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    • JANUARY. Fred White, 67. A drummer who backed up his brothers Maurice and Verdine White in the Grammy-winning ensemble Earth, Wind & Fire. Jan. 1. Ken Block, 55.
    • FEBRUARY. Paco Rabanne, 88. The Spanish-born designer known for perfumes sold worldwide but who made his name with metallic space-age fashions that put a bold, new edge on catwalks.
    • MARCH. Just Fontaine, 89. The French soccer great who scored a record 13 goals at the 1958 World Cup. March 1. Barbara Everitt Bryant, 96. The first woman to run the U.S. Census Bureau and its leader during the contentious debate over how to compensate for undercounts of minority groups in the 1990 census.
    • APRIL. Nigel Lawson, 91. The tax-cutting U.K. Treasury chief under the late Margaret Thatcher and a lion of Conservative politics in the late 20th century.
  1. This is a list of lists of deaths of notable people, organised by year. New deaths articles are added to their respective month (e.g., Deaths in June 2024) and then linked here.

  2. Dec 21, 2022 · Some of our greatest cultural legends died in 2022—people like Sidney Poitier, Queen Elizabeth II, French art-house director Jean-Luc Godard, and Fleetwood Mac standout Christine McVie. They...

    • Betty White, actress, 99​​ (Jan. 17, 1922 — Dec. 31, 2021) She won an Emmy at 30 for her sitcom Life With Elizabeth, two more as naughty Happy Homemaker Sue Ann Nivens on The Mary Tyler Moore Show in the 1970s, and further fame as Rose Nylund on The Golden Girls in the 1980s.
    • John Madden, football coach, broadcaster​​ (April 10, 1936 — Dec. 28, 2021) ​If you didn't watch pro football Hall of Famer John Madden coach the Oakland Raiders to a Super Bowl XI victory against the Minnesota Vikings, you may have listened to him broadcast NFL games or played the video game that bears his name.
    • Harry Reid, former U.S. Senate Majority Leader. ​(Dec. 2, 1939 — Dec. 28, 2021)​ ​One of the longest-serving U.S. Senate majority leaders in history, Harry Reid never tired of talking about his roots in the small gold mining town of Searchlight, Nevada, or about the more than dozen middleweight boxing matches he fought while in college.
    • Desmond Tutu, South African Anglican bishop, 90​ (Oct. 7, 1931 — Dec. 26, 2021) A Nobel Peace Prize–winning force for social justice, Desmond Tutu worked passionately to end the scourge of apartheid and fought for racial equality and LGBTQ rights.
  3. Remembering Queen Elizabeth II, Mikhail S. Gorbachev, Sidney Poitier, Bill Russell, Loretta Lynn, Jiang Zemin, Benedict XVI, Madeleine Albright, Jean-Luc Godard, Shinzo Abe, Pelé, Barbara Walters,...

  4. Jan 1, 2021 · Remembering the stars who died in 2020, including Chadwick Boseman, Alex Trebek, Kobe Bryant, Naya Rivera, Fred Willard, Regis Philbin, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and more.

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  6. Mar 31, 2020 · Deadliest Catch star McGlashan died at age 33. McGlashan, who worked as deck boss on the Discovery series, died on Dec. 27 in Nashville, according to TMZ, which first reported the news. The cause ...

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