/ Stars that died in 2023

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Bijan, Iranian-born American fashion designer, died from a stroke he was , 67


Bijan Pakzad  was an Iranian designer of menswear and fragrances  died from a stroke he was , 67.


(4 April 1940 or 1944 – 16 April 2011)

Personal history

Born in Tehran, Iran, Bijan migrated to Los Angeles in 1973. His exclusive boutique on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills was established in 1976 and can be visited by "appointment only." It has been described as "the most expensive store in the world".[5]
Bijan's main residence was in Beverly Hills, California, but he was also known to own residences in New York and Malibu, as well as Milan and Florence, Italy. Up until the time of his death, Bijan was one of few Iranians in the media limelight who were still permitted to enter Iran.
Bijan was also known for his automobiles. Most notable in his car collection was a yellow Bentley Azure with black interior, as well as a Black Bentley Azure with yellow interior. He was also known to have a black Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren with a customized paint scheme, a yellow Ferrari 430 Spider, a yellow Rolls Royce Drophead coupe, and a Bugatti Veyron, all of which he was known to park outside of his Rodeo Drive boutique.
In the late 1980s Bijan designed a golden Colt revolver. The gun had a leather handgrip fashioned for a .38-cal. Colt revolver inlaid in the cylinder was 56 grams of 24-karat gold, the gun was placed in a mink pouch in a Baccarat crystal case embossed with the customer's name. Bijan's own signature is engraved in gold on the barrel of the gun. Only 200 such guns were made. In 2005, one of these guns sold to Jacob Nahamia at Christie's auction house for over $50,000 USD.
In 2000 Bijan courted controversy when an advertisement featuring a "rotund [nude] model named Bella"[6] and himself was at first rejected by New York magazines before it was accepted by Tina Brown's Talk magazine.[7]

Death

On April 14, 2011, Bijan suffered a stroke and was immediately rushed to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.[8] He had brain surgery[4] but never recovered and he died two days later on April 16, 2011 at 8:05 am. He was 67 years-old.[4]

Business



Bijan dressed some of the world's most powerful men: President of the United States Barack Obama, former President of the United States George W. Bush, Governor of California Arnold Schwarzenegger, American actor Tom Cruise, German TV host Thomas Gottschalk, British actor Sir Anthony Hopkins, President of Russia Vladimir Putin, U.S. Senator John Kerry, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Tony Blair, Michael Jordan, Paul Allen, Jay Leno, Giorgio Armani, Usher, Carlos Slim Helu, Steve Wynn, Oscar de la Renta, Thomas Bodin, Tom Ford, Shahram Nazeri and U.S. President Ronald Reagan have all been dressed by Bijan.
Bijan's fragrances for both men and women are known for their distinctive circular glass flacon with an open center and a dividing web. When half full, the fragrance fills two separate chambers, seemingly defying the law of gravity that liquid seeks its own level. One of these perfume bottles is featured in the permanent exhibit of the Smithsonian Institution.
According to the 2001 Los Angeles Times Calendar Section, the Bijan Perfume and Fashion Business has brought in an estimated $4 billion in sales worldwide.

Family



Bijan had three children. His first-born, Daniela Pakzad, from his first marriage, has been Creative Director at Bijan for over 20 years. Daniela has a son Anthony, Bijan's only grandson, who is currently a college student studying business administration. Bijan has two other children—Alexandra Pakzad and Nicolas Bijan Pakzad from his second marriage. His daughter Alexandra is a law student, works as a fashion model, and lives in Los Angeles. His son Nicolas also works for Bijan Designer for Men. Nicolas lives in Malibu, CA, where he attends Pepperdine University, in 2009 he was named Malibu Citizen of the Year by The Malibu Times newspaper. In a 2009 interview with Signature Magazine, Bijan stated that his passion in life was his three children and his two dogs.

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Allan Blakeney, Canadian politician, Premier of Saskatchewan (1971–1982), died from complications from liver cancer he was , 85.

Allan Emrys Blakeney, PC, OC, SOM, QC, FRSC  was the tenth Premier of the Canadian province of Saskatchewan from 1971 to 1982, and leader of the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party (NDP) died from complications from liver cancer he was , 85..


(September 7, 1925 – April 16, 2011)

Life and career

Born in Bridgewater, Nova Scotia, Blakeney took his law degree at Dalhousie Law School, and was a Rhodes Scholar at the University of Oxford, where he played for the Oxford University Ice Hockey Club.[1]
On returning to Canada, he became a senior civil servant in Saskatchewan before entering politics in 1960 and serving as a cabinet minister in the governments of Tommy Douglas and Woodrow S. Lloyd.[1] As minister of health, he played a crucial role in the introduction of Medicare.[2]

NDP leader

In 1970, Blakeney succeeded Lloyd as leader of the Saskatchewan NDP, which was then in opposition. Historically, his election as leader has been interpreted as a victory of the provincial NDP's "establishment" over its extreme left-wing Waffle faction, because Lloyd was trying to move the party more to the political left, which meant he supported the Waffle Manifesto at the October 1969 Federal NDP convention in Winnipeg.[3] As well, Lloyd backed The Waffle's right to debate issues after the convention which disturbed many of his MLAs, who eventually forced him to resign in March 1970.[3]

Premier

In the 1971 provincial election, Blakeney led the party to power, defeating Ross Thatcher's Liberal government.
Blakeney's government practised state-led economic intervention in the economy.
The farmers were a high priority, as globalization began transforming agriculture, weakening the traditional family farm through consolidation, mechanization, and corporatization. The NDP promised a "revitalized rural Saskatchewan," and Blakeney's introduced programs to stabilize crop prices, retain transportation links, and modernize rural life. Looking back he lamented his lack of success: "We were, it seems, King Canute trying to hold back the tide."[4]
His government created a Crown corporation in the potash industry in an attempt to further diversify the province's agrarian economy and threatened expropriation of private potash mines within the province.[1] Blakeney pointed out that the sums paid for these mines were slightly in excess of their appraised "book" value. However, the mere threat of expropriation created a political firestorm that involved even the U.S. government.[5]
Blakeney also created a state-owned oil and gas corporation (SaskOil) to handle oil exploration and production.[1] The private oil industry had essentially abandoned Saskatchewan following the NDP's imposition of extremely high royalty rate policy of the early 1970s. Prime Minister Trudeau's policies (to centralize control in Ottawa) outraged Blakeney, and he moved closer to Alberta's position of open hostility. Blakeney joined Alberta Progressive Conservative Premier Peter Lougheed in a fight for provincial rights over minerals, oil and gas.[1] [6]
Blakeney played an important role in the federal-provincial negotiations that led to the 1982 patriation of the Canadian constitution.[1]

Defeats in 1982, 1986

Blakeney's government was defeated in the 1982 provincial election, in its attempt to win a fourth successive term. It was defeated by the Progressive Conservative Party, led by Grant Devine.[1]
He led the NDP into the 1986 provincial election in an unsuccessful attempt to return to the Premier's Office, and then retired from politics. He was succeeded as NDP leader by Roy Romanow.[1]
On April 30, 1992, he was appointed as an Officer of the Order of Canada for his work as Premier of Saskatchewan, his enormous contribution to the field of public administration and as a key player in introducing the first comprehensive public medical health care plan in Canada.[2] In 2000, he was awarded the Saskatchewan Order of Merit. In 2001, he was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. Blakeney is also a past president of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association.

Death

As a private citizen Blakeney served as a consultant to the Romanow government in the 1990s when they sold the former state owned government corporation to Occidental Petroleum. Then Blakeney served on the board of directors of the successor corporation.

Blakeney died on April 16, 2011 at his home in Saskatoon of complications from cancer.[7]
Federal NDP leader Jack Layton dedicated the rest of his federal election campaign to Blakeney, who died about halfway through the campaign.[8] About 600 people attended his memorial, including federal NDP leaders Jack Layton and Ed Broadbent, former provincial premiers Roy Romanow, Lorne Calvert, Peter Lougheed, Ed Schreyer, Bill Davis, and Bob Rae, as well the current Saskatchewan premier Brad Wall.[9]

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Monday, June 6, 2011

Stanley Glenn, American baseball player and executive (Negro league baseball) died he was , 84.

Stanley (Doc) Glenn was a baseball catcher with the Philadelphia Stars of the Negro Leagues from 1944 to 1950. He also played three years in the minors and two in the Canadian senior Intercounty Baseball League in southwestern Ontario for the St. Thomas Elgins in the early 1950s.

(September 16, 1926 - April 16, 2011)

After his retirement from baseball, Glenn spent 40 years in the wholesale electric supply business. In 2006, Glenn released his first published book entitled, Don't Let Anyone Take Your Joy Away: An inside look at Negro League baseball and its legacy.
Glenn was born in Wachapreague, Virginia, and was signed by hall-of-famer Oscar Charleston right out of John Bartram High School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
“I suppose one thing I remember so vividly was catching Satchel Paige (1946 and 1950),” Glenn says.
“As hard as he threw, the ball was like a feather. It was so easy to catch him, mainly because he was always around the plate.”

Honors

In February 1994, Stanley Glenn and several other players from the Negro Leagues were honored by Vice-President Al Gore at the White House. See pictures ot the event here
In 2004, Glenn was inducted into the Eastern Shore Baseball Hall of Fame in Maryland.

NLBPA President and Advocacy

Stanley (Doc) Glenn retired in Philadelphia and was active as president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Players Association's Board of Directors.
Glenn passed awar on April 16, 2011 in Yeadon, Pennsylvania.[1] He is interred at Ferwood Cemetary in Lansdowne, Pennsylvania.[2]

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Bill Kinnamon, American Major League Baseball umpire died he was , 91.

William Ervin Kinnamon  was an umpire in Major League Baseball who worked in the American League from 1960 to 1969  died he was , 91..

(May 13, 1919 – April 16, 2011)

Born in Lincoln, Nebraska, Kinnamon officiated in the 1968 World Series, and in the All-Star Game in 1962 (second game) and 1968. He went on to become an umpiring instructor, and operated one of the two principal umpiring schools for several years.
Kinnamon graduated from Lincoln High School and the University of Nebraska, where he earned a degree in business administration. He married Thelma Lorraine Johnson on April 29, 1945. He was stationed in Alaska while with the US Army during World War II, before beginning his baseball career as a Minor League player in 1949.[1] [2]
Kinnamon began his umpiring career in the Sooner State League in 1953, moving up to the Pioneer League (1954), the Eastern League (1955-56) and the American Association (1956-60) before joining the American League staff in September 1960.[2]
During the 1961 season, Kinnamon became a part of history as the home plate umpire during Roger Maris' record-breaking single-season 61st home run, which was hit on October 1st to break Babe Ruth's single-season record.
Through the course of his career, Kinnamon worked roughly 1,500 games including the 1962 and 1968 All-Star Games and the 1968 World Series. He later founded his own umpiring school. After retiring from field duties due to a June 1969 injury, he became an umpiring supervisor, and then the chief instructor in the major leagues' new Umpire Specialization Course, which later became the Umpire Development Program. He eventually began running the training program independently, operating one of the two principal umpiring schools from 1974 to 1981 in St. Petersburg, Florida before selling the school to umpire Joe Brinkman, who had been an instructor in Kinnamon's program since 1973. A resident of Daytona Beach, Florida throughout his major league career, he later relocated to Largo, Florida.
Kinnamon died in Clearwater, Florida, at the age of 91.[3]

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Serge LeClerc, Canadian pardoned criminal and politician, MLA for Saskatoon Northwest (2007–2010), died from complications from colon and bowel cancer he was , 61.

 Serge LeClerc  was a pardoned Canadian ex-criminal, former politician and co-author of the autobiography Untwisted died from complications from colon and bowel cancer he was , 61..

(c. 1950 – April 16, 2011)

He claimed to have been one of the most dangerous drug dealers and gang leaders in Canada. While serving in prison for one of his many convictions, LeClerc converted to Christianity, and began turning his life around. His career, aside from politics, consisted of speaking publicly to youth across Canada about his life and writing about his own experiences on such topics as drugs and violence.[2]
LeClerc graduated from the University of Waterloo with an honours degree in sociology with a minor in social work, and with a social work diploma. He was an associate member of all of the Crime Stoppers chapters in Saskatchewan, and the founder and past director of Teen Challenge Saskatchewan. LeClerc also spoke against the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, stating that it puts the rights of the individual (criminal) over the rights of society as a whole.[3] He was elected to represent the electoral district of Saskatoon Northwest in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan in the 2007 election, as a member of the Saskatchewan Party.

2010 criminal allegations

On April 16, 2010 the Saskatoon office of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation received a package containing audio recordings, allegedly of LeClerc, talking about marijuana and cocaine use, as well as sex with a gay man. The transcripts alleged many of the comments were made in the spring of 2009 when the legislature was in session. LeClerc removed himself from the Saskatchewan Party caucus on April 16, 2010, until he could "clear his name".[4][5] On April 20, 2010, he announced he would not run in the 2011 provincial election.[6] The Regina City Police began an investigation on April 21, 2010[7] but on May 19, 2010 they announced that no charges would be laid.
Members of the Legislative Assembly voted to turn the matter over to the conflict of interest commissioner.[8] LeClerc resigned his seat on September 1, 2010.[9] On November 23, 2010, Saskatchewan's conflict of interest commissioner, Ronald Barclay, issued a report concluding LeClerc had, in fact, engaged in unethical and unlawful conduct while in office.[10] Barclay rejected LeClerc's claim that the audio tapes had been forged, based on forensic analysis done by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. LeClerc had destroyed the hard drive from his government issue laptop computer, making any forensic analysis of its contents impossible.[11]
A separate report from Barclay averred that LeClerc's constituency assistants did work for his public speaking business during their constituency office hours and using government office equipment. However that did not constitute a conflict of interest.[10] LeClerc maintained that he was innocent of the criminal allegations made against him, and was the victim of a setup.[12] He continued his anti-drug activism.[13]

Illness and death

In October 2010, LeClerc announced he had been diagnosed with stomach and colon cancer, and was undergoing treatment in Ontario, where he died on April 16, 2011.[10][14][15]

Youth Work

Serge LeClerc also was a prominent youth counsellor at an all male "military"-theme school called Robert Land Academy (RLA); which is just outside of Wellandport, Ontario. Here he had held the title of Captain, and counselled all male youth at the school. In 2001 he stepped away from the school due to allegations of abuse by a student, and eventually went to Ridley College, a rival school outside St. Catherines, Ontario. The allegations were later dropped, due to insufficient evidence.[16]

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

William A. Rusher, American columnist, publisher of National Review (1957–1988) died he was , 87.


William Allen Rusher  was an American lawyer, author, activist, speaker, debater, and conservative syndicated columnist died he was , 87.. He was one of the founders of the conservative movement and was one of its most prominent spokesmen for thirty years.


(July 19, 1923 – April 16, 2011)

Early life

Rusher was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1923. His family had not been especially political; his parents were moderate Republicans, and his paternal grandfather had been a socialist.[2] In 1930 the family moved to the New York metropolitan area. Rusher entered Princeton University at 16, where he was active in student affairs, especially debate, and majored in politics. After graduation in 1943 and wartime service in the Army Air Corps, he attended Harvard Law School, where he founded and led the Harvard Young Republicans and from which he graduated in 1948.[1] Until 1956, Rusher practiced corporate law at Shearman, Sterling & Wright, a Wall Street firm in New York.[1] He then served as associate counsel to the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, under chief counsel Robert Morris, for seventeen months.[1][2]
In these years, Rusher was also active in New York state and national Young Republican politics, helping F. Clifton White to lead an alliance in these organizations.[2] He came to the attention of William F. Buckley, Jr., editor of the fledgling National Review, shortly after its founding in late 1955, when he wrote an essay for the Harvard Young Republican paper, titled "Cult of Doubt."

National Review and Political Activism

In mid-1957, William F. Buckley, Jr. hired Rusher as publisher of National Review.[1][2] At the magazine, he oversaw the business operations, but more importantly served as a link to the world of conservative and Republican politics. He held the rank although not the title of senior editor, and as such was a full participant in its internal deliberations. At National Review, he advocated that the magazine develop and maintain a leadership role in the conservative movement. In doing this, Rusher sometimes disagreed with Buckley and senior editor James Burnham. In his philosophy of conservative politics and his belief in the urgent need for an active and unified movement to pursue conservative politics, he was especially close to another senior editor at the magazine, Frank Meyer.
Rusher was an early mentor of Young Americans for Freedom, founded with his assistance in 1960.[1] He helped to found the Conservative Party of New York State in 1961, and the American Conservative Union in 1964-65.[2] He was a mentor to young conservative activists from these early years into the 1990s.
In 1961, Rusher worked with Clif White and Congressman John Ashbrook to form the nucleus of what became Senator Barry Goldwater's campaign for the Republican nomination for the presidency in 1963, known as "Draft Goldwater".[1][2][3] Goldwater's victory in the hard-fought nomination contest over New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller and the previously dominant moderate or "liberal" establishment in the Republican Party is generally acknowledged as the first stage in the conservative movement's rise to national power.[3]
Beginning in the late 1950s and continuing well past his retirement from National Review at the end of the 1980s, Rusher was a very active public speaker on college campuses and in other forums, where he defended and advocated the conservative position. In the early 1970s, he was the main conservative representative on a PBS television debate show, The Advocates. He was also a commentator on ABC-TV's Good Morning America in the late 1970s and a regular radio commentator in the 1980s. Throughout Rusher's career, he was known as an aggressive and exceptionally skilled debater.
In the mid-1970s, Rusher was among the most prominent advocates for a conservative third party, or as he called it "new majority party," that would replace the Republicans; he was also involved heavily in efforts to organize such a party.[1][3] He repeatedly and unsuccessfully urged Reagan, whom he had known since the late 1960s, to lead this effort agree to accept such a party's nomination.[3]
Although he was a "fusionist" conservative who believed in both small-government and socially-conservative positions, Rusher was greatly concerned with unifying the movement and keeping it unified. He believed that Ronald Reagan, whom he promoted as a possible presidential candidate as early as 1967 and in whose reluctant campaign for the Republican nomination in 1968 he had some involvement, was the ideal leader for this purpose. Rusher also believed that the Reagan presidency was the conservatives' greatest political achievement.
In terms of issues, he was heavily motivated by anti-communism throughout his career, was an outspoken opponent of the 1960s counterculture, and took a special interest in what he considered pervasive liberal bias in the news media. As an adult he was baptised and became a Traditional Anglican,[3] although his religious views rarely entered into his political discourse.
Rusher wrote five books: Special Counsel (1968), a memoir of his time on the Internal Security Subcommittee;[2] The Making of the New Majority Party (1975), in which he advocated the establishment of a new conservative party to replace the Republicans in the post-Watergate period;[1][2][3] How to Win Arguments (1981), a primer of debating techniques; The Rise of the Right (1984), a history of the conservative movement from the 1950s to the early 1980s, re-released in 1993 with an appendix covering more recent developments;[1][2] and The Coming Battle for the Media (1988).

Retirement

Rusher retired from National Review at age 65 at the end of 1988.[1][2] The following year, he moved from New York to San Francisco.[2] In California, Rusher served actively as a distinguished fellow of the Claremont Institute from 1989 onward.[1] He also served as a board member of the conservative California Political Review, and was for many years the chairman of the board of the Media Research Center, an anti-bias organization founded and led by L. Brent Bozell III. In addition, Rusher was involved with the Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs, the Pacific Research Institute, and the Pacific Legal Foundation.
He was in the news during the hearings for the Samuel Alito Supreme Court nomination in 2005, when he allowed Senate staff members to inspect documents related to the Concerned Alumni of Princeton group, in which Alito was tangentially involved, in the Rusher Papers at the Library of Congress. Rusher retired from his newspaper column, which he had written since 1973 under the title "The Conservative Advocate," in February 2009.[1] After more than half a year of ill health, he died in April 2011.[1]

Books By and About Rusher

  • Frisk, David B. (2011). If Not Us, Who? William Rusher, National Review, and the Conservative Movement.ISI Books. (forthcoming)
  • Rusher, William A. The Rise of the Right. New York: National Review Books (1993), 261 pages, ISBN 0-688-01936-6 (hardback) or ISBN 0-9627841-2-5 (paper).
  • Rusher, William A. "How to Win Arguments More Often Than Not." , Lanham: University Press of America (1985), 216 pages, ISBN 978-0819147714
  • Rusher, William A. "The Coming Battle for the Media." New York: William Morrow & Co. (1988), 228 pages, ISBN 978-0688064334

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Sol Saks, American screenwriter, creator of Bewitched died he was , 100.

Sol Saks was an American screenwriter best known as the creator of television sitcom Bewitched died he was , 100..


(December 13, 1910 – April 16, 2011)

 
 

Career

Saks was a radio actor as a child.[1] He later wrote for radio and TV series such as My Favorite Husband, Mr. Adams and Eve, and I Married Joan.[2]
Saks wrote the screenplay for Cary Grant's last film, the comedy Walk, Don't Run.[2] At the time of its release, Time said his dialogue on that film "bristles amiably from first to last."[3]
Saks wrote The Craft of Comedy Writing,[4] published by Writer's Digest Books.

Personal life

Saks attended Harrison High School in Chicago.[1] Saks died of respiratory failure due to pneumonia on April 16, 2011,[2] at the age of 100 in Los Angeles.[5]

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

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...