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Tuesday, 28 December 2010

Passing on: notable deaths of 2010

28 December 2010 - 06H22

Tsutomu Yamaguchi, who survived not only the US atomic bombing of Hiroshima but also that of Nagasaki and lived to testify. At age 93 in Nagasaki.
Tsutomu Yamaguchi, who survived not only the US atomic bombing of Hiroshima but also that of Nagasaki and lived to testify. At age 93 in Nagasaki.
Black US jazz singer Lena Horne performing in the 1950s. Horne, who spoke out strongly for the civil rights movement, died at age 92 in New York on May 9.
Black US jazz singer Lena Horne performing in the 1950s. Horne, who spoke out strongly for the civil rights movement, died at age 92 in New York on May 9.
British actress Lynn Redgrave, died aged 63 of cancer at her home in the US state of Connecticut.
British actress Lynn Redgrave, died aged 63 of cancer at her home in the US state of Connecticut.
British punk rock icon Malcolm McLaren, founder of the group The Sex Pistols, who died aged 64 of cancer in Switzerland.
British punk rock icon Malcolm McLaren, founder of the group The Sex Pistols, who died aged 64 of cancer in Switzerland.
Oscar-winning US director Blake Edwards, who made the "Pink Panther" movies and the 1961 classic "Breakfast at Tiffany's," who died earlier in December at the age of 88.
Oscar-winning US director Blake Edwards, who made the "Pink Panther" movies and the 1961 classic "Breakfast at Tiffany's," who died earlier in December at the age of 88.

AFP - Noteworthy deaths during the year just ending:

January

- 4: Tsutomu Yamaguchi, who survived not only the US atomic bombing of Hiroshima but also that of Nagasaki and lived to testify. At age 93 in Nagasaki.

- 17: "Love Story" author Erich Segal of a heart attack in London at the age of 72.

- 27: American writer J. D. Salinger, author of "The Catcher in the Rye", at 91 at his home in New Hampshire.

February

- 11: British fashion designer Alexander McQueen, committed suicide in London at age 40.

- 20: Alexander Haig, US secretary of state under president Ronald Reagan, at age 85 in a Baltimore hospital.

March

- 12: Miguel Delibes, Spanish novelist and winner of the Cervantes Prize, at age 89.

April

- 8: British punk rock icon Malcolm McLaren, founder of the group The Sex Pistols. At age 64 of cancer in Switzerland.

- 10: Lech Kaczynski, president of Poland. Died aged 60 along with his wife and 94 others in a plane crash in Russia.

- 21: Juan Antonio Samaranch, Spaniard who presided the International Olympic Committee for 21 years. Died aged 89 in Barcelona.

May

- 3: British actress Lynn Redgrave, at age 63 of cancer at her home in the US state of Connecticut.

- 5: Umaru Yar'Adua, president of Nigeria. Died at age 58 after a long illness.

- 9: Black US jazz singer Lena Horne, who spoke out strongly for the civil rights movement, at age 92 in New York.

- 29: US film star Dennis Hopper, best known for his role in the film "Easy Rider". At age 74 in Los Angeles.

June

- 18: Jose Saramago: Portuguese novelist who won the Nobel Literature Prize in 1998. Died at age 87 in his home town of Lanzarote, on the Canary Islands.

- 25: Chinese painter Wu Guanzhong, a leading figure of the Cultural Revolution in the 1970s, at age 90 in a Beijing hospital.

July

- 19: David Warren, Australian who invented the "black box" flight recorder for aircraft in 1956. Died at age 85.

August

- 31: Laurent Fignon, popular French cyclist and two-time winner of the Tour de France, of cancer at age 50.

September

- 12: Claude Chabrol, prolific French new-wave film director, at age 80.

- 24: Gennady Yanayev, Russian politician who in 1991 led an abortive coup against then president Mikhail Gorbachev. At 73 in a Moscow hospital.

- 28: American film and stage director Arthur Penn, best known for the movie "Bonnie and Clyde", at age 88 in New York.

- 29: US film star Tony Curtis, who played opposite Marilyn Monroe in "Some Like it Hot". Died aged 85 at his home in Nevada.

October

- 4: Popular British comedian Norman Wisdom, at age 95 on the Isle of Man, where he lived.

- 10: Joan Sutherland, Australian opera singer who was one of the great sopranos of the 20th century, aged 83 at her home in Switzerland.

- 14: Benoit Mandelbrot, a French-American mathematician who explored a new class of mathematical shapes known as "fractals," aged 85 in Massachusetts.

- 27: Nestor Kirchner, former president of Argentina and husband of the current president, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner. Died aged 60 of a heart attack.

November

- 3: Viktor Chernomyrdin, Russian prime minister under Boris Yeltsin from 1992 to 1998. Died aged 72 after a long illness.

- 8: Admiral Emilio Massera, a leader of the dictatorship that ousted Argentinian president Isabel Peron in 1976. Died aged 85 while awaiting a second trial on charges of crimes against humanity.

- 10: Italian film producer Dino de Laurentiis, at age 91 in Los Angeles.

- 27: US director Irvin Kershner, renowned for making the second Star Wars film, "The Empire Strikes Back", in Los Angeles, aged 87.

December

- 3: Samuel Cohen, inventor of the neutron nuclear bomb which is supposed to kill humans and leave buildings standing, at age 89 in Los Angeles.

- 14: Veteran US diplomat Richard Holbrooke, best known for brokering the 1995 peace agreement that ended three years of war in Bosnia. Died at age 69 after heart surgery.

- 15: Oscar-winning US director Blake Edwards, who made the "Pink Panther" movies and the 1961 classic "Breakfast at Tiffany's," at the age of 88.

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