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The following is a list of notable deaths in May 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.
May 1982
1

.jpg/440px-Sharif_Nasser_portrait_(cropped).jpg)
- Kenneth Beck, 67, American water polo player and Olympian[1]
- Edwin N. Clark
- Amelia Gade Corson
- Albert Fitzgerald, 75, American trade union leader[2]
- Beryl Follet
- Grant Gilmore
- Samuel Juster
- Alexander Kutateli
- Everett McGowan
- Hussein ibn Nasser
- Angus Nicoson
- Brian O'Brien
- Jake Pelkington
- William Primrose, 77, Scottish violist and teacher, he was a member of both the London String Quartet and the NBC Symphony Orchestra, [3]cancer[3]
- Anthony Hoskyns-Abrahall
- Torajirō Saitō
- Gene Sheldon, 74, American actor, mime artist, and musician, primarily remembered for playing the mute servant Bernardo in Walt Disney's Western series Zorro (1957–1959), [4][5] heart attack[6]
- Margaret Sheridan
- Wolfgang Stammberger
- Harcus Strachan
- Mikhaïl Suzumov
- Mir Rasool Bux Talpur
- Eddie Tryon
- Walther Wenck, 81, German military officer and industrialist[7]
2

- Salomon Bochner, 82, Galizien-born mathematician[8]
- Leo Callahan
- Helmut Dantine, 63, Austrian-American actor and film producer, typecast in portraying Nazis, [9]vice-president of Schenck Enterprises, the production company of his uncle-in-law Joseph Schenck, [10]heart attack[9][10]
- Patrick Dooley
- Nirmal Kumar Dutta
- James Fitton
- Hugh Marlowe, 71, American actor, he played the eponymous character Ellery Queen in the first radio version of The Adventures of Ellery Queen, [11]heart attack[12]
- Allan Montgomery
- John Ryan
- Bill Sefton
- Wini Shaw, 75, American actress, dancer, and singer,[13][14] in film she introduced the song "Lullaby of Broadway"[14][15] and performed the song "The Lady in Red"[14][16]
- Virginia Vestoff
3

- Mohammed Seddik Benyahia, 50, Algerian politician and diplomat who was a militant nationalist during the Algerian War. He served as a member of the Algerian delegation in negotiations with the French government for the Evian Accords (1962), [17][18][19] and was a cabinet member for fifteen years.[20] His airplane was shot down on the Iran–Turkey border during his mediation mission in the Iran–Iraq War.[21]
- Devendranath
- Ella Florence Fondren
- Brenda Frazier
- Kanchi Kalyanasundaram
- Margit Nordin
- Chandrakant T. Patel
- Rajni Patel
- Werner Schwier
- Ibrahim Yusuf Sulayman
- Henri Tajfel
- Rex Townley
- William Whitelaw
4

- Huang Bamei
- Georges Aleka Damas
- Lillian Gilmore, 72, America actress[22]
- Harry Hays
- Edna Holland, 86, American actress[23]ruptured aneurysm[23]
- Barnett Janner
- Loraine Leeson
- Charles O. McManiman
- Leo W. O'Brien
5

- Accamma Cherian
- Ian Hill
- Denis Hill-Wood
- Julio Irazusta
- Irmgard Keun
- Phuljhuri Khan
- Mauricio Cardozo Ocampo
- Nikolai Organov
- Sue Pritzker
- Hossein Qajeyi
- Cal Tjader, 56, American American Latin Jazz musician, he is often described as the most successful non-Latino Latin musician, [24]he is linked to the development of the then-new music genres of Latin rock and acid jazz, [25]heart attack while on the road with his band in Manila[26][27]
- Ernie Watson
6

- Nancy Adam
- Faiz Mohammad Baloch
- William P. Durkee III
- Rosamond Harding
- Hibiscus, 32, American actor and performance artist, he took part in the anti-war march March on the Pentagon (1967),and he appeared in Bernie Boston's Pulitzer Prize-nominated photograph, Flower Power; Hibiscus was the turtleneck sweater-wearing protester photographed putting flowers into the gun barrels of a soldier of the 503rd Military Police Battalion (Airborne),[28] he was the founder of the psychedelic gay liberation theater collective known as the Cockettes, [29][30] death from pneumonia and complications from AIDS.[31]At the time of his death, AIDS was known as GRID or "gay cancer", and was highly stigmatized.[32]
- Robert McGowan Littlejohn
- Art Macioszczyk
- Beauty McGowan
- Endel Press
- Salvatore Ruggiero
- Herman T. Schneebeli
7
.jpg/440px-Claudio_Barrientos,_Estadio,_1955-12-16_(657).jpg)
8

- Salomea Andronikova, 94, Georgian socialite and salonist[33][34] remembered for her association with several writers of the Silver Age of Russian Poetry in pre-revolutionary Saint Petersburg, who celebrated her physical and intellectual charms in their works.[35]
- Sam Baker, 75, American actor, [36]he played Queequeg in The Sea Beast (1926), [36]which was the first film adaptation of Herman Melville's 1851 novel Moby-Dick,[37] and Hugo in the science fiction film serial The Lost City (1935).[36][38]
- Neil Bogart, 39, American record executive who founded Casablanca Records[39][40]
- Leonor Cecotto
- Atmaram Ravaji Deshpande
- Anatoli Kacharava
- Al Leader
- Anita Pittoni
- Gilles Villeneuve, 32, Canadian racing driver who competed in Formula One from 1977 to 1982. He won six Grands Prix.[41] He was seriously injured in an accident at the 1982 Belgian Grand Prix.[42] After being hospitalized, he was diagnosed with a fatal fracture of the neck[43] and died soon after.[44]
9

- Del W. Carroll
- René González
- Nelida Lobato, 47, Argentine actress, dancer, and model[45] cancer[46]
- Dorothy Binney Palmer
- John Smith
- Petr Svojtka
- Madeline Willemsen
10

- Villem Ernits
- Winston Jenkins
- Raymond Jonson
- Ron Lundy
- Vivian Carter Mason
- Don L. Short
- Vilém Šindler
- Peter Weiss
- Alex Weyand
- Ma Yinchu
11
1.jpg/440px-Nettie_Ottenberg_(cropped)1.jpg)
- Bull Allen
- Åke Andersson
- Jacob Burck
- Tibor Fazekas
- Dave Malarcher
- Josiah Lewis Morgan
- Nettie Ottenberg
- Leonardo Savioli
- Sejr Volmer-Sørensen
- Elli Ylimaa
12

- Walter Boas
- Aleksandr Borisov, 77, Soviet actor, film director, screenwriter, and singer, [47] he was named People's Artist of the USSR (1951) and Hero of Socialist Labour (1981)[48]
- Hardy Cross Dillard
- Pjetër Gjoka
- Fred Halsey Kraege
- Hubert Lanz
- Wear Schoonover
- Ronald Bodley Scott
- Humphrey Searle, 66, English composer and writer on music[49] who was considered an authority on Franz Liszt[50]
- Alexander Zaytsev
13

- Akhsarbek Abaev
- Despina Achladiotou
- Claude Bourque
- Gara Garayev
- Zhamyangiyn Lhagvasuren
- Jim Lookabaugh
- Frank Monte
- Věra Suková
14
- Hugh Beaumont, 73, American actor, short story writer, and scriptwriter for both radio and television[51], primarily known for his portrayal of the wise small-town father Ward Cleaver on the television sitcom Leave It to Beaver[52], and the private detective Michael Shayne in a series of low-budget crime films released by the Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC) from 1946 until 1947, [53][54][55][56]heart attack[51]
- Joe Davidson
- Harry Englehart
- Marcel-Henri Jaspar
15

- Stuart Thomas Butler
- Loren G. McCollom
- Birch Monroe
- John Newbold
- Gordon Smiley, 36, American race car driver, killed in a single-car crash at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He was attempting to qualify for the 1982 Indianapolis 500, reportedly determined to break 200 mph (320 km/h) "or to die trying". Due to massive centrifugal force, his helmet was pulled from his head on impact, and he was scalped by the debris fence. Parts of his brain marked a trail on the asphalt.[57]Smiley's death was the first at Indy since 1973, and to date, the last during a qualification attempt.[57]
- Robert Arthur Sprecher
- Jane Storm
16
- Nené Cascallar
- Edward Clarke
- J. J. P. Corrigan
- Naoe Fushimi
- Sidney Hickox
- Claude Jeantet
- William Harry Jellema
- Alfonso Marotta
- Ivan Mihailov
- Emili Salut Payà
- Feliciano Peña
- Leigh Snowden, 52, American actress for Universal Pictures[58] and nightclub singer, [59]cancer[60]
- M. Harvey Taylor
17
.jpg/440px-Miss_Hazel_Hunkins_(cropped).jpg)
- Don R. Berlin
- Peter Boardman
- Charles Griffiths
- Hazel Hunkins Hallinan
- Väinö Heusala
- Israel Levitan
- John O'Donovan
- Joe Tasker
- Dixie Walker
18

19

- Willem Bokhoven
- C. Violet Butler
- Lee S. Gerow
- Elwyn Jones, 59, Welsh television writer, producer, and true crime novelist, Head of Drama (Series) at the BBC from 1963 until 1966, he created or co-created the television series Z-Cars, Softly, Softly, Softly, Softly: Taskforce, Barlow at Large/Barlow, Jack the Ripper and Second Verdict, [61]sudden death at his home, no known cause of death[61]
- Reinhard Karl
- Pavel Grigoryevich Kuznetsov
- Frank Winnold Prentice
- Corbet Woodall, 53, English newsreader for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), [62]host for the shows Look East, Any Questions?, and Any Answers?, [63]he frequently played roles as a television newsreader or as an announcer in both films and television series, [64] increasingly disabled by rheumatoid arthritis since the late 1960s[65]
20

- Elisa Hall de Asturias
- John Philip Falter
- Greene Farmer
- Jan Gregoor
- Franciszek Mientki
- Shmuel Mikunis
- Monk Montgomery
- Phaedrig O'Brien, 17th Baron Inchiquin
- Zirl A. Palmer
- Edmundo Searle
- John Stephenson
- Leo Taylor
- Hubert Thorn
- Merle Tuve
21

- Marco Cimatti
- Jean Coleman
- Jim Collins
- Holger Crafoord
- Eilís Nic Eachnaidh
- Barbara Fitzgerald
- Olive A. Greeley
- Mieczysław Łoza
- Giovanni Muzio
- Ray Nash
- Arthur Norrington
- Paul A. Putnam
- Max Stern
22

- Louis Balsan
- Ronnie Elliott
- Robert Kent Gooch
- Jay Laurence Lush
- Athol Richardson
- Princess Princep Shah of Nepal
- Afanasy Shilin
- Lynn de Silva
- Cevdet Sunay
23

- Karl Fochler
- Enzo Galbiati
- Louis Gérardin
- Geoffrey Lowndes
- John D. MacCallum
- Ernest McGirr
- Florence Violet McKenzie
- Marjorie Gordon Smart
24

- Dan Bailey
- Raffaele Calabria
- Edward T. Conroy
- Mary Campbell Dawbarn
- Mikael Gam
- Gene Graham
- Richard Hall
- Sidney H. Haughton
- Florence Hay
- Zakariyya Kandhlawi
- Tauno Palo, 73, Finnish actor, singer, and chemist, [66]he worked for the Finnish National Theatre [66]
- Stanisława Perzanowska
- William Sheat
- Juwad Shitnah
- Edward Tolhurst
- Zeno Żebrowski
25

- Larry J. Blake, 68, American actor[67]
- Larry Giovando
- Nikolai Mikhailov
- Hermine Sterler
- Richard Tomberg
26
_(cropped).jpg/440px-Foto_oficial_de_Presidente_Guillermo_Flores_Avendaño_(trimmed)_(cropped).jpg)
- Robert Armitage
- Magele Ate
- Guillermo Flores Avendaño, 87, Guatemalan military officer, he served as the acting president of Guatemala from 1957 until 1958,[68][69]with the start of his term following the annulled results of the 1957 Guatemalan general election, his term ended shortly after the 1958 Guatemalan general election, he oversaw the inauguration of a new president[70]
- Richard Battle
- Semra Ertan
- Giovanni Folcarelli
- Emma Horion
- Reino Kuivamäki
- Beirne Lay Jr., 72, American aviation writer, Hollywood screenwriter, and combat veteran of the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II[71], cancer[72]
- Sally Lippman, 81, American lawyer and regular dancer at the disco of Studio 54[73][74][75][76][77]
- Barry J. Mailloux
- Karl-Conrad Mecke
- Lee Shih-ke
- Tamaki Uemura
- Bessie Williamson
- Ernst Zipperer
27
.jpg/440px-00035_DUP_(14083184875).jpg)
28
- Boris Chirkov
- Carl Henry Clerk
- Gerhard Conrad
- Harry Crabtree
- Roberto Estévez
- Alexander Hurd
- H. Jones, 42, British military officer, he served as the commanding officer of the 2nd Battalion, Parachute Regiment during the Falklands War, he was killed in the Battle of Goose Green, while leading a charge against entrenched Argentine positions. [78]Jones fell metres short of the trench, shot in the back and the groin, and died within minutes.[79]
- Jurica Lakić
- Arthur Lemon
- Wiesław Maniak
- Christian Markersen
- Carlo Miranda
- Harry Van Surdam
- Herbert A. Wagner
- Mathias Zahradka
29

- Auro de Moura Andrade
- Rudy Debnar
- Henri Dulieux
- Henri Guidet
- Walter Harzer
- Erv Palica
- Babe Parnell
- Romy Schneider, 43, German and French actress, she started her film career in her teen years by performing in the German Heimatfilm genre, she became a cult figure with her starring role as Empress Elisabeth of Austria in the Sissi trilogy in the mid-1950s, [80]death by cardiac arrest, [81]attributed to complications from a kidney surgery which she had months before her death. [82][83] Posthumously, the Sissi trilogy remains one of the most successful examples of the German-language cinema, the trilogy is used as a popular Christmas television special, and is shown with some regularity on channels in German-speaking countries,[84] in Hungary, [85] and in Italy.[86]
- Phil White
30

- Husein Đozo
- Charlie Gooch
- Hubert Lindop
- Albert Norden, 77, German communist politician, [87] he was the editor of the newspaper Die Rote Fahne ('Red Flag') from 1931 until 1933, [88][89]he served as a member of the Central Committee of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED), and as a member of the party's Politburo,[89]he published the Braunbuch ('Brown Book', 1965), in which he accused over 1,900 politicians, state officials and other prominent persons in West Germany of having worked for the Nazi regime in the past. The book became a reference in the West German New Left, which increasingly had begun to question the official historiography on the Nazi period.[90][91]The book highlighted the past political activities of 21 Ministers and state secretaries, 100 admirals and generals, 828 judges or state lawyers and high law officers, 245 officials of the Foreign Office and of embassies and consulates in leading position, 297 high police officers and officers of the Verfassungsschutz[92][93]
- Johnny O'Connor
- Georg Stibi
31

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- ^ Burke, Marie (May 3, 1982). "Albert Fitzgerald, 75, Led UE for 37 Years". The Boston Globe. p. 34.
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- ^ "Obituaries: Gene Sheldon". Variety. May 12, 1982. p. 484. ProQuest 1286047018.
Gene Sheldon, 75, stage and screen actress, died May 1 of a heart attack at his Tarzana, Calif. home.
- ^ "Crash kills retired Gen. Wenck, who defied Hitler's suicidal order". Chicago Tribune. May 8, 1982. p. 10. Retrieved December 14, 2022.
- ^ "Other Deaths: Bochner, Salomon". The Boston Globe. May 7, 1982. p. 19.
- ^ a b "Helmut Dantine, Film Actor; Often Played Arrogant Nazi". The New York Times. UPI. May 6, 1982.
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- ^ "Remembering Cal Tjader". CapRadio, website of NPR affiliate and central California flagship station KXKZ. July 16, 2015.
- ^ Montgomery, David (March 18, 2007). "Flowers, Guns and an Iconic Snapshot". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 22, 2007.
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- ^ Ditfurth, Jutta (2007). Ulrike Meinhof: Die Biography. Ullstein. ISBN 978-3-550-08728-8. pp. 274–275 (Greek version)
- ^ "Was möglich ist". Der Spiegel (in German). No. 44/1967. Hamburg. October 22, 1967.
Sources
- Bamsey, Ian (1983). Automobile Sport 82-83. City: Haynes Manuals. ISBN 0-946321-01-9.
- Donaldson, Gerald (2003). Gilles Villeneuve: The Life of the Legendary Racing Driver. London: Virgin. ISBN 0-7535-0747-1.
- Fearnley, Paul (May 2007). "It's war. Absolutely war". Motor Sport. Haymarket. pp. 52–61.
- Jenkinson, Denis (June 1982). "Grote Prijs van Belgie". Motor Sport. Motor Sport Magazine Ltd. pp. 708–712.
- Lang, Mike (1992). Grand Prix! vol.4. Sparkford: Foulis. ISBN 0-85429-733-2.
- Mason, Colin (2001). "Searle, Humphrey". Grove Music Online. Revised by Hugo Cole and David C.F. Wright. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.25279. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0. (subscription, Wikilibrary access, or UK public library membership required)
- Watkins, Sid (1997). Life at the Limit: Triumph and Tragedy in Formula One. City: Pan Books. ISBN 0-330-35139-7.
- Soister, John T.; Nicolella, Henry; Joyce, Steve (January 31, 2013). American Silent Horror, Science Fiction and Fantasy Feature Films, 1913–1929. McFarland Publishing. p. 830. ISBN 9780786487905.
- Watson, Derek (January 6, 2011) [23 September 2004]. "Searle, Humphrey". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/31668. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. (subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required)
- Wright, Mark, ed. (2017). "Galaxy 4, Mission to the Unknown, The Myth Makers and The Daleks' Master Plan". Doctor Who: The Complete History. 6 (47). London: Panini Comics, Hachette Partworks. ISSN 2057-6048.
External links
- List of May 1982 deaths at IMDb