of Black Consciousness Movement.
- Kay Noble-Bell, 65, American wrestler.
- Julia Thorne, 61, American author and first wife of John Kerry, bladder cancer.
- Mel Tom, 64, American football player, heart failure.
- Alexander Buel Trowbridge, 76, American politician and businessman, Secretary of Commerce under US President Lyndon B. Johnson from 1967 to 1968, former president of the National Association of Manufacturers.
28
- Helen Armstrong, 63, American concert violinist.
- Ángel O. Berríos, 69, Puerto Rican engineer, former mayor of Caguas, heart failure.
- Steve Howe, 48, American former Major League Baseball pitcher, automobile accident.
- Jan Koetsier, 94, Dutch composer and conductor.
- Ben-Zion Orgad, 80, Israeli composer, cancer.
- M. G. G. Pillai, 67, Malaysian journalist and political activist, heart complications.
29
- Sid Barron, 88, Canadian cartoonist. Known for the biplane flying overhead trailing a banner that read "mild, isn't it.".
- John Kenneth Galbraith, 97, American economist and author, natural causes.
- Alberta Nelson, 68, American actress known for beach party films of 1960s.
- Félix Siby, 64, Gabonese politician and former government minister.
- John Trever, 90, American scholar who photographed the Dead Sea Scrolls in Jerusalem.
- Alvin S. White, 87, American test pilot.
30
- Jay Bernstein, 69, American Hollywood publicist.
- Barry Driscoll, 79, British sculptor and painter, cancer.
- Jean-François Revel, 82, French philosopher.
- Corinne Rey-Bellet, 33, Swiss Alpine skier, shot dead.
- William (Bill) Roberts, 105, British First World War veteran.
- Moshe Shmuel Shapiro, 88, Belarusian-born rabbi and Rosh Yeshiva of Yeshivas Be'er Yaakov in Israel.
- Paul Spiegel, 68, German chairman of the Central Council of German Jews, natural causes.
- Pramoedya Ananta Toer, 81, Indonesian writer.
- Beatriz Sheridan, 71, Mexican actress and director.