The following is a list of notable deaths in June 1982.
Entries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence:
- Name, age, country of citizenship at birth, subsequent country of citizenship (if applicable), reason for notability, cause of death (if known), and reference.
June 1982
2
- Jiří Brdečka, 64, Czech screenwriter, film director, animator, cartoonist, and painter, he worked as both a screenwriter and film director at the Barrandov Studios, and he directed animated films for the Bratři v triku studio, [1]one of his short animated films had won the Grand Prix award at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival in 1963[2]
- Fazal Ilahi Chaudhry, 78, Pakistani politician and barrister, he served as the president of Pakistan from 1973[3] until his resignation in 1978,[4] he was the first ethnic Punjabi president of Pakistan, heart disease[5]
- Shah Abdul Wahhab, 87-88, Bangladeshi Deobandi Islamic scholar, educator, jurist, preacher, and spiritual leader, [6][7]during the Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971, he arranged a special langar khana for those in danger, regardless of their religion[8]
3
- Peter Carter, 48, British-Canadian film and television director, he was nominated for the Best Director award at the 1st Genie Awards in 1980 for Klondike Fever, [9]heart attack[10]
4
- Henning Dahl Mikkelsen, 67, Danish cartoonist, he was the creator of the long-running comic strip Ferd'nand, [11][12]a prominent example of pantomime comics[13][14]
6
- Kenneth Rexroth, 76, American poet, translator, critical essayist, and painter, [15]he was considered an associate member of the poetry group Objectivists in the 1930s, [16]he was regarded as a central figure in the San Francisco Renaissance of the 1950s, [17][18]and he was also described as a father figure to the Beat Generation, despite his own criticisms of this literary movement[19]
7
- Ferdinand Waldo Demara, 60, American impostor, he was a deserter from the ranks of the United States Army during World War II, [20]and he subsequently had several short-lived careers while using the names and identities of other people, variously serving as a civil engineer, a sheriff's deputy, an assistant prison warden, a doctor of applied psychology, a hospital orderly, a lawyer, a child-care expert, a Benedictine monk, a Trappist monk, and a naval surgeon,[21]heart failure and complications from diabetes[21]
8

- Satchel Paige, 75, American professional baseball pitcher who played in both Negro league baseball and Major League Baseball (MLB), his professional career lasted from 1926 until 1966, and he retired two weeks prior to his 60th birthday, [22] heart attack during a power failure at his home.[23][24]
9
- Mirza Nasir Ahmad, 72, Pakistani religious leader, he served as the third Caliph of the country's Ahmadiyya Muslim Community from 1965 until his death in 1982, [25][26] he laid the foundation stone of the Basharat Mosque in Pedro Abad, the first mosque to be built in Spain in over 750 years, [27][28]heart attack, while already receiving medical treatment for unspecified health problems since late May[29]
- Hank Ladd, 73, American actor and screenwriter[30], television writer for Jackie Gleason and His American Scene[31]
10
- Gala Dalí, 87, Russian schoolteacher and art model, mainly associated with the Surrealist movement and its artists, wife and muse for both Paul Éluard and Salvador Dalí[32], she is also credited for providing inspiration to Louis Aragon, Max Ernst, and André Breton, [33]death attributed to a severe case of influenza, but she was also suffering from dementia during the last monts of her life[32][34][35]
- Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 37, German filmmaker, dramatist and actor, one of the major figures of the New German Cinema movement[36][37], death from drug overdose, due to a combination of cocaine[38] and barbiturates[39]
11
- H. Radclyffe Roberts, 76, American entomologist[40]and amateur ornithologist, he served as a member of several bird-collecting expeditions for the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia during the late 1920s and the early 1930s, [41] [42][43][44]his professional work focused on the taxonomy and morphology of the grasshoppers, [45][46]he also produced and published research on the malaria-transmitting mosquitos for the U.S. War Department during his military service in World War II[47][48][49]
- Santosh Kumar, 56, Pakistani actor[50], he repeatedly won the Nigar Award for Best Actor (in 1957, [51] 1962[52], and 1963[53])
- Anatoly Solonitsyn, 47, Soviet actor.[54], he won the Silver Bear for Best Actor at the 31st Berlin International Film Festival for his role in Twenty Six Days from the Life of Dostoyevsky (1981), [55]lung cancer. Death reputedly caused by Solonitsyn's exposure to toxic chemicals during the filming of Stalker. [56]The film was shot near Tallinn, with the polluted waters of the small river Jägala used as a setting for certain scenes. The waters contained poisonous liquids from a nearby chemical plant, and many women in the film crew had allergic reactions. Several members of the cast and crew subsequently died due to cancer of the right bronchial tube.[57]
12
- Karl von Frisch, 95, German-Austrian ethologist, [58]his work focuded on investigating the sensory perceptions of the honey bee, he was one of the first scientists to translate the meaning of the waggle dance, publishing his research findings in 1927[59][60]
- Marie Rambert, 94, Polish-born English dancer and pedagogue, an influential figure in British ballet[61], she served with the Ballets Russes from 1912 until 1913, [62][63]she founded the Ballet Club in 1926[64]
13

- Khalid of Saudi Arabia, 66, he served as both the King of Saudi Arabia and the Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia from 1975 until his death in 1982, [65]rising to power following the assassination of his predecessor Faisal, [66][67] Khalid had previously served as the first deputy prime minister from 1962 until 1975[68][69], and as a frequent member of diplomatic missions from 1934 until 1943[70], heart attack[71][72]
- Peter Maivia, 45, Samoan-American professional wrestler, actor, and stunt coordinator[73], he won the New Zealand Heavyweight Championship in 1964, [73][74]he served as the NWA Australasian Heavyweight Champion from 1964 until 1968, [73]he was one of biggest stars of the company World Wide Wrestling Federation (WWWF) from 1977 until his departure in 1981, [75]death from inoperable cancer, he had been diagnosed with the disease in 1981.[76][73]The Disney animated character Maui was posthumously designed to resemble Maivia[77]
- Riccardo Paletti, 23, Italian motor racing driver, killed while competing in the 1982 Canadian Grand Prix. During the race, the driver of the Ferrari who had the pole position stalled its engine and lifted his hand to signal that there was a problem. The other cars swerved across the track, trying to squeeze past the stationary car.[78]Paletti could not react in time, and he slammed into the rear of the stranded Ferrari at high speed. He sustained heavy chest injuries and was lying unconscious in his car, wedged against the steering wheel. The petrol from the fuel tank soon ignited, enveloping the car in a wall of fire. While Paletti supposedly died in a hospital shortly after the accident, [79]the track doctor reported that Paletti was already brain dead by the time the medical personnel arrived[79]
14
- Marjorie Bennett, 86, Australian actress[80]
15
- Neil Fitzgerald, 89, Irish actor[81]
- Art Pepper, 56, American jazz musician, active in West Coast jazz, he was reputedly the greatest alto saxophonist of his era, [82]and he also played the tenor saxophone, the clarinet, and the bass clarinet, [83]stroke[84][85]
16
- James Honeyman-Scott, 25, English rock guitarist and songwriter, founding member of the band the Pretenders and an influential figure in the new wave movement, [86][87]heart failure caused by cocaine intolerance[88]
17
- Roberto Calvi, 62, Italian banker, chairman of the Banco Ambrosiano, his bank collapsed in June 1982 following the discovery of debts estimated to an amount between US$700 million and 1.5 billion, [89]death under uncertain circumstances. Calvi's dead body was found hanging from the scaffolding beneath London's Blackfriars Bridge. [90] Following two decades of contradictory official reports on the manner of his death, a forensic report in 2002 established that Calvi had been murdered[91][92]
- Rebekah Harkness, 67, American composer, sculptor, dance patron, and philanthropist, eponymous founder of the Harkness Ballet,[93]she sponsored the construction of a medical research building at the New York Hospital, and she supported a number of medical research projects, [94][95]stomach cancer[96][97]
18
- Djuna Barnes, 90, American novelist, short story writer, playwright, and illustrator, [98] she is primarily remembered for her novel Nightwood (1936), a prominent example of lesbian literature [99][100]and metafiction,[101]she was reputedly the last surviving member of the first generation of English-language modernists[98]
- John Cheever, 70, American novelist and short story writer, his post-World War II fiction was noted for Kafkaesque tales[102] and protests against the "slice of life" fiction which dominated The New Yorker during this era, [103]his short story compilation The Stories of John Cheever won the 1979 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and a National Book Critics Circle Award, [104]lung cancer[105][106]

- Curd Jürgens, 66, German-Austrian actor, [107]he played a version of the Luftwaffe Colonel-General (Generaloberst) Ernst Udet in The Devil's General (1955), [108][109]the Chancellor Otto von Bismarck in Fall of Eagles (1974),[110] and the sociopathic industrialist Karl Stromberg in The Spy Who Loved Me (1977)[111]
20
- Ralph Moody, 83, American novelist and autobiographer, better known for the story of his own childhood which he narrated in Little Britches (1950)[112]
21
- Cotton Warburton, 70, American college football quarterback and film editor with about sixty feature film credits, [113][114]he primarily worked for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer[113] and the Walt Disney Studios, he won the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for Mary Poppins (1964)[115][116][117]
22
- Alan Webb, 75, English actor, he played Mole in the world premiere of the play Toad of Toad Hall (1929) by A. A. Milne,[118]he was originally cast as Palpatine in Return of the Jedi (1983), but he bowed out due to illness, [119]death at his own home due to unspecified health problems[120][121]
24
- Marcelle Pradot, 80, French actress of the silent film era[122], she worked with the film director Marcel L'Herbier throughout her film career, and she eventually married him in 1923[123]
25
- Ed Hamm, 76, American athlete and businessperson, he won the gold medal in the long jump at the 1928 Summer Olympics, [124]business executive of The Coca-Cola Company, representing the company on the West Coast and in Alaska[124]
27
- Jack Mullaney, 52, American actor, he was a regular cast member in the sitcoms The Ann Sothern Show, [125]Ensign O'Toole, [126] and It's About Time,[126]: 516 stroke[125]
29
- Pierre Balmain, 68, French fashion designer, he was the founder of the leading post-World War II fashion house Balmain, [127][128]liver cancer[129]
- Henry King, 96, American film director and actor, he is regarded as one of the most commercially successful Hollywood directors of the interwar period, he primarily worked for the film studio 20th Century Fox since its foundation in 1935[130]
30
- Abner Dean, 72, American cartoonist[131], his darkly humorous drawings often depicted barren landscapes and dead trees, [132]or grim and decaying urban environments[133]
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The spectacular success of Mary Poppins, which was the highest grossing film of 1964 (significantly outperforming its closest rivals My Fair Lady (George Cukor) and Goldfinger (Guy Hamilton)), pushed company profits to record highs of $11 million in 1965 and $12 million in 1966.
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Disney was the leader, his musical fantasies mixing animation and truly marvelous f/x with real-life action for children and the child in the adult. Mary Poppins (1964) was his plum. ... the story was elemental, even trite. But utmost sophistication (the chimney pot sequence crisply cut by Oscared "Cotton" Warburton) and high-level invention (a tea party on the ceiling, a staircase of black smoke to the city's top) characterized its handling.
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- ^ Lanier, Chris."Abner Dean Made This: An Appreciation," High Hat (Spring 2006).
- ^ "Abner Dean". lambiek.net. Retrieved July 31, 2020.
Sources
- Austen, Roger (1977). Playing the Game: The Homosexual Novel in America (1st ed.). Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Company. ISBN 978-0-672-52287-1.
- Nijampuri, Ashraf Ali (2013). The Hundred (100 Great Scholars from Bangladesh) (1st ed.). Hathazari, Chittagong: Salman Publication. ISBN 978-112009250-2. Archived from the original on December 2, 2021. Retrieved May 8, 2022.
- Ott, Frederick W (1986). The great German films.
- Tye, Larry (2009). Satchel: The Life and Times of an American Legend. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-1400066513.
- Ullah, Ahmad; Qadir, Ridwanul (2018). মাশায়েখে চাটগাম [Scholars of Chittagong] (in Bengali). Dhaka: Ahmad Publications. ISBN 978-984-92106-4-1.
- Young, Ian (1975). The Male Homosexual in Literature: A Bibliography (1st ed.). Metuchen, New Jersey: The Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-0861-4.
External links
- List of June 1982 deaths at IMDb