The following is a list of notable deaths in April 2018.

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 2018

1

  • Amsale Aberra, 64, Ethiopian-born American fashion designer, uterine cancer.
  • Françoise Adret, 97, French ballerina and choreographer.
  • Bob Beattie, 85, American skiing coach (national team) and sports commentator (ABC Sports, ESPN).
  • Steven Bochco, 74, American television producer and writer (Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law, NYPD Blue), 10-time Emmy winner, leukemia.
  • Gil Brealey, 85, Australian film director and producer (Sunday Too Far Away, Annie's Coming Out).
  • Ricardo Pedro Chaves Pinto Filho, 79, Brazilian Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Leopoldina (1990–1996) and Archbishop of Pouso Alegre (1996–2014).
  • Foster Diebold, 85, American academic, President of the University of Alaska system (1977–1979) and Edinboro University of Pennsylvania (1979–1996).
  • Edward Digby, 12th Baron Digby, 93, British peer and Army officer.
  • Gabriel Dover, 80, British geneticist, chest infection.
  • Robert F. Gatje, 90, American architect, stroke.
  • Kazimierz Gierżod, 81, Polish pianist.
  • Michiko Hirayama, 94, Japanese singer.
  • Almerindo Jaka Jamba, 69, Angolan politician and rebel leader (UNITA), stroke.
  • Etelka Keserű, 92, Hungarian politician, Minister of Light Industry (1971–1980).
  • Audrey Morris, 89, American jazz singer and pianist.
  • Brian Moynahan, 77, British journalist and historian.
  • Vladimir Nakoryakov, 82, Russian physicist, absorptive heat pump theorist.
  • Jocelyn Newman, 80, Australian politician, Senator for Tasmania (1986–2002), Minister for Social Security (1996–1998) and Family and Community Services (1998–2001), Alzheimer's disease.
  • Aimo Nieminen, 77, Finnish Olympic weightlifter.
  • John Pretlove, 85, English cricketer (Kent).
  • C. V. Rajendran, 81, Indian film director.
  • Wilfrid Rall, 95, American neuroscientist.
  • Efraín Ríos Montt, 91, Guatemalan military officer and politician, President (1982–1983), heart attack.
  • Avichai Rontzki, 66, Israeli general, Chief Military Rabbi of the Israel Defence Forces (2006–2010), colorectal cancer.
  • Michel Sénéchal, 91, French tenor.
  • Ruth Sonntag Nussenzweig, 89, Austrian-Brazilian immunologist.
  • Scott Sowers, 54, American actor (Cracker, Erin Brockovich, Money Train), heart attack.
  • Efraín Trelles, 64, Peruvian historian of Spanish colonialism and sports commentator, heart attack.
  • Julia Vargas-Weise, 76, Bolivian photographer, screenwriter, and film director (Sealed Cargo).

2

  • Susan Anspach, 75, American actress (Five Easy Pieces, Play It Again, Sam, Blume in Love), heart failure.
  • Clyde Billington Jr., 83, American politician, member of the Connecticut House of Representatives (1971–1979).
  • P. L. Thibaut Brian, 87, American chemical engineer.
  • Wes Buller, 89, American football coach.
  • Alton Ford, 36, American basketball player (Phoenix Suns, Houston Rockets), lymphoma.
  • Anthony Freeman, 29, American Roman Catholic religious brother and author, dilated cardiomyopathy.
  • Sara Ginaite, 94, Lithuanian-born Canadian author and resistance fighter.
  • Morris Halle, 94, Latvian-born American linguist.
  • Claus Heß, 84, German Olympic rower (1956).
  • Michael M. T. Henderson, 75-76, American linguist.
  • Evert Kroon, 71, Dutch water polo player, Olympic bronze medalist (1976).
  • Tuiloma Pule Lameko, 83, Samoan politician.
  • Connie Lawn, 73, American journalist, longest-serving White House correspondent, Parkinson's disease.
  • Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, 81, South African anti-apartheid activist and politician, MP (since 2009), complications of diabetes.
  • Ahmed Janka Nabay, 54, Sierra Leonean Bubu musician.
  • Elie Onana, 66, Cameroonian footballer (Canon Yaoundé, national team).
  • Bill Rademacher, 75, American football player (New York Jets, New England Patriots, Northern Michigan Wildcats).
  • Bo Rather, 67, American football player (Chicago Bears, Miami Dolphins).
  • Laura Roslof, 69, American illustrator (Dungeons & Dragons).
  • Bill Royer, 88, American politician.
  • Fufi Santori, 85, Puerto Rican Olympic basketball player (1960) and writer.
  • Paul Sinibaldi, 96, French footballer (Reims).
  • Burton Smith, 77, American computer scientist, complications from heart disease.
  • Ahmed Khaled Tawfik, 55, Egyptian novelist.
  • Wilbur Ternyik, 92, American civic leader and politician.
  • Minoru Uchida, 91, Japanese actor (Royal Space Force: The Wings of Honnêamise).
  • Bhai Vaidya, 89, Indian politician.
  • Velga Vīlipa, 78, Latvian actress.

3

  • Bujari Ahmed, 65, Sahrawi diplomat and independentism leader, Permanent Representative of Polisario to the UN (since 1992).
  • Ron Dunbar, 78, American songwriter ("Give Me Just a Little More Time", "Band of Gold", "Patches"), Grammy winner (1971).
  • David Edgerton, 90, American entrepreneur, co-founder of Burger King, complications from surgery.
  • David J. Foulis, 87, American mathematician.
  • Seymour Glanzer, 91, American lawyer.
  • Pam Golding, 89, South African real estate developer.
  • Eugene M. Grant, 99, American real estate mogul.
  • Mary Hatcher, 88, American actress (The Big Wheel), bile duct cancer.
  • Dale Haupt, 88, American football coach (Chicago Bears, Philadelphia Eagles).
  • Kelly Lai Chen, 84, Hong Kong actor.
  • Lill-Babs, 80, Swedish singer ("En tuff brud i lyxförpackning", "Är du kär i mej ännu Klas-Göran?") and actress, cancer and heart failure.
  • Hashem Mahameed, 73, Israeli politician, member of Knesset (1990–2003).
  • Stuart Matchett, 67, Australian broadcaster, cancer.
  • Charles McDew, 79, American civil rights activist.
  • Howard T. Owens Jr., 83, American politician and judge.
  • Arrigo Petacco, 88, Italian journalist and writer.
  • Irma Rapuzzi, 107, French politician.
  • Jacques Tixier, 93, French archaeologist and prehistorian.
  • Zollie Toth, 94, American football player (New York Yanks, Dallas Texans, Baltimore Colts).
  • Tomas Villa, 34, Mexican boxer, traffic collision.
  • Leonard Gilchrist Wilson, 89, Canadian-born American science historian.
  • Noela Young, 88, Australian illustrator (The Muddle-Headed Wombat, Finders Keepers).

4

  • Ignatius Peter VIII Abdalahad, 87, Syrian Syriac Catholic hierarch, Patriarch of Antioch and all the East (2001–2008).
  • Andres Ammas, 56, Estonian politician.
  • David Bonetti, 71, American art critic.
  • Burt Boyar, 90, American voice actor (Archie Andrews) and author.
  • Don Cherry, 94, American singer ("Band of Gold") and golfer.
  • Elton Georges, 74, British Virgin Islands politician, Deputy Governor (1983–2003, 2007–2008).
  • Gertrude Jeannette, 103, American actress (Shaft).
  • Li Zhengyou, 82, Chinese agronomist and politician, Vice-Governor of Yunnan Province.
  • John Lynch, 91, British historian of Latin America.
  • C. Shannon Mallory, 81, American Anglican prelate, Bishop of Botswana (1972–1978) and El Camino Real (1980–1990), leukemia.
  • Tom Morrow, 79, American football player (Oakland Raiders).
  • Jim Nielsen, 79, Canadian politician, MLA (1975–1986).
  • Soon-Tek Oh, 85, South Korean-American actor (The Man with the Golden Gun, Mulan, M*A*S*H), Alzheimer's disease.
  • Jonathan Pitre, 17, Canadian advocate for raising awareness of epidermolysis bullosa, complications from septic shock.
  • Stuart Pottasch, 86, American astronomer.
  • Raobail, 80, Indian cartoonist.
  • Joaquín del Real, 76, Spanish Olympic rower.
  • Leonid Sokov, 76, Russian artist and sculptor.
  • Johnny Valiant, 71, American Hall of Fame professional wrestler (The Valiant Brothers) and manager (WWF, AWA), traffic collision.
  • Clément Vincent, 86, Canadian politician, MP (1962–1966).
  • Ron White, 64, Canadian actor (Copper, Unforgiven, Republic of Doyle), cancer.
  • Ray Wilkins, 61, English football player (Chelsea, Manchester United) and manager (Queens Park Rangers), heart attack.

5

  • Yuri Abramochkin, 81, Russian photographer and photojournalist.
  • Grady Alderman, 79, American football player (Minnesota Vikings).
  • Eric Bristow, 60, English Hall of Fame darts player, world champion (1980, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1986), heart attack.
  • George Bryanchaninov, 98, Russian-Australian priest in the Russian Greek Catholic Church.
  • Cynthia Chalk, 104, Canadian photographer.
  • Charles de Chassiron, 69, British diplomat, cancer.
  • Geoffrey M. Footner, 94, American maritime historian, heart failure.
  • Cola Franzen, 95, American writer and translator.
  • Dieter Freise, 73, German field hockey player, Olympic champion (1972).
  • Lars Hall, 79, Swedish advertiser and art director.
  • Ajith Kollam, 55, Indian actor, stomach illness.
  • Jun Morinaga, 80, Japanese photographer.
  • Tim O'Connor, 90, American actor (Peyton Place, General Hospital, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century), cancer.
  • Bolette Sutermeister Petri, 97, Danish-Swiss travel writer. (death announced on this date)
  • Jim Pietrzak, 65, American football player (New York Giants, New Orleans Saints, Kansas City Chiefs).
  • Branislav Pokrajac, 71, Serbian handball player, Olympic champion (1972).
  • Frederick D. Reese, 88, American civil rights activist.
  • Saw O Moo, 42–43, Burmese environmental activist, shot.
  • Mete Sozen, 87, Turkish-born American structural engineer.
  • Isao Takahata, 82, Japanese film director, producer and screenwriter (Grave of the Fireflies, Only Yesterday, The Tale of the Princess Kaguya), co-founder of Studio Ghibli, lung cancer.
  • Cecil Taylor, 89, American jazz pianist and poet.
  • Jaime Thorne León, 74, Peruvian politician, Minister of Defense (2010–2011).
  • Irina Tokmakova, 89, Russian writer.
  • Raymonde Vergauwen, 90, Belgian Olympic swimmer (1952).

6

  • Daniel Akaka, 93, American educator and politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Hawaii's 2nd district (1977–1990) and Senate (1990–2013), organ failure.
  • Daniel Chavarría, 84, Uruguayan-born Cuban author.
  • Dorothy Garlock, 98, American historical romance author.
  • Aby Gartmann, 87, Swiss Olympic bobsledder.
  • Billy Gustafsson, 70, Swedish politician, MP (2002–2014).
  • Jacques Higelin, 77, French pop singer.
  • Raj Kishore, 85, Indian actor (Sholay), heart attack.
  • Aleksandr Kurlovich, 56, Belarusian weightlifter, Olympic champion (1988, 1992).
  • Senteni Masango, 37, Swazi royal, 8th wife of Mswati III of Eswatini.
  • Donald McKayle, 87, American dancer and choreographer (The Great White Hope, Bedknobs and Broomsticks, The Jazz Singer).
  • Colin McLeod, 96, New Zealand civil engineer, Commissioner of Works (1973–1981).
  • Yaser Murtaja, 30, Palestinian journalist, shot.
  • Pavol Paška, 60, Slovak politician, MP (since 2002), Speaker of the Slovak National Council (2006–2010, 2012–2014).
  • Acácio Pereira Magro, 85, Portuguese politician, economist and academic, Minister of Social Affairs (1978–1979) and Commerce and Tourism (1979–1980).
  • Mary Lou Sallee, 87, American politician.
  • Henryk Skolimowski, 87, Polish philosopher.
  • Lewis Van Bergen, 79, American actor (Bugsy, Sable).
  • Edla Van Steen, 81, Brazilian playwright, actress and journalist.
  • Ted Washburn, 75, American Olympic rower.
  • Urbano Zea, 49, Mexican Olympic swimmer (1988), heart attack.

7

  • Brigitte Ahrenholz, 65, German rower, Olympic champion (1976). (body discovered on this date)
  • Ai Xing, 93, Chinese mechanical engineer, member of the Chinese Academy of Engineering.
  • Agni Vlavianos Arvanitis, 82, American biologist.
  • Gerald Ayres, 82, American studio executive (Columbia Pictures) and film producer (The Last Detail, Cisco Pike), complications from dementia.
  • Munin Barua, 71, Indian film director.
  • John D. Biggers, 94–95, British biologist and physiologist.
  • Petr Braiko, 98, Soviet soldier, Hero of the Soviet Union.
  • Petr Černý, 84, Czechoslovak-born Canadian mineralogist.
  • Francisco D'Alessandri, 87, Argentine Olympic equestrian.
  • Eric England, 84, American sniper.
  • Peter Grünberg, 78, German physicist, co-discoverer of giant magnetoresistance, Nobel Prize laureate (2007).
  • Robert C. Hicks, 91, American football player and coach.
  • Gerd Honsik, 76, Austrian writer and Holocaust denier.
  • Ed Kissell, 88, American football player (Pittsburgh Steelers).
  • Koichi, 37, Japanese kickboxer, traffic collision.
  • Li Zhen, 93, Chinese politician, Chairman of the Shandong People's Congress (1985–1996).
  • Samuel B. McKinney, 91, American civil rights activist and pastor.
  • Ángel Peralta Pineda, 92, Spanish rejoneador, respiratory failure.
  • Božidar Smiljanić, 81, Croatian actor.
  • Wang Wusheng, 73, Chinese photographer.

8

  • Leila Abashidze, 88, Georgian actress (Keto and Kote), film director and screenwriter, stroke.
  • Tate Adams, 96, Northern Irish-born Australian printmaker.
  • António Barros, 68, Portuguese footballer (Benfica, national team).
  • William Sperry Beinecke, 103, American philanthropist.
  • Nathan Davis, 81, American jazz musician.
  • Michael Goolaerts, 23, Belgian racing cyclist, heart attack.
  • Juraj Herz, 83, Czech film director, actor, writer and scenic designer.
  • Barbora Horáčková, 49, Czech Olympic archer (2008).
  • Efraín Jara Idrovo, 92, Ecuadorian writer and existentialist poet, Premio Eugenio Espejo (1999).
  • Viacheslav Koleichuk, 77, Russian sound artist.
  • Fjodor Koltšin, 61, Estonian Olympic skier (1980).
  • Sir Peter Le Cheminant, 97, British air chief marshal, Lieutenant Governor of Guernsey (1980–1985).
  • André Lerond, 87, French footballer (Lyon, Stade Français, national team).
  • Chuck McCann, 83, American voice actor (DuckTales, G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero, Fantastic Four), heart failure.
  • Joe McConnell, 79, American sports announcer (Minnesota Vikings, Indiana Pacers, Chicago White Sox).
  • John Miles, 74, British racing driver, complications from a stroke.
  • Gunnar Persson, 84, Swedish cartoonist.
  • Guy Lyon Playfair, 83, British author and paranormal researcher.
  • Óscar Saavedra San Martín, 77, Bolivian physicist, astrophysicist and academic.

9

  • Fredy Brupbacher, 83, Swiss Olympic alpine skier.
  • Felix Chen, 75, Taiwanese conductor.
  • Pierre Descoteaux, 66, Canadian lawyer and politician.
  • Liam Devally, 85, Irish singer, television presenter and lawyer.
  • Barney A. Ebsworth, 83, American business executive (Build-A-Bear Workshop) and art collector.
  • James Endres, 86, American politician.
  • Jonathan M. Hess, 52, American philologist, aneurysm.
  • Dewey Martin, 94, American actor (The Big Sky, Land of the Pharaohs, Ten Thousand Bedrooms).
  • Jigjidiin Mönkhbat, 76, Mongolian wrestler, Olympic silver medalist (1968).
  • Gerard S. Naples, 80, American politician.
  • Ira Philip, 92, Bermudian writer and politician.
  • Silviniaco Conti, 12, French racehorse, team chasing accident.
  • Kimberly G. Smith, 69, American biologist.
  • Ruth Stewart, 101, American operatic soprano.
  • Felipe Tejeda García, 83, Mexican Roman Catholic prelate, Auxiliary Bishop of México (2000–2010).
  • Edward Von der Porten, 84, American scholar.
  • Rob Walton, 69, Canadian ice hockey player (Minnesota Fighting Saints, Vancouver Blazers, Calgary Cowboys).

10

  • Peter Bayley, 73, British scholar.
  • Alex Beckett, 35, English actor (Twenty Twelve, W1A, I Live with Models), suicide by hanging.
  • Danarto, 76, Indonesian writer and artist.
  • John Dlugos, 89, Canadian football player (Edmonton Eskimos).
  • F'Murr, 72, French comics artist (Le Génie des alpages).
  • Samir Gharbo, 93, Egyptian Olympic water polo player (1948, 1952).
  • Viliam Karmažin, 95, Slovak composer and conductor.
  • Andre de Krayewski, 84, Polish-American graphic artist.
  • John Lambie, 77, Scottish football player (Falkirk, St Johnstone) and manager (Partick Thistle).
  • Li Dawei, 47, Chinese director (The Story of a Noble Family), intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma.
  • Li Yaowen, 99, Chinese admiral and diplomat, Political Commissar of the PLA Navy (1980–1990).
  • Jean Marzollo, 75, American children's author (I Spy).
  • J. D. McClatchy, 72, American poet, cancer.
  • Fergie McCormick, 78, New Zealand rugby union player (Canterbury, national team), throat cancer.
  • Richard Muth, 90, American economist, gallbladder cancer.
  • Alastair Rellie, 83, British intelligence officer.
  • Matthew Stark, 88, American civil rights activist.
  • Sauro Tomà, 92, Italian football player (Torino F.C.).
  • Wu Nansheng, 95, Chinese politician, party chief of Shenzhen.
  • Yang Gui, 89, Chinese politician, chief designer of the Red Flag Canal.

11

  • Gillian Ayres, 88, British abstract artist.
  • Jim Caine, 91, Manx jazz pianist and radio presenter.
  • Karen Dawisha, 68, American political scientist and writer (Putin's Kleptocracy), lung cancer.
  • Bruce M. Fischer, 82, American actor (Escape from Alcatraz, The Outlaw Josey Wales).
  • Mary Giles, 73, American fiber artist, ovarian cancer.
  • Jumana El Husseini, 86, Palestinian artist.
  • Li Tian, 79, Chinese physicist and aircraft designer.
  • Tania Lineham, 52, New Zealand educator, complications from primary sclerosing cholangitis.
  • Jorge Lozada Stanbury, 87, Peruvian agricultural engineer and politician, Member of the Congress (1963–1965), constituent deputy (1978–1980) and Speaker of the Senate (1988).
  • Aimo Mäenpää, 81, Finnish Olympic wrestler.
  • Robert Matthews, 56, British athlete, Paralympic champion (1984, 1988, 1992, 2000), brain tumor.
  • Patrick F. McManus, 84, American writer.
  • Mauro Panaggio, 90, American basketball coach (SUNY Brockport, Rochester Zeniths, Quad City Thunder).
  • Polixeni Papapetrou, 57, Australian photographer, breast cancer.
  • Phillip Pipersburg, 62, Belizean Olympic sprinter.
  • Theo Ramos, 89, Spanish-born British painter.
  • André Richer, 90, Brazilian Olympic rower.
  • Michael Schlesinger, 75, American climatologist.
  • Jean-Claude Servan-Schreiber, 100, French politician and journalist, MP (1965–1967).
  • Mitzi Shore, 87, American comedy club owner (The Comedy Store), Parkinson's disease.
  • Zola Skweyiya, 75, South African politician, Minister of Public Service and Administration (1994–1999) and Social Development (1999–2009), High Commissioner to the UK (2009–2014).
  • Carmen Stănescu, 92, Romanian actress, cardiopulmonary arrest.
  • Alexander Welsh, 84, American literary scholar.
  • Kevin Wortman, 49, American ice hockey player (Calgary Flames, JYP Jyväskylä, Schwenninger Wild Wings).

12

  • Gyula Babos, 68, Hungarian jazz guitarist.
  • Heinrich Brändli, 79, Swiss engineer.
  • Giuliano Cenci, 86, Italian animated film director (The Adventures of Pinocchio), injuries due to a fall.
  • Naseem Mirza Changezi, 108, Indian independence activist.
  • Ronald Chesney, 97, British comedy screenwriter (On the Buses, The Rag Trade, Romany Jones).
  • Deborah Coleman, 61, American blues musician, complications from bronchitis and pneumonia.
  • Stuart Devlin, 86, Australian goldsmith.
  • Spas Dzhurov, 73, Bulgarian Olympic decathlete.
  • Irwin Gage, 78, American pianist.
  • Carlos Enrique Gómez Centurión, 93, Argentine politician, geologist and diplomat, Governor of San Juan (1971–1973, 1987–1991).
  • Hu Chengzhi, 100, Chinese palaeontologist and palaeoanthropologist, discoverer of Keichousaurus.
  • Rafael Grossman, 84, American rabbi.
  • Brij Bhushan Kabra, 81, Indian classical slide guitar player (Call of the Valley).
  • Juozas Karvelis, 83, Lithuanian politician, co-signatory of the Act of the Re-Establishment.
  • Zoran Krasić, 62, Serbian politician, Minister of Trade (1998–2000).
  • Alan Lloyd, 91, British writer and journalist.
  • Oliver Lozano, 77, Filipino lawyer and politician.
  • Nestor Mata, 92, Filipino journalist.
  • John Melcher, 93, American politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Montana's 2nd district (1969–1977) and Senate (1977–1989).
  • Mark Merrill, 62, American football player (New York Jets, Denver Broncos, Buffalo Bills).
  • Neil Nugent, 91, British field hockey player, Olympic bronze medalist (1952).
  • Len Okrie, 94, American baseball player and coach (Washington Senators, Boston Red Sox).
  • Bob Pickens, 75, American wrestler and football player (Chicago Bears).
  • Sergio Pitol, 85, Mexican novelist and translator, Miguel de Cervantes Prize (2005), aphasia.
  • Dame Daphne Sheldrick, 83, Kenyan-British conservationist, breast cancer.
  • Włodzimierz Smoliński, 80, Polish Olympic wrestler.
  • Kiyoko Takeda, 100, Japanese scholar.

13

  • Yogesh Atal, 80, Indian sociologist.
  • Art Bell, 72, American author (The Coming Global Superstorm) and radio host (Coast to Coast AM, Art Bell's Dark Matter), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
  • Zbigniew Bujarski, 84, Polish composer.
  • Cesarino Cervellati, 88, Italian football player and manager (Bologna).
  • Ron Cooper, 79, English footballer (Peterborough United).
  • Isa Degener, 93, German-born American plant collector and botanist.
  • Barrie Dexter, 96, Australian diplomat and public servant.
  • J. Harold Ellens, 84, American psychologist and theologian.
  • Walter Fink, 87, German entrepreneur and music patron.
  • Miloš Forman, 86, Czech-American film director (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Amadeus, The People vs. Larry Flynt), Oscar winner (1976, 1985).
  • Joy Laville, 94, English-Mexican artist, National Prize for Arts and Sciences (2012).
  • André Maman, 90, French politician and Romance philologist, Senator (1992–2001).
  • Graeme Mitchison, 73, English mathematician.
  • William Nack, 77, American journalist (Newsday, Sports Illustrated) and author.
  • Tata Subba Rao, 75–76, Indian-born British statistician.
  • Lidia Redondo de Lucas, 52, Spanish librist and politician, Senator (2005–2008).
  • Jesús Rodríguez, 84, Spanish Olympic weightlifter.
  • Marc Rowell, 80, Australian politician, member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly for Hinchinbrook (1989–2006).
  • Clive Stanbrook, 70, British barrister.
  • Joan Staniswalis, 60, American statistician.
  • Fernando Tamayo Tamayo, 68, Colombian economist and politician, MP (1994–2010) and Senator (since 2010), cancer.
  • Owen Webster, 89, American chemist.
  • Gus Weill, 85, American political writer and strategist.

14

  • Rajendra Bhalekar, 66, Indian cricketer, multiple organ failure.
  • Isabella Biagini, 74, Italian actress (Love Italian Style, Il clan dei due Borsalini, The Future Is Woman), complications from a stroke.
  • Colin Bland, 80, South African cricketer (national team).
  • Stewart M. Brandborg, 93, American conservation activist.
  • Frank Bren, 74, Australian actor and playwright.
  • David Buckel, 60, American LGBT rights lawyer, suicide by self-immolation.
  • Daedra Charles, 49, American basketball player (Los Angeles Sparks), Olympic bronze medalist (1992).
  • Hal Greer, 81, American Hall of Fame basketball player (Philadelphia 76ers), NBA champion (1967).
  • Sam Hamill, 74, American poet and publisher.
  • Michael D. Healy, 91, American military officer.
  • Robert Holmes, 72, American football player (Kansas City Chiefs, Houston Oilers).
  • Ram Kumar, 93, Indian artist.
  • Jean-Claude Malgoire, 77, French conductor.
  • Jon Michelet, 73, Norwegian author (Orion's Belt), cancer.
  • Gerald Nachman, 80, American journalist and author.
  • Roger G. Newton, 93, German-born American physicist.
  • Stan Reynolds, 92, British jazz musician.
  • Armando Salgado, 80, Mexican photographer and photojournalist (Corpus Christi massacre), pancreatic cancer.
  • Neil Shand, 84, British comedy writer (Q..., The Russ Abbot Show) and journalist (Daily Mail).
  • Kirk Simon, 63, American documentarian (Strangers No More, Chimps: So Like Us, Rehearsing a Dream), Oscar winner (2011), cardiac arrest.
  • André Sterling, 94, Belgian civil engineer.
  • Frank Varga, 74, Hungarian-born American sculptor, cancer.

15

  • Shirley Barrie, 72, Canadian writer.
  • Hadassa Ben-Itto, 91, Polish-born Israeli judge and writer.
  • Maksim Borodin, 32-33, Russian journalist, complications after falling from his fifth-floor balcony.
  • Bob Braden, 84, American computer scientist.
  • Rinaldo Fidel Brédice, 85, Argentine Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Santa Rosa (1992–2008).
  • Philip D'Antoni, 89, American film producer (The French Connection, Bullitt, The Seven-Ups), Oscar winner (1972).
  • Frank Drowota, 79, American judge, Chief Justice of the Tennessee Supreme Court (1989–1990; 2000–2005).
  • R. Lee Ermey, 74, American actor (Full Metal Jacket, Mississippi Burning, Toy Story) and military drill instructor, complications from pneumonia.
  • Michael Halliday, 93, English-born Australian linguist.
  • Beatrix Hamburg, 94, American psychiatrist, Alzheimer's disease.
  • Frank Heiss, 46, American electronic record producer.
  • Luise Hercus, 92, German-born Australian linguist.
  • Judy Kennedy, 73, American politician, Mayor of Newburgh, New York (since 2012), ovarian cancer.
  • Kenneth Matiba, 85, Kenyan politician, MP (1972–1990, 1992–1997).
  • Boki Milošević, 86, Serbian clarinetist.
  • Miriam Naveira, 83, Puerto Rican jurist, first woman Associate Justice (1985–2003) and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (2003–2004).
  • George Oster, 77, American biologist.
  • Domenico Pittella, 86, Italian politician, Senator (1972–1983), complications from a broken hip.
  • Edward Diego Reyes, 88, Guamanian politician, Lieutenant Governor of Guam (1983–1987).
  • Neena Schwartz, 91, American endocrinologist.
  • Waqar Ahmad Shah, 74, Indian politician, MLA (1993–2017).
  • Frank Skartados, 62, Greek-born American politician, member of the New York State Assembly (2009–2010, since 2012), pancreatic cancer.
  • Vittorio Taviani, 88, Italian film director (Padre Padrone, Kaos, Caesar Must Die).
  • Raquel Trindade, 81, Brazilian artist, folklorist, and writer, complications from surgery.
  • Tüvdiin Tserendondov, 83, Mongolian Olympic sport shooter.
  • Stefano Zappalà, 77, Italian politician, MEP (1999–2009), respiratory failure.
  • H. Dieter Zeh, 85, German theoretical physicist.

16

  • Harry Anderson, 65, American actor (Night Court, Dave's World, It) and magician, stroke.
  • Gustav Victor Rudolf Born, 96, German-born British pharmacologist.
  • Vic Bubas, 91, American college basketball coach (Duke Blue Devils).
  • Carlos Chasseing, 91, Argentine politician, De facto Federal Interventor of Córdoba (1976–1979).
  • Choi Eun-hee, 91, South Korean actress (The Lovers and the Despot).
  • Florea Dumitrescu, 91, Romanian politician and diplomat, Minister of Finance (1969–1978), Governor of the National Bank (1984–1989).
  • Sir Roger Elliott, 89, British theoretical physicist.
  • Beverley Farmer, 77, Australian novelist and short story writer.
  • Giant's Causeway, 21, American racehorse and sire.
  • Pamela Gidley, 52, American actress (The Pretender, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation) and model.
  • Earl B. Gustafson, 90, American judge and politician, member of the Minnesota House of Representatives (1963–1967, 1969–1971), dementia.
  • Fred Haberlein, 73, American artist.
  • Ken Hottman, 69, American baseball player (Chicago White Sox).
  • Henri Landwirth, 91, Belgian hotelier and philanthropist, founder of Give Kids the World Village.
  • Dona Ivone Lara, 97, Brazilian singer and composer.
  • Robert M. Lindholm, 82, American photographer.
  • Lü Chuanzan, 85, Chinese politician, Chairman of Hebei Provincial People's Congress (1993–1998).
  • Ivan Mauger, 78, New Zealand motorcycle speedway rider, world champion (1968, 1969, 1970, 1972, 1977, 1979).
  • Matthew Mellon, 54, American billionaire investor, heart attack.
  • Napsiah Omar, 74, Malaysian politician, liver cancer.
  • Alejandro Rojas Wainer, 73, Chilean politician and academic, President of University of Chile Student Federation (1970–1973) and deputy (1973).
  • Richard Rothstein, 74-75, American screenwriter (Universal Soldier, Bates Motel) and television producer (The Hitchhiker).
  • Sax Man, 65, American street saxophonist.
  • George N. Skene, 92, American politician.
  • Paul Singer, 86, Austrian-born Brazilian economist, co-founder of Partido dos Trabalhadores.
  • Lynn A. Stout, 60, American legal scholar, cancer.
  • Rein Tölp, 76, Estonian Olympic middle-distance runner (1964).
  • Martin J. Whitman, 93, American investment advisor.

17

  • John Amirante, 83, American anthem singer (New York Rangers).
  • Rosemary Bamforth, 93, British pathologist and code breaker.
  • Big Tom, 81, Irish country music singer.
  • Barbara Bush, 92, American political matriarch and literacy advocate, First Lady (1989–1993) and Second Lady (1981–1989), complications from COPD and heart failure.
  • Joan Chase, 81, American novelist.
  • Gérard Desanghere, 70, Belgian footballer (R.S.C. Anderlecht, R.W.D. Molenbeek).
  • Ken Dolan, 75, American journalist and broadcaster, cancer.
  • Dick Fichtner, 78, American college basketball coach (Occidental Tigers, Pacific Tigers).
  • David Edward Foley, 88, American Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Birmingham (1994–2005), bone cancer.
  • Peter Guidi, 68, Italian jazz saxophonist and flutist, Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease.
  • Marcia Hafif, 88, American artist.
  • Carl Kasell, 84, American radio journalist (Morning Edition) and quiz show judge (Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!), complications from Alzheimer's disease.
  • Amoroso Katamsi, 79, Indonesian actor (Pengkhianatan G30S/PKI).
  • Nils Malmer, 89, Swedish ecologist.
  • Richard Oldenburg, 84, Swedish museum curator, Director of the Museum of Modern Art (1972–1995).
  • Vel Phillips, 94, American attorney and politician, Secretary of State of Wisconsin (1979–1983).
  • Philibert Randriambololona, 90, Malagasy Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Antsirabe (1989–1992) and Archbishop of Fianarantsoa (1992–2002).
  • Karl Rawer, 104, German physicist.
  • Judith Révész, 102, Hungarian-Dutch potter and sculptor.
  • Randy Scruggs, 64, American music producer, songwriter ("Angel in Disguise", "Love Has No Right", "We Danced Anyway") and guitarist, multiple Grammy winner.
  • T. V. R. Shenoy, 76, Indian journalist (Malayala Manorama).
  • Maurice Sion, 90, Yugoslav-born American-Canadian mathematician.

18

  • Karl Wolfgang Boer, 92, German-born American physicist.
  • Robert F. Chapman, 91, American judge.
  • Kevin Colson, 80, Australian actor.
  • Frank B. Dilley, 86, American philosopher.
  • Sir Clive Elliott, 72, British ornithologist and civil servant, cancer.
  • Jean Flori, 82, French medieval historian.
  • Grigory Gamarnik, 88, Soviet-born Ukrainian Olympic wrestler (1960).
  • Jerry Green, 79, American politician, member of the New Jersey General Assembly (since 1992).
  • Tsuyoshi Hiroshige, 70, Japanese martial artist.
  • John Hope, 47, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates).
  • Paul Jones, 75, American professional wrestler and manager (JCP, PNW, CWF).
  • Joan Konner, 87, American academic and journalist, Dean of the Columbia School of Journalism, leukemia.
  • George Lefferts, 96, American television writer.
  • Luisa Pastor Lillo, 69, Spanish politician, President of Province of Alicante (2011–2015) and Mayor of Sant Vicent del Raspeig (2001–2015), cancer.
  • Howard Sachar, 90, American historian.
  • Bruno Sammartino, 82, Italian-American Hall of Fame professional wrestler (WWWF), longest-reigning Heavyweight Champion (1963–1971, 1973–1977), multiple organ failure.
  • Joël Santoni, 74, French film director (Scrambled Eggs) and screenwriter.
  • Willibald Sauerländer, 94, German art historian.
  • Henk Schouten, 86, Dutch footballer (Feyenoord, national team).
  • James Whelan, 81, American politician, member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1974–1976).
  • Jeanne Wilson, 92, American Olympic swimmer (1948).
  • Dale Winton, 62, English radio DJ and television presenter (Dale's Supermarket Sweep, Hole in the Wall, The National Lottery: In It to Win It).
  • Alphonse Yanghat, 70, Congolese Olympic sprinter.

19

  • Graciela Agudelo, 72, Mexican pianist and composer.
  • Allan M. Campbell, 88, American microbiologist.
  • John Carroll, 93, Irish labor union leader.
  • Evžen Čermák, 85, Czech Olympic alpine skier.
  • Dharam Pal Choudhary, 66, Indian politician, liver disease.
  • Stuart Colman, 73, English musician, record producer and broadcaster, cancer.
  • Sören Danielsson, 88, Swedish Olympic boxer.
  • John Duffie, 72, American baseball player (Los Angeles Dodgers).
  • Darrell Eastlake, 75, Australian television presenter and sports commentator (Nine Network), Alzheimer's disease and emphysema.
  • Arnold Eidslott, 91, Norwegian poet.
  • Christine Floss, 56, German-born American cosmochemist.
  • Pat Heenan, 80, American football player (Washington Redskins).
  • Joseph Hoover, 85, American actor (The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, Hell Is for Heroes, Stagecoach).
  • Cornelius Jakobs, 93, Estonian Russian Orthodox hierarch, Metropolitan Bishop of Tallinn and all Estonia (since 1992).
  • Zacharias Jimenez, 70, Filipino Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Pagadian (1994–2003) and Auxiliary Bishop of Butuan (2003–2009).
  • Donald C. Leidel, 90, American diplomat.
  • Soso Lorho, 79, Indian politician.
  • Vladimir Lyakhov, 76, Ukrainian-born Russian cosmonaut (Soyuz 32, Soyuz T-9, Soyuz TM-6).
  • Pepe Mediavilla, 77, Spanish voice actor.
  • Luis Montes Mieza, 68–69, Spanish anesthetist and pro-euthanasia activist, heart attack.
  • Walter Moody, 83, American convicted murderer, execution by lethal injection.
  • Herbert Pilch, 91, German linguist and celtologist.
  • Saleh Ali al-Sammad, 39, Yemeni politician, President of the Houthi Supreme Political Council (since 2016), air strike.
  • Gil Santos, 80, American sportscaster (New England Patriots, WBZ).
  • Mark Vallance, 72, British rock climber and mountaineer, complications from Parkinson's disease.
  • Agnès-Marie Valois, 103, French nun and World War II nurse.
  • Abraham Viruthakulangara, 74, Indian Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Khandwa (1977–1998) and Archbishop of Nagpur (since 1998).

20

  • George Alusik, 83, American baseball player (Kansas City Athletics, Detroit Tigers).
  • Avicii, 28, Swedish electronic musician, DJ and record producer ("Wake Me Up", "Hey Brother", "Levels"), suicide by exsanguination.
  • Roy Bentley, 93, English footballer (Chelsea, Fulham, national team).
  • Eddie Blackburn, 61, English footballer (Hull City, Hartlepool United, York City).
  • Earle Bruce, 87, American football coach (Ohio State), Alzheimer's disease.
  • Leopoldo Cantancio, 54, Filipino Olympic boxer (1984, 1988), Asian Games silver (1986) and bronze medalist (1990), traffic collision.
  • Khurshid Drabu, 72, Indian-born English judge and Muslim community leader.
  • Pedro Erquicia, 75, Spanish journalist.
  • Bob Gale, 84, English cricketer (Middlesex).
  • Anne Gibson, Baroness Gibson of Market Rasen, 77, British trade unionist and life peer.
  • Tom Jones, 87, Australian rules footballer (Carlton, Footscray).
  • Grace Jelagat Kipchoim, 56, Kenyan politician, member of the National Assembly (since 2013), cancer.
  • James Ajongo Mawut, 57, South Sudanese army commander.
  • Nie Bichu, 90, Chinese politician, mayor of Tianjin (1993–1998).
  • Jim Novak, 62, American comic book letterer (Avengers, Doctor Strange, Fantastic Four).
  • John Petercuskie, 93, American football coach (Dartmouth College, Princeton).
  • Rajinder Sachar, 94, Indian judge.
  • James F. Sirmons, 100, American broadcasting executive (CBS).
  • John Stride, 81, British actor (The Main Chance, The Omen, A Bridge Too Far).
  • Pavel Šrut, 78, Czech poet, writer and translator.
  • Al Swift, 82, American broadcaster and politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Washington's 2nd district (1979–1995), idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
  • John Waller, 77, American fight director.
  • Shane Yarran, 28, Australian footballer (Fremantle, Subiaco), suicide.
  • Charles Zwick, 91, American civil servant, Director of the Bureau of the Budget (1968–1969).

21

  • Fadi Mohammad al-Batsh, 35, Palestinian engineer and academic, shot.
  • Anwara Begum, 83, Bangladeshi academic and First Lady (2002–2009).
  • Zoran Bojović, 81–82, Serbian architect.
  • Robert M. Blakeman, 92, American politician, member of the New York State Assembly (1961–1966).
  • Pierre Ceyrac, 71, French politician, MEP (1989–1994).
  • Nina Doroshina, 83, Russian actress (Love and Pigeons).
  • William F. Dowd, 74, American politician, member of the New Jersey General Assembly.
  • Dee Hardison, 61, American football player (Buffalo Bills, New York Giants, San Diego Chargers).
  • Ron Hayter, 81, Canadian politician.
  • Robert Kates, 89, American geographer.
  • Firmin Le Bourhis, 67, French author, heart attack.
  • Neff Maiava, 93, American Samoan professional wrestler.
  • Jim Miceli, 83, American politician, member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (since 1977), heart attack.
  • Les Pearce, 94, Welsh rugby league player and coach (Halifax).
  • Desmond Saunders, 91, British film and television director.
  • Nelson Pereira dos Santos, 89, Brazilian filmmaker (Vidas Secas, How Tasty Was My Little Frenchman), liver cancer.
  • Nabi Tajima, 117, Japanese supercentenarian, world's oldest living person and last living verified person born in the 19th century.
  • Huguette Tourangeau, 79, Canadian operatic mezzo-soprano.
  • Verne Troyer, 49, American actor (Austin Powers, The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone), suicide by alcohol poisoning.
  • Paul Younger, 55, British hydrogeologist and environmental engineer.

22

  • Wakil Hussain Allahdad, 32, Afghan wrestler, bombing.
  • Keith Ashfield, 66, Canadian politician, MP (2008–2015) and MLA (1999–2008).
  • Demeter Bitenc, 95, Slovenian actor (Outsider).
  • Wiam Dahmani, 34, Moroccan singer and actress, heart attack.
  • Per K. Enge, 64, Norwegian-born American engineer.
  • Roy Haggerty, 58, English rugby league player (St Helens, Barrow).
  • Ken Hofmann, 95, American businessman and sports team owner (Oakland Athletics).
  • Richard Jenrette, 89, American investor (Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette), cancer.
  • Gary Jordan, 76, English rugby league footballer.
  • Nino Khurtsidze, 42, Georgian Grandmaster chess player, International Master (1999), cancer.
  • Dave Nelson, 73, American baseball player (Texas Rangers, Cleveland Indians) and broadcaster (Milwaukee Brewers), liver cancer.
  • Ivan Neumyvakin, 89, Russian physician.
  • Terence T. O'Malley, 73, American politician.
  • Balantrapu Rajanikanta Rao, 98, Indian writer, composer and musicologist.
  • Charlie Rice, 98, American jazz drummer.
  • Kona Schwenke, 25, American football player (Notre Dame Fighting Irish).
  • Hoyt Patrick Taylor Jr., 94, American politician, Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina (1969–1973).

23

  • Liri Belishova, 91, Albanian politician and resistance member during World War II.
  • Don Bustany, 89, American radio and television broadcaster (American Top 40).
  • Bennie Cunningham, 63, American football player (Pittsburgh Steelers), cancer.
  • Anne Dickson-Waiko, 67, Papua New Guinean historian and academic.
  • Haddon Donald, 101, New Zealand Army lieutenant colonel and politician, MP for Wairarapa (1963–1969).
  • Bob Dorough, 94, American pianist, singer and composer (Schoolhouse Rock!).
  • Don Hall, 78, Australian rules footballer (Carlton).
  • Lyall Hanson, 88, Canadian politician.
  • Isamu Imoto, 92, Japanese politician, Governor of Saga Prefecture (1991–2003).
  • Sachio Kinugasa, 71, Japanese baseball player, colon cancer.
  • Al Lavan, 71, American football player (Atlanta Falcons) and coach (Dallas Cowboys, Baltimore Ravens).
  • Gennady Leonov, 71, Russian mathematician and mechanic.
  • Béla Magyari, 68, Hungarian air force colonel (Hungarian Astronautical Society).
  • Patrick James McGlinchey, 89, Irish Roman Catholic missionary, myocardial infarction and kidney failure.
  • Jerrold Meinwald, 91, American chemist.
  • Donald O'Brien, 87, French-Irish actor.
  • Alice Provensen, 99, American children's illustrator and writer.
  • Arthur B. Rubinstein, 80, American film composer (WarGames, Stakeout, Lost in America), cancer.
  • Traudl Ruckser, 93, Austrian Olympic gymnast.
  • Bob Schermerhorn, 75, American college basketball coach (Riverside City Tigers, Southern Utah Thunderbirds, Arizona State Sun Devils).
  • Art Simmons, 92, American jazz pianist, stomach cancer.
  • Doreen Simmons, 85, British sumo wrestling commentator.
  • Arthur R.G. Solmssen, 89, American novelist.
  • Edward W. Tayler, 87, American literary scholar.
  • Henk Temming, 94, Dutch footballer (VV DOS).
  • Vladimír Weiss, 78, Slovak footballer (Inter Bratislava), Olympic silver medalist (1964).
  • Barrie Williams, 79, British football coach and manager (Sutton United).
  • Leland B. Yeager, 93, American economist.

24

  • Belal Chowdhury, 79, Bangladeshi poet.
  • Angelos Delivorrias, 80, Greek art historian and academic (University of Athens), Director of Benaki Museum (1973–2015) and member of the Academy of Athens (since 2016).
  • Rick Dickinson, 61, British industrial designer, cancer.
  • Arthur Eustace, 92, New Zealand sprinter, British Empire Games bronze medalist (1950), and sports administrator.
  • Victor Garaigordóbil Berrizbeitia, 102, Spanish Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Los Rios (1963–1982).
  • Dinu C. Giurescu, 91, Romanian historian.
  • Paul Gray, 54, Australian musician (Wa Wa Nee), myeloma.
  • Lee Howard, 94, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates).
  • Christine Jewitt, 91, Canadian baseball player (AAGPBL).
  • Anders Kvissberg, 89, Swedish Olympic sport shooter.
  • Ilja Matouš, 87, Czech Olympic cross-country skier (1956).
  • Henri Michel, 70, French football player (Nantes) and coach (national team).
  • Maria Oeyen, 87, Belgian Olympic swimmer.
  • Hariton Pushwagner, 77, Norwegian artist.
  • Marv Rackley, 96, American baseball player (Brooklyn Dodgers).
  • Susan Shadburne, 75, American screenwriter (The Adventures of Mark Twain) and film director Shadow Play).
  • Quentin Sickels, 91, American football player (Michigan Wolverines).
  • Leszek Skorupa, 66, Polish Olympic weightlifter.
  • Emma Smith, 94, English author (Maidens' Trip).
  • André Tarallo, 92, French businessman (Elf Aquitaine).
  • Susan Williams, 66, American marine biologist, traffic collision.

25

  • Abbas, 74, Iranian photographer.
  • Shuhrat Abbosov, 87, Uzbek actor, film director (Mahallada duv-duv gap), screenwriter (The Mischievous Boy) and film producer.
  • Adebayo Adedeji, 87, Nigerian politician and diplomat.
  • Laura Aguilar, 58, American photographer, complications from diabetes.
  • Michael Anderson, 98, British film director (The Dam Busters, Around the World in 80 Days, Logan's Run), heart disease.
  • Rolla Anderson, 97, American football and basketball player and coach.
  • Issi Baran, 90, Finnish Olympic sprinter.
  • Dick Bate, 71, English football player and manager (Southend United).
  • Bill Brown, 92, American track athlete, Pan-American champion (1951).
  • Margo Buchanan-Oliver, New Zealand academic.
  • Paul N. Carlin, 86, American businessman, Postmaster General (1985–1986), bronchitis and pneumonia.
  • Gregorio Casal, 82, Mexican actor (La Choca).
  • Jacquelyn Crowell, 30, American racing cyclist, brain cancer.
  • David Edwards, 89, British Anglican priest, Chaplain to the Speaker of the House of Commons (1972–1978), Dean of Norwich (1978–1983), Provost of Southwark (1983–1994).
  • Madeeha Gauhar, 61, Pakistani actress (Burqavaganza) and founder of Ajoka Theatre, cancer.
  • Yeshayahu Hadari, 84, Israeli rabbi, first rosh yeshiva of Yeshivat HaKotel.
  • Bjørn Hansen, 79, Norwegian football coach (Rosenborg BK).
  • Fredric Hobbs, 86, American artist and filmmaker.
  • Inuka, 27, Singaporean polar bear, first born in the tropics, euthanized by anaesthesia.
  • Kato Khandwala, 47, American record producer (My Chemical Romance, Breaking Benjamin, Papa Roach), injuries sustained in traffic collision.
  • Hans-Reinhard Koch, 88, German Roman Catholic prelate, Auxiliary Bishop of Erfurt (1985–2004).
  • Jerry L. Larson, 81, American judge, Justice of the Iowa Supreme Court (1978–2008).
  • Lisiate Lavulo, 56, Tongan Olympic boxer.
  • Edith MacArthur, 92, Scottish actress (Take the High Road).
  • Steven Marcus, 89, American literary critic and scholar.
  • Alberto Marson, 93, Brazilian basketball player, Olympic bronze medalist (1948).
  • Cveto Pretnar, 61, Slovenian Olympic ice hockey player (1984).
  • Rollin Putzier, 52, American football player (Pittsburgh Steelers, San Francisco 49ers).
  • Bill Stokes, 89, American college basketball coach (Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders).
  • M. S. Rajeswari, 86, Indian playback singer.
  • Anam Vivekananda Reddy, 67, Indian politician, MLA for Nellore Rural (1999–2009), prostate cancer.
  • Donald Seldin, 97, American nephrologist.
  • Soni Wolf, 69, American lesbian activist, co-founder of Dykes on Bikes.

26

  • Noble Craig, 69, American actor (Big Trouble in Little China, A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child, The Blob).
  • Robert diGrazia, 90, American police officer.
  • Jean Duprat, 81, French politician, member of the National Assembly (1981–1986).
  • A. Theodore Eastman, 89, American Episcopal prelate, Bishop of Maryland (1986–1994), Parkinson's disease.
  • Jon Engen, 61, American Olympic skier.
  • Betty Hall, 97, American politician, four-time member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives.
  • Philip H. Hoff, 93, American politician, Governor of Vermont (1963–1969).
  • Yoshinobu Ishii, 79, Japanese football player and manager.
  • Shamsul Islam, 86, Bangladeshi politician, Minister of Information (1991–1996, 2001–2006).
  • Félix Mata, 67, Venezuelan Olympic sprinter.
  • Sean McPherson, 47, American politician, member of the South Dakota House of Representatives (since 2017), cancer.
  • David Mitchell, 77, New Zealand architect.
  • Charles Neville, 79, American saxophonist (The Neville Brothers), Grammy winner (1990), pancreatic cancer.
  • Jordan Nikolić, 84, Serbian folk singer.
  • Henk Numan, 62, Dutch judoka, Olympic bronze medallist (1980).
  • Elvira Orphée, 95, Argentine writer, Guggenheim Fellow (1988).
  • Gianfranco Parolini, 93, Italian film director (Francis the Smuggler, Kiss Kiss, Kill Kill, If You Meet Sartana Pray for Your Death).
  • Pierre Plateau, 94, French Roman Catholic prelate, Archbishop of Bourges (1984–2000).
  • Donald Whitton, 94, Canadian concert cellist and teacher.
  • Wolfgang Zapf, 81, German sociologist.

27

  • Álvaro Arzú, 72, Guatemalan politician, President (1996–2000), Mayor of Guatemala City (1986–1990, since 2004), heart attack.
  • Yukiji Asaoka, 82, Japanese actress, Alzheimer's disease.
  • Earl Balfour, 85, Canadian ice hockey player (Chicago Blackhawks, Toronto Maple Leafs), cancer.
  • Livio Besso Cordero, 70, Italian politician, Senator (1996–2001).
  • Bob Gessner, 85, American artist.
  • Donald Keats, 88, American composer.
  • Maya Kuliyeva, 97, Turkmen operatic soprano and actress.
  • Michael Luscombe, 64, Australian chief executive (Woolworths Limited), Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease.
  • Gildo Mahones, 88, American jazz pianist.
  • George Mulhall, 81, Scottish football player (Aberdeen, Sunderland, national team) and manager.
  • Kristin Nelson, 72, American actress, painter and author, heart attack.
  • Juan Carlos Olivas, 34, Mexican actor (El Chapo), cancer.
  • Paul Junger Witt, 77, American film and television producer (Dead Poets Society, The Golden Girls, Soap), cancer.
  • Bernard Woma, 51, Ghanaian gyile player.
  • Roy Young, 83, British singer and pianist.

28

  • Roberto Angleró, 88, Puerto Rican music composer and singer.
  • Bob Byler, 87, American jazz journalist.
  • James H. Cone, 79, American Methodist theologian (Black theology).
  • Larry Harvey, 70, American artist, philanthropist and activist, founder of the Burning Man festival, complications from a stroke.
  • James Hylton, 83, American stock car racing driver (NASCAR, ARCA) and race team owner (James Hylton Motorsports), traffic collision.
  • Hollis Jeffcoat, 65, American painter, ovarian cancer.
  • Akhumzi Jezile, 29, South African television presenter and actor, traffic collision.
  • Brooks Kerr, 66, American jazz pianist.
  • Eric Koch, 98, German-born Canadian author, broadcaster and academic.
  • Gerson Leiber, 96, American painter, heart attack.
  • Judith Leiber, 97, Hungarian-born American fashion designer and businesswoman, Holocaust survivor.
  • Ramón López Carrozas, 80, Spanish-born Brazilian Roman Catholic prelate, Auxiliary Bishop (1979–1989) and Bishop of Bom Jesus do Gurguéia (1989–2014).
  • Ken Messer, 86, British painter.
  • Tetsuro Miura, 62, Japanese football player and manager, lung cancer.
  • Art Paul, 93, American graphic designer (Playboy), pneumonia.
  • Montse Pérez, 61, Spanish actress (Plats Bruts).
  • Carlos del Pozo, 75, Cuban Olympic basketball player (1968).
  • Russell Renfrey, 94, Australian football player.
  • Agildo Ribeiro, 86, Brazilian actor.
  • Art Shay, 96, American photographer (Sports Illustrated, Life) and writer, heart failure.
  • Morag Crichton Timbury, 87, Scottish virologist.
  • Yevgeny Titarenko, 82, Russian writer.
  • Karl Toft, 81, Canadian sex offender, lung cancer.
  • Bruce Tulloh, 82, British athlete, European champion (1962), cancer.

29

  • Eliudis Benítez, 63, Puerto Rican Olympic judoka.
  • Richard L. Collins, 84, American aviation journalist.
  • Ewa Dyakowska-Berbeka, 61, Polish painter and graphic and stage designer.
  • Luis García Meza, 88, Bolivian general and politician, President (1980–1981), heart attack.
  • Bill Hay, 83, Australian rules footballer (Hawthorn).
  • Derek Keys, 86, South African executive (ASEA, Sandvik, Sappi) and politician, Minister of Finance (1992–1994).
  • Rose Laurens, 65, French singer-songwriter ("I Dreamed a Dream", "Africa").
  • Robert Mandan, 86, American actor (Soap, The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, Three's a Crowd).
  • Michael Martin, Baron Martin of Springburn, 72, British politician, MP (1979–2009) and Speaker of the House of Commons (2000–2009).
  • Andrzej Orłoś, 84, Polish Olympic equestrian (1960).
  • Lester James Peries, 99, Sri Lankan film producer, director, and screenwriter.
  • Trevor Preston, 79, British screenwriter.
  • Jan Salter, 82, British artist and animal sanctuary keeper.
  • Reginald C. Stuart, 74, Canadian historian.
  • Edward Szmidt, 86, Polish Olympic sprinter (1956).
  • Bruce Taafe, 73, Australian rugby union player.
  • Aaron Traywick, 28, American life extension activist, drowned.

30

  • Tim Calvert, 52, American rock guitarist (Nevermore, Forbidden), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
  • Jan Cameron, 71, Australian swimmer and coach, Olympic silver (1964) and Commonwealth Games triple medalist (1966).
  • Geneviève Claisse, 82, French abstract painter.
  • Manfredo do Carmo, 89, Brazilian mathematician (differential geometry).
  • Frank Ernaga, 87, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs).
  • Hortensio Fucil, 79, Venezuelan Olympic runner.
  • Neil D. Humphrey, 89, American academic.
  • Elisa Izaurralde, 58, Uruguayan biochemist.
  • Anatole Katok, 73, Russian-born American mathematician.
  • Joel Kovel, 81, American environmentalist and anti-war activist.
  • Idris Hasan Latif, 94, Indian military officer, Chief of Air Staff (1978–1981).
  • Terry Mackenroth, 68, Australian politician, Deputy Premier of Queensland (2000–2005), lung cancer.
  • Shah Marai, 40, Afghan photojournalist (Agence France-Presse), bombing.
  • Jhoon Rhee, 86, South Korean taekwondo practitioner.
  • Gajendra Narayan Singh, Indian musicologist.
  • Naresh Sohal, 78, Indian composer.
  • Ralph Stephan, 89, American Olympic rower (1948).
  • Sir John Treacher, 93, British Royal Navy Admiral, Commander-in-Chief Fleet (1975–1977).
  • David Wiegand, 70, American journalist (San Francisco Chronicle).

References

External links

  • List of April 2018 deaths at IMDb



Notable Deaths In 2018

Famous Deaths on April 19 On This Day

Celebrity Deaths of 2018

Famous Deaths on April 3 On This Day

11 Most Shocking Deaths of 2018 Decider