/ Stars that died in 2023

Thursday, March 17, 2011

David Hart, British political activist, author and playwright, died from motor neurone disease he was , 66

David Hart was a British writer, businessman, and adviser to Margaret Thatcher died from motor neurone disease he was , 66.[1]

(4 February 1944 — 5 January 2011)

Early life

David Hart was the eldest of the two sons of Anglo-Jewish businessman Louis Albert Hart.[2] Hart came from a prominent Anglo-Jewish family which has contributed to public life in the U.K. Other noted public figures from his family include his uncle[3] , Ferdinand Mount as well as Professor H. L. A. Hart, a legal philosopher, and Charles Hart, a lyricist.
Hart was educated at Eton. After an early period in which he made avant garde films (in the circle of Bruce Robinson who made Withnail and I), he moved into property,[2] a field in which he became a millionaire by the late 1960s. He declared himself bankrupt in 1974,[4] though this was discharged in 1978.[5] A later inheritance restored his fortunes.[2]

Political advisor

By the late 1970s he was involved in Conservative Party politics and the Centre for Policy Studies think-tank. He wrote speeches for Archie Hamilton MP, a friend from Eton.[2]
In the early 1980s Lady Thatcher involved Hart in negotions with the Ronald Reagan US administration regarding their "Star Wars" Strategic Defence Initiative.[2]
During the miners' strike of 1984–85 he was an unpaid advisor to Thatcher, the National Coal Board and its chair Ian MacGregor.[6] He was a controversial[6] figure during the 1984–5 miners strike and was instrumental in organising and funding the anti-strike campaign in the coalfields,[7] including funding a breakaway miners union, the Union of Democratic Mineworkers.[8] His involvement in aiding working miners extended to employing former members of the SAS to protect the families of working miners[9] and using the resources of 'the secret state'.[10] Hart's involvement was eventually a source of bitterness for the UDM's leader Roy Lynk.[8]
Towards the end of Hungarian communism, David Hart channelled support from the West to a Hungarian political movement known as "Fidesz", which at the time was a ragtag collection of students and activists. Within a year, Hungarian communism fell and members of Fidesz were part of the new government.[citation needed]
In the autumn of 1993 he was appointed as a personal advisor to Malcolm Rifkind, Secretary of State for Defence,[11] a position Hart retained when Michael Portillo succeeded Rifkind. Reportedly a long-standing Portillo contact, Hart is credited with writing the 'Who Dares Wins' conclusion to Portillo's 1995 Conservative Party Conference speech.[1][12] He was also involved in the 2005 plan to install 40 telephones and fax machines in a Lord Smith Street house for a Portillo leadership challenge to Prime Minister John Major which never emerged.[13]
In the 2000s he was involved in the international defence industry – including being a lobbyist for BAE and Boeing.[14] In 2004 an arrest warrant for Hart was issued concerning his alleged involvement in that year's coup attempt in Equatorial Guinea.[1] In 2007 The Guardian newspaper alleged Hart had received £13million in secret payments from BAE Systems,[15] via Defence Consultancy Ltd, an anonymously registered company based in the British Virgin Islands. While BAE was under investigation for corruption at the time, Hart himself was not thought to have done anything illegal.[15]

Novelist and playwright

Hart wrote numerous plays including Victoriana, The Little Rabbi, The Ark & the Covenant,[2] and two novels, The Colonel and Come to the Edge.

Cultural depictions

In 2004 the author David Peace published the novel GB84, a “fiction based on a fact” of the miners strike. The book’s most controversial feature was Stephen Sweet, who is referred to throughout by his driver as "The Jew", a vain and obsessive character allegedly based on David Hart.[7]
However in Francis Beckett and David Henckes’ study on the miners' strike, Marching to the Fault Line, Hart features more as light relief.[16]

Personal life

The father of five children by four women,[1] in an article for The Daily Telegraph in June 2009, Hart revealed he had been living with primary lateral sclerosis, a form of motor neurone disease since 2003.[17] He died on 5 January 2011.[1]
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Malangatana Ngwenya, Mozambican poet and painter, died after a long illness he was , 74

Malangatana Ngwenya [1][2] was a Mozambican painter and poet. He frequently exhibited work under his first name alone. He died on January 5, 2011 in Matosinhos, Portugal died after a long illness he was , 74.[1]


(6 June 1936—5 January 2011)

Life

Born in Matalana, a village in the south of Portuguese Mozambique, Ngwenya spent his early life attending mission schools and helping his mother on the farm. At 12 he went to the city of Lourenço Marques (now Maputo) to find work, becoming ball boy for a tennis club in 1953. This allowed him to resume his education, and he took classes at night, through which he developed an interest in art. Augusto Cabral, a member of the tennis club, gave him materials and helped him to sell his art.
In 1958 Ngwenya attended some functions of Nucleo de Arte, a local artists' organization, and received support from the painter Ze Julio. The next year he exhibited publicly for the first time, as part of a group show; two years later came his first solo exhibition, at the age of 25. In 1963 some of his poetry was published in the journal Black Orpheus, and his work was included in the anthology Modern Poetry from Africa.
In 1964, Ngwenya, who had joined the nationalistic FRELIMO guerrilla, was detained by the PIDE, the Portuguese secret police of the Estado Novo regime, and spent 18 months in jail. He was given a grant from the Lisbon-based Gulbenkian Foundation in 1971, and studied engraving and ceramics in Portugal, Europe. Back to Mozambique, Africa, his art was exposed several times in both Lourenço Marques and Lisbon until the independence.[3]

After the independence of Mozambique due to the events of the Carnation Revolution of April 1974, Malangatana Ngwenya openly rejoined FRELIMO, now the single-party communist organization which was ruling the new country, and worked in political mobilization events and alphabetization campaigns. Since 1981 he has worked full-time as an artist. His work has been shown throughout Africa, and is in the collection of the National Museum of African Art in Washington, DC. In addition, he has executed numerous murals, including for Frelimo and UNESCO. He has also helped to start a number of cultural institutions in Mozambique, and was a founder of the Mozambican Peace Movement.
Ngwenya has been awarded the Nachingwea Medal for Contribution to Mozambican Culture, and has been made a Grande Oficial da Ordem do Infante D. Henrique. In 1997 he was named a UNESCO Artist for Peace and received a Prince Claus Award.
He was awarded a degree honoris causa by the University of Évora in 2010.
He died on January 5, 2011 in Matosinhos.[1]

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Helene Palmer, British actress (Coronation Street) died she was , 82.

Helene Palmer  was a British actress best known for her portrayal of Ida Clough, a machinist on the long running television series, Coronation Street died she was , 82..[2]

(5 March 1928 – 5 January 2011)

Entertainment career

She began her career as an entertainer in British nightclubs during the 1960s and 1970s.[2] She collaborated and became friends with many well known English actors and comedians in the clubs, including Lynne Perrie, Pat Phoenix, Liz Dawn, Freddie Starr and Les Dawson.[2]

Acting credits

Palmer joined the cast of Coronation Street in 1978, portraying machinist Ida Clough.[2] Her son, David Palmer, told the Bridlington Free Press in 2011 that he was unsure how she came to be cast in the show, but she joined the series about the same time as Pat Phoenix, Lynne Perrie and others whom she worked with in the clubs.[2] Palmer's character appeared opposite other high profile characters on the show, including Ivy Tilsley and Vera Duckworth.[2] Palmer remained a regular cast member on the show until 1988, when Ida Clough was fired by Mike Baldwin (portrayed by Johnny Briggs for reporting him for drunk driving.[2] Palmer's Ida Clough returned to the show in 1995 for the funeral of Ivy Tilsley, played by Lynne Perrie.[2] Palmer made her last appearance on Cononation Street in 1998.[2] Her other credits included Days of Hope, Spend, Spend, Spend and the 1979 film, Yanks.[2] Her last appearance as an actor was in the comedic series, Stan The Man, in which she played the wife of actor Eric Sykes' character.[2]

Personal life

Palmer and her husband, Alex Palmer, were both originally from South Yorkshire.[2] The couple, who worked in the licensed trade in addition to her career as an entertainer, purchased a home in the village of Sewerby in the 1970s with the intent to move there during their retirement.[2] In 1986, they moved to the nearby seaside resort of Bridlington, where they began operating the Nags Head pub in Market Place.[2] They ran and lived at the Nags Head until Alex retired in 1990, at which time they moved to Sewerby.[2]

Death

She died on 5 January, 2011, at Scarborough General Hospital in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England at the age of 82 after a brief illness.[2][1] She is survived by her husband, Alex, and her son, David Palmer. Her funeral was held on January 18 at St John the Evangelist Church in Sewerby.[2]

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Bill Zeller, American computer programmer, died from injuries from a suicide attempt he was 27.

William Paul "Bill" Zeller [1] was an American computer programmer who was best known for creating the MyTunes application. After Zeller committed suicide in January 2011, his suicide note[2] began circulating widely, launching a public discussion on the long-term ill effects of child abuse.

(October 26, 1983 – January 5, 2011)

Education and career

A native of Middletown, Connecticut,[3] Zeller was pursuing a doctoral degree in computer science from Princeton, having earned his master's degree in 2008.[4] He received his bachelor's degree from Trinity College, Hartford in 2006.
His best-known software project was MyTunes, an enhancement for Apple's iTunes software that enables users to copy music between computers on a local network.[5] During his undergraduate years he also created Zempt, an enhancement for the popular Moveable Type blogging platform.[6] Zeller continued creating innovative software in graduate school. His most recent hit was Graph Your Inbox, an extension to the Chrome browser that allows GMail users to analyze patterns in their own email traffic.[7]
Zeller also served for more than two years as the computer science representative to Princeton's Graduate Student Government, advocating the interests of his fellow graduate students in housing, campus transportation, and other issues.[4]
He co-authored an influential paper, called "Government Data and the Invisible Hand"[8], that explained how governments can release public data in ways that will be useful to programmers. The paper has been influential both in academia and government.[9][10][11]

Death

Zeller posted a 4,000 word suicide note on his website, explaining why he had decided to take his own life. He also emailed the letter to several friends. Zeller was found in his University apartment early on Sunday, January 2, 2011, by officials from Princeton University. As a result of the suicide attempt, he suffered brain damage due to oxygen deprivation, and was in a coma at University Medical Center at Princeton. He died following the withdrawal of life support, on the evening of January 5, 2011.[4][12]


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Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Mohamed Bouazizi, Tunisian protestor, self-immolation died he was , 26

Tarek al-Tayyib Muhammad Bouazizi , more commonly known as Mohamed Bouazizi, was a Tunisian street vendor who set himself on fire on December 17, 2010, in protest of the confiscation of his wares and the harassment and humiliation that was allegedly inflicted on him by a municipal official and her aides. This act became the catalyst for the Tunisian Revolution, sparking deadly demonstrations and riots throughout Tunisia in protest of social and political issues in the country. Anger and violence intensified following Bouazizi's death, leading then-President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali to step down on January 14, 2011, after 23 years in power.
The success of the Tunisian protests sparked protests in several other Arab countries, including several men who emulated Bouazizi's act, in an attempt to bring an end to autocratic governments. Those men and Bouazizi are hailed by some Arab commentators as "heroic martyrs of a new Middle Eastern revolution."[1]


(March 29, 1984 – January 4, 2011)

 Early life and employment struggles

Mohamed Bouazizi, who was known locally as Basboosa,[2] was born in Sidi Bouzid, Tunisia, on March 29, 1984. His father, a construction worker in Libya, died of a heart attack when Bouazizi was three, and his mother married Bouazizi's uncle some time later.[3] Along with his six siblings,[4] Bouazizi was educated in a one-room country school in Sidi Salah, a village 12 miles from Sidi Bouzid.[5] Although multiple media outlets reported that Bouazizi had a university degree,[4][6][7] his sister, Samia Bouazizi, stated that he had never graduated from high school,[8] but that it was something he had wanted for both himself and his sisters.[5] With his uncle in poor health and unable to work regularly,[9] Bouazizi had worked various jobs since he was ten,[3] and in his late teens he quit school in order to work full-time.[9]

Bouazizi lived in a modest stucco home, a 20-minute walk from the center of Sidi Bouzid,[10][11] a rural town in Tunisia burdened by corruption[12] and suffering an unemployment rate estimated at 30%.[3] According to his mother, he applied to join the army, but was refused, and several subsequent job applications also resulted in rejection.[9] He supported his mother, uncle, and younger siblings, including paying for one of his sisters to attend university, by earning approximately US$140 per month selling produce on the street in Sidi Bouzid.[5][9] He was also working toward the goal of buying or renting a pickup truck for his work.[13] A close friend of Bouazizi said he "was a very well-known and popular man [who] would give free fruit and vegetables to very poor families".[9]

Confiscation of wares and self-immolation

Local police officers had targeted Bouazizi for years, even during his childhood, regularly confiscating his small wheelbarrow of produce;[9] but Bouazizi had few options to try to make a living, so he continued to work as a street vendor. Around 10 p.m. on December 16, 2010, he had contracted approximately US$200 in debt to buy the produce he was to sell the following day. On the morning of December 17, he started his workday at 8 a.m.[5] Just after 10:30 a.m., the police began harassing him again, ostensibly because he did not have a vendor's permit.[13] However, while some sources state that street vending is illegal in Tunisia,[14] and others that Bouazizi lacked a required permit to sell his wares,[5][13] according to the head of Sidi Bouzid's state office for employment and independent work, no permit is needed to sell from a cart.[12]
It has also been claimed that Bouazizi did not have the funds to bribe police officials to allow his street vending to continue.[5][15] Similarly, two of Bouazizi's siblings accused authorities of attempting to extort money from their brother,[12] and during an interview with Reuters, one of his sisters stated, "What kind of repression do you imagine it takes for a young man to do this? A man who has to feed his family by buying goods on credit when they fine him ... and take his goods. In Sidi Bouzid, those with no connections and no money for bribes are humiliated and insulted and not allowed to live."[11]
Regardless, Bouazizi's family claims he was publicly humiliated when a 45-year-old female municipal official, Faida Hamdi,[3][4][9] slapped him in the face, spat at him, confiscated his electronic weighing scales, and tossed aside his produce cart.[13] It was also stated that she made a slur against his deceased father.[11][13] Bouazizi's family says her gender made his humiliation worse.[4][16] His mother also claimed Hamdi's aides beat and swore at her son. Countering these claims, in an interview with Asharq Al-Awsat, a brother of Hamdi claimed neither his sister nor her aides slapped or otherwise mistreated Bouazizi. He said they only confiscated Bouazizi's wares. However, an eye witness told Asharq Al-Awsat that he did not see Hamdi slap Bouazizi, but that her aides did beat him.[17]
Bouazizi, angered by the confrontation,[18] went to the governor's office to complain.[13] Following the governor's refusal to see or listen to him,[13] even after Bouazizi was quoted as saying "'If you don't see me, I'll burn myself'", he acquired a can of gasoline (or two bottles of paint thinner) and, at 11:30 a.m. local time (less than an hour after the altercation),[13][19] he doused himself in front of a local government building and set himself alight.[19]

Death and funeral

According to the Bouazizi family lawyer, Bouazizi was taken by ambulance to a medical facility in Sidi Bouzid. When they were not able to treat Bouazizi's severe burns, he was taken to the city of Sfax, more than 70 miles away.[5] Later, as the government's interest in his case grew, he was transferred to a hospital in the town of Ben Arous at the Burn and Trauma Centre, where he was visited by then-President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.[20] According to Bouazizi's mother, Ben Ali promised to send him to a treatment facility in France,[9] but no such transfer was ever arranged and Bouazizi died in Ben Arous, 18 days after the immolation, on January 4, 2011, at 5:30 p.m. local time.[21][22]
It is estimated that more than 5,000 people participated in the funeral procession that began in Sidi Bouzid and continued through to Bouazizi's native village, though police did not allow the procession to pass near the spot at which Bouazizi had burned himself.[23] From the crowd, many were heard chanting "Farewell, Mohammed, we will avenge you. We weep for you today. We will make those who caused your death weep."[24] He was buried at Garaat Bennour cemetery, 10 miles from Sidi Bouzid.[25]
Bouazizi is considered a martyr by the Progressive Democratic Party (PDP).[9] On February 4, 2011, Bertrand Delanoë, the mayor of Paris, announced that, as a tribute to honour Bouazizi, a place in Paris will be named after him.[26]

Aftermath

Investigation

An investigation was launched following Bouazizi's self-immolation to determine what took place during the incident that led to his action. On December 20, 2010, it was reported that Faida Hamdi, the female officer who allegedly accosted Bouazizi the day of his immolation, was suspended along with the secretary-general (governor) of Sidi Bouzid,[27] but this was subsequently denied by the secretary-general of the Sidi Bouzid municipality.[28] Some time later, Hamdi was arrested on orders from then-President Ben Ali and held in an unspecified town.[3][17] A brother of Hamdi later stated that she had been arrested and detained on two separate occasions, the first time following Ben Ali's visit to Bouazizi in the hospital and subsequent meeting with his mother and sister at his presidential palace. He says his sister and her aides were released following a short detention and the closing of the investigation which "confirmed her innocence".[17] He said her second arrest was "in response to the demands of the Tunisian protestors", and that the Tunisian security authorities informed him that she was being held only for her own protection and would be released once the protesting ended.[17]
According to Bouazizi's mother, who was not aware of her son's intentions before he carried out his act of self-immolation,[19] he did what he did because he had been humiliated, not because of the family's poverty.[13] "It got to him deep inside, it hurt his pride", she said, referring to the police harassment.[9] One of Bouazizi's sisters stated during an interview with Asharq Al-Awsat that their family intends to take legal action against all involved, "whether this is the municipal officers that slapped and insulted him, or the mayor [who] refused to meet him."[17]

Protests

Outraged by the events that led to Bouazizi's self-immolation, protests began in Sidi Bouzid within hours,[12] building for more than two weeks, with attempts by police to quiet the unrest serving only to fuel what had become a violent and deadly movement.[29] After Bouazizi's death, the protests became widespread, moving into the more affluent areas and eventually into the capital.[13] The anger and violence became so intense that President Ben Ali fled Tunisia with his family on January 14, 2011,[13] trying first to go to Paris, but was refused refuge by the French government. They were eventually welcomed into Saudi Arabia under many conditions, ending his 23-year dictatorship and sparking "angry condemnation" among Saudis.[29] In Tunisia, unrest persisted as a new regime took over, leaving many citizens of Tunisia feeling as though their needs were still being ignored.[30]

Copycat incidents


Since Bouazizi's self-immolation led to the successful overthrow of the Ben Ali regime, a number of self-immolation protests emulating Bouazizi's have taken place in several other countries in the Middle East and Europe. In Algeria, during protests against rising food prices and spreading unemployment,[31] there have been many cases. The first reported case following Bouazizi's death is among those whose attempted suicide was successful. Mohsen Bouterfif, a 37-year-old father of two, set himself on fire when the mayor of Boukhadra refused to meet with him and others regarding employment and housing requests on January 13, 2011. According to a report in El-Watan, the mayor challenged him, saying if he had courage he would immolate himself by fire as Bouazizi had done.[32] He died on January 24. Maamir Lotfi, a 36-year-old unemployed father of six who was denied a meeting with the governor, burned himself in front of the El Oued town hall on January 17. He died on February 12.[33] Abdelhafid Boudechicha, a 29-year-old day laborer who lived with his parents and five siblings, burned himself in Medjana on January 28 over employment and housing issues. He died the following day.[34]
In Egypt, Abdou Abdel-Moneim Jaafar, a 49-year-old restaurant owner, set himself alight in front of the Egyptian Parliament.[35] His act of protest contributed to the instigation of weeks of protest and, later, the resignation of Egyptian then-President Hosni Mubarak on February 11, 2011. In Saudi Arabia, an unidentified 65-year-old man died on January 21, 2011, after setting himself on fire in the town of Samtah, Jizan. This was apparently the kingdom's first known case of self-immolation.[36][37]
Although these cases, with the exception of Egypt, did not provoke the same kind of popular reaction that Bouazizi's case did in Tunisia, the Algerian, Yemeni, and Jordanian governments have experienced significant protests and made major concessions in response to them.[13] As such, these men and Bouazizi are being hailed by some as "heroic martyrs of a new Arab revolution."[1]
The wave of copycat incidents reached Europe on February 11, 2011, in a case very similar to Bouazizi's. Noureddine Adnane, a 27-year-old Moroccan street vendor, set himself on fire in Palermo, Sicily, in protest of the confiscation of his wares and the harassment that was allegedly inflicted on him by municipal officials.[38] He died five days later.[39]

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American doo-wop singer (The Robins), died from heart failure he was , 81

Grady Chapman [1] was best known as the American lead singer of doo wop group The Robins  died from heart failure he was , 81.[1]


(October 1, 1929 – January 4, 2011)

  

 

 

Biography

Born in Greenville, South Carolina, Chapman joined The Robins in 1952,[2] singing alongside Bobby Nunn, Billy Richards, Roy Richards, Ty Terrell, and later Carl Gardner. During that time, the Robins recorded for RCA, and later Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller's Los Angeles -based "Spark" label. In 1955, when Leiber and Stoller took Robins members Nunn and Gardner east to form the Coasters, the Robins recruited H. B. Barnum, and continued recording for the Whippet label. In 1958, he wrote "Sweet Pea" (Class Records #232) for Bob and Earl. Chapman would later become a member of one of the Coasters' many spin-off groups, The Coasters Mark II,[3] which included Bobby Nunn, Bobby Sheen, and Billy Richards, Jr. In 1977, along with Billy Guy and Jerome Evans, he sang on "Paid The Price" on Michelle Phillips' album Victim Of Romance. Chapman would also substitute for Carl Gardner a few times in the 1990s and 2000s with The Coasters.[4] He still performed as Grady Chapman & The Robins with various back-up musicians, until his death, from congestive heart failure, on January 4, 2011.[1]


Discography

Singles

  • I Need You So/Don’t Blooper (Money #204) (1955) (as Grady Chapman And The Suedes)
  • My Love Will Never Change/Smiling Gondolier (Zephyr #016) (1957)
  • Say You Will Be Mine/Starlight, Starbright (Knight #2003) (1958)
  • Garden Of Memories/Tell Me That You Care (Imperial #5591) (1959)
  • Come Away/Let’s Talk About Us (Imperial #5611) (1959)
  • Sweet Thing/I Know What I Want (Mercury #71632) (1960)
  • Ambush/My Life Would Be Worth Living (Mercury #71698) (1960)
  • I’ll Never Question Your Love/This, That, ‘N The Other (Mercury #71771) (1961)
  • Roly Poly/(B-Side Unknown) (Arwin) (1961)[3]

Other media

  • In 2006, he appeared on the TV show Joey in the episode entitled "Joey And The Party For Alex" playing Pip #1
  • His recording "Since I First Met You" from 1957 with The Robins is included in the films Pulp Fiction and American Strays.
  • "Out Of The Picture" from 1956 by The Robins (with Chapman) appears in an Hewlett Packard printer commercial.

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B. H. Friedman, American author and art critic, died from pneumonia.he was , 84

Bernard Harper Friedman , better known by his initials "B. H.", was an American author and art critic who wrote biographies of Jackson Pollock and Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, a number of novels that combined his experiences in the worlds of art and business, as well as an autobiographical account of his use of psychedelic drugs with Timothy Leary.

(July 27, 1926 – January 4, 2011)

Friedman was born on July 27, 1926, in Manhattan, New York City, the son of Leonard and Madeline Copland (Uris) Friedman. He enrolled at Cornell University before enlisting in the United States Navy during World War II, serving from 1944 to 1946. He returned to Cornell after completing his military service and earned his undergraduate degree in literature in 1948. He married his second cousin, Abby Noselson, in 1948 while he was in college. Friedman went into the real estate business owned by his uncles Percy and Harold Uris, working his way up to become a director of the Uris Buildings Corporation.[1]
After publishing his first novel, Circles, in 1962, a story based on life in the art world in New York City and The Hamptons, he left the real estate business to focus on his writing.[1] He wrote Jackson Pollock: Energy Made Visible, published in 1972, a book considered to be the first biography of the artist and called "a book that everyone interested in the social history of modern art will want to read" by reviewer Hilton Kramer in The New York Times.[2][1] Frustrated by perceived snubs from the major book publishing firms, he joined other authors, such as Mark Jay Mirsky and Ronald Sukenick, to form the Fiction Collective in 1974, a not-for-profit publishing group intended to "make serious novels and story collections available in simultaneous hard and quality paper editions" and to "keep them in print permanently."[3] Friedman's 1978 book Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney: A Biography provided an account of the life of the artist, art collector and patron of the arts. His 2006 autobiographical account Tripping recounts his experiences using psychedelic drugs together with Timothy Leary.[1]
Friedman died in Manhattan at the age of 84 on January 4, 2011, due to pneumonia. He was survived by a daughter, a son and two grandchildren. His wife Abby died in 2003. His younger brother, novelist Sanford Friedman, was born in 1928 and died in 2010.[1]

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Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...