For my first blog of the year 2021, I'm taking a look back over 2020 at some of the people we lost. This list is chronological by date of death. I've tried to pick a cross section from different walks of life. This is definitely not a complete list of all those who died. The loss of life from the COVID-19 pandemic exceeded a third of a million people just in the United States with the world wide loss being much higher. Just the number of those infected in the United States exceeded 20 million.
Buck Henry
Date: Jan. 8
Cause of death: Heart attack
Age: 89
Co-wrote the iconic film The Graduate which launched
Dustin Hoffman to stardom and also co-created the television sitcom Get
Smart with Mel Brooks. Regularly hosted Saturday Night Live in its
infancy.
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Kobe Bryant
Date: Jan. 26
Cause of death: Blunt trauma
Age: 41
The NBA legend and eight others, including his 13-year-old daughter,
died when his private helicopter crashed into a hillside in Calabasas, Calif.
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Mary Higgins Clark
Date: Jan 31
Age: 92
The bestselling "Queen of Suspense" who wrote
dozens of suspense novels sold worldwide. Clark's writing career spanned
decades.
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Kirk Douglas
Date: Feb. 5
Cause of death: Natural causes
Age: 103
The matinee idol of Hollywood’s Golden Age died at his
Beverly Hills home, announced his son Michael Douglas. The star of Spartacus,
Ace in the Hole, Champion and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, was a
three-time Academy Award nominee and was awarded an honorary lifetime
achievement Oscar in 1996. He also played an instrumental role in helping end
the Hollywood blacklist against suspected communist sympathizers.
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Max von Sydow
Date: March 8
Age: 90
Born Carl Adolf von Sydow, the Swedish actor and director
enjoyed a 70-year career that spanned everything from The Exorcist (1973),
to Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015), to numerous international
films including Ingmar Bergman’s critically acclaimed The Seventh Seal (1957).
In more recent years, he reached a new audience with his Emmy-nominated
performance as the Three-eyed Raven in Game of Thrones.
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Kenny Rogers
Date: March 20
Cause of death: Natural causes
Age: 81
One of the most successful recording artists of all time,
the country star recorded 65 albums, sold more than 165 million records, and
racked up more than 120 Billboard hit singles across various genres — including
his 1978 story song “The Gambler,” which was selected for preservation in the
National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress and inspired five
television movies. A Country Music Hall of Fame inductee in 2013, Rogers also
won three Grammys, 13 American Music Awards, six Country Music Association
Awards, the CMA Lifetime Achievement Award and the CMT Artist of a Lifetime
Award.
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Roy Horn
Date: May 8
Cause of death: Coronavirus-related complications
Age: 75
Horn was half of the successful Las Vegas duo Siegfried and
Roy, who entertained crowds with magic tricks and interaction with lions and
tigers, for 35 years. He had miraculously survived after being mauled and
dragged offstage by a 400-pound white tiger during a performance on Oct. 3,
2003, although he had a stroke and partial paralysis afterward. While the duo
made an appearance for charity in 2009, they officially retired their act the
following year. His death came one week after his diagnosis with the
coronavirus.
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Little Richard
Date: May 9
Cause of death: Bone cancer
Age: 87
Considered the founding father of rock ‘n’ roll whose
combination of boogie, gospel and blues paved the way for every rocker that
followed, the flamboyant “Tutti Frutti” showman’s death prompted a flood of
tributes to his incredible legacy.
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Jerry Stiller
Date: May 11
Cause of death: Natural causes
Age: 92
The comedian and his wife of 60 years, Anne Meara, were a
very successful stand-up comedy duo. Their son, Ben Stiller, is a successful
actor. Jerry had a late-career boost first on Seinfeld, playing George
Costanza's father Frank (Festivus!). He followed that success by playing Leah
Remini's dad on The King of Queens. He also appeared with Ben in
numerous films.
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Phyllis George
Date: May 14
Cause of death: Complications from a blood disorder
Age: 70
After winning the title of Miss America 1971, she became one
of the first female sports broadcasters when she joined the NFL Today
team four years later.
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Carl Reiner
Date: June 29
Cause of death: Natural causes
Age: 98
Because he was a writer, producer, director and an actor,
it’s easy to see why he was an important influence on comedy. He was the winner
of multiple Emmys and the father of director Rob Reiner. Carl continued to act
into his later years.
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Kelly Preston
Date: July 12
Cause of death: Breast cancer
Age: 57
The Jerry Maguire and For Love of the Game actress
privately battled breast cancer for two years before succumbing to the disease
at her Florida home. She had been married to John Travolta since 1991.
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John Lewis
Date: July 17
Cause of death: Pancreatic cancer
Age: 80
An icon of the civil rights movement, he was one of the
activists who was by the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s side during the
March on Washington in 1963 and during the Bloody Sunday March in 1965. He spent
more than three decades as a congressman representing Atlanta. His death came
six months after he revealed that he had Stage 4 pancreatic cancer.
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Diana Rigg
Date: Sept. 10
Cause of death: Lung cancer
Age: 82
Long before her popular role as the wickedly witty Lady
Olenna Tyrell on Game of Thrones, she was a ‘60s sex symbol playing
crimefighting assistant Emma Peel to Patrick Macnee's John Steed on the British
TV series The Avengers. A star on stage and screen, the British actress
was made a “Dame” for her services to drama in 1994, the year she won the Tony
Award for Best Actress in a Play after starring in the London and New York
productions of Medea.
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Regis Philbin
Date: July 24
Cause of death: Heart attack
Age: 88
The iconic TV personality set the Guinness World Record for
"Most Hours on US Television" during his 60-year showbiz career. He
was best known for the morning show Live!, which he co-hosted for 24
seasons, and the hit primetime game show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
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Olivia de Havilland
Date: July 26
Cause of death: Natural causes
Age: 104
The two-time Oscar winner and last surviving star of Gone
With the Wind died peacefully in her sleep at her home in Paris. The fiery
actress made a splash off-screen, too, as she helped buck the old Hollywood
studio system with what’s known in the industry as the de Havilland Law.
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Chadwick Boseman
Date: Aug. 28
Cause of death: Cancer
Age: 43
The Black Panther star’s death sent a shockwave
around the world when Boseman’s family announced he privately battled colon
cancer for four years. The actor brought King T’Challa to life in the Marvel
Universe between countless surgeries and chemotherapy.
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Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Date: Sept. 18
Cause of death: Metastatic pancreatic cancer
Age: 87
The Supreme Court justice, nominated by President Bill
Clinton in 1993, was beloved for the many advancements she made for women. Even
before she became only the second woman (and the first Jewish woman) to sit on
the nation’s highest court, Ginsburg had fought for women’s rights on behalf of
the American Civil Liberties Union and had persevered against sexism in her own
life as one of the few women studying law. In her later years, Ginsburg became
so famous for her dissents, that she was given the nickname of “the notorious
RBG.” Her story inspired books and movies, a meme and even a regular sketch on Saturday
Night Live.
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Eddie Van Halen
Date: Oct 6
Cause of death: Cancer
Age: 65
The renowned lead guitarist of iconic rock group Van Halen
died after a "long and arduous battle with cancer," his son wrote on
social media.
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Sean Connery
Date: Oct. 31
Cause of death: Respiratory failure due to pneumonia, old
age and atrial fibrillation
Age: 90
He won an Oscar playing a tough-talking cop in The
Untouchables and found success with a series of thrillers and action hits
in the 1990s, but the suave Scotsman will forever be synonymous with three
words: “Bond, James Bond.” Connery’s original 007 set the benchmark for
debonair-but-deadly action heroes.
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Alex Trebek
Date: Nov. 8
Cause of death: Cancer
Age: 80
Less than two years after announcing his stage 4 pancreatic
cancer diagnosis, the beloved Jeopardy! host passed away at home
surrounded by loved ones. Trebek filmed his final episodes just 10 days before
his death. The pop culture icon hosted the game show since its revival in 1984.
In 2014, he was awarded the Guinness World Record for most gameshow episodes
hosted by the same presenter.
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Chuck Yeager
Date: Dec. 7
Age: 97
The test pilot who broke the sound barrier in 1947, thus
paving the way for future space travel.
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Charley Pride
Date: Dec. 12
Cause of death: COVID-19-related complications
Age: 86
Pride was a legendary baritone singer who broke barriers as the first Black country superstar and first Black member of the Country Music Hall of Fame. During his peak recording years, he was RCA Records’ best-selling artist since Elvis Presley, earning 52 top 10 country hits (36 of which went to No. 1) and 12 gold albums. Pride was the winner of four Grammys and three Country Music Association Awards.
4 comments:
What a list and so many from some kind of cancer. Thanks for sharing, Samantha. May they and the numerous others only their loved ones can name rest in peace.
A lovely post. So sad, though. We lost some great ones!
Anna: Yes, that was a surprise to me, too--so many cancer deaths.
Thanks for your comment.
Judith: This was just a partial list, a small partial list, of all those we lost during 2020. Some truly great people in their field.
Thanks for your comment.
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