Deaths in the first half of the year 2021 in the United States. For the last half of the year, see 2021 deaths in the United States (July–December).
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Decades: |
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January
- January 1
- Ben Chafin, 60, politician, member of the Virginia House of Delegates (2014) and Senate (since 2014) (b. 1960)[1]
- Ron Dominguez, 85, business and theme park executive, vice-president of Disneyland (1974–1990) and of Walt Disney Attractions, West Coast (1990–1994) (b. 1935)[2]
- George Gerdes, 72, singer, songwriter and actor (Hidalgo, L.A. Noire, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) (b. 1948)[3]
- Floyd Little, 78, Hall of Fame football player (Syracuse Orange, Denver Broncos) (b. 1942)[4]
- Misty Morgan, 75, country music singer (Jack Blanchard & Misty Morgan) (b. 1945)[5]
- Paige Rense, 91, writer and editor, editor-in-chief of Architectural Digest (1975–2010) (b. 1929)[6]
- George Whitmore, 89, mountaineer and conservationist (b. 1931)[7]
- January 2
- Mary Catherine Bateson, 81, writer and cultural anthropologist (b. 1939)[8]
- Brad Cox, 76, computer scientist (b. 1944)[9]
- Carrie Dann, 88/89, Western Shoshone indigenous rights activist and spiritual leader (b. 1932)[10]
- Robert Livingston, 87, Zen Buddhist teacher (b. 1933)[11]
- W. B. Park, 84, cartoonist and illustrator (b. 1936)[12]
- Mike Reese, 42, politician, member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (since 2009) (b. 1978)[13]
- Don Salls, 101, football player (Alabama Crimson Tide) and coach (Jacksonville State Gamecocks) (b. 1919)[14]
- Gary Staples, 80, politician, member of the Mississippi House of Representatives (1988–1992, 2004–2020) (b. 1940)[15]
- Paul Westphal, 70, Hall of Fame basketball player (Boston Celtics, Phoenix Suns, Seattle SuperSonics, New York Knicks), coach (Phoenix Suns, Seattle SuperSonics, Sacramento Kings) and commentator (b. 1950)[16]
- January 3
- Lee Breuer, 83, academic, educator, filmmaker, lyricist, playwright (The Gospel at Colonus), poet and theater director (b. 1937)[17]
- Eric Jerome Dickey, 59, author (b. 1961)[18]
- Dick Kulpa, 67, cartoonist (Cracked, Weekly World News) (b. 1953)[19]
- Donald Perry Polsky, 92, architect (b. 1928)[20]
- George F. Regas, 90, Episcopal priest, rector of All Saints Episcopal Church (Pasadena) (1967–1995) (b. 1930)[21]
- James C. Renick, 72, academic administrator, 4th Chancellor of the University of Michigan-Dearborn (1993–1999) and 9th Chancellor of the North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University (1999–2006) (b. 1948)[22]
- January 4
- Tom Acker, 90, baseball player (Cincinnati Redlegs/Reds) (b. 1930)[23]
- Ronnie Burgess, 57, football player (Green Bay Packers) (b. 1963)[24]
- Seymour Van Gundy, 89, nematologist (University of California, Riverside) (b. 1931)[25]
- Sandra Hutchens, 65, law enforcement officer and official, Sheriff-Coroner of Orange County, California (2008–2019) (b. 1955)[26]
- Jonas Neubauer, 39, Tetris player, seven-time world champion (b. 1981)[27]
- Bernard P. Randolph, 87, general (b. 1933)[28]
- Tanya Roberts, 65, actress (Charlie's Angels, A View to a Kill, That '70s Show), producer and model (b. 1955)[29]
- Gregory Sierra, 83, actor (Sanford and Son, Barney Miller, The Other Side of the Wind) (b. 1937)[30]
- January 5
- Jerry Berger, 87, public relations practitioner, press agent and journalist (St. Louis Globe-Democrat, St. Louis Post-Dispatch) (b. 1933)[31]
- C. George Boeree, 68, Dutch-born American psychologist (Shippensburg University) (b. 1952)[32]
- Christina Crosby, 67, scholar and writer (b. 1953)[33]
- Thereasea Elder, 93, public health nurse (b. 1927)[34]
- Patricia C. Frist, 81, banker and philanthropist (b. 1939)[35]
- Don Leppert, 90, baseball player (Baltimore Orioles) (b. 1930)[36]
- Pat Patrick, 91, racing team owner (Patrick Racing) (b. 1929)[37]
- Thelma Shoher Baker, 96, educator and anthropologist (b. 1924)[38]
- January 6
- Jonathan Aldrich, 84, poet and educator (b. 1936)[39]
- Kenneth Z. Altshuler, 91, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst (Columbia University, UT Southwestern Medical Center) (b. 1929)[40]
- Ashli Babbitt, 35, protester who participated in the January 6 United States Capitol attack
- Thomas G. Carpenter, 94, educator and academic administrator, President of the University of North Florida (1969–1980) and University of Memphis (1980–1991) (b. 1926)[41]
- Peter S. Eagleson, 92, hydrologist (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) and author (b. 1928)[42]
- Bobby Few, 85, jazz pianist and vocalist (b. 1935)[43]
- Eldon Fortie, 79, football player (BYU Cougars, Edmonton Eskimos) (b. 1941)[44]
- Donald Frith, 96, ceramic artist and academic (b. 1924)[45]
- Jim Haynes, 87, American-British underground and avant-garde theatre producer, co-founder of the Traverse Theatre and International Times (b. 1933)[46]
- Gerald Hiken, 93, actor (Car 54, Where Are You?, Invitation to a Gunfighter, Reds) (b. 1927)[47]
- Laurence H. Kedes, 83, scientist (Stanford University, University of Southern California) (b. 1937)[48]
- Barry Schwartz, 83, sociologist (b. 1938)[49]
- Burt Wilson, 87, philosopher, writer, jazz musician, playwright, political activist and advertising executive (b. 1933)[50]
- January 7
- Robbins Burling, 94, anthropologist and sociolinguist (University of Pennsylvania, University of Michigan) (b. 1926)[51]
- Deezer D, 55, rapper and actor (CB4, ER, Romy and Michele's High School Reunion) (b. 1965)[52]
- Grant Gondrezick, 57, basketball player (Phoenix Suns, Los Angeles Clippers, Limoges CSP) (b. 1963)[53]
- Taky Kimura, 96, Japanese-American martial artist (b. 1924)[54]
- Tom LaBonge, 67, politician, member of the Los Angeles City Council (2001–2015) (b. 1953)[55]
- Tommy Lasorda, 93, Hall of Fame baseball player (Brooklyn Dodgers, Kansas City Athletics), manager (Los Angeles Dodgers) and coach (Los Angeles Dodgers) (b. 1927)[56]
- Jamie O'Hara, 70, country musician and songwriter ("Older Women", "Grandpa (Tell Me 'Bout the Good Old Days)"), Grammy winner (1987) (b. 1950)[57]
- Lonnie Perrin, 68, football player (Denver Broncos, Chicago Bears, Washington Redskins) (b. 1952)[58]
- Marion Ramsey, 73, actress (Police Academy, Return to Babylon, Lavalantula) and singer (b. 1947)[59]
- Neil Sheehan, 84, journalist, Pulitzer Prize winner (1989) (b. 1936)[60]
- Brian Sicknick, 42, police officer (U.S. Capitol Police) (b. 1978)[61]
- Mel Weitsman, 91, Buddhist priest, founder of the Berkeley Zen Center (b. 1929)[62]
- January 8
- Meredith Anding, 79, civil rights activist (b. 1941)[63]
- William H. Barbour Jr., 79, judge (1983–2006), chief judge (1989–1996) and senior judge (since 2006) of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi (b. 1941)[64]
- Harold Bornstein, 73, gastroenterologist (b. 1947)[65]
- Ed Bruce, 81, country music singer-songwriter ("Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys", "You're the Best Break This Old Heart Ever Had") and actor (Bret Maverick) (b. 1939)[66]
- David Buchsbaum, 91, mathematician (Brandeis University) (b. 1929)[67]
- Steve Carver, 75, film director (Big Bad Mama, Capone, Lone Wolf McQuade), producer and photographer (b. 1945)[68]
- John Corcoran, 83, logician, mathematician and philosopher (University at Buffalo (SUNY), University of Pennsylvania) (b. 1937)[69]
- David Darling, 79, cellist and composer (b. 1941)[70]
- Steve Hendrickson, 54, football player (San Francisco 49ers, Dallas Cowboys, San Diego Chargers, Houston Oilers, Philadelphia Eagles) (b. 1966)[71]
- Mike Henry, 84, football player (Pittsburgh Steelers, Los Angeles Rams) and actor (Tarzan films, Smokey and the Bandit) (b. 1936)[72]
- Peter W. Huber, 68, lawyer and non-fiction writer (b. 1952)[73]
- Steve Lightle, 61, comic book artist (Doom Patrol, Legion of Super-Heroes, The Flash) (b. 1959)[74]
- Jay W. McGee, 70, American-Canadian musician (b. 1950)[75]
- Diana Millay, 85, actress (The Secret Storm, Street of Sinners, Dark Shadows) (b. 1935)[76]
- Samuel L. Myers Sr., 101, economist, educationist and civil rights advocate (b. 1919)[77]
- Deborah Rhode, 68, legal scholar (b. 1952)[78]
- Don Robertson, 92, television announcer (CBS Sports) (b. 1928)[79]
- Shirley Wilson, 95, football player and coach (Elon University, Duke University) (b. 1925)[80]
- January 9
- Jerry Douglas, 85, director and writer (b. 1935)[81]
- John Lutz, 81, mystery writer (b. 1939)[82]
- John Joseph Ryba, 91, politician, member of the Wisconsin State Assembly (1993–2003) (b. 1929)[83]
- Caroly Wilcox, 89, puppeteer (b. 1931)[84]
- Jeannette Wood, 88, politician, member of the Washington House of Representatives (1988–1994) and Senate (1994–1999) (b. 1932)[85]
- January 10
- Harry Brown, 72, basketball player (b. 1948)[86]
- Nancy Walker Bush Ellis, 94, philanthropist (b. 1926)[87]
- Tom Gannon, 77, politician, member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1979–2006) (b. 1943)[88]
- Wayne Radford, 64, basketball player (Indiana Pacers) (b. 1956)[89]
- Dee Rowe, 91, college basketball coach (b. 1929)[90]
- Antonio Sabàto Sr., 77, Italian-American actor (Grand Prix, One Dollar Too Many, Due volte Giuda) (b. 1943)[91]
- Julie Strain, 58, actress and model (b. 1962)[92]
- January 11
- Sheldon Adelson, 87, businessman, investor, political donor and philanthropist (b. 1933)[93]
- Edward Beard, 80, politician, member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives (1972–1974) and the U.S. House of Representatives (1975–1981) (b. 1940)[94]
- Lionel Gossman, 91, Scottish-American literary scholar (b. 1929)[95]
- Ronald J. Hays, 92, admiral (b. 1928)[96]
- Howard Johnson, 79, jazz musician (b. 1941)[97]
- Tetsuo Najita, 84, historian (b. 1936)[98]
- Prentice E. Sanders, 83, police officer (b. 1937)[99]
- Margo St. James, 83, women's rights activist and sex worker (b. 1937)[100]
- Paul Taylor, 81/82, engineer (b. 1939)[101]
- William E. Thornton, 91, astronaut (b. 1929)[102]
- Stacy Title, 56, film director, screenwriter, and producer (b. 1964)[103]
- January 12
- Bruce Bennett, 77, football player (Saskatchewan Roughriders) (b. 1943)[104]
- Carlos Joseph, 40, football player (b. 1980)[105]
- Tim Lester, 52, football player (b. 1968)[106]
- Fred Levin, 83, lawyer (b. 1937)[107]
- Barry Lewis, 75, architectural historian (b. 1945)[108]
- Christopher P. Monkhouse, 73, architectural historian (b. 1947)[109]
- Keith Valigura, 63, politician, member of the Texas House of Representatives (1985–1991) (b. 1957)[110]
- January 13
- Howard Andrew, 86/87, poker player (b. 1934)[111]
- Tim Bogert, 76, rock bassist and vocalist (b. 1944)[112]
- Duke Bootee, 69, rapper and songwriter (b. 1951)[113]
- Sir Robert Cohan, 95, American-born British dancer, choreographer, and artistic director (b. 1925)[114]
- Frank J. Coppa, 83, historian, author, and educator (b. 1937)[115]
- Siegfried Fischbacher, 81, German-American magician and entertainer (b. 1939)[116]
- Benjamin F. Gibson, 89, judge (1979–1996), chief judge (1991–1995) and senior judge (1996–1999) of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan (b. 1931)[117]
- Ben Hines, 85, baseball coach (b. 1935)[118]
- Bryan Monroe, 55, journalist, editor, and educator (b. 1965)[119]
- Lisa Marie Montgomery, 52, convicted murderer (b. 1968)[120]
- Sylvain Sylvain, 69, Egyptian-born American rock guitarist (b. 1951)[121]
- January 14
- Eiji Hashimoto, 89, Japanese-American harpsichordist, orchestra conductor, and professor (b. 1931)[122]
- Shirley Johnson, 83, politician, member of the Michigan House of Representatives (1981–1992, 1993–1998) and Senate (1999–2004) (b. 1937)[123]
- John LaRose, 69, baseball player (b. 1951)[124]
- Harold Lawrence McPheeters, 97, psychiatrist (b. 1923)[125]
- Peter Mark Richman, 93, actor (b. 1927)[126]
- Joanne Rogers, 92, pianist and puppeteer (b. 1928)[127]
- Ron Samford, 90, baseball player (b. 1930)[128]
- Larry Willoughby, 70, country singer-songwriter and music executive (b. 1950)[129]
- January 15
- William R. Allen, 96, economist, professor and author (b. 1924)[130]
- Dale Baer, 70, animator (b. 1950)[131]
- Wilbur Brotherton, 98, politician, member of the Michigan House of Representatives (1975–1988) (b. 1922)[132]
- Tyrone Crawley, 62, boxer (b. 1958)[133]
- Bruce Headley, 86, thoroughbred trainer and owner (b. 1934)[134]
- Kathleen Krull, 68, children's writer and book editor (b. 1952)[135]
- Lệ Thu, 77, Vietnamese-American singer (b. 1943)[136]
- Thomas V. Miller Jr., 78, politician, member of the Maryland House of Delegates (1971–1975), member (1975–2020) and President (1987–2020) of the Maryland Senate (b. 1942)[137]
- J. Michael Schweder, 71, politician, member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1975–1980) (b. 1949)[138]
- Jon Westling, 78/79, educator and academic administrator, 8th President of Boston University (1996–2002) (b. 1942)[139]
- Gerald Wiegert, 76, automotive businessman and engineer (b. 1944)[140]
- James White, 78, politician, member of the New Mexico House of Representatives (2009–2014) and Senate (2016–2021) (b. 1942)[141]
- January 16
- Jon Arnett, 85, football player (Los Angeles Rams, Chicago Bears) (b. 1935)[142]
- Sharon Begley, 64, journalist (b. 1956)[143]
- Jerry Brandt, 82, club owner and manager (b. 1938)[144]
- Little Walter DeVenne, 73, radio host (b. 1948)[145]
- Dustin Higgs, 48, convicted murderer (b. 1972)[146]
- Jim MacGeorge, 92, voice actor and writer (b. 1928)[147]
- Jimmy Powell, 85, golfer (b. 1935)[148]
- Phil Spector, 81, record producer, musician, songwriter and convicted murderer (b. 1939)[149]
- Paul Varelans, 51, mixed martial artist (b. 1969)[150]
- January 17
- Dave Arnold, 49, politician, member of the Pennsylvania Senate (2020–2021) (b. 1971)[151]
- Robert Cheezic, 82, martial artist (b. 1939)[152]
- Brian Christie, Unk, television news journalist, talk show host and anchor (b. Unk)[153]
- Barbara Gronemus, 89, politician, member of the Wisconsin State Assembly (1982–2008) (b. 1931)[154]
- Muriel Grossfeld, 80, Olympic gymnast (b. 1940)[155]
- Marlin Kuykendall, 86, politician (b. 1934)[156]
- Gerald Locklin, 79, poet and lecturer (b. 1941)[157]
- Junior Mance, 92, jazz pianist, composer and educator (b. 1928)[158]
- Sammy Nestico, 96, jazz composer and arranger (b. 1924)[159]
- Vincent M. Rizzotto, 89, Roman Catholic prelate and Auxiliary Bishop of Galveston–Houston (2001–2006) (b. 1931)[160]
- Maynard Wallace, 77, politician, member of the Missouri House of Representatives (2003–2011) (b. 1943)[161]
- January 18
- Lubomir Kavalek, 77, Czech-American chess player (b. 1943)[162]
- Don Sutton, 75, baseball player (b. 1945)[163]
- Perry Botkin Jr., 87, composer and musician (b. 1933)[164]
- Jimmie Rodgers, 87, pop singer (b. 1933)[165]
- January 20
- Mira Furlan, 65, Croatian-American actress (b. 1955)[166]
- Lonnie Nielsen, 67, golfer (b. 1953)[167]
- Ted Thompson, 68, football player and executive (b. 1953)[168]
- January 21
- Bob Avian, 83, choreographer and theatre producer (b. 1937)[169]
- Randy Parton, 67, singer-songwriter, actor, businessman, and younger brother of Dolly Parton (b. 1953)[170]
- January 22
- Hank Aaron, 86, baseball player (b. 1934)[171]
- Tony Jones, 54, football player (b. 1966)[172]
- Sharon Kay Penman, 75, historical novelist (b. 1945)[173]
- January 23
- Walter Bernstein, 101, screenwriter and movie producer (b. 1919)[174]
- Hal Holbrook, 95, actor (b. 1925)[175]
- Larry King, 87, talk show host (b. 1933)[176]
- Andrew Brooks, 51, medical researcher (b. 1969)[177]
- January 24
- Sonny Fox, 95, television host (b. 1925)[178]
- Bruce Kirby, 95, actor (b. 1925)[179]
- Barry Le Va, 79, sculptor and installation artist (b. 1941)[180]
- Frank Shankwitz, 77, philanthropist and co-founder of the Make-A-Wish Foundation (b. 1943)[181]
- January 25
- Mike Bell, 63, Hall of Fame motorcycle racer and mountain bike rider (b. 1957)[182]
- Marie Harmon, 97, actress (b. 1923)[183]
- January 26
- Ron Johnson, 64, baseball player and coach (b. 1956)[184]
- Cindy Nemser, 83, art historian and feminist (b. 1937)[185]
- Sekou Smith, 48, sportswriter and journalist (b. 1972)[186]
- Margaret C. Snyder, 91, social scientist and feminist (b. 1929)[187]
- January 27
- Cloris Leachman, 94, actress (b. 1926)[188]
- Carmen Vázquez, 72, LGBT activist and writer (b. 1947)[189]
- Corky Lee, 73, photojournalist (b. 1947)[190]
- Goddess Bunny, 61, drag queen and actress (b. 1960)[191]
- January 28
- Cicely Tyson, 96, actress (b. 1924)[192]
- Heidi Weisel, 59, fashion designer (b. 1961/1962)[193]
- January 29
- John Chaney, 89, college basketball coach (b. 1932)[194]
- Grady Gaines, 86, blues saxophonist (b. 1934)[195]
- Richard L. Feigen, 90, gallery owner (b. 1930)[196]
- Flory Jagoda, 97, Bosnian-born musician and songwriter (b. 1923)[197]
- January 30
- Allan Burns, 85, television producer and screenwriter (b. 1935)[198]
- Double K, 43, rapper (b. 1977)[199]
- Eugenio Martínez, 98, Cuban-born operative and convicted criminal in the Watergate case (b. 1922)[200]
- Marc Wilmore, 57, comedian and screenwriter (b. 1963)[201]
- January 31
- Benedict J. Fernandez, 84, educator and photojournalist (b. 1936)[202]
- Abraham J. Twerski, 90, American-born Israeli Hasidic rabbi and psychiatrist (b. 1930)[203]
February
- February 1
- Dustin Diamond, 44, actor and comedian (b. 1977)[204]
- Emil J. Freireich, 93, hematologist and oncologist (b. 1928)[205]
- Arlon Lindner, 85, politician (b. 1935)[206]
- Ricky Powell, 59, photographer (b. 1961)[207]
- Jamie Tarses, 56, television executive (b. 1964)[208]
- Robert C. Jones, 84, film editor and screenwriter (b. 1936)[209]
- John Sweeney, 86, labor leader, president of the AFL–CIO (b. 1934)[210])
- Jack Palladino, 76, private investigator and attorney (b. 1944)[211]
- February 2
- Millie Hughes-Fulford, 75, astronaut and molecular biologist (b. 1945)[212]
- Albert Hale, 70, politician (b. 1950)[213]
- Grant Jackson, 78, baseball player (b. 1942)[214]
- Harry Mark Petrakis, 97, author (b. 1923)[215]
- Rennie Davis, 80, antiwar activist, member of the Chicago Seven (b. 1940)[216]
- February 3
- Joann Aalfs, 85, women's rights and LGBT rights activist (b. 1923)[217]
- Anne Feeney, 69, folk singer (b. 1951)[218]
- Willard Hunter, 87, baseball player (b. 1935)[219]
- Tony Trabert, 90, tennis player (b. 1930)[220]
- Wayne Terwilliger, 95, baseball player (b. 1925)[221]
- Jim Weatherly, 77, Hall of Fame singer-songwriter (b. 1943)[222]
- February 4
- Dianne Durham, 52, gymnast (b. 1968)[223]
- Josh Evans, 48, football player (b. 1972)[224]
- David Shepard, 73, politician (b. 1947)[225]
- Robert A. Altman, 73, video game executive (b. 1947)[226]
- Hy Cohen, 90, baseball player (b. 1931)[227]
- February 5
- Susan Bayh, 61, attorney, first lady of Indiana (b. 1959)[228]
- Julio Canani, 82, horse breeder and trainer (b. 1938)[229]
- Rob Kane, 53, politician and auditor (b. 1967)[230]
- Charlie Krueger, 84, professional football player in the NFL (b. 1937)[231]
- Christopher Plummer, 91, Canadian actor (The Sound of Music, Beginners, All the Money in the World), Oscar winner (2012) (b. 1929)[232]
- Leon Spinks, 67, boxer (b. 1953)[233]
- February 6
- Thomas Rutherford Brett, 89, judge (b. 1931)[234]
- Rajie Cook, 90, graphic designer (b. 1930)[235]
- Maria Guarnaschelli, 79, cookbook editor and publisher (b. 1941)[236]
- Burwell Jones, 87, Olympic swimmer, doctor (b. 1933)[237]
- George Shultz, 100, politician, diplomat and economist (b. 1920)[238]
- February 7
- Billy Brown, 68, television celebrity and Alaskan Bush People patriarch (b. 1952)[239]
- Marshall Cassidy, 75, sportscaster (b. 1945)[240]
- Cathy Cochran, 76, judge (b. 1944)[241]
- Roz Cron, 95, saxophonist (b. 1925)[242]
- Pedro Gomez, 58, sports journalist (b. 1962)[243]
- Karen Lewis, 67, educator and labor leader (b. 1953)[244]
- J. Hillis Miller, 92, literary critic and scholar who advanced theories of literary deconstruction (b. 1928)[245]
- Ron Wright, 67, politician (b. 1953)[246]
- February 8
- Davey Armstrong, 64, Olympic boxer (b. 1956)[247]
- Claude Crabb, 80, football player (b. 1940)[248]
- Marty Schottenheimer, 77, football player and coach (b. 1943)[249]
- Anthony Sowell, 61, serial killer (b. 1959)[250]
- Mary Wilson, 76, singer and founding member of The Supremes (b. 1944)[251]
- February 9
- Chick Corea, 79, jazz keyboardist (b. 1941)[252]
- John Hora, 80, cinematographer (b. 1940)[253]
- February 10
- Larry Flynt, 78, porn publisher (b. 1942)[254]
- Billy Conigliaro, 73, baseball player (b. 1947)[255]
- Fanne Foxe, 84, Argentine-born stripper (b. 1936)[256]
- February 11
- S. Prestley Blake, 106, restaurateur (b. 1914)[257]
- Rusty Brooks, 63, wrestler and trainer (b. 1958)[258]
- Leslie E. Robertson, 92, structural engineer (b. 1928)[259]
- Isadore Singer, 96, mathematician (b. 1924)[260]
- Joan Weldon, 90, actress (b. 1930)[261]
- February 12
- Frederick K. C. Price, 89, pastor and televangelist (b. 1932)[262]
- Milford Graves, 79, drummer (b. 1941)[263]
- Lynn Stalmaster, 93, casting director (b. 1927)[264]
- February 13
- Bud Estes, 75, politician (b. 1946)[265]
- Dave Nalle, 61, political writer, game author and font designer who was active in the early history of the development of the internet (b. 1959)[266]
- Peter G. Davis, 84, music critic (b. 1936)[267]
- James Ridgeway, 84, investigative journalist (b. 1936)[268]
- February 14
- Zachary Wohlman, 32, boxer (b. 1988)[269]
- Lorenzo Washington, 34, football player (b. 1986)[270]
- Robert R. Glauber, 81, academic (b. 1939)[271]
- Ari Gold, 47, singer-songwriter (b. 1974)[272]
- February 15
- Florence Birdwell, 96, educator, musician and singer (b. 1924)[273]
- Vincent Jackson, 38, football player (b. 1983)[274]
- Derek Khan, 63, Trinidadian-American fashion stylist (b. 1957)[275]
- Johnny Pacheco, 85, Dominican-American musician and label executive (b. 1935)[276]
- Arne Sorenson, 62, hotel executive (b. 1958)[277]
- February 16
- Bernard Lown, 99, Lithuanian-born inventor and cardiologist, developer of the defibrillator (b. 1921)[278]
- Jessica McClintock, 90, fashion designer (b. 1930)[279]
- Carman, 65, contemporary Christian music singer, songwriter, television host, life coach, and evangelist (b. 1956)[280]
- February 17
- Rush Limbaugh, 70, radio personality (b. 1951)[281]
- Christine McHorse, 72, ceramics artist (b. 1948)[282]
- Martha Stewart, 98, actress and singer (b. 1922)[283]
- February 18:
- Prince Markie Dee, 52, rapper (b. 1968)[284]
- Frank Lupo, 66, television writer and producer (b. 1955)[285]
- February 19
- Arturo Di Modica, 80, Italian-American sculptor best known for Charging Bull (b. 1941)[286]
- Lawrence Otis Graham, 59, attorney and best-selling author (b. 1961)[287]
- Dianna Ortiz, 62, Roman Catholic nun and anti-torture advocate (b. 1958)[288]
- Jerold Ottley, 86, music director and longtime choral conductor of the Tabernacle Choir (b. 1934)[289]
- Naomi Rosenblum, 96, photography historian (b. 1922)[290]
- LaVannes Squires, 90, basketball player (b. 1931)[291]
- February 20
- Douglas Turner Ward, 90, playwright, actor, director, and theatrical producer (b. 1930)[292]
- Stan Williams, 84, baseball player and coach (b. 1946)[293]
- February 21 – Doug Wilkerson, 73, football player (b. 1947)[294]
- February 22
- Lawrence Ferlinghetti, 101, poet (b. 1919)[295]
- Dick Witcher, 76, football player (b. 1944)[296]
- February 23
- Margaret Maron, 82, mystery writer (b. 1938)[297]
- Geoffrey Scott, 79, actor (b. 1942)[298]
- February 24
- Phoebe Liebig, 87, academic and gerontologist (b. 1933)[299]
- Alan Robert Murray, 66, Oscar-winning sound editor (b. 1954)[300]
- February 25
- John Geddert, 63, gymnastics coach (b. 1957)[301]
- Ivy Bottini, 94, artist and civil rights activist (b. 1926)[302]
- Joseph Duffey, 88, academic, anti-war activist and government official (b. 1932)[303]
- Darrius Johnson, 47, professional football player in the NFL (b. 1973)[304]
- Peter Gotti, 81, mobster and onetime leader of the Gambino family (b. 1939)[305]
- February 26
- Bob James, 68, rock music singer-songwriter (b. 1952)[306]
- Johnny De Fazio, 80, professional wrestler (WWWF) (b. 1940)[307]
- Mo Forte, 73, football coach (Denver Broncos) (b. 1947)[308]
- Philip Ray Martinez, 63, federal judge, U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas (since 2002) (b. 1957)[309]
- Des McAleenan, 53, Irish-American soccer player (Connecticut Wolves, Albany Alleycats) and coach (New York Red Bulls) (b. 1967)[310]
- John Mendenhall, 72, football player (New York Giants) (b. 1948)[311]
- Joel A. Pisano, 71, federal judge, U.S. District Court for New Jersey (2000–2015) (b. 1949)[312]
- Bill C. Davis, 69, playwright best known for Mass Appeal (b. 1951)[313]
- February 27
- Louis Nix, 29, football player (b. 1991)[314]
- Russ Martin, 60, radio broadcaster (KEGL, KLLI-FM) (b. 1960)[315]
- Erica Watson, 48, actress (b. 1973)[316]
- February 28
- Michael J. Barron, 87, former chief judge of the Milwaukee County Circuit Court and a former member of the Wisconsin State Assembly (b. 1933)[317]
- Irv Cross, 81, football player and sportscaster (b.1939)[318]
- Tom Green, 72, Mormon polygamist (b. 1948)[319]
- Roger Kibbe, 81, serial killer (b. 1939)[320]
- Ian North, 68, punk and new wave musician (Milk 'N' Cookies) (b. 1952)[321]
March
- March 1
- Flex-Deon Blake, 58, pornographic actor (Niggas' Revenge) (b. 1962)[322]
- Ann Casey, 82, professional wrestler (GCCW, JCP, WWWF) (b. 1938)[323]
- Vernon Jordan, 85, attorney, business executive, civil rights activist and non-profit executive (National Urban League, United Negro College Fund) (b. 1935)[324]
- Ralph Peterson Jr., 58, bandleader and jazz drummer (The Jazz Messengers, Out of the Blue) (b. 1962)[325]
- March 2
- George Bass, 88, archaeologist (b. 1932)[326]
- Luciano Capicchioni, 74, Sammarinese-American sports agent (b. 1946)[327]
- Mark Goffeney, 51, musician and guitarist (b. 1969)[328]
- Louise McBee, 96, politician, member of the Georgia House of Representatives (1993–2005) (b. 1924)[329]
- Gil Rogers, 87, actor (All My Children, Guiding Light) (b. 1934)[330]
- Edward C. Waller III, 95, vice admiral (b. 1926)[331]
- March 3
- Joe Altobelli, 88, baseball player (Cleveland Indians, Minnesota Twins), manager (San Francisco Giants, Baltimore Orioles, Chicago Cubs), coach and color commentator (b. 1932)[332]
- Marianne Carus, 92, editor and publisher, founder of the children's magazine Cricket (b. 1928)[333]
- Jim Crockett Jr., 76, professional wrestling promoter (Jim Crockett Promotions), president of the NWA (1980–1982, 1985–1986, 1987–1991) (b. 1944)[334]
- Kelly Flynn, 66, politician, member of the Montana House of Representatives (2011–2019) (b. 1954)[335]
- Duffy Jackson, 67, jazz drummer (b. 1953)[336]
- Earl Renneke, 92, politician, member of the Minnesota Senate (1969–1993) (b. 1928)[337]
- John Sackett, 76, politician, member of the Alaska House of Representatives (1967–1971) and Senate (1973–1987) (b. 1944)[338]
- Edward Sandoval, 74, politician, member of the New Mexico House of Representatives (1983–2015) (b. 1947)[339]
- March 4
- Colby Chandler, 95, business executive, CEO of Kodak (1983–1990) (b. 1925)[340]
- Barbara Ess, 76, photographer and musician (Disband, The Static, Y Pants) (b. 1944)[341]
- Heinrich Guggenheimer, 96, German-born Swiss-American mathematician (Washington State University, University of Minnesota, Polytechnic University) (b. 1924)
- Hugh Newell Jacobsen, 91, architect (b. 1929)[342]
- Gerald Kogan, 87, jurist, justice (1987–1998) and chief justice (1996–1998) of the Supreme Court of Florida (b. 1933)[343]
- Moses McCormick, 39, polyglot and YouTuber (b. 1981)[344]
- Paul McMullen, 49, competition and Olympic middle-distance runner (1996) (b. 1972)[345]
- Bhaskar Menon, 86, Indian-born American music industry executive, chairman and CEO of EMI Group Limited (b. 1934)[346]
- Mark Pavelich, 63, ice hockey player (New York Rangers, Minnesota North Stars, San Jose Sharks) and Olympic champion (1980) (b. 1958)[347]
- David Schindler, 80, American-Canadian limnologist (b. 1940)[348]
- Jonathan Steinberg, 86, American-born British historian (b. 1934)[349]
- March 5
- Buddy Colt, 81, professional wrestler and pilot (b. 1936)[350]
- Paul Foster, 89, playwright, theater director and producer, founding member and first president of the La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club (b. 1931)[351]
- Don Gile, 85, baseball player (Boston Red Sox) (b. 1935)[352]
- Frank J. Kelley, 96, politician, Attorney General of the State of Michigan (1961–1999) (b. 1924)[353]
- Samuel J. Scott, 82, engineer (NASA) (b. 1938)[354]
- Michael Stanley, 72, musician, singer-songwriter and radio personality (b. 1948)[355]
- March 6
- Jude Patrick Dougherty, 90, academic administrator, philosopher and editor (b. 1930)[356]
- Wilhelmina Holladay, 98, art collector and patron (b. 1922)[357]
- Marion Lewenstein, 93, academic and journalist (b. 1927)[358]
- Allan J. McDonald, 83, aerospace consultant, engineer and author (b. 1937)[359]
- Bill O'Connor, 94, football player (Cleveland Browns, Toronto Argonauts) (b. 1926)[360]
- Carmel Quinn, 95, Irish-American actress and singer (b. 1925)[361]
- March 7
- Thaddeus M. Buczko, 95, politician and jurist, member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1959-1964), Massachusetts State Auditor (1964-1981) (b. 1926)[362]
- Janis Hape, 62, competition and Olympic swimmer (1976) (b. 1958)[363]
- Janice McLaughlin, 79, Catholic nun, missionary and human rights activist (b. 1942)[364]
- Yechezkel Roth, 84/85, Romanian-born American rabbi (b. 1936)[365]
- Charles Scontras, 91, historian, educator and author (b. 1929)[366]
- Carl J. Shapiro, 108, businessman and philanthropist, president, chairman of the board and director of VF Corporation (1971–1976) (b. 1913)[367]
- Frank Thorne, 90, comic book artist and writer (Red Sonja) (b. 1930)[368]
- Jack Welborn, 88, politician, member of the Michigan House of Representatives (1973–1974) and Senate (1975–1982, 1985–1994) (b. 1932)[369]
- March 8
- Tom Bland, 83, football player (Wheeling Ironmen, Fort Wayne Warriors, Orlando Panthers, Toronto Argonauts) and coach (b. 1937)[370]
- Rhéal Cormier, 53, Canadian-American baseball player (St. Louis Cardinals, Boston Red Sox, Montreal Expos, Philadelphia Phillies, Cincinnati Reds) (b. 1967)[371]
- Leon Gast, 84, documentary film filmmaker (When We Were Kings, The Grateful Dead Movie), cinematographer, director, editor, producer and Oscar winner (1997) (b. 1936)[372]
- Norton Juster, 91, academic, architect, author and writer (The Phantom Tollbooth, The Dot and the Line, The Hello, Goodbye Window) (b. 1929)[373]
- Terrence F. McVerry, 77, politician and federal judge, member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1979-1990), judge (2002-2013) and senior judge (since 2013) of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania (b. 1943)[374]
- Norm Sherry, 89, baseball player (Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Mets), manager (California Angels) and coach (b. 1931)[375]
- Mark Whitecage, 83, jazz musician and reedist (b. 1937)[376]
- March 9
- Joan Walsh Anglund, 95, children's author, illustrator and poet (b. 1926)[377]
- Boston Harbor, 26, Thoroughbred racehorse (b. 1994)[378]
- Richard Driehaus, 78, businessman, fund manager and philanthropist, founder, chairman and chief investment officer of Driehaus Capital Management LLC. (b. 1942)[379]
- Walter LaFeber, 87, historian (Cornell University) (b. 1933)[380]
- James Levine, 77, conductor and pianist (Metropolitan Opera) (b. 1943)[381]
- Michael McDermott, 67, politician and real estate broker, Libertarian Party candidate for Governor of New York (2014) (b. 1953)[382]
- Biff McGuire, 94, actor (Alfred Hitchcock Presents, The Thomas Crown Affair, Serpico) (b. 1926) [383]
- Roger Mudd, 93, television news anchor, broadcast journalist and correspondent (CBS Evening News, Meet the Press, NBC Nightly News) (b. 1928)[384]
- Steve Ortmayer, 77, football coach (Kansas City Chiefs, Oakland Raiders, Green Bay Packers) and executive (San Diego Chargers, Los Angeles Rams) (b. 1944)[385]
- Cliff Simon, 58, South African-born American actor (Stargate SG-1), athlete and pilot (b. 1962)[386]
- Jim Snyder, 88, baseball player (Minnesota Twins) and manager (Seattle Mariners) (b. 1932)[387]
- Blanquita Valenti, 87, politician (b. 1933/1934)[388]
- March 10
- Bruce Abel, 84, bass singer (b. 1936)[389]
- Eugene Hughes, 86, academic administrator, president of Northern Arizona University (1979-1993) and Wichita State University (1993-1998) (b. 1934)[390]
- Robert Middlekauff, 91, historian (University of California, Berkeley) (b. 1929)[391]
- Scott Pilarz, 61, Jesuit academic administrator, president of Marquette University (2011–2013) and the University of Scranton (2003–2011, since 2017) (b. 1959)[392]
- Albert Resis, 99, historian (Northern Illinois University) (b. 1921)[393]
- Stephen Scott, 76, composer (b. 1944)[394]
- Joe Tait, 83, sports broadcaster (Cleveland Cavaliers, Cleveland Indians, Cleveland Rockers) (b. 1937)[395]
- March 11
- Ray Campi, 86, rock and roll musician and double bassist (b. 1934)[396]
- Carola B. Eisenberg, 103, Argentine-American psychiatrist (b. 1917)[397]
- Jewlia Eisenberg, 50, singer (Charming Hostess), bassist, cantor, composer and educator (b. 1970/1971)[398]
- Lin Emery, 94, visual artist (b. 1926)[399]
- Sally Grossman, 81, model and music label executive (Bearsville Records) (b. 1939)[400]
- Peter W. Hall, 72, attorney and federal judge, United States Attorney for the District of Vermont (2001–2004), judge (2004-2021) and senior judge (since 2021) of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (b. 1948)[401]
- Curtis Lovejoy, 63, competition and Paralympic swimmer, Paralympic champion (2000) (b. 1957)[402]
- Isidore Mankofsky, 89, cinematographer (The Muppet Movie, Somewhere in Time, The Jazz Singer) (b. 1931)[403]
- Skip Mercier, 66, costume, puppet and set designer (b. 1954)[404]
- Luis Palau, 86, Argentine-born American evangelist and author (b. 1934)[405]
- George Reihner, 65, football player (Houston Oilers) (b. 1955)[406]
- Jack Sandner, 79, business executive (Chicago Mercantile Exchange) and community leader (b. 1941)[407]
- March 12
- Robina Asti, 99, flight instructor and advocate for women's and transgender rights (b. 1921)[408]
- Gaynor Cawley, 79, politician, member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1981–2006) (b. 1941)[409]
- Ronald DeFeo Jr., 69, mass murderer (b. 1951)[410]
- Daphne Gail Fautin, 74, professor of invertebrate zoology (University of Kansas) (b. 1946)[411]
- Andrew Majda, 72, mathematician (New York University) (b. 1949)[412]
- John Albert Nordberg, 94, federal judge, judge (1982-1994) and senior judge (since 1994) of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois (b. 1926)[413]
- Dion Payton, 70, blues guitarist and singer (b. 1950)[414]
- Tapan Kumar Sarkar, 72, Indian-American electrical engineer (Syracuse University) (b. 1948)[415]
- Bob Walkup, politician, 84, Mayor of Tucson (1999–2011) (b. 1936)[416]
- March 13 – Marvin Hagler, 66, boxer (b. 1954)[417]
- March 15
- Stephen Bechtel Jr., 95, businessman and engineer (b. 1925)[418]
- Henry Darrow, 87, character actor of stage and film (b. 1933)[419]
- Calvin Jackson, 49, professional football player in the NFL (b. 1972)[420]
- Yaphet Kotto, 81, actor (b. 1939)[421]
- March 16 – Amaranth Ehrenhalt, 93, painter, sculptor, and writer (b. 1928)[422]
- March 17
- Dick Hoyt, 80, athletic competitor. He competed with his son Rick, who has cerebral palsy, in marathons and Ironman Triathlons (b. 1940)[423]
- Freddie Redd, 92, hard-bop pianist and composer (b. 1928)[424]
- March 18
- J. Michael Boardman, 83, British mathematician specializing in algebraic and differential topology (b. 1938)[425]
- Richard Gilliland, 71, television and movie actor (b. 1950)[426]
- Paul Jackson, bassist and composer (b. 1947)[427]
- W. Kent Taylor, 65, businessman; founder and CEO of the Texas Roadhouse restaurant chain (b. 1955)[428]
- Bill Young, 74, football coach at the high school, college, and professional levels (b. 1946)[429]
- March 19
- Andy Haman, 54, professional bodybuilder and actor (b. 1966)[430]
- Melvin L. Kohn, 92, sociologist and past president of the American Sociological Association (b. 1928)[431]
- Gary Leib, 65, underground cartoonist, animator, and musician (b. 1955)[432]
- Glynn Lunney, 84, aerospace engineer (b. 1936)[433]
- Barry Orton, 62, actor and professional wrestler (b. 1958)[434]
- Dan Sartain, 39, musician (b. 1981)[435]
- March 20
- Fred Wyant, 86, professional football player and NFL official (b. 1934)[436]
- Dale E. Wolf, 96, businessman and politician (b. 1924)[437]
- March 22 – Elgin Baylor, 86, basketball player, coach and executive (b. 1934)[438]
- March 23
- Connie Bradley, 75, music executive (ASCAP) (b. 1945)[439]
- Benny Dees, 86, college basketball coach (b. 1934)[440]
- Ethel Gabriel, 99, Grammy winning record producer and music executive (b. 1921)[441]
- Don Heffington, 70, drummer (Lone Justice, Watkins Family Hour) (b. 1950)[442]
- George Segal, 87, actor (b. 1934)[443]
- Houston Tumlin, 28, child actor (Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby) and United States Army veteran (b. 1992)[444]
- Granville Waiters, 60, professional basketball player (b. 1961)[445]
- March 24
- Morris Dickstein, 81, literary scholar (b. 1940)[446]
- Jessica Walter, 80, actress (b. 1941)[447]
- March 25
- Stan Albeck, 89, college and professional basketball coach (b. 1931)[448]
- Rick Azar, 91, broadcaster (WKBW-TV) (b. 1929)[449]
- Bill Brock, 90, politician, U.S. House of Representatives, U.S. Senate, and U.S. Secretary of Labor (b. 1930)[450]
- Bobby Brown, 96, professional baseball player, executive, and physician (b. 1924)[451]
- Beverly Cleary, 104, children's author (b. 1916)[452]
- Joe Cunningham, 89, professional baseball player (b. 1931)[453]
- Larry McMurtry, 84, Academy Award-winning novelist and screenwriter (Lonesome Dove, The Last Picture Show, Brokeback Mountain) (b. 1936)[454]
- Gail Phillips, 76, politician, member of the Alaska House of Representatives (b. 1944)[455]
- Paul W. Whear, 95, composer, conductor, double-bassist and music educator (b. 1925)[456]
- March 26
- Mike Bell, 46, professional baseball player and coach (b. 1974)[457]
- Paul Polansky, 79, writer and Romani activist (b. 1942)[458]
- March 27
- Howard Schnellenberger, 87, college and professional football coach (b. 1934)[459]
- Leon Hale, 99, journalist and author (Houston Chronicle, Houston Post) (b. 1921)[460]
- March 28 – Joseph Edward Duncan, 58, serial killer and child molester (b. 1963)[461]
- March 30 – G. Gordon Liddy, 90, lawyer, FBI agent, talk show host, actor, and one of the seven conspirators convicted of the 1972 Watergate burglary (b. 1930)[462]
- March 31
- Paul Feinman, 61, attorney, associate judge of the New York Court of Appeals (2017–2021) (b. 1960)[463]
- Ron Greene, 82, college basketball coach (b. 1938)[464]
- Cleve Hall, 61, special effects artist (Metalstorm: The Destruction of Jared-Syn, Alienator), make-up artist and actor (b.1959)[465]
- Jerry McGee, 77, golfer (b. 1943)[466]
- Mary Mullarkey, 77, jurist, member (1987–2010) and chief justice (1998–2010) of the Colorado Supreme Court (b. 1943)[467]
- Ken Reitz, 69, MLB baseball player (b. 1951)[468]
- Gregory K. Scott, 72, state judge, member of the Colorado Supreme Court (1992–2000) (b. 1948)[469]
April
- April 1
- Lee Aaker, 77, actor (The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin, Hondo, Mister Scoutmaster), producer, carpenter and ski instructor, (b. 1943)[470]
- Martha Lou Gadsden, 91, chef and restaurateur (Martha Lou's Kitchen), (b. 1930)[471]
- Gerald Irons, 73, football player (Oakland Raiders, Cleveland Browns), (b. 1947)[472]
- April 2
- April, 20, reticulated giraffe, (b. 2000)[473]
- Morris "B.B." Dickerson, 71, funk bassist and singer (War), (b. 1949)[474]
- William Evans, 41, (police officer), killed in the April Capitol attack, (b. 1980)[475]
- Pete Giesen, 88, politician, member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1964–1996), (b. 1932)[476]
- Arthur Kopit, 83, playwright (Indians, Wings, Nine), (b. 1937)[477]
- Clara LaMore, 94, competition and Olympic swimmer (1948), (b. 1926)[478]
- Quindon Tarver, 38, singer and songwriter (b. 1982)[479]
- Gordon Weaver, 84, novelist and short story writer, (b. 1937)[480]
- April 3
- Kathie Coblentz, 73, author and librarian, (b. 1947)[481]
- Jill Corey, 85, singer ("Love Me to Pieces", "Let It Be Me"), (b. 1935)[482]
- Mark Elliott, 81, voice-over artist, (b. 1939)[483]
- Gloria Henry, 98, actress (Dennis the Menace, Miss Grant Takes Richmond, Rancho Notorious), (b. 1923)[484]
- Carl Hodges, 84, atmospheric physicist and climate scientist, (b. 1937)[485]
- James B. Holderman, 85, academic administrator, president of the University of South Carolina (1977–1990), (b. 1936)[486]
- Herb Johnson, 92, football player (New York Giants), (b. 1928)[487]
- Brother Stair, 87, Pentecostal evangelical pastor and radio preacher (The Overcomer Ministry), (b. 1933)[488]
- Stan Stephens, 91, Canadian-born American politician, member (1969–1985) and president (1983–1985) of the Montana Senate, Governor of Montana (1989–1993), (b. 1929)[489]
- April 4
- Thomas D. Brock, 94, microbiologist, (b. 1926)[490]
- Elizabeth Davis, 70, trade unionist, (b. 1930/1931)[491]
- Jean Dupuy, 95, French-born American artist, (b. 1925)[492]
- Ralph Schuckett, 73, rock keyboardist (Utopia, Todd Rundgren) and composer (Pokémon: The First Movie), (b. 1948)[493]
- April 5
- Philip K. Chapman, 86, Australian-born American astronaut (NASA Astronaut Group 6), (b. 1935)[494]
- Jon Michael Dunn, 79, philosopher (Wayne State University, Yale University, Indiana University Bloomington), (b. 1941)[495]
- Robert Fletcher, 98, costume and set designer (Star Trek, Fright Night, The Last Starfighter), (b. 1922)[496]
- Joye Hummel, 97, comic book ghostwriter (Wonder Woman), (b. 1924)[497]
- Frank Jacobs, 91, comics writer (Mad), (b. 1929)[498]
- Bill Markham, 98, politician, member of the Oregon House of Representatives (1969–1993), (b. 1922)[499]
- Gene Mullin, 83, politician, member of the California State Assembly (2002–2008) and Mayor of South San Francisco (1997–1998, 2001–2002), (b. 1937)[500]
- Marshall Sahlins, 90, anthropologist (Sahlins–Obeyesekere debate), (b. 1930)[501]
- Wilber Shirley, 90, restaurateur (Wilber's Barbecue), (b. 1930)[502]
- April 6
- Alice Headley Chandler, 95, Hall of Fame horsebreeder (Sir Ivor) and racing stable owner, (b. 1926)[503]
- Midwin Charles, 47, lawyer and legal analyst (CNN, MSNBC) (b. 1973)[504]
- Charles H. Coolidge, 99, technical sergeant and Medal of Honor recipient, (b. 1921)[505]
- Reese Erlich, 73, author and journalist, (b. 1947)[506]
- Paul Greenberg, 84, journalist (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette) and Pulitzer Prize winner (1969), (b. 1937)[507]
- Alcee Hastings, 84, jurist and politician, judge of Florida's 17th Circuit Court (1977-1979), judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida (1979-1989), member of the U.S. House of Representatives (since 1993), (b. 1936)[508]
- Joe Krebs, 78, television news anchor, (b. 1943)[509]
- Al Mengert, 91, golfer, (b. 1928)[510]
- Walter Olkewicz, 72, actor (Grace Under Fire, Twin Peaks, The Client), (b. 1948)[511]
- Paul Rabinow, 76, anthropologist (University of California, Berkeley), (b. 1944)[512]
- Bobby Schilling, 57, politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (2011–2013), (b. 1964)[513]
- Sonny Simmons, 87, jazz musician and saxophonist, (b. 1933)[514]
- Gene Youngblood, 78, media theorist and writer (Expanded Cinema), (b. 1942)[515]
- April 7
- Anne Beatts, 74, humorist, comedy and television writer (National Lampoon, Saturday Night Live, Square Pegs), (b. 1947)[516]
- James Hampton, 84, actor (F Troop, The Longest Yard, Teen Wolf) and director, (b. 1936)[517]
- Peter Manso, 80, author, writer and journalist, (b. 1940)[518][519]
- Kai Nielsen, 94, philosopher (University of Calgary), (b. 1926)[520]
- Bill Owens, 85, songwriter, (b. 1935)[521]
- Wayne Peterson, 93, composer, pianist and educator, (b. 1927)[522]
- Jack Smith, 85, baseball player (Los Angeles Dodgers, Milwaukee Braves), (b. 1935)[523]
- Howard Weitzman, 81, lawyer, (b. 1939)[524]
- April 8
- Phillip Adams, 32, football player (San Francisco 49ers, New England Patriots, Seattle Seahawks, Oakland Raiders, New York Jets, Atlanta Falcons) and mass murderer (2021 Rock Hill shooting), (b. 1988)[525]
- Margaret Wander Bonanno, 71, science fiction writer (Dwellers in the Crucible, Strangers from the Sky), ghostwriter and publisher, (b. 1950)[526]
- Lee Delaney, 49, business executive, CEO of BJ's Wholesale Club, (b. 1971/1972)[527]
- Conn Findlay, 90, Olympic rower and sailor, (b. 1930)[528]
- Red Mack, 83, football player (Pittsburgh Steelers, Philadelphia Eagles, Atlanta Falcons, Green Bay Packers), (b. 1937)[529]
- John Naisbitt, 92, author, futurologist and public speaker, (b. 1929)[530]
- Alan Pastrana, 76, football player (Denver Broncos) and coach (Anne Arundel Community College, Severn School), (b. 1944)[531]
- Richard Rush, 91, film director (Freebie and the Bean, The Stunt Man, Color of Night), scriptwriter and producer, (b. 1929)[532]
- April 9
- Ramsey Clark, 93, activist, lawyer and federal government official, attorney general (1966–1969) and deputy attorney general (1965–1967), (b. 1927)[533]
- DMX, 50, rapper ("Party Up (Up in Here)", "X Gon' Give It to Ya"), songwriter and actor (Cradle 2 the Grave), (b. 1970)[534]
- Sandra J. Feuerstein, 75, federal judge, judge (2003-2015) and senior judge (since 2015) of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York (since 2003), (b. 1946)[535]
- Red Gendron, 63, ice hockey coach (Albany River Rats, Indiana Ice, Maine Black Bears), (b. 1957)[536]
- Charles Jenkins, 69, Episcopal prelate, 10th Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Louisiana (1998–2009), (b. 1951)[537]
- Jack Minker, 93, computer scientist (University of Maryland, College Park), (b. 1927)[538]
- Judith Reisman, 84, author, (b. 1935)[539]
- April 10
- Edwin E. Aguilar, 46, Salvadoran-born American animator and director (G.I. Joe, The Simpsons, Transformers), (b. 1974)[540]
- LaDonna Brave Bull Allard, 64, Lakota historian and Native American rights activist (Dakota Access Pipeline protests), (b. 1956)[541]
- Quinton Claunch, 99, musician, songwriter, record label owner and producer, (b. 1921)[542]
- Roger Kasperson, 83, geographer (Clark University), (b. 1938)[543]
- Bob Petric, 56, guitarist (Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments), (b. 1964) (death announced on this date)[544]
- Bob Porter, 80, Hall of Fame record producer, discographer, writer and radio broadcaster, (b. 1940)[545]
- M. Richard Rose, 88, academic administrator, president of Alfred University (1974–1978) and the Rochester Institute of Technology (1979–1992), (b. 1933)[546]
- Lin Whitworth, 87, politician, member of the Idaho Senate (1994–2000), (b. 1933)[547]
- April 11
- Todd J. Campbell, 64, federal judge, judge (1995-2016), chief judge (2005–2012) and senior judge (since 2016) of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee, (b. 1956)[548]
- Kas Kastner, 92, motorsports manager, racing driver, car builder and author, (b. 1928)[549]
- Joseph Siravo, 66, actor (The Sopranos, American Crime Story, Oslo), producer and educator, (b. 1955)[550]
- Gerren Taylor, 30, television personality (Baldwin Hills, America the Beautiful), (b. 1990)[551]
- John Williamson, 83, British-born American economist (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Princeton University), (b. 1937)[552]
- Daunte Wright, 20, arrestee (Killing of Daunte Wright), (b. 2000)[553]
- April 12
- Thomas E. Delahanty II, 75, jurist and lawyer, judge (1983-2010) and chief judge (1990-1995) of the Maine Superior Court, United States Attorney for the District of Maine (1980-1981, 2010–2017), (b. 1945)[554]
- John Pelan, 63, author, editor and publisher, (b. 1957)[555]
- Paull Shin, 85, politician, member of the Washington House of Representatives (1993–1995) and Senate (1999–2014), (b. 1935)[556]
- Martin Wachs, 79, urban planner (University of California, Los Angeles, University of California, Berkeley), (b. 1941)[557]
- April 13
- Harold Bradley Jr., 91, football player (Cleveland Browns, Philadelphia Eagles) and actor (Seven Rebel Gladiators) (b. 1929)[558]
- Bobby Leonard, 88, Hall of Fame basketball player (Los Angeles Lakers, Washington Wizards) and coach (Indiana Pacers) (b. 1932)[559]
- April 14
- Hank Huckaby, 79, politician (Georgia House of Representatives) (b. 1941)[560]
- Bernie Madoff, 82, financier and convicted fraudster who ran the world's largest Ponzi scheme (b. 1938)[561]
- Lynn Thomas, 61, professional football player in the NFL (San Francisco 49ers) and USFL Oakland Invaders; (1982 Super Bowl champion) (b. 1959)[562]
- Rusty Young, 75, guitarist, vocalist and songwriter, co-founder of the band Poco (b. 1946)[563]
- April 15
- Moshe Ber Beck, 86, Hungarian-born American rabbi and anti-Zionist campaigner (b. 1934)[564]
- Roscoe Dixon, 71, politician, member of the Tennessee House of Representatives (1984–1994) and Senate (1994–2005) (b. 1949)[565]
- Vartan Gregorian, 87, Iranian-born American academic, president of Carnegie Corporation (b. 1934)[566]
- Leroy Keyes, 74, College Football Hall of Fame football player (Philadelphia Eagles, Kansas City Chiefs) (b. 1947)[567]
- John C. McAdams, 75, political scientist (b. 1945)[568]
- April 16
- Charles Geschke, 81, computer scientist, co-founder of Adobe Inc. (b. 1939)[569]
- Nelson Haggerty, 47, college basketball coach (North Texas Mean Green, Central Missouri Mules, Midwestern State Mustangs) (b. 1973)[570]
- Felix Silla, 84, actor (Cousin Itt on The Addams Family) and stuntman (b. 1937)[571]
- April 17
- Fred Arbanas, 82, football player (Dallas Texans/Kansas City Chiefs) (b. 1939)[572]
- Black Rob, 51, rapper ("Whoa!", "Bad Boy for Life") (b. 1969)[573]
- April 18
- Elizabeth Furse, 84, politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1993–1999) (b. 1936)[574]
- Frank McCabe, 93, basketball player, Olympic champion (1952) (b. 1927)[575]
- Paul Oscher, 71, blues singer (b. 1950)[576]
- Anthony Russo, 74, politician, mayor of Hoboken (1993–2001) (b. 1947)[577]
- Al Young, 81, poet, novelist, essayist, screenwriter, professor, and former Poet Laureate of California (b. 1939)[578]
- April 19
- Shaler Halimon, 76, professional basketball player (NBA & ABA) (b. 1945) (announced on this date)[579]
- Walter Mondale, 93, politician, 42nd Vice President of the United States (1977–1981), senator (1964–1976), ambassador to Japan (1993–1996) (b. 1928)[580]
- Jim Steinman, 73, Grammy Award-winning composer, lyricist, record producer, and playwright (b. 1947)[581]
- Robin Wood, 67, artist specializing in game art and fantasy (b. 1953)[582]
- April 20
- Monte Hellman, 91, film director, producer, writer, and editor (b. 1929)[583]
- Tom Robson, 75, baseball player and coach (MLB) (b. 1946)[584]
- Tempest Storm, 93, burlesque star and actress (b. 1928)[585]
- Bill Wynne, 99, World War II veteran, photojournalist and dog trainer (Smoky) (b. 1922)[586]
- April 21
- Joe Long, 88, musician (The Four Seasons) (b. 1932)[587]
- D. Michael Quinn, 77, historian of the Latter Day Saint movement and member of the September Six (b. 1944)[588]
- Henrietta M. Smith, 98, academic, librarian and storyteller (b. 1922)[589]
- Carl Spielvogel, 92, marketing executive and diplomat, ambassador to Slovakia (2000–2001) (b. 1928)[590]
- April 22
- Terrence Clarke, 19, basketball player (Kentucky Wildcats) (b. 2001)[591]
- Charles Fries, 92, producer (The Amazing Spider-Man, The Martian Chronicles) (b. 1928)[592]
- Adrian Garrett, 78, baseball player (Atlanta Braves, Chicago Cubs, Hiroshima Toyo Carp) (b. 1943)[593]
- Thelma Harper, 80, politician, member of the Tennessee Senate (1989–2019) (b. 1940)[594]
- Shock G, 57, rapper (Digital Underground) and songwriter ("The Humpty Dance", "I Get Around") (b. 1963)[595]
- April 23
- Charlie Glotzbach, 82, racing driver (NASCAR Winston Cup Series) (b.1938)[596]
- Dan Kaminsky, 42, computer security researcher (b. 1979)[597]
- Bill Whittington, 71, racing driver and convicted criminal, 24 Hours of Le Mans winner (1979) (b. 1949)[598]
- April 24
- Bob Fass, 87, radio host (WBAI) (b. 1933)[599]
- Duane Hagadone, 88, newspaper publisher (b. 1932)[600]
- Nathan Jung, 74, actor and stuntman (b. 1946)[601]
- Robert Slavin, 70, psychologist (b. 1950)[602]
- John T. Ward Jr., 75, racehorse trainer (b. 1945)[603]
- April 25
- Mike Davis, 65, professional football player and defensive back in the National Football League (NFL) (b. 1956)[604]
- Denny Freeman, 76, blues guitarist and keyboardist (Stevie Ray Vaughan, Jimmie Vaughan, Bob Dylan, others) (b. 1944)[605]
- April 26
- Geno Hayes, 33, professional football player and linebacker in the National Football League (NFL) (b. 1987)[606]
- Dick Mann, 86, Hall of Fame motorcycle racer (b. 1934)[607]
- Al Schmitt, 91, Grammy Award winning recording engineer (RCA Records, Capitol Studios) (b. 1930)[608]
- April 27
- George P. Kazen, 81, jurist, judge (1979–2018) and chief judge (1996–2003) of the U.S. District Court for Southern Texas (b. 1940)[609]
- Charles Strum, 73, journalist (The New York Times) and author (b. 1948)[610]
- April 28
- Michael Collins, 90, astronaut (Apollo 11), Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs (1970–1971) (b. 1930)[611]
- Jason Matthews, 69, author (Red Sparrow) (b. 1951)[612]
- April 29
- Martin Bookspan, 94, music broadcaster (Live from Lincoln Center) and author (b. 1926)[613]
- Anne Buydens, 102, German-born American philanthropist and widow of Kirk Douglas (b. 1919)[614]
- Johnny Crawford, 75, actor (The Rifleman, Village of the Giants, The Space Children) and singer (b. 1946)[615]
- Pierce Fulton, 28, disc jockey and record producer (b. 1992)[616]
- Courtney Hall, 52, professional football player in the NFL (b. 1968)[617]
- Billie Hayes, 96, actress (H.R. Pufnstuf, The Black Cauldron, Transformers: Rescue Bots, Li'l Abner) (b. 1924)[618]
- Pete Lammons, 77, football player, New York Jets (1966–1971) and the Green Bay Packers (1972) (b. 1943)[619]
- Tony Markellis, bassist (Trey Anastasio Band) (b. 1952)[620]
- Frank McRae, 80, actor (Last Action Hero, Licence to Kill) and professional football player (b. 1941)[621]
- David B. Wake, 84, herpetologist (b. 1936)[622]
- April 30
- Eli Broad, 87, philanthropist, art collector, and museum co-founder (The Broad) (b. 1933)[623]
- John Dee Holeman, 92, Piedmont blues guitarist, singer. and songwriter (b. 1929)[624]
May
- May 1
- Chuck Darling, 91, basketball player (Iowa Hawkeyes) (b. 1930)[625]
- Olympia Dukakis, 89, actress and 1988 Academy Award winner for Moonstruck. Also known for Sinatra and Steel Magnolias (b. 1931)[626]
- Helen Murray Free, 98, chemist (b. 1923)[627]
- Joseph W. Hatchett, 88, attorney and judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits (b. 1932)[628]
- Wondress Hutchinson, 56, singer ("Got to Have Your Love") (b. 1964)[629]
- Al Jamison, 83, football player (Houston Oilers) (b. 1937)[630]
- John Paul Leon, 49, comic book artist (b. 1972)[631]
- Joseph Z. Nederlander, 93, theatre owner and manager (b. 1927)[632]
- Ernest E. West, 89, soldier, Medal of Honor recipient (b. 1931)[633]
- May 2
- Bob Abernethy, 93, journalist (NBC News) and television presenter (Religion & Ethics Newsweekly) (b. 1927)[634]
- Jacques d'Amboise, 86, ballet dancer, choreographer and actor (Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, Carousel) (b. 1934)[635]
- Eric McClure, 42, racing driver (NASCAR Xfinity Series) (b. 1978)[636]
- Sally Falk Moore, 97, legal anthropologist and professor emerita at Harvard University (b. 1924)[637]
- Bobby Unser, 87, racing driver, three-time Indianapolis 500 winner (b. 1934)[638]
- Tommy West, 78, music producer (Life and Times, I Got a Name) and singer-songwriter (b. 1942)[639]
- May 3
- Hal Breeden, 76, baseball player (Montreal Expos, Hanshin Tigers, Chicago Cubs) (b. 1944)[640]
- Vinson Filyaw, 51, convicted child rapist (b. 1969)[641]
- Frazier Glenn Miller Jr., 80, domestic terrorist and perpetrator of the Overland Park Jewish Community Center shooting (b. 1940)[642]
- Phil Naro, 63, rock vocalist (Talas) (b. 1957 or 1958)[643]
- Lloyd Price, 88, Hall of Fame R&B singer ("Personality", "Lawdy Miss Clawdy", "Stagger Lee") (b. 1933)[644]
- Ed Ward, 72, music writer and radio commentator (b. 1948)[645]
- May 4
- Jim Hagan, 83, basketball player (Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles, Phillips 66ers) (b. 1938)[646]
- Ray Miller, 76, baseball coach and manager (Minnesota Twins, Baltimore Orioles) (b. 1945)[647]
- May 5
- Jonathan Bush, 89, banker and brother of President George H. W. Bush (b. 1931)[648]
- Del Crandall, 91, baseball player (Boston Braves/Milwaukee Braves) and manager (Milwaukee Brewers) (b. 1930)[649]
- Lucinda Franks, 74, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist (The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Atlantic) (b. 1946)[650]
- George Jung, 78, drug trafficker and smuggler, subject of the movie Blow (b. 1942)[651]
- David F. Swensen, 67, investor and philanthropist (b. 1954)[652]
- May 6
- Jim Bertelsen, 71, football player (Los Angeles Rams) (b. 1950)[653]
- David Bulow, 41, soccer player (Dungannon Swifts, Richmond Kickers) (b. 1980)[654]
- David H. Gambrell, 91, politician, member of the U.S. Senate (1971–1972) (b. 1929)[655]
- Pervis Staples, 85, Staple Singers co-founder (b. 1935)[656]
- Paul Van Doren, 90, entrepreneur, co-founder of Vans (b. 1930)[657]
- Karl Wirsum, 81, artist (b. 1939)[658]
- Felix Zabala, 83, Cuban-born American boxing promoter (b. 1937)[659]
- May 7
- Ernest Angley, 99, evangelist (b. 1921)[660]
- Tawny Kitaen, 59, actress, comedian, and media personality (Bachelor Party) (b. 1961)[661]
- Cruz Reynoso, 90, civil rights lawyer and jurist, associate judge of the Supreme Court of California (1982–1987) (b. 1931)[662]
- May 8
- Bo, First Dog of the United States (b. 2008)[663]
- Pete du Pont, 86, politician, governor of Delaware (1977–1985), member of the Delaware (1969–1971) and U.S. House of Representatives (1971–1977) (b. 1935)[664]
- Aurelia Greene, 86, politician, member of the New York State Assembly (1982–2009) (b. 1934)[665]
- Curtis Fuller, 88, jazz trombonist (b. 1932)[666]
- Eula Hall, 93, healthcare activist (b. 1927)[667]
- Ronald Inglehart, 86, political scientist (Inglehart–Welzel cultural map of the world) (b. 1934)[668]
- Helmut Jahn, 81, German-American architect (Liberty Place, James R. Thompson Center, 50 West Street) (b. 1940)[669]
- Cal Luther, 93, basketball coach (Murray State Racers, UT Martin Skyhawks, Longwood Lancers) (b. 1927)[670]
- Spencer Silver, 80, chemist, co-inventor of Post-it Notes (b. 1941)[671]
- May 9
- Marye Anne Fox, 73, chemist and academic administrator, chancellor of North Carolina State University (1998–2004) and the University of California, San Diego (2004–2012) (b. 1947)[672]
- George Hovland, 94, Olympic cross country skier (1952) (b. 1926)[673]
- Robert Ward, 68, politician (b. 1952)[674]
- May 10
- Art Gensler, 85, architect, founder of Gensler (b. 1935)[675]
- Froy Salinas, 81, politician, member of the Texas House of Representatives (1977–1985) (b. 1939)[676]
- May 11
- Colt Brennan, 37, football player (Hawaii Rainbow Warriors, Washington Redskins) (b. 1983)[677]
- Dan W. Brown, 70, politician, member of the Missouri House of Representatives (2008–2010) and Senate (2011–2019) (b. 1950)[678]
- Norman Lloyd, 106, actor (St. Elsewhere, Dead Poets Society, Limelight), producer and director (b. 1914)[679]
- Richard Nonas, 85, sculptor (b. 1936)[680]
- Chuck Welke, 67, politician, member of the South Dakota Senate (2013–2015) (b. 1953)[681]
- Lester L. Wolff, 102, politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1965–1981) (b. 1919)[682]
- May 12
- Jerry Burns, 94, football player (Michigan Wolverines) and coach (Minnesota Vikings) (b. 1927)[683]
- Jim Klobuchar, 93, journalist and author (Star Tribune) and father of U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar (b. 1928)[684]
- Bob Koester, 88, music executive and founder of Delmark Records (b. 1932)[685]
- Ralph Turlington, 100, politician, member (1950–1974) and speaker (1967–1969) of the Florida House of Representatives, Florida education commissioner (1974–1986) (b. 1920)[686]
- May 13
- Norman Simmons, 91, pianist, arranger and composer (b. 1929)[687]
- Jack Terricloth, 50, musician (The World/Inferno Friendship Society) (b. 1970)[688]
- May 14
- Jay Barbree, 87, space travel news correspondent (NBC News) (b. 1933)[689]
- Otto Beatty Jr., 81, politician, member of the Ohio House of Representatives (1980–1999) (b. 1940)[690]
- New Jack (Jerome Young), 58, professional wrestler (SMW, ECW, XPW) (b. 1963)[691]
- Bobby Jones, 81, college basketball coach (Kentucky Wesleyan Panthers) (b. 1939 or 1940)[692]
- May 15
- Felicia Elizondo, 74, transgender activist (b. 1946)[693]
- Fred Martinelli, 92, Hall of Fame college football coach (Ashland University) (b. 1929)[694]
- May 16 – Mike Carter, 67, politician, member of the Tennessee House of Representatives (since 2003) (b. 1953)[695]
- May 17
- Patsy Bruce, 81, country music songwriter ("Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys") (b. 1940)[696]
- Don Kernodle, 71, professional wrestler (Jim Crockett Promotions) (b. 1950)[697]
- Buddy Roemer, 77, politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1981–1988), Governor of Louisiana (1988–1992) (b. 1943)[698]
- May 18
- Joe J. Christensen, 91, Mormon leader, president of Ricks College (1985–1989), general authority (since 1989) (b. 1929)[699]
- Robert V. Cullison, 84, politician, member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives (1973–1979) and Senate (1979–1995) (b. 1934)[700]
- Charles Grodin, 86, actor (The Heartbreak Kid, Midnight Run, Beethoven) and comedian, Emmy winner (1978) (b. 1935)[701]
- Arthur Hills, 91, golf course designer (b. 1930)[702]
- Terence Riley, 66, architect and museum curator, chief curator of architecture and design at the Museum of Modern Art (1992–2006) (b. 1954)[703]
- Corinne Wood, 66, politician, lieutenant governor of Illinois (1999–2003) (b. 1954)[704]
- May 19
- Gary Blodgett, 83, politician, member of the Iowa House of Representatives (1993–2001) (b. 1937)[705]
- Alix Dobkin, 80, folk singer-songwriter, lesbian feminist activist and memoirist (b. 1940)[706]
- Esther A. Hopkins, 94, chemist, environmental lawyer and civil servant (b. 1926)[707]
- David Anthony Kraft, 68–69, comic book writer (The Defenders, Captain America) (b. 1952)[708]
- Paul Mooney, 79, actor (The Buddy Holly Story, Bamboozled), comedian (Chappelle's Show) and writer (b. 1941)[709]
- Lee Evans, 74, sprinter, double Olympic champion (1968), coach, and activist (b.1947)[710]
- Charles C. Hagemeister, 74, soldier, Medal of Honor recipient (b. 1946)[711]
- Quintin Jones, 41, convicted murderer, execution by lethal injection (b. 1979)[712]
- May 20
- Glen E. Conrad, 71, lawyer and jurist, U.S. District Court for Western Virginia (since 2003) (b. 1949)[713]
- Roger Hawkins, 75, drummer (Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section) and recording studio owner (Muscle Shoals Sound Studio) (b. 1945)[714]
- John Powless, 88. college basketball coach (Wisconsin Badgers) (b. 1932)[715]
- May 21
- Margherita Marchione, 99, Roman Catholic nun and writer (b. 1922)[716]
- Stephen Zappala Sr., 88, judge, member (1983–2002) and chief justice (2001–2002) of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania (b. 1932)[717]
- Harvey Schlossberg, 85, police officer (b. 1936)[718]
- May 22
- Joe Beckwith, 66, baseball player (Los Angeles Dodgers, Kansas City Royals), World Series champion (1981, 1985) (b. 1955)[719]
- David Danielson, 73, politician, member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives (since 2013) (b. 1947)[720]
- May 23
- Dewayne Blackwell, 84, songwriter ("Friends in Low Places", "Mr. Blue") (b. 1936)[721]
- Charles Boutin, 79, politician and administrative law judge, mayor of Aberdeen, Maryland (1994–1998), member of the Maryland House of Delegates (1999–2005) (b. 1942)[722]
- Eric Carle, 91, writer and illustrator (The Very Hungry Caterpillar, The Grouchy Ladybug, Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?), (b. 1929)[723]
- May 24
- Robert Green Hall, 47, makeup artist (Angel, Buffy the Vampire Slayer) and film director (Laid to Rest) (b. 1973)[724]
- Paul Christy, 82, professional wrestler (NWA, ICW, WWF) (b. 1939)[725]
- Samuel E. Wright, actor and singer (The Little Mermaid, The Lion King) (b. 1946)[726]
- Anna Halprin, 100, choreographer (b. 1920)[727]
- Desiree Gould, 76, actress (Sleepaway Camp) (b. 1945)[728]
- May 25
- J. D. Roberts, 88, football player and coach (New Orleans Saints) (b. 1932)[729]
- John Warner, 94, politician, U.S. Senator from Virginia (1979–2009) and 61st United States Secretary of the Navy (1972–1974) (b. 1927)[730]
- Lois Ehlert, 86, children's author and illustrator (Chicka Chicka Boom Boom) (b. 1934)[731]
- May 26 – Rusty Warren, 91, comedian and singer (Knockers Up!) (b. 1930)[732]
- May 27
- Foster Friess, 81, investment manager (b. 1940)[733]
- Robert Hogan, 87, actor (b. 1933)[734]
- Robbie McCauley, 78, playwright and actress (b. 1942)[735]
- May 28
- Albert Kookesh, 72, politician, member of the Alaska Senate (2005–2013) and House of Representatives (1997–2005) (b. 1948)[736]
- Jim Beirne, 74, football player (Houston Oilers, San Diego Chargers) (b. 1946)[737]
- William F. Clinger Jr., 92, politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1979–1997) and chair of the House Oversight Committee (1995–1997) (b. 1929)[738]
- May 29
- Gavin MacLeod, 90, actor (McHale's Navy, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, The Love Boat) (b. 1931)[739]
- B. J. Thomas, 78, singer ("Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head", "(Hey Won't You Play) Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song", "Hooked on a Feeling"), Grammy winner (1981), (b. 1942)[740]
- Floyd McClung, 75, clergyman, Protestant missionary, and writer (b. 1945)[741]
- Joe Lara, 58, actor (American Cyborg: Steel Warrior, Steel Frontier, Tarzan: The Epic Adventures) (b. 1962)[742]
- Gwen Shamblin Lara, 66, writer and dietician (Christian diet programs) (b. 1955)[742]
- May 31
- Arlene Golonka, 85, actress (Mayberry R.F.D., The Andy Griffith Show, Hang 'Em High) (b. 1936)[743]
- Lil Loaded, 20, rapper and Internet personality (b. 2000)[744]
- Leon Burtnett, 78, football coach (Purdue University) (b. 1943)[745]
June
- June 1
- Mike Marshall, 78, baseball player (Los Angeles Dodgers, Montreal Expos, Minnesota Twins) (b. 1943)[746]
- Bunny Matthews, 70, cartoonist and writer (b. 1951)[747]
- June 2
- Bill Scanlon, 64, tennis player, cancer (b. 1956)[748]
- Eric Mobley, 51, basketball player (Milwaukee Bucks, Vancouver Grizzlies), (b. 1970)[749]
- June 3
- F. Lee Bailey, 87, criminal defense attorney (Sam Sheppard, O. J. Simpson) (b. 1933)[750]
- Karla Burns, 66, operatic mezzo-soprano (b. 1954)[751]
- Ernie Lively, actor (The Man in the Moon, The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, Looking Glass) (b. 1947)[752]
- June 4
- John Malcolm Patterson, 99, politician, Governor of Alabama (1959–1963) (b. 1921)[753]
- Tom Fink, 92, politician, mayor of Anchorage (1987–1994) and speaker of the Alaska House of Representatives (1973–1975) (b. 1928)[754]
- Clarence Williams III, actor (Purple Rain, The Legend of 1900, The Butler) (b. 1939)[755]
- June 5
- Galen Young, 45, basketball player (Charlotte 49ers, Yakima Sun Kings, Perth Wildcats) (b. 1975)[756]
- Richard Robinson, 84, businessman and educator, president and CEO of Scholastic Corporation (since 1975) (b. 1937)[757]
- June 7
- Douglas S. Cramer, 89, television producer (Wonder Woman, Dynasty, The Love Boat) and art collector (b. 1931)[758]
- Jim Fassel, 71, football player (The Hawaiians) and coach (Utah Utes, New York Giants) (b. 1949)[759]
- June 8
- Joseph Margolis, 97, philosopher (b. 1924)[760]
- Dean Parrish, 79, soul singer (b. 1942)[761]
- June 9
- Dale Danks, 81, politician, mayor of Jackson (1977–1989), complications from a stroke (b. 1939)[762]
- Robert Katzmann, 68, jurist, judge (since 1999) and chief judge (2013–2020) for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (b. 1953)[763]
- Dakota Skye, 27, pornographic film actress (b. 1994)[764]
- June 10
- Douglas Ley, 62, academic and politician, member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives (since 2012) (b. 1958)[765]
- Joyce MacKenzie, 95, actress (Broken Arrow, Tarzan and the She-Devil, Rails Into Laramie) (b. 1925)[766]
- June 11
- Vern Miller, 92, politician, Kansas Attorney General (1971–1975) (b. 1928)[767]
- John Gabriel, 90, actor (Ryan's Hope, Stagecoach, The Mary Tyler Moore Show)[768]
- June 12
- Dennis Berry, 76, film director (The Big Delirium, Chloé, Highlander: The Raven) (b. 1944)[769]
- Mudcat Grant, 85, baseball player (Cleveland Indians, Minnesota Twins, Oakland Athletics) (b. 1935)[770]
- Christopher Sign, 45, television journalist (KNXV-TV, WBMA-LD) (b. 1975)[771]
- John Marinatto, 64, college athletics commissioner, commissioner of the Big East Conference (2009–2012) (b. 1957)[772]
- June 13 – Ned Beatty, 83, actor (Network, Deliverance, Toy Story 3) (b. 1937)[773]
- June 14
- Hessley Hempstead, 49, football player (Detroit Lions) (b. 1972)[774]
- Lisa Banes, 65, actress (Cocktail, Young Guns, Gone Girl) (b. 1955)[775]
- Philip Gannon, 98, educator, founder and president (1957–1989) of Lansing Community College.[776]
- Deona Marie Knajdek, 31, social activist (b. 1969/1970)[777]
- June 15
- Jack B. Weinstein, 99, jurist, judge (since 1967) and chief judge (1980–1988) of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York (b. 1921)[778]
- Anna C. Verna, 90, politician, member (1975–2012) and president (1999–2011) of the Philadelphia City Council (b. 1931)[779]
- June 16
- Frank Bonner, 79, actor (WKRP in Cincinnati, Just the Ten of Us) and television director (City Guys), (b. 1942)[780]
- Janet Malcolm, 86, journalist (The New Yorker, Psychoanalysis: The Impossible Profession, The Journalist and the Murderer), (b. 1934)[781]
- Norman Powell, 86, television executive and producer (24, Washington: Behind Closed Doors, Rafferty) (b. 1934)[782]
- Richard Stolley, 92, journalist and editor (People), (b. 1928)[783]
- Vance Trimble, 107, journalist (The Kentucky Post), Pulitzer Prize winner (1960) (b. 1913)[784]
- June 17 – Alex Harvill, 28, motorcycle stuntman (b. 1992)[785]
- June 18 – Billy Fuccillo, 64, car dealer and owner of Fuccillo Automotive Group (b. 1957)[786]
- June 19 – Champ, 12, dog, presidential pet of Joe and Jill Biden (b. 2008)[787]
- June 20 – Joanne Linville, 93, actress ("The Enterprise Incident" episode of Star Trek, A Star Is Born, Scorpio) (b. 1928)[788]
- June 21
- Diego Cortez, 74, art curator (b. 1946)[789]
- Mark Doumit, 59, politician, member of the Washington House of Representatives and Senate (b. 1961)[790]
- Tom Kurvers, 58, ice hockey player (New York Islanders, Montreal Canadiens, New Jersey Devils), Stanley Cup champion (1986) (b. 1962)[791]
- June 22
- Patrick Allen, 59, football player (Houston Oilers) (b. 1961)[792]
- Jim Bessman, 68, music journalist (Billboard) (b. 1952)[793]
- Patricia Reilly Giff, 86, author (Lily's Crossing, Pictures of Hollis Woods) (b. 1935)[794]
- Richard H. Kyle, 84, judge, U.S. District Court for Minnesota (since 1992) (b. 1937)[795]
- June 23
- Mike Brooks, 66, journalist (CNN) (b. 1955)[796]
- John McAfee, 75, British-American computer programmer and businessman (McAfee Associates) (b. 1945)[797]
- Ellen McIlwaine, 75, American-born Canadian guitarist and blues singer (b. 1945)[798]
- Mike McLachlan, 75, politician, member of the Colorado House of Representatives (2013–2015) (b. 1946)[799]
- Bev Scalze, 77, politician, member of the Minnesota House of Representatives (2005–2013) and Senate (2013–2017) (b. 1943)[800]
- June 24
- Sonny Callahan, 88, politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1985–2003), Alabama Senate (1979–1985) and House of Representatives (1971–1979) (b. 1932)[801]
- Stephen Dunn, 82, poet, Pulitzer Prize winner (2001) (b. 1939)[802]
- Frederick S. Humphries, 85, educator, president of Florida A&M University (1985–2001) (b. 1935)[803]
- June 25
- John Erman, 85, director (My Favorite Martian, Peyton Place, That Girl), Emmy winner (1983) (b. 1935)[804]
- Jack Ingram, 84, Hall of Fame racing driver, NASCAR Busch Grand National Series champion (1982, 1985) (b. 1936)[805]
- June 26
- Mike Gravel, 91, politician, member (1963–1967) and speaker (1965–1967) of the Alaska House of Representatives, U.S. Senator (1969–1981) (b. 1930)[806]
- Jon Hassell, 84, trumpeter and composer (b. 1937)[807]
- John Langley, 78, television producer (Cops) (b. 1943)[808]
- Frederic Rzewski, 83, composer and virtuoso pianist (The People United Will Never Be Defeated!) (b. 1938)[809]
- Johnny Solinger, 55, singer-songwriter (Skid Row) (b. 1965)[810]
- June 27
- Alison Greenspan, 48, film and television producer (Monte Carlo, The Best of Me, For Life) (b. 1972)[811]
- Steven Horwitz, 57, economist (b. 1964)[812]
- June 28
- Lauren Berlant, 63, scholar and writer (b. 1957)[813]
- Burton Greene, 84, jazz pianist (b. 1937)[814]
- Harry Johnston, 89, politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1989–1997) (b. 1931)[815]
- Greg Noll, 84, surfer (b. 1937)[816]
- June 29
- Stuart Damon, 84, actor (General Hospital, The Champions, Port Charles) (b. 1937)[817]
- Elizabeth Martínez, 95, Chicana feminist (b. 1925)[818]
- Donald Rumsfeld, 88, politician, U.S. Representative (1963–1969), White House Chief of Staff (1974–1975), and two-time Secretary of Defense (1975–1977, 2001–2006) (b. 1932)[819]
- June 30
- Jimmy Fitzmorris, 99, politician, Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana (1972–1980) (b. 1921)[820]
- Janet Moreau, 93, track and field athlete, Olympic champion (1952) (b. 1927)[821]
- Bob Newland, 72, football player (New Orleans Saints) (b. 1948)[822]
References
- ↑ Governor Northam Statement on the Passing of Senator A. Benton Chafin, Jr. (R-SD38), Who Died From "Complications From COVID-19"
- ↑ Disney Legend Ron Dominguez (aka "Mr. Disneyland") Passed Away at Age 85
- ↑ George Gerdes, Singer, Songwriter and Character Actor, Dies at 72
- ↑ Denver Broncos Hall of Fame RB Floyd Little dies at 78
- ↑ Country Star Misty Morgan Dies Aged 75
- ↑ Paige Rense, Trendsetting Editor of Architectural Digest, Dies at 91
- ↑ George Whitmore, legendary climber of El Capitan, dies at 89
- ↑ Mary Catherine Bateson
- ↑ Brad Cox
- ↑ Native American land activist Carrie Dann dies in Nevada
- ↑ Robert C. Livingston
- ↑ W.B. Park – RIP
- ↑ Pa. representative Mike Reese dies at 42
- ↑ Don Salls, World War II veteran & former Alabama football player, dies at 101
- ↑ "Former Mississippi Rep. Gary Staples passes away". Archived from the original on 2021-01-03. Retrieved 2021-03-02.
- ↑ Paul Westphal, member of Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, dies at age 70
- ↑ Lee Breuer Dies: 'The Gospel at Colonus' Playwright, Leading Force In American Avant-Garde Theater Was 83
- ↑ Celebrated author Eric Jerome Dickey dies at 59
- ↑ Dick Kulpa – RIP
- ↑ Donald Polsky
- ↑ The Rev. George Regas, former rector of All Saints Pasadena, dies at 90
- ↑ Former N.C. A&T Chancellor Dr. James Renick Dead at 72
- ↑ Tom Acker, former Major League pitcher and Bergen County legend, dies at age 90
- ↑ 'To know him was to love him': longtime Horry County Schools administrator dies at 57
- ↑ In Memoriam prof. Seymour Van Gundy (in Romanian)
- ↑ Former Orange County Sheriff Sandra Hutchens dies after lengthy cancer battle
- ↑ Jonas Neubauer, 7-time Tetris World Champion, dies at age 39
- ↑ Bernard Peter Randolph
- ↑ Tanya Roberts, a Charlie's Angel and a Bond Girl, Is Dead at 65
- ↑ Gregory Sierra, Actor on 'Barney Miller' and 'Sanford and Son,' Dies at 83
- ↑ Remembering Jerry Berger
- ↑ Cornelis G. Boeree
- ↑ Christina Crosby
- ↑ 'Charlotte icon' Thereasea Elder, Black nurse who integrated public health, dies at 93
- ↑ 'An incredible life well-lived': Patricia Frist, longtime Nashville philanthropist, dies at 81
- ↑ Donald Eugene Leppert Sr.
- ↑ Longtime IndyCar entrant Pat Patrick dies, aged 91
- ↑ Thelma S. Baker
- ↑ Obituary: Jonathan Aldrich
- ↑ Dr. Kenneth Altshuler, champion of mental health causes in Dallas, dies at 91
- ↑ Photos: University of North Florida's founding and first president dies at 94
- ↑ Professor Emeritus Peter Eagleson, pioneering hydrologist, dies at 92
- ↑ Bobby Few 1935–2021
- ↑ Former BYU All-American Eldon Fortie Passes Away at 79
- ↑ Donald E. Frith
- ↑ Edinburgh Fringe pioneer Jim Haynes dies at 87
- ↑ Gerald Hiken
- ↑ In memoriam: Laurence H. Kedes, MD
- ↑ Dr. Barry Schwartz
- ↑ Burt Wilson, leader of the Silver Dollar Jazz Band, has passed
- ↑ American anthropologist who authored Rengsanggri no more
- ↑ 'ER' Star Dearon 'Deezer D' Thompson Dead at 55
- ↑ Grant Gondrezick, un des plus grands joueurs passés par le Caen BC, est décédé (in French)
- ↑ Bruce Lee's long time friend and training partner Taky Kimura dies aged 96
- ↑ Tom LaBonge, former LA councilman and longtime fixture on local political scene, dies at 67
- ↑ Dodgers Legend Tommy Lasorda Dies At 93: 'One Of The Most Memorable Personalities In Baseball History'
- ↑ Singer-songwriter Jamie O'Hara Dead at 70
- ↑ Former Illini running back Perrin dies at 68
- ↑ Marion Ramsey Dies: 'Police Academy' Actress Was 73
- ↑ Neil Sheehan, Reporter Who Obtained the Pentagon Papers, Dies at 84
- ↑ Capitol Police officer dies from injuries after clashing with pro-Trump mob
- ↑ Sojun Mel Weitsman, founder of Berkeley Zen Center, dies at 91
- ↑ Mississippi Civil Rights activist Meredith Anding Jr. dies at 79
- ↑ Judge William Henry Barbour Jr.
- ↑ Harold N. Bornstein, Trump's Former Personal Physician, Dies at 73
- ↑ Ed Bruce Dies: Country Songwriter, 'Bret Maverick' Actor Was 81
- ↑ David Buchsbaum, 1929 – 2021
- ↑ Steve Carver, Director of 'Lone Wolf McQuade' and 'Big Bad Mama,' Dies at 75
- ↑ John Corcoran (1937 - 2021)
- ↑ David Darling
- ↑ Football: Napa High's Super Bowl champion, Steve Hendrickson, dies at 54
- ↑ Mike Henry Dies: USC Footballer, LA Ram, Played 'Tarzan' And 'Junior' In 'Smokey And The Bandit', Was 84
- ↑ My Brilliant Friend: Peter W. Huber, 1952–2021
- ↑ Iconic Legion of Super-Heroes artist Steve Lightle dies at age 61
- ↑ Mr. James Wesley McGee
- ↑ Diana Millay (1935–2021)
- ↑ Higher Education Pioneer Dr. Samuel L. Myers Dead at 101
- ↑ Remembering Deborah L. Rhode: Legal Ethics Pioneer, Stanford Scholar, Mentor to Many
- ↑ Donald "Don" Robertson
- ↑ Former Elon, Duke coach Red Wilson dies at 95
- ↑ Updated: Acclaimed Director, Author Jerry Douglas Passes
- ↑ "Sarasota resident John Lutz, author of 'Single White Female,' dies at 81". Archived from the original on 2021-01-11. Retrieved 2021-03-10.
- ↑ John J. Ryba Jr.
- ↑ RIP Muppet Designer Caroly Wilcox
- ↑ Former legislator Jeannette Wood dies at 88
- ↑ Toronto Basketball Legend Harry Brown Passes Away
- ↑ Nancy Bush Ellis, Sister and Aunt of Presidents, Dies at 94
- ↑ "Thomas P. Gannon". Archived from the original on 2021-07-29. Retrieved 2021-03-10.
- ↑ Wayne Radford, who 'was just always there' for Indiana basketball, dies at 64
- ↑ UConn Legend Dee Rowe Passes Away at the Age of 91
- ↑ Addio ad Antonio Sabàto: morto per Covid, fu star di poliziotteschi e spaghetti western (in Italian)
- ↑ RIP Julie Strain: B-Movie Actor And Star Of 'Heavy Metal 2000'
- ↑ Sheldon Adelson, Las Vegas convention visionary and philanthropist, dies at 87
- ↑ Former Congressman Eddie Beard dies at 80
- ↑ Lionel Gossman, specialist in French literature and history and 'one of the great humanists and scholar-teachers of his generation,' dies at 91
- ↑ Hawaii loses 2 military heroes, advocates in Irwin K. Cockett Jr. and Ronald J. Hays
- ↑ Howard Johnson, Tuba Virtuoso & Collaborator With The Band, Taj Mahal, Dies At 79
- ↑ Tetsuo Najita (1936-2021)
- ↑ Prentice Earl Sanders, San Francisco's first Black police chief, dies
- ↑ Margo St. James, the sex workers' 'Joan of Arc,' dies at 83
- ↑ Remembering Paul Taylor, One of the Early TTY Activists.
- ↑ Astronaut William Thornton, who invented shuttle treadmill, dies at 91
- ↑ Stacy Title, Director of 'The Bye Bye Man' and 'The Last Supper,' Dies at 56
- ↑ The late Bruce Bennett remembered for dedication to Saskatchewan Roughriders
- ↑ Former Miami Hurricanes standout, NFL player Carlos Joseph dies at 40
- ↑ Former NFL player Tim Lester dies of COVID-19 at age 52
- ↑ Famed Pensacola Attorney Fred Levin has died at the age of 83 from COVID-19
- ↑ Barry Lewis
- ↑ Obituary: Christopher P. Monkhouse
- ↑ Keith Wayne Valigura
- ↑ Poker Elder Statesman Howard "Tahoe" Andrew Passes Away (1934-2021)
- ↑ Tim Bogert Dies: Bassist With Jeff Beck, Vanilla Fudge, Cactus Was 76
- ↑ Duke Bootee, Rapper and Co-Writer of Hip-Hop Classic 'The Message,' Dead at 69
- ↑ Sir Robert Cohan, modern dance legend, dies aged 95
- ↑ Obituaries, Week of Jan.30, 2021
- ↑ Siegfried and Roy Magician Siegfried Fischbacher Dead at 81
- ↑ Benjamin Gibson, first Black judge in U.S. Western District of Michigan, dies at 89
- ↑ Former Dodger batting coach Ben Hines has passed away
- ↑ NABJ Celebrates the Life and Legacy of Former President Bryan Monroe
- ↑ US carries out its 1st execution of female inmate since 1953
- ↑ "New York Dolls Guitarist Sylvain Sylvain Dead at 69". Rolling Stone. 2021-01-15. Archived from the original on 2023-06-23.
- ↑ In Memoriam: CCM Professor Emeritus Eiji Hashimoto
- ↑ Longtime Oakland County state lawmaker Shirley Johnson dies
- ↑ John H. LaRose
- ↑ Harold McPheeters
- ↑ Peter Mark Richman Dies: Versatile Playwright, Author And Actor For Broadway, Film, TV Was 93
- ↑ Joanne Rogers, wife of Fred Rogers of 'Mister Rogers' Neighborhood,' dies at 92
- ↑ Ronald Edward Samford
- ↑ Larry Willoughby, A&R Executive Who Signed Luke Bryan, Dies of COVID-19
- ↑ "Opinion | How Economics Lost Itself in Data". The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on 2023-04-17.
- ↑ Disney Great Dale Baer, An Animator For Five Decades, Has Died At 70
- ↑ Former Farmington mayor Sandy Brotherton dies at 98
- ↑ Tyrone Crawley
- ↑ Bruce Headley, California thoroughbred trainer, dies at 86
- ↑ Obituary: Kathleen Krull
- ↑ Danh ca Lệ Thu qua đời (in Vietnamese)
- ↑ Maryland Senate President Emeritus Thomas V. Mike Miller, Jr Passes Away
- ↑ J. Michael Schweder
- ↑ Jon Westling, R.I.P.
- ↑ "Gerald Wiegert, Creator Of The Vector Supercar, Dies At 76". Archived from the original on 2021-01-28. Retrieved 2021-03-23.
- ↑ Former New Mexico legislator Jim White—known for wise, calm demeanor—dies
- ↑ Former USC and Rams great Jon Arnett dies at 85
- ↑ Sharon Begley, path-breaking science journalist who spun words into gold, dies at 64
- ↑ Jerry Brandt, Founder of New York Nightclub The Ritz, Dead at 82
- ↑ Little Walter, king of doo-wop and oldies, dies at 73
- ↑ U.S. Executes Dustin Higgs In 13th And Final Execution Under Trump Administration
- ↑ Jim MacGeorge, R.I.P.
- ↑ Powell passes away at the age of 85
- ↑ Phil Spector, Famed Music Producer Imprisoned in Slaying, Dies at 81
- ↑ UFC pioneer, early fan favorite Paul Varelans dies after battle with COVID-19
- ↑ Pa. state senator dies from brain cancer at age 49
- ↑ Grand Master Cheezic
- ↑ Former Peoria-area TV news anchor Brian Christie dies
- ↑ Barbara "Bobby" Gronemus
- ↑ Indianapolis native Muriel Grossfeld was a 3-time Olympian who had brush with Hollywood
- ↑ "Mayor who led Prescott after firefighters' deaths dies at 86". Archived from the original on 2021-01-28. Retrieved 2021-04-03.
- ↑ Gerald Locklin, CSULB teacher, writer, poet, dies at 79
- ↑ Junior Mance, jazz pianist and educator, dies at 92
- ↑ Fallece el arreglista Sammy Nestico (in Spanish)
- ↑ Cardinal DiNardo on the death of Retired Aux. Bishop Rizzotto
- ↑ Maynard Leon Wallace
- ↑ Lubomir Kavalek, international chess grandmaster, dies at 77
- ↑ Don Sutton, Hall of Fame pitcher for Dodgers, dies at 75
- ↑ Perry Botkin Jr., Grammy-Winning Arranger of 'Nadia's Theme,' Dies at 87
- ↑ Jimmie Rodgers, Who Sang 'Honeycomb' and Other Hits, Dies at 87
- ↑ Mira Furlan, 'Babylon 5' and 'Lost' Actress, Dies at 65
- ↑ "Pro golfer Lonnie Nielsen dies after battle with dementia". USA Today. 2021-01-29. Archived from the original on 2022-12-09.
- ↑ Ted Thompson, Who Helped Revive the Packers, Is Dead at 68
- ↑ Bob Avian, Choreographer of Broadway Smashes, Dies at 83
- ↑ Dolly Parton's Brother, Singer Randy Parton, Has Died
- ↑ Baseball icon Hank Aaron dead at age 86
- ↑ Ulrich, Nate. "Browns archives: Remembering Tony Jones, the offensive lineman who left his heart in Cleveland". Akron Beacon Journal. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
- ↑ Sharon Kay Penman, Whose Novels Plumbed Britain's Past, Dies at 75
- ↑ Walter Bernstein Dies: Blacklisted Writer In 1950s Who Returned With 'Fail Safe' & 'The Front' Was 101
- ↑ Hal Holbrook, Actor Who Channeled Mark Twain, Is Dead at 95
- ↑ Larry King, legendary talk show host, dies at 87
- ↑ Andrew Brooks, Who Developed a Coronavirus Spit Test, Dies at 51
- ↑ Sonny Fox, Whose 'Wonderama' Mixed Fun and Learning, Dies at 95
- ↑ Bruce Kirby, veteran character actor and father of Bruno Kirby, dies at 95
- ↑ Barry Le Va, Whose Floor-Bound Art Defied Boundaries, Dies at 79
- ↑ Frank Shankwitz, a Founder of Make-a-Wish, Is Dead at 77
- ↑ R.I.P. Mike Bell (1957-2021)
- ↑ "Marie Harmon, Actress in 1940s Westerns, Dies at 97". The Hollywood Reporter.
- ↑ Ron Johnson, former Boston Red Sox first base coach and minor league manager, dies at 64
- ↑ Cindy Nemser, Advocate for Women Artists, Is Dead at 83
- ↑ Sekou Smith, Award-Winning N.B.A. Reporter and Analyst, Dies at 48
- ↑ Margaret C. Snyder, the U.N.'s 'First Feminist,' Dies at 91
- ↑ Cloris Leachman, Emmy- and Oscar- winning actor, dies at 94
- ↑ Carmen Vázquez, a Force on L.G.B.T.Q. Issues, Dies at 72
- ↑ Corky Lee, Who Photographed Asian-American Life, Dies at 73
- ↑ Sandie Crisp, 'Goddess Bunny' of the Underground Scene, Dies at 61
- ↑ "Cicely Tyson obituary". The Guardian. 2021-01-31. Archived from the original on 2022-10-27.
- ↑ Fashion Designer Heidi Weisel Dies at 59
- ↑ John Chaney, Temple's commanding basketball coach, dies at 89
- ↑ Houston blues and R&B great Grady Gaines dies
- ↑ Richard Feigen, Gallerist and Champion of Art, Dies at 90
- ↑ Flory Jagoda, Keeper of Sephardic Music Tradition, Dies at 97
- ↑ Allan Burns, a Creator of 'The Mary Tyler Moore Show,' Dies at 85
- ↑ Double K, People Under The Stairs Rapper And Producer, Dead At 43
- ↑ Eugenio Martínez, Last of the Watergate Burglars, Dies at 98
- ↑ Marc Wilmore, 'In Living Color' Writer, Dies at 57
- ↑ Benedict J. Fernandez, Photojournalist and Mentor, Dies at 84
- ↑ Abraham Twerski, Who Merged 12 Steps and the Torah, Dies at 90
- ↑ 'Saved By the Bell's' Dustin Diamond, aka 'Screech,' dead at 44
- ↑ Emil Freireich, Groundbreaking Cancer Researcher, Dies at 93
- ↑ Arlon Lindner
- ↑ Caramanica, Jon (February 3, 2021). "Ricky Powell, 59, Dies; Chronicled Early Hip-Hop and Downtown New York". The New York Times.
- ↑ Jamie Tarses Dies: Trailblazing TV Executive & Producer Was 56
- ↑ Robert C. Jones, Oscar-winning screenwriter of 'Coming Home,' dies at 84
- ↑ John J. Sweeney, Crusading Labor Leader, Is Dead at 86
- ↑ Jack Palladino, 76, Hard-Charging Private Investigator, Dies After 'Brutal Attack' (subscription required)
- ↑ Millie Hughes-Fulford, NASA's first female payload specialist in space, dies at 75
- ↑ Albert Hale, Nation's second president, passes of COVID-19
- ↑ 'He never got enough credit': Pirates remember unsung hero Grant Jackson
- ↑ Author Harry Mark Petrakis, 'one of the greatest,' dies at 97
- ↑ Rennie Davis, 'Chicago Seven' Antiwar Activist
- ↑ Joann W. Aalfs 1923–2021
- ↑ Anne Feeney Dies: Folksinger, Activist & First Female President Of Musicians Union Chapter Was 69
- ↑ Willard Hunter (1935-2021)
- ↑ Tony Trabert, Top Amateur Star, TV Commentator, Ambassador, Dies Aged 90
- ↑ Wayne Terwilliger Dies at 95; Baseball Was His (Long) Life
- ↑ Jim Weatherly, 'Midnight Train to Georgia' songwriter, dies at 77
- ↑ Durham, First Black US Women's Gymnastics Champion, Dies
- ↑ Josh Evans, starter on Tennessee Titans' Super Bowl team, dies after kidney cancer battle
- ↑ Former State Rep. David Shepard dies at age 73
- ↑ Robert Altman, Video Game Mogul Who Survived Scandal, Dies at 73
- ↑ "Former Birmingham baseball coach Hy Cohen dies at age 90". Los Angeles Times. 2021-02-05. Archived from the original on 2023-04-19.
- ↑ Susan Bayh, lawyer and former first lady of Indiana, dies at 61
- ↑ Trainer Julio Canani Dies
- ↑ State Auditor Rob Kane of Watertown dies unexpectedly
- ↑ Hall of Famer Charlie Krueger Passes Away March 26, 2021
- ↑ Christopher Plummer, Legendary 'Sound of Music' Star, Dies at 91
- ↑ Leon Spinks, 67-Years-Old, Passes Away After Long Battle With Cancer
- ↑ Thomas Rutherford
- ↑ Rajie Cook, Who Helped Make Sense of Public Spaces, Dies at 90
- ↑ The Heartbreaking Death Of Maria Guarnaschelli
- ↑ Burwell Jones Obituary (1933-2021)
- ↑ George Shultz, Reagan's secretary of state, dies at 100
- ↑ Billy Brown Dies: Star Of Discovery Channel's 'Alaskan Bush People' Was 68
- ↑ Former NYRA lead announcer Marshall Cassidy dies at age 75; praised for his accuracy
- ↑ Cathy Cochran, influential Texas judge, dies at 76
- ↑ Rosalind Cron Obituary (1925-2021)
- ↑ Remembering ESPN SportsCenter reporter Pedro Gomez
- ↑ Karen Lewis, Jewish union chief who made Chicago's teachers into a national force, is dead at 67
- ↑ J. Hillis Miller, noted literary critic and theorist, dies at 92
- ↑ https://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/articles/news/texas/2021/02/08/390894/north-texas-congressman-ron-wright-dies-after-testing-positive-for-covid-19/
- ↑ Puyallup native, former Olympic boxer Davey Armstrong dies at 64
- ↑ Claude Crabb Obituary (1940-2021)
- ↑ Marty Schottenheimer, seventh-winningest coach in NFL history, dies at 77
- ↑ Convicted Cleveland serial killer Anthony Sowell dies
- ↑ Mary Wilson, Co-Founder of the Supremes, Dies at 76
- ↑ Jazz Keyboard Legend Chick Corea Dies at 79
- ↑ John Hora, Cinematographer on 'The Howling' and 'Gremlins,' Dies at 80
- ↑ Larry Flynt, Porn Mogul And 'Hustler' Founder, Dies At 78
- ↑ Billy Conigliaro, Keeper of His Brother's Baseball Flame, Dies at 73
- ↑ Fanne Foxe, Who Plunged Into the Tidal Basin and Emerged Famous, Dies at 84
- ↑ Friendly's Co-Founder S. Prestley Blake Dies At 106
- ↑ Beloved wrestler, trainer Rusty Brooks dies
- ↑ Leslie Robertson, Who Engineered the World Trade Center, Dies at 92
- ↑ Isadore Singer, Who Bridged a Gulf From Math to Physics, Dies at 96
- ↑ Joan Weldon, Actress Pursued by Giant Ants in 'Them!,' Dies at 90
- ↑ Frederick K.C. Price, Founder Of Crenshaw Christian Center, Dies At 89 From COVID
- ↑ Influential jazz drummer Milford Graves has passed away at 79
- ↑ Lynn Stalmaster, Hollywood's 'Master Caster,' Dies at 93
- ↑ Kansas State Sen. Bud Estes dies at 75
- ↑ Dave Nalle
- ↑ Peter G. Davis, Music Critic of Wide Knowledge and Wit, Dies at 84
- ↑ James Ridgeway, Hard-Hitting Investigative Journalist, Dies at 84
- ↑ Zachary Wohlman, Boxer Known as Kid Yamaka Who Was Profiled in We Fight, Dead at 32
- ↑ Former Alabama DL Lorenzo Washington passes away
- ↑ Robert Glauber, Harvard business professor and ranking Treasury official, dies at 81
- ↑ Ari Gold, Pioneering Dance Artist And Gay Nightlife Icon, Dies At 47
- ↑ Florence Birdwell, Singing Teacher to Broadway Stars, Dies at 96
- ↑ Vincent Jackson, former Chargers and Buccaneers wide receiver, found dead at 38
- ↑ Derek Khan, Onetime Stylist for Hip-Hop Stars, Dies at 63
- ↑ Johnny Pacheco, Who Helped Bring Salsa to the World, Dies at 85
- ↑ Marriott Hotels 'exceptional' chief Arne Sorenson dies aged 62
- ↑ Bernard Lown, Inventive Heart Doctor and Antiwar Activist, Dies at 99
- ↑ Jessica McClintock, dressmaker who outfitted generations of prom-goers and brides, dies at 90
- ↑ GMA Gospel Music Hall of Fame Member, CARMAN, Iconic CCM Trailblazer, Dies at Las Vegas Hospital
- ↑ Rush Limbaugh, conservative radio host, dies at 70
- ↑ Christine Nofchissey McHorse, Navajo Ceramist, Dies at 72
- ↑ Martha Stewart, 'In a Lonely Place' Actress, Dies at 98
- ↑ Breaking News: Prince Markie Dee Of The Fat Boys Has Died, Only 52
- ↑ Frank Lupo, Writer-Producer Known for 'The A-Team,' 'Wiseguy,' Dies at 66
- ↑ Arturo Di Modica, Sculptor of the 'Charging Bull', Dies at 80
- ↑ Lawrence Otis Graham, 59, Dies; Explored Race and Class in Black America
- ↑ Dianna Ortiz, American Nun Tortured in Guatemala, Dies at 62
- ↑ Long time Tabernacle Choir director Jerold Ottley passes away
- ↑ Naomi Rosenblum, Historian of Photography, Dies at 96
- ↑ LaVannes Squires, Kansas' first Black men's basketball player, dies at 90
- ↑ Douglas Turner Ward, Actor and Co-Founder of the Negro Ensemble Company, Dies at 90
- ↑ Stan Williams, Dodgers fireballer who was part of 1959 World Series team, dies at 84
- ↑ Ex-Chargers guard Doug Wilkerson, "Air Coryell" mainstay, dies at 73
- ↑ Lawrence Ferlinghetti, literary citadel of San Francisco, dies at 101 (subscription required)
- ↑ Former 49ers receiver Dick Witcher dies at 76
- ↑ Margaret Maron, Acclaimed Mystery Writer, Dies at 82 (subscription required)
- ↑ Geoffrey Scott, Dynasty and Dark Shadows actor, dies at 79
- ↑ Remembering Professor Emerita Phoebe S. Liebig
- ↑ Alan Robert Murray, Oscar-Winning Sound Editor on 'American Sniper' and 'Joker,' Dies at 66
- ↑ Former U.S. gymnastics coach dies by suicide after he was charged with sex crimes
- ↑ RIP Ivy Bottini - WeHo Icon and LGBT Advocate Dies Peacefully Surrounded by Family
- ↑ Educator, activist Joseph Duffey dies
- ↑ Former Sooner DB Darrius Johnson passes away at 47
- ↑ Gambino crime family's elder Gotti, Peter, dies in prison
- ↑ Former MONTROSE Singer ROBERT 'BOB' JAMES Dies From Stomach Ulcer Complications
- ↑ John DeFazio, former Allegheny County Council president and pro wrestler, dies
- ↑ Batesville Inc Obituary for Merrill "Mo" Maurice Forte at Brown Funeral Home (Pine Bluff)
- ↑ Martinez Aaron Judge Philip Martinez dies at 63, remembered for passion for justice, El Paso community
- ↑ Former New York Red Bulls goalkeeper coach Des McAleenan passes away
- ↑ Giants mourn passing of former DT John Mendenhall
- ↑ Alvarado Monsy Joel A. Pisano, retired federal judge who presided over high-profile cases, dies at 71
- ↑ Bill C. Davis, Who Had a Hit Play With 'Mass Appeal,' Dies at 69
- ↑ Report: Former Notre Dame DL Louis Nix has died, mother says
- ↑ D-FW radio host Russ Martin, 60, found dead in his home, police say
- ↑ Erica Faye Watson, Comedic 'Hidden Gem of Chicago,' Dies at 48
- ↑ Former chief judge had it all, and was grateful every day
- ↑ Former Eagles cornerback, CBS broadcaster Irv Cross dies at 81
- ↑ Tom Green, polygamist whose trial captured international attention, dies at 72
- ↑ 'I-5 Strangler' killed in prison; victims included Walnut Creek and Pittsburg women
- ↑ Ian North, Guitarist of Power Pop Band Milk 'N' Cookies, Dies at 68
- ↑ Adult film star Flex Deon has passed away
- ↑ Women's great Ann Casey dies
- ↑ Vernon Jordan, civil rights leader and close ally of Bill Clinton, dies
- ↑ Drummer Ralph Peterson Jr., torchbearer for the Jazz Messengers, dies at 58
- ↑ Underwater archaeology pioneer George Bass dies at 88
- ↑ Luciano Capicchioni morto, addio al manager delle stelle del basket (in Italian)
- ↑ San Diego Armless Guitarist/Bassist 'Big Toe' Dies at 51
- ↑ Former UGA administrator and Athens state rep Louise McBee dies at 96
- ↑ Soap-Hopper Who Played One of Daytime's Vilest Baddies Dead at 87: He Was a 'Shameless Flirt and a Fierce Protector'
- ↑ Edward Waller
- ↑ Joe Altobelli dies: Rochester's 'Mr. Baseball' led Orioles to last title
- ↑ Obituary: Marianne Carus
- ↑ Legendary Pro Wrestling Promoter Jim Crockett Jr. Dead at 76
- ↑ Former state Rep. Kelly Flynn has died
- ↑ Duffy Jackson, Ebullient Drummer with Lionel Hampton, Count Basie and Others, Dies at 67
- ↑ Earl W. Renneke
- ↑ Longtime Alaska lawmaker and Native leader John Sackett has died at age 76
- ↑ Longtime state Rep. Ed Sandoval remembered as 'faithful public servant'
- ↑ Former Kodak CEO and Chairman dies
- ↑ Barbara Ess (1948–2021)
- ↑ Hugh Newell Jacobsen, award-winning modernist architect, dies at 91
- ↑ Gerald Kogan, former Florida Supreme Court chief justice and ethics crusader, dies at 87
- ↑ Popular language YouTuber 'Laoshu' dies
- ↑ "Record Breaking Olympian Paul McMullen Dies Suddenly After 'Devastating' Accident". Archived from the original on 2021-03-06. Retrieved 2021-04-19.
- ↑ Bhaskar Menon, Legendary EMI and Capitol Records Head, Dies at 86
- ↑ Death of 'Miracle on Ice' Olympic hockey team star Mark Pavelich ruled suicide
- ↑ 'Canada's leading ecologist': David Schindler dead at 80
- ↑ Professor Jonathan Steinberg 1934-2021
- ↑ Former NWA Star Buddy Colt Passes Away At 81
- ↑ Paul Foster, Innovative Playwright And Founding Member Of La MaMa, Dies At 89
- ↑ "Donald Loren Gile". Archived from the original on 2021-03-21. Retrieved 2021-04-19.
- ↑ "Frank Kelley, Michigan's 'eternal general,' dies at 96". Archived from the original on 2021-03-07. Retrieved 2021-04-19.
- ↑ Samuel J. Scott Jr.
- ↑ Michael Stanley, Cleveland rock legend and noted local radio and TV personality, dead at 72
- ↑ Dr. Jude Patrick Dougherty
- ↑ Wilhelmina Cole Holladay, Founder of the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Dies at 98
- ↑ Marion Lewenstein, Stanford professor of communication (teaching), emerita, has died at 93
- ↑ Remembering Allan McDonald: He Refused To Approve Challenger Launch, Exposed Cover-Up
- ↑ William Francis O'CONNOR
- ↑ Irish singer and entertainer Carmel Quinn passes away in New Jersey
- ↑ Thaddeus 'Ted' Buczko, retired judge, state auditor dies at 95 after a lifetime of service
- ↑ Janis Hape
- ↑ Remembering Janice McLaughlin, the Maryknoll sister who found freedom in the struggle for African liberation
- ↑ Sudden Petira Of Leading Posek Hagaon HaRav Yechezkel Roth Zatzal of Boro Park
- ↑ Charles Scontras, 91, renowned educator, author, Maine labor historian
- ↑ Carl Shapiro
- ↑ Frank Thorne Dead: 'Red Sonja' Comic Book Artist Dies Along With Wife, Marilyn
- ↑ Former State Senator Jack Welborn Dead at 88
- ↑ Obituary for Thomas Robert Bland Sr.
- ↑ Former MLB reliever Rheal Cormier dies at 53
- ↑ Leon Gast, Oscar-Winning Documentarian Behind 'When We Were Kings,' Dies at 85
- ↑ 'Phantom Tollbooth' Author Norton Juster Dies At 91
- ↑ Obituary: Terrence F. 'Terry' McVerry, a former legislator and judge
- ↑ Fomer coach, player, manager Norm Sherry dies at 89
- ↑ RIP Mark Whitecage... (1937-2021)
- ↑ Obituary: Joan Walsh Anglund
- ↑ Champion, Sire Boston Harbor Dies in Japan at 27
- ↑ Richard Driehaus, DePaul alum and business school namesake, dies at 78
- ↑ Walter LaFeber, Historian Who Dissected Diplomacy, Dies at 87
- ↑ Former Met Opera conductor James Levine dead at 77
- ↑ Libertarian Party Of New York Mourns The Passing Of 2014 Gubernatorial Candidate Michael McDermott
- ↑ Remembering Biff McGuire
- ↑ Roger Mudd, longtime network TV newsman, dies at 93
- ↑ Raiders issue statement on the passing of Steve Ortmayer
- ↑ Stargate Actor Cliff Simon Has Passed Away At Age 58
- ↑ James Robert Snyder
- ↑ Blanquita Valenti, trailblazing Middlesex freeholder, dies at 87
- ↑ Wir trauern um Prof. Bruce Abel (25.07.1936-10.03.2021) (in German)
- ↑ Eugene Hughes, University President in 2 States, Dies at 86
- ↑ Robert Middlekauff, leading scholar of early American history, dies at 91
- ↑ University of Scranton's Pilarz dies from ALS complications
- ↑ Albert Resis
- ↑ Stephen A. Scott
- ↑ Joe Tait, the voice of the Cleveland Cavaliers for two generations, dies at age 83
- ↑ Ray Campi Obituary
- ↑ Carola Blitzman Guttmacher Eisenberg M.D.
- ↑ Jewlia Eisenberg, musical intellectual and Jewish radical, dies at 50
- ↑ "Lin Emery, sculptor of movement, nature, dies at 94". Archived from the original on 2021-03-15. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
- ↑ Sally Grossman, Widow of Dylan Manager Who Famously Posed on Album Cover, Dies
- ↑ Peter W. Hall, Who Recently Took Senior Status on Second Circuit, Dies at 72, Court Says
- ↑ Five-Time Paralympian Curtis Lovejoy passes away at 63
- ↑ In Memoriam: Isidore Mankofsky, ASC (1931-2021)
- ↑ Tony-Nominated Set and Costume Designer G.W. Mercier Has Passed Away at 66
- ↑ Luis Palau (1934–2021), evangelist called "the Billy Graham of Latin America"
- ↑ George Arthur Reihner
- ↑ Jack Sandner, longtime Chicago Mercantile Exchange chairman, dies at 79 after suffering a stroke
- ↑ Robina Asti (1921–2021), WWII veteran and transgender advocate
- ↑ Former state Rep. Gaynor Cawley of Scranton dies of cancer at 79
- ↑ 'Amityville Horror' killer Ronald DeFeo Jr. dies in prison
- ↑ Daphne Gail Fautin
- ↑ Andrew J Majda
- ↑ Judge John A. Nordberg
- ↑ Dion Payton, legendary Chicago underground blues guitarist, dead at 70
- ↑ In Memoriam: Prof. Tapan Sarkar
- ↑ Former Tucson Mayor Bob Walkup has died
- ↑ Former boxing champion 'Marvelous' Marvin Hagler dies at 66
- ↑ Stephen Bechtel Jr., former CEO of family construction firm and San Francisco philanthropist, dies at 95
- ↑ Henry Darrow, Actor on 'The High Chaparral,' Dies at 87
- ↑ Former Miami Dolphins and Fort Lauderdale Dillard player Calvin Jackson, 49, dies
- ↑ Yaphet Kotto: a life in pictures
- ↑ Amaranth Ehrenhalt, abstract expressionist, dies
- ↑ Dick Hoyt, longtime Boston Marathon runner who pushed son Rick for decades, dies at 80
- ↑ Freddie Redd, Pianist and Composer Known For 'The Connection,' Has Died at 92
- ↑ Mathematician J. Michael Boardman, pioneer of the field of homotopy, dies at 83
- ↑ Richard Gilliland, 'Designing Women' Actor and Husband of Jean Smart, Dies at 71
- ↑ In Memoriam: Paul Jackson
- ↑ Texas Roadhouse Founder Kent Taylor Dies After Struggle With 'Post-COVID' Symptoms
- ↑ Universally respected Bill Young, a significant figure in Oklahoma football, dies at 74
- ↑ IFBB Pro Andy Haman Dies at 55
- ↑ Sociologist Melvin Kohn dies at 92
- ↑ Gary Leib, Musician and Illustrator, Dies at 65
- ↑ "NASA Remembers Legendary Flight Director Glynn Lunney". NASA. Archived from the original on 2023-06-26.
- ↑ Barry Orton Passes Away at 62 Years Old
- ↑ Tributes are being paid to Dan Sartain who has died aged 40
- ↑ Former WVU quarterback Fred Wyant dies at age 86
- ↑ Dale Wolf, Delaware's 20-day governor and diligent lieutenant governor, dies at 96
- ↑ Elgin Baylor, Acrobatic Hall of Famer in N.B.A., Dies at 86
- ↑ Connie Bradley, Longtime ASCAP Nashville Head, Dies at 75
- ↑ Benny Dees Passes Away at 86
- ↑ Ethel Gabriel
- ↑ Versatile drummer Don Heffington dead at 70
- ↑ George Segal Dies: Oscar-Nominated Actor & 'The Goldbergs' Star Was 87
- ↑ Houston Tumlin Dies: 'Talladega Nights' Child Actor Was 28
- ↑ Former Ohio State Basketball Player Granville Waiters Dies At Age 60
- ↑ Morris Dickstein, influential critic-historian, dead at 81
- ↑ Jessica Walter Dies: Emmy-Winning 'Arrested Development,' 'Archer' Actress Was 80
- ↑ Former Spurs coach Stan Albeck dies at 89
- ↑ Legendary 7 Eyewitness News broadcaster Rick Azar has died
- ↑ Bill Brock dies at 90: Chattanooga native was longtime national leader
- ↑ Bobby Brown, Yankees great and Fort Worth doctor, dead at 96
- ↑ HarperCollins Mourns the Loss of Beloved Children's Book Author Beverly Cleary
- ↑ St. Louis Cardinals mourn loss of 'Smokey' Joe Cunningham
- ↑ Larry McMurtry, Novelist And Screenwriter Of The West, Has Died At Age 84
- ↑ Former Alaska House Speaker Gail Phillips dies
- ↑ In Memoriam: Dr. Paul W. Whear
- ↑ Twins Bench Coach Mike Bell Passes Away
- ↑ American author Paul Polansky has passed away
- ↑ Florida college football legend Howard Schnellenberger has died
- ↑ Beloved Houston Chronicle columnist Leon Hale dies
- ↑ 'The sun is a little brighter today': Serial killer Joseph Duncan is dead
- ↑ G. Gordon Liddy, unrepentant Watergate burglar who became talk show host, dies
- ↑ Paul Feinman, first openly gay judge on NY's highest court, dies at 61
- ↑ First UNO basketball coach and leader in wins Ron Greene dies at 82
- ↑ Artist Cleve Hall's Death Cause Following Hospitalization at 61
- ↑ PGA Tour winner and Ryder Cup player Jerry McGee passes away at 77
- ↑ Mary Mullarkey, the first woman to serve as Colorado Supreme Court chief justice, has died at 77
- ↑ Former Cardinals third baseman Reitz, the 'Zamboni,' dies at 69
- ↑ Gregory Kellan Scott, Colorado's first-and only-Black Supreme Court justice, dies at 72
- ↑ Lee Aaker Dies: 'Adventures Of Rin Tin Tin' Child Star Was 77
- ↑ Martha Lou Gadsden, Charleston Soul Food Icon, Has Died
- ↑ Former Raider, CISD board member, Gerald Irons dead at 73
- ↑ April the Giraffe, who became a viral sensation during her 2017 pregnancy, dies
- ↑ Morris 'B.B.' Dickerson, Founding Member of War, Dies at 71
- ↑ Capitol Police officer killed, another injured after suspect rams car into police barrier outside building
- ↑ Former valley Delegate A.R. "Pete" Giesen, Jr. passes away at age 88
- ↑ Arthur Kopit Dies: Pulitizer-Nominated 'Indians', 'Nine' Playwright Was 83
- ↑ Former Olympic swimmer from RI dies at age 94
- ↑ 'Romeo + Juliet' Choir Boy Quindon Tarver Killed in Crash, Family Says
- ↑ Gordon A Weaver
- ↑ Kathie Coblentz, 73, dies; not your ordinary librarian
- ↑ Jill Corey
- ↑ Mark Elliott, Iconic Voice of Disney Movie Trailers, Dies at 81
- ↑ Gloria Henry, Mom on 'Dennis the Menace,' Dies at 98
- ↑ Carl Hodges, accomplished Arizona climate scientist, dies at 84 after Alzheimer's diagnosis
- ↑ Jim Holderman, controversial former USC president, dies at 85
- ↑ Herb Johnson, believed to be oldest living former Giants player, passes away
- ↑ Colleton County pastor Ralph Stair dies
- ↑ "Former Montana Gov. Stan Stephens dies at 91". Archived from the original on 2021-04-06. Retrieved 2021-04-09.
- ↑ Thomas Brock, Whose Discovery Paved the Way for PCR Tests, Dies at 94
- ↑ Washington Teachers' Union president Elizabeth Davis dies in a car accident
- ↑ L'artiste avant-gardiste Jean Dupuy est mort (in French)
- ↑ R.I.P. Ralph Schuckett, fratello 'Utopico' di Todd Rundgren (in Italian)
- ↑ Philip Chapman, first Australian-born NASA astronaut, dies at 86
- ↑ J. Michael Dunn (1941-2021)
- ↑ Robert Fletcher Dies: Costume Designer For 'Star Trek' Films, Broadway Was 98
- ↑ Joye Murchison Kelly, R.I.P.
- ↑ Longtime Mad Writer Frank Jacobs Passes Away At 92
- ↑ World War II veteran and popular legislator Bill Markham has died at 98
- ↑ Former CA state assemblyman Gene Mullin dead at 83
- ↑ Marshall Sahlins
- ↑ Wilber Shirley, Carolina Barbecue Legend and Original Owner of Wilber's Barbecue, Has Died
- ↑ Hall of Fame horse breeder Alice Headley Chandler dies at 95
- ↑ Midwin Charles, CNN and MSNBC Legal Analyst, Dies at 47
- ↑ Local World War II veteran & Medal of Honor recipient Charles H. Coolidge dies at 99
- ↑ In Memory and Celebration of Reese Erlich
- ↑ Paul Greenberg, Pulitzer-winning chronicler of Arkansas politics, dies at 84
- ↑ Alcee Hastings dies at 84 after cancer battle
- ↑ DC-area news anchor Joe Krebs dies
- ↑ Spokane native and decorated golfer Al Mengert passes away at 91
- ↑ Walter Olkewicz Dies: Character Actor In 'Twin Peaks' And 'Grace Under Fire' Was 72
- ↑ Antropologi: addio a Paul Rabinow, studioso delle metamorfosi delle modernità Archived 2021-04-10 at the Wayback Machine (in Italian)
- ↑ Former Republican Illinois U.S. Rep. Bobby Schilling dies after bout of cancer
- ↑ Mort de Sonny Simmons : quand le jazz est las (in French)
- ↑ Gene Youngblood, Writer of Influential 'Expanded Cinema' Book, Has Died at 78
- ↑ Original SNL Writer Anne Beatts Dies at 74
- ↑ James Hampton Dies: Writer, Director, And Bugler Hannibal Dobbs On 'F Troop' Was 84
- ↑ Peter Manso, biographer of Mailer and Brando, dies at 80
- ↑ Author Peter Manso dies in his Truro home
- ↑ Kai Nielsen
- ↑ "Bill Owens, uncle and musical mentor to Dolly Parton, dies". Archived from the original on 2021-05-03. Retrieved 2021-04-09.
- ↑ Wayne Peterson, Pulitzer Prize-winning composer, dies at 93
- ↑ Jack Smith
- ↑ Hollywood lawyer Howard Weitzman, attorney to Michael Jackson, Justin Bieber, dies
- ↑ AP source: NFL player Phillip Adams killed 5, then himself
- ↑ Star Trek novelist Margaret Wander Bonanno has passed away at 71
- ↑ BJ's Wholesale Club CEO dies unexpectedly at 49
- ↑ Conn Findlay, Who Won Medals At Four Olympics And Was USC's Oldest Living Olympic Gold Medalist, Dies
- ↑ 'Red' Mack, special-teamer on Super Bowl I title team, dies at 83
- ↑ Zukunftsforscher John Naisbitt gestorben (in German)
- ↑ Annapolis loses a legend: Hall of Fame athlete Alan Pastrana dies at age 76 from complications of COVID
- ↑ Richard Rush, 'The Stunt Man' Director, Dies at 91
- ↑ Ramsey Clark, Attorney General and Rebel With a Cause, Dies at 93
- ↑ Rapper-actor DMX, known for gruff delivery, dead at 50
- ↑ Long Island Federal Judge Sandra Feuerstein Killed in Car Crash
- ↑ UMaine ice hockey coach Red Gendron dead at 63
- ↑ Charles Jenkins, Louisiana bishop broken and transformed by Katrina, dies at 69
- ↑ Jack Minker
- ↑ Judith Reisman, figure de la lutte contre les pédocriminels, s'est éteinte à l'âge de 84 ans (in French)
- ↑ Edwin Aguilar, Animator and Assistant Director on 'The Simpsons,' Dies at 46
- ↑ LaDonna Tamakawastewin Allard, Leader of Standing Rock's Fight Against the Dakota Access Pipeline, Passes On
- ↑ Quinton Claunch 1921 - 2021
- ↑ Dr. Roger E. Kasperson
- ↑ Remembering Bob Petric, longtime guitarist for Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments
- ↑ Bob Porter, Eminent Producer, Broadcaster and Writer, and Pillar of WBGO, Has Died at 80
- ↑ RIT remembers President Emeritus M. Richard Rose
- ↑ Arthur Lin Whitworth
- ↑ Former U.S. District Judge Todd Campbell, longtime Nashville legal mind and adviser to a vice president, dead at 64
- ↑ Kas Kastner 1928-2021
- ↑ Joseph Siravo, Veteran Broadway Actor and Johnny Soprano in 'The Sopranos,' Dies at 66
- ↑ Who was Gerren Taylor? 'Baldwin Hills' star, 30, dies in sleep, co-star Moriah J says 'safe travels'
- ↑ John Williamson
- ↑ Brooklyn Center police fatally shoot man, 20, inflaming tensions during the Derek Chauvin trial
- ↑ Thomas e. Delahanty II, Maine legal titan, dies at 75
- ↑ John Pelan (1957-2021)
- ↑ Former Sen. Paull Shin, longtime Edmonds resident, dies
- ↑ In Memoriam: Martin Wachs, Renowned Transportation Scholar
- ↑ Farewell to Harold Bradley, founder of the Folkstudio in Rome (in Italian)
- ↑ Bobby 'Slick' Leonard, Hoosiers and Pacers icon, dies at 88
- ↑ Hank Huckaby, served in some of Georgia's highest offices, dies at 79
- ↑ Bernie Madoff, infamous Ponzi schemer, has died
- ↑ Former 49ers defensive back Lynn Thomas dies at 61
- ↑ Rusty Young, Poco's Co-Founder and Longtime Frontman, Dies at 75
- ↑ Neturei Karta Leader Moshe Ber Beck Dies In Monsey
- ↑ Roscoe Dixon, influential Memphis lawmaker brought down by Tennessee Waltz, dies at 71
- ↑ Vartan Gregorian, Savior of the New York Public Library, Dies at 87
- ↑ Purdue football legend Leroy Keyes dies Thursday at 74
- ↑ Political science professor John McAdams passes away
- ↑ Charles Geschke, Adobe Systems co-founder, dies
- ↑ North Texas assistant basketball coach Nelson Haggerty dies in car crash
- ↑ Felix Silla Dies: 'Cousin Itt' On The 'Addams Family' TV Show Was 84
- ↑ "Former Chiefs TE Fred Arbanas dead at 82". USA Today. 2021-04-18. Archived from the original on 2023-05-29.
- ↑ Black Rob passes away
- ↑ Former Oregon Congresswoman Elizabeth Furse has died
- ↑ Frank Reilly McCabe, 1927-2021
- ↑ Paul Oscher, Austin blues musician who played in Muddy Waters' band, dies at 71
- ↑ Anthony Russo, former Hoboken mayor, dies at 74
- ↑ Al Young, Former California Poet Laureate, Dies at 81
- ↑ USU Men's Basketball Hall of Famer Shaler Halimon Dies at Age 76
- ↑ Former Vice President Walter Mondale dies at 93
- ↑ Rock Legend Jim Steinman Dead at 73
- ↑ Robin Wood, Prolific Dungeons & Dragons Artist, Dies at 67
- ↑ Monte Hellman, 'Two-Lane Blacktop' Director, Dies at 91
- ↑ "Former Mets hitting coach Tom Robson dies at 75". Archived from the original on 2021-04-21. Retrieved 2021-08-31.
- ↑ Tempest Storm, legendary burlesque star, dies at 93
- ↑ William Anthony Wynne Obituary
- ↑ Joe Long, Four Seasons bassist and Elizabeth native, has died
- ↑ Historian D. Michael Quinn, who was booted from the LDS Church as part of the 'September Six' but remained a believer, dies at 77
- ↑ R.I.P. dear Henrietta
- ↑ Carl Spielvogel, a longtime power in advertising, dies
- ↑ UK men's basketball player Terrence Clarke dies in Los Angeles
- ↑ Chuck Fries, Prolific TV and Film Producer, Dies at 92
- ↑ Former major leaguer Garrett dies at age 78
- ↑ "Thelma Harper, "transformative" Tennessee legislator, dies". Archived from the original on 2021-05-03. Retrieved 2021-08-31.
- ↑ Shock G: Digital Underground's The Humpty Dance rapper dies, aged 57
- ↑ Charlie Glotzbach, Southern Indiana NASCAR racer, dies at 83
- ↑ Computer security world in mourning over death of Dan Kaminsky, aged 42
- ↑ Bill Whittington, 1949-2021
- ↑ Bob Fass, Pioneer of Underground Radio, Dies at 87
- ↑ Duane Hagadone, business leader, dies at 88
- ↑ Nathan Jung, Actor Who Appeared on 'Star Trek' and 'The A-Team,' Dies at 74
- ↑ Robert Slavin, global authority on education research and evidence-based school reform, dies at 70
- ↑ Kentucky Derby Winning Trainer Ward Dies at 75
- ↑ Former Raiders defensive back Mike Davis dies at age 65
- ↑ Austin guitar great Denny Freeman, who played with Jimmie and Stevie Ray Vaughan, dies aged 76
- ↑ Former Madison County, FSU star linebacker Geno Hayes passes away from liver disease
- ↑ Farewell To Dick Mann, Historical Winner of the Daytona 200 Miles with Honda
- ↑ Al Schmitt, 23x Grammy Award-Winning Producer-Engineer, Dies
- ↑ Former Federal Judge George P. Kazen passes away
- ↑ Charles Strum, Versatile Editor for The Times, Dies at 73
- ↑ 'Forgotten Astronaut' Michael Collins Dies
- ↑ "Jason Matthews, author of 'Red Sparrow' thrillers, dies". Archived from the original on 2021-04-30. Retrieved 2021-08-31.
- ↑ Martin Bookspan, legendary host, commentator noted for work at Tanglewood, dies at 94
- ↑ Anne Douglas, Widow of Kirk Douglas, Dies at 102
- ↑ Johnny Crawford, Young Star of 'The Rifleman,' Dies at 75
- ↑ Pierce Fulton Has Died Following Struggles With Mental Health
- ↑ Courtney Hall, captain of 1994 Super Bowl team, dies at 52
- ↑ Billie Hayes Dies: Wicked Witchiepoo Of 'H.R. Pufnstuf' Was 96
- ↑ East Texas football legend Pete Lammons dies after falling from boat during fishing tournament
- ↑ RIP: Tony Markellis, Bassist for Trey Anastasio Band
- ↑ Frank McRae, Actor in 'Licence to Kill' and 'Last Action Hero,' Dies at 80
- ↑ Amphibian News Archive
- ↑ Eli Broad Dies: Businessman, Philanthropist, Founder of L.A.'s Broad Museum Was 87
- ↑ John Dee Holeman, Durham's Last Great Blues Elder, Dies at 92
- ↑ Hawkeye Hoops Legend Chuck Darling Passes Away
- ↑ Olympia Dukakis, Oscar-Winning 'Moonstruck' Actress, Dies at 89
- ↑ Helen Murray Free Dies at 98; Chemist Developed Diabetes Test
- ↑ First Black man on Florida Supreme Court dies at 88
- ↑ Wondress Hutchinson
- ↑ Al Jamison, an original Houston Oiler, dies at 83
- ↑ John Paul Leon, Legendary Batman, X-Men, and Static Artist, Dies at 49
- ↑ Detroit theater impresario Joseph Nederlander, a larger-than-life legend, dies at 93
- ↑ Medal of Honor recipient and Kentucky native Ernie West dies
- ↑ Bob Abernethy, host and founder of 'Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly,' dies at 93
- ↑ Jacques d'Amboise, an Early Male Star of City Ballet, Dies at 86
- ↑ Former NASCAR driver Eric McClure dies at 42
- ↑ In Memoriam: Sally Falk Moore, Victor S. Thomas Professor of Anthropology
- ↑ Bobby Unser, three-time Indy 500 winner, dies at 87
- ↑ Tommy West, Producer for Jim Croce & Others, Dies
- ↑ Baseball: Ex-Hanshin home run hitter Harold Breeden dies at U.S. home
- ↑ Infamous 'Girl in the Bunker' kidnapper Vinson Filyaw dies in prison
- ↑ "Man who fatally shot 3 at Kansas Jewish sites dies in prison". Associated Press. 2021-05-04. Archived from the original on 2023-03-12.
- ↑ Talas Singer Phil Naro Dead at 63
- ↑ Hall of Fame "Personality," "Stagger Lee" singer Lloyd Price dies at 88
- ↑ Ed Ward, Rock Historian and Early 'Rolling Stone' Editor, Dead at 72
- ↑ James Stephen Hagan Sr.
- ↑ Longtime Baltimore Orioles pitching coach Ray Miller dies at 76
- ↑ Jonathan Bush, brother of President George H.W. Bush, dead at 89
- ↑ Del Crandall Dies
- ↑ Seelye, Katharine Q. (May 6, 2021). "Lucinda Franks Dies at 74; Prize-Winning Journalist Broke Molds". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on May 6, 2021. Retrieved May 6, 2021.
- ↑ George Jung Real-Life 'Blow' Smuggler Dead at 78
- ↑ The head of Yale's massive endowment fund has died
- ↑ Bohls: Longhorns running back Jim Bertelsen's career said it all (because it had to)
- ↑ David Bulow (1980-2021)
- ↑ David Henry Gambrell
- ↑ Staple Singers Co-Founder, Pervis Staples, Dead at 85
- ↑ Vans co-founder Paul Van Doren dies at age 90
- ↑ Karl Wirsum, visionary, 'utterly original' artist, dies at 81
- ↑ Legendary Boxing Promoter Felix Zabala Sr., 83, Passes Away
- ↑ Rev. Ernest Angley Dies: Controversial Faith Healer Televangelist Was 99
- ↑ Tawny Kitaen, '80s Music Video Vixen and 'Bachelor Party' Star, Dies at 59
- ↑ Cruz Reynoso, First Latino Supreme Court Justice in California, Dies at 90
- ↑ Bo, the Obama family dog, has died
- ↑ Pete du Pont, transformational governor who brought credit card industry to Delaware, dies at 86
- ↑ Bronx Elected Officials Pay Tribute To Former Bronx Deputy BP, Aurelia Greene
- ↑ Curtis Fuller, a Powerful Voice on Jazz Trombone, Dies at 88
- ↑ 'Hillbilly activist' and healthcare pioneer Eula Hall dies at 93
- ↑ Ronald Franklin Inglehart
- ↑ Famed architect Helmut Jahn struck by two vehicles, killed while riding bicycle near St. Charles
- ↑ Former Men's Basketball Head Coach Cal Luther Passes Away at 93
- ↑ Co-inventor of Post-its, retired 3M scientist Spencer Silver, dies at 80
- ↑ UCSD's First Female Chancellor Marye Anne Fox Dies At Age 73
- ↑ George Hovland, who fostered skiing in Duluth, dies at 94
- ↑ Former Connecticut House Republican leader and state motor vehicles commissioner Bob Ward dies at 68
- ↑ Art Gensler, founder of world's largest architects, dies aged 85
- ↑ Former State Rep. Froy Salinas, who broke barriers as first Hispanic lawmaker from Lubbock, has died
- ↑ Ex-Hawai'i record-setting QB Colt Brennan dead at 37
- ↑ Former State Sen Dan Brown passes away
- ↑ Norman Lloyd, Actor in 'St. Elsewhere' and Hitchcock's 'Saboteur,' Dies at 106
- ↑ Richard Nonas, Experimental Sculptor Who Pushed the Medium to New Frontiers, Has Died at 85
- ↑ Chuck Welke, a former basketball coach at Warner who served in the state Legislature, has died
- ↑ How the GOP's vote to remove Cheney will go down
- ↑ Innovative former Vikings coach Jerry Burns dies at age 94
- ↑ Jim Klobuchar, longtime Star Tribune columnist and adventurer, dies at 93
- ↑ Bob Koester, who ran Chicago's Jazz Record Mart, Delmark Records for decades, has died
- ↑ Ralph Turlington, former Speaker of House, education commissioner, dies at 100
- ↑ Norman Simmons, Pianist Who Made an Elegant Art Out of Accompaniment, Dies at 91
- ↑ Rest in peace Jack Terricloth of World/Inferno Friendship Society
- ↑ Veteran space journalist Jay Barbree, who covered more than 160 missions, dies at 87
- ↑ Former State Rep. Otto Beatty Jr. passes away at 81
- ↑ Jerome Young, New Jack, Passes Away
- ↑ Former Kentucky Wesleyan College Basketball Coach Bob Jones Passes Away
- ↑ Trans activist and AIDS survivor Felicia Elizondo dies
- ↑ "Hall of Famer Dr. Fred Martinelli passes away at 92". Archived from the original on 2021-05-15. Retrieved 2021-08-31.
- ↑ Tennessee Rep. Mike Carter passes away from pancreatic cancer
- ↑ Patsy Bruce, 'Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys' songwriter, dies at 82
- ↑ Don Kernodle dead at age 71
- ↑ Buddy Roemer, Louisiana's former Democrat-turned-Republican governor, dies at 77
- ↑ Elder Joe J. Christensen, emeritus General Authority Seventy, dies at age 91
- ↑ Former lawmaker, Senate leader Bob Cullison dies Tuesday
- ↑ Charles Grodin Dies: 'The Heartbreak Kid' Actor, Unrivaled Talk Show Curmudgeon Was 86
- ↑ Arthur Hills, architect of 200-plus new courses, dies at age 91
- ↑ Terence Riley, former Chief Curator of Architecture and Design at the MoMA, is dead
- ↑ Corinne Wood, Illinois' first female lieutenant governor, dies at 66
- ↑ Gary A. Blodgett
- ↑ Lesbian Music Legend Alix Dobkin Dies at 80
- ↑ Esther A.H. Hopkins, 94, Chemist, Environmental Attorney, & First African-American Framingham Selectwoman
- ↑ David A. Kraft, Iconic Defenders Writer, Comics Journalist, Has Passed Away
- ↑ Paul Mooney Dies: Trailblazing Comedian, Writing Partner Of Richard Pryor Was 79
- ↑ Lee Evans, 1968 Olympic 400m champion, dies at 74
- ↑ Medal of Honor Recipient Charles C. Hagemeister Passes Away at 74
- ↑ Absent media, Texas executes inmate who killed his great aunt in 1999
- ↑ Veteran Federal Judge Glen Conrad Dead at 71
- ↑ Swampers drummer, Muscle Shoals Sound Studio cofounder Roger Hawkins has died
- ↑ John Powless, UW men's basketball coach for eight seasons and a remarkable tennis player, dies at age 88
- ↑ A 99 anni ci ha lasciato suor Margherita Marchione biografa di Pio XII
- ↑ Former Pennsylvania high court justice Zappala Sr. dies at 88
- ↑ Harvey Schlossberg, Cop With a Ph.D. in Defusing a Crisis, Dies at 85
- ↑ Former Kansas City Royals pitcher Joe Beckwith dies
- ↑ Bedford Republican State Representative Dies
- ↑ JUST IN: 'Friends in Low Places' Songwriter, a Nashville Hall of Famer, Dead at 84
- ↑ Former Aberdeen mayor, state delegate Charles R. Boutin dies in Kent County boating incident
- ↑ Eric Carle, Creator Of 'The Very Hungry Caterpillar,' Has Died
- ↑ R.I.P. Robert Hall: Special Effects Makeup Artist Who Directed 'Fear Clinic', 'Laid to Rest', and "Teen Wolf"
- ↑ Paul Christy dies
- ↑ Samuel E Wright: Tributes paid to actor who voiced crab in The Little Mermaid
- ↑ Choreographer Anna Halprin, Who Redefined Dance As A Tool For Healing, Dies At 100
- ↑ R.I.P. 'Sleepaway Camp' Actress Desiree Gould Has Passed Away
- ↑ Tramel's ScissorTales: Baseball's unwritten rules are disrespecting the game
- ↑ John Warner, longtime US senator from Virginia, dies at 94
- ↑ 'Chicka Chicka Boom Boom' illustrator Lois Ehlert dies at 86
- ↑ Rusty Warren, an often overlooked comedy trailblazer, dead at 91
- ↑ Republican Megadonor Foster Friess Dies at 81
- ↑ Bosselman, Haley (June 1, 2021). "Robert Hogan, Actor Who Appeared on 'The Wire' and 'Peyton Place,' Dies at 87". Variety. Retrieved June 1, 2021.
- ↑ Playwright and performer Robbie McCauley, whose work confronted race and gender, dies at 78
- ↑ Albert Kookesh, Alaska Native leader, dies at 72
- ↑ James Beirne Obituary (1946 - 2021)
- ↑ William Clinger, Warren native and longtime congressman, dies at 92
- ↑ Gavin MacLeod, 'Mary Tyler Moore' and 'Love Boat' Actor, Dies at 90
- ↑ B.J. Thomas, who sang 'Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head,' dies at 78
- ↑ Floyd McClung dies at age 75 (in Dutch)
- 1 2 Diet guru Gwen Lara, husband actor Joe Lara among seven killed in plane crash
- ↑ 'Mayberry R.F.D.' Actress Arlene Golonka Dies at 85
- ↑ Dallas Rapper Lil Loaded Has Died At 20
- ↑ Former Purdue head football coach passes away at 78
- ↑ Former Dodgers Pitcher Mike Marshall Passes at 78
- ↑ Bunny Matthews, cartoonist and chronicler of New Orleans life, dies at 70
- ↑ Bill Scanlon Obituary
- ↑ Former Pitt Basketball Star Eric Mobley Passes Away at 51
- ↑ Law legend F. Lee Bailey dies at 87
- ↑ Karla Burns, music theater trailblazer who won coveted Olivier award, dies at 66
- ↑ Ernie Lively, Actor in the 'Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants' Films, Dies at 74
- ↑ Segregationist former Alabama Gov. John Patterson dies at 99
- ↑ Tom Fink, former mayor of Anchorage, dies at 92
- ↑ Clarence Williams III Dies: 'Linc' On 'The Mod Squad', Star Was 81
- ↑ 'Such a freaky, terrible thing': Galen Young, former Charlotte 49er basketball star, has died
- ↑ Richard Robinson, Longtime Scholastic CEO, Dies at 84
- ↑ Douglas S. Cramer, Exec Producer on 'Wonder Woman,' 'Dynasty' and 'The Love Boat,' Dies at 89
- ↑ Jim Fassel, former Giants head coach, dies at 71
- ↑ Joseph Margolis (1924-2021)
- ↑ "I'm On My Way" singer Dean Parrish dies at age 79
- ↑ Dale Danks, former Jackson mayor, dies of complications from stroke
- ↑ Robert Katzmann, Former Chief Judge of 2nd Circuit, Dies at 68
- ↑ Dakota Skye Confirmed Dead AVN
- ↑ Colleagues mourn state rep, union head and FPU professor Doug Ley
- ↑ Joyce MacKenzie, Actress in 'Tarzan and the She-Devil,' Dies at 95
- ↑ Former Kansas attorney general Vern Miller has died at 92
- ↑ John Gabriel, Actor on 'Ryan's Hope,' Dies at 90
- ↑ Mort du réalisateur Dennis Berry, qui fut marié à Jean Seberg et Anna Karina
- ↑ 'Mudcat' Grant passes away at 85
- ↑ Birmingham news anchor Christopher Sign passes away
- ↑ John Marinatto, ran Big East in time of tumult, dies at 64
- ↑ Ned Beatty, Acclaimed Character Actor in 'Deliverance,' 'Network' and 'Homicide: Life on the Street,' Dies at 83
- ↑ Former Lions offensive lineman Hessley Hempstead dies at age 49
- ↑ Cramer, Maria; Genzlinger, Neil (2021-06-15). "Lisa Banes, Film and Stage Actress, Dies at 65". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
- ↑ Founding Lansing Community College president remembered for service to college, community
- ↑ Deona Marie Erickson: Minneapolis Woman Killed When Driver Hits Protesters
- ↑ Retired Brooklyn Federal Judge Jack Weinstein, LBJ appointee who served 53 years on the bench, dies at 99
- ↑ Anna Verna, the first and only woman to serve as president of Philly City Council, dies at 90
- ↑ ""Kattobi Broadcasting Station" Star Frank Bonner dies at the age of 79". Archived from the original on 2021-06-28. Retrieved 2021-08-31.
- ↑ Janet Malcolm, Provocative Journalist With a Piercing Eye, Dies at 86
- ↑ Norman S. Powell, Emmy-Nominated Producer and Veteran CBS Exec, Dies at 86
- ↑ Richard Stolley, the Man Who Launched PEOPLE Magazine, Dies at 92
- ↑ Legendary editor of The Kentucky Post, author Vance Trimble, dies at age 107
- ↑ Daredevil dies while attempting world-record motorcycle jump
- ↑ 'Huge' car dealer and philanthropist Billy Fuccillo has died
- ↑ Biden's dog Champ has died, White House says
- ↑ Joanne Linville Dies: 'Star Trek' Romulan Commander & 'Twilight Zone' Actress With Scores Of Screen Credits Was 93
- ↑ Curator Diego Cortez, Who Helped Launch Basquiat to Fame, Is Dead
- ↑ Former 19th District legislator Mark Doumit dies suddenly at 59
- ↑ Wild assistant Former NHL player Tom Kurvers dies at 58 from lung cancer
- ↑ Former Oilers cornerback Patrick Allen dies at 59
- ↑ Longtime Billboard Contributor Jim Bessman Dies at 68
- ↑ Award-winning children's author, CT resident Patricia Reilly Giff dies at 86
- ↑ Former U.S. District Judge Richard Kyle, who presided over major cases over 25 years, dies
- ↑ Former CNN Correspondent & Radio Host Mike Brooks Dies
- ↑ Larger-than-life software mogul John McAfee dies in Spain by suicide, lawyer says
- ↑ Calgary-based guitarist and blues legend Ellen McIlwaine dead at 75
- ↑ Former Colorado state Rep. Mike McLachlan dies at 75
- ↑ Bev Scalze, former state lawmaker and Little Canada city council member, dies at 77
- ↑ Former Alabama Congressman H.L. 'Sonny' Callahan dies
- ↑ Stephen Dunn, Poet Who Celebrated the Ordinary, Dies at 82
- ↑ Former FAMU President Frederick Humphries dies at 85
- ↑ John Erman Dies: Emmy Winner Who Directed For 'Star Trek', 'Roots' & 'M*A*S*H' Was 85
- ↑ NASCAR Hall of Famer, short-track legend Jack Ingram dies at age 84
- ↑ Mike Gravel, former US senator for Alaska, dies at 91
- ↑ Jon Hassell, avant garde US composer, dies aged 84
- ↑ 'Cops' creator Langley dies during off-road race in Mexico
- ↑ The American composer and pianist Frederic Rzewski has died
- ↑ Ex-Skid Row Singer Johnny Solinger Dead At 55
- ↑ Alison Greenspan Dies: 'For Life' & 'The Sisterhood Of The Traveling Pants' Executive Producer Was 48
- ↑ In Memoriam: Steven G. Horwitz, 1964-2021
- ↑ Lauren Berlant, preeminent literary scholar and cultural theorist, 1957–2021
- ↑ Burton Greene, Pioneering Free Jazz Pianist, Dies at 84
- ↑ Harry Johnston, former congressman and state Senate president, dead at 89
- ↑ Legendary big-wave surfer Greg 'Da Bull' Noll dies at 84
- ↑ Stuart Damon Dies: 'General Hospital's' Alan Quartermaine Had 50-Year Career On Stage And Screen
- ↑ Elizabeth 'Betita' Martínez, prolific author and pioneering Chicana, dies
- ↑ Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld dead at 88
- ↑ Jimmy Fitzmorris, former Louisiana lieutenant governor, dies at 99
- ↑ Janet "Jay" Stone
- ↑ Former Oregon Ducks, New Orleans Saints wide receiver Bob Newland dies at 72
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