Jo-Carroll Dennison, Miss America 1942
Universal History Archive/Getty Images
The oldest surviving winner of theย Miss America ย pageant, Jo-Carroll Dennison, has died at age 97.
Dennison, who held the title during World War II and broke with convention by refusing to wear a swimsuit onstage after the pageant, died at her home in California last month, according to her friend Evan Mills.
Mills, who edited Dennison's memoir and learned of her death directly from her family, said over email that the former Miss Texas could "serve as a model for young women โ and men โ in a world where many are tempted to bend to social expectations rather than trusting and following their own moral compass."
The Miss America Organization said it was "saddened to hear" of Dennison's death, writing on Instagram: "We thank her for her year of service and will miss her dearly."
Jo-Carroll Dennison, far right, is shown competing at the 1942 Miss America pageant.
Glasshouse Images/Shutterstock
Born in 1923 in Florence, Arizona, a young Dennison joined her parents' traveling medicine show, where she sang, dance and performed on trick horses. She went on to train as a secretary before being scouted for the Miss Tyler pageant in Tyler, Texas, where she was studying at the time.
In her autobiography "Finding My Little Red Hat," Dennison wrote that she had "sworn never to perform in public again" following her medicine show days. But she eventually agreed to compete in the Miss Tyler pageant on the promise of a free swimsuit from a high-end department store.
After winning the pageant, she went on to claim the Miss East Texas and Miss Texas titles, before competing in โ and winning โ the Miss America contest in 1942 at the age of 18.
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Though she won the swimsuit category, Dennison later refused to wear bathing suits during her year-long reign as Miss America. Speaking at the contest's 100th anniversary gala earlier this year, she commended the Miss America Organization for scrapping the swimsuit portion of competition in 2018 and focusing on the "totality of each candidate."
"Back in 1942, the pageant was supposed to be about looks," she told attendees in a pre-recorded message . "Yet, I never thought I had won (Miss America) because of the way I looked, but rather because of the way I felt about myself. With this in mind, I flat out refused to wear my bathing suit onstage after the pageant."
Crowned Miss America shortly after USA's entry into World War II, Dennison would visit defense plants, hospitals and service camps to help improve troop morale.
Dennison also signed a contract with 20th Century Fox, starring in movies including "The Jolson Story" and the wartime drama "Winged Victory." Her proximity to Hollywood saw her cross paths with many of the era's celebrities, and she embarked on relationships with Charlie Chaplin's son Sydney and comedian Phil Silvers, whom she married in 1945 and divorced five years later.
Jo-Carroll Dennison is shown in 1946 with her then-husband Phil Silvers.
Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy
Dennison went on to appear in the "Dick Tracy" series and later worked behind the scenes of television productions. She married CBS producer and director Russell Stoneham, with whom she had two children, though they separated in the 1970s and subsequently divorced.
In her autobiography, Dennison expressed her support for the #MeToo movement, revealing that she had been sexually assaulted at 12 years old. She wrote, "It is stunning how poorly women have been treated in the American culture. I am so proud of the 'Me Too movement' and the women who have been brave enough to come forward about the male sexual abuse they have suffered, and grateful I have lived long enough to see it."
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Jan 3, 2022
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Jan 3, 2022
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F. Lee Bailey
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Jan 3, 2022
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Eric Carle
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Jan 3, 2022
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Tawny Kitaen
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
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Lloyd Price
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Jan 3, 2022
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Charles Grodin
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Jan 3, 2022
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Jack Ingram
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Jan 3, 2022
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John Warner
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
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AP FILE, 2007
Marvin Hagler
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
"Marvelous" Marvin Hagler , the middleweight boxing great whose title reign and career ended with a split-decision loss to โSugarโ Ray Leonard in 1987, died March 13, 2021. He was 66. Hagler was 62-3-2 with 52 knockouts from 1973 to 1987. He was the undisputed middleweight champion from 1980 until his loss to Leonard at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas on April 6, 1987. The fierce left-hander had two of his biggest victories at Caesars Palace, unanimously outpointing Roberto Duran in 1983 and knocking out Thomas Hearns in the third round in 1985.
AP FILE, 1983
Michael Collins
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Apollo 11 astronaut Michael Collins , who piloted the ship from which Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin left to make their historic first steps on the moon in 1969, died April 28, 2021, of cancer. He was 90. Collins was part of the three-man Apollo 11 crew that effectively ended the space race between the United States and Russia and fulfilled President John F. Kennedyโs challenge to reach the moon by the end of the 1960s.
AP FILE, 1979
Gavin MacLeod
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Gavin MacLeod , the veteran supporting actor who achieved fame as sardonic TV news writer Murray Slaughter on โThe Mary Tyler Moore Showโ and stardom playing cheerful Capt. Stubing on โThe Love Boat,โ died May 29, 2021. He was 90.
AP FILE, 1982
Helen McCrory
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
British actor Helen McCrory , who starred in the television show โPeaky Blindersโ and the โHarry Potterโ movies, has died. She was 52 and had been suffering from cancer. McCrory was one of Britainโs most respected actors, making her mark by playing a succession of formidable and sometimes fearsome women. She played the matriarch of a crime family on โPeaky Blindersโ and the scheming Voldemort ally Narcissa Malfoy in the โHarry Potterโ movies.
AP FILE, 2012
Samuel E. Wright
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Samuel E. Wright , the actor who voiced Sebastian the crab in Disney's "The Little Mermaid" and sang the film's Oscar-winning song "Under the Sea," has died at age 74. Wright's role as a Jamaican crab and adviser to King Triton in the much-loved 1989 Disney film marked the high point of his lengthy career in cinema, television and theater. - CNN
Photo by Walter McBride/WireImage
Bernie Madoff
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Bernie Madoff , the financier who pleaded guilty to orchestrating a massive Ponzi scheme, died in a federal prison April 14, 2021. He was 82. Madoff admitted swindling thousands of clients out of billions of dollars in investments over decades.
AP FILE, 2009
Shock G
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Shock G , who blended whimsical wordplay with reverence for '70s funk as leader of the off-kilter Bay Area hip-hop group Digital Underground, died April 22, 2021. He was 57. The group found fame with the Billboard Top 10 hit โHumpty Danceโ in 1990, as Shock G, born Greg Jacobs, donned a Groucho Marx-style fake nose and glasses to become one of his many alter egos, Humpty Hump.
AP FILE, 2008
Anne Douglas
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Anne Douglas , the widow of Kirk Douglas and stepmother of Michael Douglas, died April 29, 2021. She was 102. The Douglas Foundation, which Anne and her husband co-founded, has donated millions to a wide range of institutions, from Childrenโs Hospital Los Angeles to the Motion Picture & Television Fund.
AP FILE, 2017
Vernon Jordan
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Vernon Jordan , who rose from humble beginnings in the segregated South to become a champion of civil rights before reinventing himself as a Washington insider and corporate influencer, died March 1, 2021. After stints as field secretary for the Georgia NAACP and executive director of the United Negro College Fund, he became head of the National Urban League, becoming the face of Black Americaโs modern struggle for jobs and justice for more than a decade. He was nearly killed by a racistโs bullet in 1980 before transitioning to business and politics. His friendship with Bill Clinton took them both to the White House.
AP FILE, 1977
G. Gordon Liddy
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
G. Gordon Liddy , a mastermind of the Watergate burglary and a radio talk show host after emerging from prison, died March 30, 2021, at age 90. Liddy, a former FBI agent and Army veteran, was convicted of conspiracy, burglary and illegal wiretapping for his role in the Watergate burglary, which led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon. He spent four years and four months in prison, including more than 100 days in solitary confinement.
AP FILE, 1973
George P. Shultz
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Former Secretary of State George P. Shultz , a titan of American academia, business and diplomacy who spent most of the 1980s trying to improve Cold War relations with the Soviet Union and forging a course for peace in the Middle East, died Feb. 6, 2021. He was 100. Shultz was labor secretary, treasury secretary and director of the Office of Management and Budget under President Richard M. Nixon before spending more than six years as President Ronald Reaganโs secretary of state.
AP FILE, 1987
John Chaney
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
John Chaney , one of the nationโs leading Black coaches and a commanding figure during a Hall of Fame basketball career at Temple, died Jan. 29, 2021. He was 89. Chaney led Temple to 17 NCAA Tournament appearances over 24 seasons, including five NCAA regional finals. Chaney had 741 wins as a college coach. He was twice named national coach of the year and his teams at Temple won six Atlantic 10 conference titles.
AP FILE, 2006
Sheldon Adelson
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Sheldon Adelson , who rose from a modest start as the son of an immigrant taxi driver to become a billionaire Republican powerbroker with a casino empire and influence on international politics, died Jan. 11, 2021. He was 87. In business, Adelson transformed a landmark Las Vegas casino that was once a hangout of Frank Sinatra's Rat Pack into a towering Italian-inspired complex. In politics, Adelson was a record-breaking campaign donor who had the ear of domestic and international leaders, including President Donald Trump.
AP FILE, 2017
Bunny Wailer
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Bunny Wailer , a reggae luminary who was the last surviving founding member of the legendary group The Wailers, died March 2, 2021, in his native Jamaica. He was 73. Wailer, a baritone singer whose birth name is Neville Livingston, formed The Wailers in 1963 with late superstars Bob Marley and Peter Tosh when they lived in a slum in the capital of Kingston. They catapulted to international fame with the album, โCatch a Fire" and also helped popularize Rastafarian culture among better-off Jamaicans starting in the 1970s.
AP FILE, 2014
Carla Wallenda
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Carla Wallenda , a member of โThe Flying Wallendasโ high-wire act and the last surviving child of the famed troupe's founder, died March 6, at the age of 85. She was the daughter of Karl Wallenda, who had founded the troupe in Germany before moving to the United States in 1928 to great acclaim. She was the aunt of aerialist Nik Wallenda.
AP FILE, 1972
Roger Mudd
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Roger Mudd , the longtime political correspondent and anchor for NBC and CBS who once stumped Sen. Edward Kennedy by simply asking why he wanted to be president, died March 9, 2021. He was 93. During more than 30 years on network television, starting with CBS in 1961, Mudd covered Congress, elections and political conventions and was a frequent anchor and contributor to various specials.
AP FILE, 2001
Joanne Rogers
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Joanne Rogers , an an accomplished concert pianist who celebrated and protected the legacy of her husband, the beloved children's TV host Mister Rogers, died Jan. 14, 2021. She was 92. Joanne and Fred Rogers were married for more than 50 years, spanning the launch and end of the low-key, low-tech โMister Rogersโ Neighborhood,โ which presented Fred Rogers as one adult in a busy world who always had time to listen to children. His pull as Americaโs favorite neighbor never seemed to wane before his death in 2003.
AP FILE, 2018
Tom Moore
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Capt. Tom Moore , the World War II veteran who walked into the hearts of a nation in lockdown as he shuffled up and down his garden to raise money for health care workers, died Feb. 2, 2021, after testing positive for COVID-19. He was 100.
AP FILE, 2020
James Levine
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Conductor James Levine , who ruled over the Metropolitan Opera for more than four decades before being eased aside when his health declined and then was fired for sexual improprieties, died March 9, 2021. He was 77. Levine made his Met debut in 1971 and became one of the signature artists in the companyโs century-plus history, conducting 2,552 performances and ruling over its repertoire, orchestra and singers as music or artistic director from 1976 until forced out by general manager Peter Gelb in 2016 due to Parkinsonโs disease.
AP FILE, 2006
Phil Spector
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Phil Spector , the eccentric and revolutionary music producer who transformed rock music with his โWall of Soundโ method and who later was convicted of murder, died Jan. 16, 2021. He was 81. Spector was convicted of murdering actress Lana Clarkson in 2003 at his castle-like mansion on the edge of Los Angeles. After a trial in 2009, he was sentenced to 19 years to life. Decades before, Spector had been hailed as a visionary for channeling Wagnerian ambition into the three-minute song, creating the โWall of Soundโ that merged spirited vocal harmonies with lavish orchestral arrangements to produce such pop monuments as โDa Doo Ron Ron,โ โBe My Babyโ and โHeโs a Rebel.โ
AP FILE, 1989
Dianne Durham
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Dianne Durham , the first Black woman to win a USA Gymnastics national championship, died Feb. 4, 2021. She was 52. Durham was a pioneer in American gymnastics. Her victory in the all-around at the 1983 national championships as a teenager was the first by a Black woman in the organization's history.
AP FILE, 1983
Chick Corea
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Chick Corea , a towering jazz pianist with a staggering 23 Grammy Awards who pushed the boundaries of the genre and worked alongside Miles Davis and Herbie Hancock, died Feb. 9, 2021. He was 79. A prolific artist with dozens of albums, Corea in 1968 replaced Herbie Hancock in Miles Davisโ group, playing on the landmark albums โIn a Silent Wayโ and โBitches Brew.โ
AP FILE, 2020
Marty Schottenheimer
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Marty Schottenheimer , who won 200 regular-season games with four NFL teams thanks to his โMartyballโ brand of smash-mouth football but regularly fell short in the playoffs, died Feb. 8, 2021. He was 77. Schottenheimer was the eighth-winningest coach in NFL history. He went 200-126-1 in 21 seasons with Cleveland, Kansas City, Washington and San Diego.
AP FILE, 1996
Nancy Bush Ellis
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Nancy Bush Ellis , a longtime Democrat who helped her Republican brother and nephew get elected president, died Jan. 10, 2021, of complications of the coronavirus. She was 94. She supported and campaigned not only for her brother George H.W. Bush, and her nephew George W. Bush, but for other family members running for public office, including nephew Jeb Bush, former governor of Florida.
AP FILE, 1990
Paul Westphal
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Paul Westphal , a Hall of Fame player who won a championship with the Boston Celtics in 1974 and later coached in the league and in college, died Jan. 2, 2021. He was 70. A five-time All-Star guard, Westphal played in the NBA from 1972-84. After winning a championship with the Celtics, he made the finals in 1976 with Phoenix, where he was a key part of one of the most riveting games in league history. After his playing career ended, Westphal moved into coaching. He led the Suns to the NBA Finals in 1993, and also was head coach of Seattle and Sacramento.
AP FILE, 2009
Don Sutton
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Don Sutton , a Hall of Fame pitcher who was a stalwart of the Los Angeles Dodgersโ rotation spanning an era from Sandy Koufax to Fernando Valenzuela, died Jan. 19, 2021. He was 75. A four-time All-Star, Sutton had a career record of 324-256 and an ERA of 3.26 while pitching for the Dodgers, Houston Astros, Milwaukee Brewers, Oakland Athletics, California Angels and the Dodgers again in 1988, his final season. The durable Sutton never missed a turn in the rotation in 756 big league starts. Only Cy Young and Nolan Ryan made more starts than Sutton, who never landed on the injured list in his 23-year career.
AP FILE, 1978
Gerry Marsden
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Gerry Marsden , lead singer of the 1960s British group Gerry and the Pacemakers that had such hits as โFerry Cross the Merseyโ and the song that became the anthem of Liverpool Football Club, โYouโll Never Walk Alone,โ died Jan. 3, 2021. He was 78.
AP FILE, 2009
Gregory Sierra
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Gregory Sierra , best known for his roles in "Sanford and Son" and "Barney Miller," died on Jan. 4, 2021, from cancer. He was 83. Sierra's most prominent roles were in sitcoms from the 1970s. In NBC's "Sanford and Son," he was a series regular as the Sanfords' neighbor Julio Fuentes. Later, he portrayed Miguel "Chano" Amanguale, a detective on ABC's "Barney Miller." Sierra also had supporting or guest roles in "All in the Family," "Hill Street Blues," "Miami Vice," and "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air."
Photo by Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives/Walt Disney Television via Getty Images
Jim Weatherly
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Hall of Fame songwriter Jim Weatherly , who wrote โMidnight Train to Georgia" and other hits for Gladys Knight, Glen Campbell and Ray Price, died Feb. 3, 2021. He was 77. Weatherly, who was also a star quarterback for Ole Miss in the 1960s, wrote a number of hits for Gladys Knight & The Pips, including โ(Youโre the) Best Thing That Ever Happened To Me,โ โNeither One of Us (Wants to Be the First to Say Goodbye)โ and โWhere Peaceful Waters Flow."
AP FILE, 2014
Pedro Gomez
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Pedro Gomez (left in photo), a longtime baseball correspondent for ESPN who covered more than 25 World Series, died Feb. 7, 2021. He was 58. Gomez joined ESPN as a Phoenix-based reporter in 2003 after being a sports columnist and national baseball writer at The Arizona Republic since 1997. He was best known at the network for his coverage of Barry Bonds and his pursuit of the home-run record during the steroid controversy.
AP FILE, 2008
Floyd Little
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Floyd Little , the versatile running back who starred at Syracuse and for the Denver Broncos, died Jan. 1, 2021, after a long bout with cancer. He was 78. Little was a three-time All-American at Syracuse, where he wore No. 44 like Jim Brown and Ernie Davis before him. From 1964-66, he ran for 2,704 yards and 46 touchdowns. Little was the sixth overall pick in the 1967 AFL-NFL draft. He played nine seasons in Denver, where he earned the nickname โThe Franchiseโ because his signing was credited with keeping the team from relocating.
AP FILE, 2010
Dick Hoyt
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Dick Hoyt , who inspired thousands of runners, fathers and disabled athletes by pushing his son, Rick, in a wheelchair in dozens of Boston Marathons and hundreds of other races, died March 17, 2021. He was 80.
AP FILE, 2013
Sarah Obama
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Sarah Obama , the matriarch of former U.S. President Barack Obama's Kenyan family has died. She was at least 99 years old. Mama Sarah, as the step-grandmother of the former U.S. president was fondly called, promoted education for girls and orphans in her rural Kogelo village.
AP FILE, 2012
Johnny Pacheco
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Salsa idol Johnny Pacheco , who was a co-founder of Fania Records, Eddie Palmieriโs bandmate and backer of music stars such as Rubรฉn Bladรฉs, Willie Colรณn and Celia Cruz, died Feb. 15, 2021. He was 85.
AP FILE, 2010
Prince Markie Dee
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Prince Markie Dee , a member of the Fat Boys hip-hop trio who later formed his own band and became a well-known radio host, died Feb. 18, 2021. He was 52. Born Mark Morales in Brooklyn, Prince Markie Dee was a prolific songwriter and founding member of the Fat Boys, a group known for beatboxing that released several popular albums in the 1980s such as the platinum record โCrushin'.โ
AP FILE, 1987
Arturo Di Modica
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Arturo Di Modica , the artist who sculpted Charging Bull, the bronze statue in New York which became an iconic symbol of Wall Street, died Feb. 19, 2021, in his hometown in Sicily at age 80. The sculptor lived in New York for more than 40 years in New York. He arrived in 1973 and opened an art studio in the city's SoHo neighborhood. With the help of a truck and crane, Di Modica installed the bronze bull sculpture in New Yorkโs financial district without permission on the night of Dec. 16, 1989.
AP FILE, 2017
Neil Sheehan
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Neil Sheehan , a reporter and Pulitzer Prize-winning author who broke the story of the Pentagon Papers for The New York Times and who chronicled the deception at the heart of the Vietnam War in his epic book about the conflict, died Jan. 7, 2021. He was 84. His account of the Vietnam War, โA Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam,โ took him 15 years to write. The 1988 book won the Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction.
AP FILE, 1972
Yaphet Kotto
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Yaphet Kotto , the commanding actor who brought tough magnetism and stately gravitas to films including the James Bond movie โLive and Let Dieโ and โAlien," died March 15, 2021. He was 81. Standing 6-foot-3-inches, Yaphet Frederick Kotto was a regular and compelling presence across films, television and Broadway beginning with the films โNothing But a Manโ (1964) and โThe Thomas Crown Affairโ (1968). He made his stage debut in a Boston production of โOthello.โ In 1969, he replaced James Earl Jones in the Pulitzer-winning โThe Great White Hopeโ on Broadway. His big-screen breakthrough came as Lieutenant Pope in 1972's โAcross 110th Street."
AP FILE, 1998
Bobby Brown
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Bobby Brown , an infielder who played on five World Series champions with the New York Yankees and later became a cardiologist and president of the American League, died March 25, 2021. He was 96. Brown played with the Yankees from 1947-54, with Yogi Berra his roommate. He spent eight seasons in the majors and played in a career-high 113 games in 1948, batting .300 with three home runs, 48 RBIs. Overall, he batted .279 with 22 home runs and 237 RBIs. He was president of the American League from 1984-94. Commissioner Rob Manfred called him a โproud Yankeeโ and โquiet star.โ
AP FILE, 1950
Larry McMurtry
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Larry McMurtry , the prolific and popular author who took readers back to the old American West in his Pulitzer Prize-winning โLonesome Doveโ and returned them to modern-day landscapes in works such as his emotional tale of a mother-daughter relationship in โTerms of Endearment,โ died March 25, 2021. He was 84.
AP FILE, 2014
Howard Schnellenberger
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Howard Schnellenberger , who revived football at the University of Miami and Louisville and started the program at Florida Atlantic during a coaching career that spanned a half century, died March 27, 2021. He was 87. Schnellenberger had a career record below .500, but when it came to building, he was a winner. His legacy includes campus stadiums at Louisville and Florida Atlantic.
AP FILE, 2014
Anne Beatts
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Anne Beatts , a groundbreaking comedy writer with a taste for sweetness and the macabre who was on the original staff of โSaturday Night Liveโ and later created the cult sitcom โSquare Pegs,โ died April 7, 2021. She was 74. Starting in 1975 and running for five seasons, Beatts was among a team of gifted writers that included Rosie Shuster, Alan Zweibel, Marilyn Suzanne Miller and such cast members as Dan Aykroyd and Chevy Chase who helped make โSaturday Night Liveโ a cultural phenomenon.
AP FILE, 2015
Alcee Hastings
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Rep. Alcee Hastings , the fiercely liberal longtime Florida congressman who was dogged throughout his tenure by an impeachment that ended his fast-rising judicial career, died April 6, 2021. He was 84. Hastings was known as an advocate for minorities, a defender of Israel and a voice for gays, immigrants, women and the elderly. He held senior posts on the House Rules Committee and the Helsinki Commission, which works with other countries on a variety of multinational issues.
AP FILE, 2019
Lee Hart
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Lee Hart , the wife of former U.S. Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado, died April 9, 2021. She was 85. Hart campaigned for her husband during his runs for the Senate and the White House.
AP FILE, 1984
Black Rob
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Rapper Black Rob , known for his hit โWhoa!โ and key contributions to Diddy's dominant Bad Boy Records in the 1990s and early 2000s, died April 17, 2021. He was 52. His debut album โLife Story,โ released in 2000, peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard charts and went platinum, led by the infectious single โWhoa!โ
AP FILE, 2015
Alma Wahlberg
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Alma Wahlberg , the mother of entertainers Mark and Donnie Wahlberg and a regular on their reality series โWahlburgers,โ has died. She was 78. The Boston-born mother of nine became a household name thanks to her appearances on the A&E series โWahlburgers,โ about the familyโs burgeoning burger chain.
AP FILE, 2005
Les McKeown
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Les McKeown , the former lead singer of the 1970s Scottish pop sensation Bay City Rollers, died April 20, 2021, at age 65. Formed at the end of the 1960s, the Bay City Rollers enjoyed huge success in Britain and abroad with their tartan outfits and pop tunes like โBye Bye Baby," โShang-a-Lang" and โGive a Little Love.โ They had a fanatical teen following and sold more than 100 million records. Some in the British media called them the โbiggest group since the Beatlesโ.
AP FILE, 1976
Tempest Storm
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Tempest Storm , the legendary burlesque star who blazed a trail for strip-tease artists for more than a half-century, died April 20, 2021. She was 93. Storm would become an internationally famous figure, selling out clubs across the country. She was featured in many feature films by pioneers Russ Meyer and Irving Klaw, including a co-starring role with Bettie Page in Klawโs 1955 film โTeaserama.โ
AP FILE, 2008
Idriss Deby Itno
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
President Idriss Deby Itno , who ruled Chad for more than 30 years and became an important ally to Western nations in the fight against Islamic extremism in Africa, was killed April 19, 2021, while battling against rebels in the north. He was 68.
AP FILE, 2019
Jim Steinman
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Jim Steinman , the Grammy-winning composer who wrote Meat Loaf's best-selling โBat Out Of Hell" debut album as well as hits for Celine Dion, Air Supply and Bonnie Tyler, died April 19, 2021. He was 73. Steinman was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2012 and won album of the year at the 1997 Grammy Awards for producing songs on Celine Dion's โFalling Into You," which celebrated its 25th anniversary last month and featured the Steinman-penned power ballad โItโs All Coming Back to Me Now."
AP FILE, 2012
Al Schmitt
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Twenty-time Grammy winner Al Schmitt , whose extraordinary career as a recording engineer and producer included albums by Bob Dylan, Ray Charles, Frank Sinatra and many other of the top performers of the past 60 years, died April 26, 2021, at age 91.
AP FILE, 2014
Jonathan Bush
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Jonathan Bush , the younger brother of the late President George H.W. Bush and uncle of former President George W. Bush, died May 5, 2021. He was 89. Bush, who worked in finance, was the last surviving of the family's five siblings.
AP FILE, 2016
Pervis Staples
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Pervis Staples (pictured far left), whose tenor voice complimented his fatherโs and sistersโ in the legendary gospel group The Staple Singers, died May 6, 2021. He was 85. Staples sang gospel songs with his father, the guitar-playing Roebuck "Popsโ Staples, and sisters Mavis, Yvonne and Cleotha in Chicago churches before gaining a national following when they began recording songs such as โSo Soon,โ โIf I Could Hear My Mother Pray Again,โ โWill the Circle Be Unbroken,โ and โUncloudy Dayโ for Vee Jay records in the 1950s.
AP FILE, 1999
Norman Lloyd
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Norman Lloyd , whose role as kindly Dr. Daniel Auschlander on TVโs โSt. Elsewhereโ was a single chapter in a distinguished stage and screen career that put him in the company of Orson Welles, Alfred Hitchcock, Charlie Chaplin and other greats, died May 11, 2021. He was 106.
AP FILE, 2015
Colt Brennan
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Colt Brennan , a star quarterback at the University of Hawaii who finished third in the 2007 Heisman Trophy balloting, died May 11, 2021. He was 37. Brennan transferred to Hawaii after stints at Colorado and Saddleback College in California. A certain pro prospect after a record-breaking junior season, he bypassed the NFL draft in order to play his senior year for Hawaii coach June Jones. Brennan led the Warriors to its finest season ever, going 12-0 in the regular season.
AP FILE, 2007
Damon Weaver
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Damon Weaver , the student reporter who gained national acclaim when he interviewed President Barack Obama at the White House in 2009 died May 1, 2021. He was 23. Weaver was 11 when he interviewed Obama for 10 minutes in the Diplomatic Room on Aug. 13, 2009, asking questions that focused primarily on education. He covered school lunches, bullying, conflict resolution and how to succeed.
AP FILE, 2009
Jim โMudcatโ Grant
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Jim โMudcatโ Grant , the first Black 20-game winner in the American League and a key part of Minnesota's first World Series team in 1965, died June 12, 2021. He was 85. Grant spent less than four full seasons of his 14-year major league career with the Twins, but they were by far his best.
AP FILE, 1964
Clarence Williams III
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Clarence Williams III , who played the cool undercover cop Linc Hayes on the counterculture series โThe Mod Squadโ and Princeโs father in โPurple Rain,โ died June 4, 2021. He was 81. A native of New York, Williams career spanned over five decades in theater, television and film. He was born into a creative family in 1939 and raised by his musical grandparents. He got his acting start on Broadway after a stint as a paratrooper and received a Tony nomination for his role in William Hanleyโs โSlow Dance on the Killing Groundโ in 1964. His breakout role would come with โThe Mod Squad,โ which he led with Peggy Lipton and Michael Cole.
AP FILE, 2013
Jim Fassel
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Jim Fassel , whose bold guarantee of a playoff bid late in the 2000 season seemingly catapulted the New York Giants to a spot in the Super Bowl, has died. He was 71. Fassel, the 1997 NFL coach of the year, guided the Giants from 1997 to 2003, posting a 58-53-1 record. He was 2-3 in the postseason, including a 34-7 loss to the Baltimore Ravens in the Super Bowl in February 2001.
AP FILE
Lisa Banes
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Lisa Banes , who appeared in numerous television shows and movies, including โGone Girlโ in 2014 and โCocktailโ with Tom Cruise in 1988, died June 14, 2021, 10 days after being injured by a hit-and-run driver in New York City. She was 65. On television, Banes had roles on โNashville,โ โMadam Secretary,โ โMasters of Sexโ and โNCIS.โ
AP FILE, 2014
Jack B. Weinstein
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Jack B. Weinstein , a former federal judge who earned a reputation as a tireless legal maverick while overseeing a series of landmark class-action lawsuits and sensational mob cases in New York City like that of the โMafia Cops,โ has died. He was 99. Weinstein, a World War II veteran appointed by President Lyndon Johnson, had spent more than five decades on the bench in Brooklyn before retiring last year.
AP FILE, 2011
Mike Gravel
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Mike Gravel , a former U.S. senator from Alaska who read the Pentagon Papers into the Congressional Record and confronted Barack Obama about nuclear weapons during a later presidential run, died June 26, 2021. He was 91. Gravel represented Alaska as a Democrat in the Senate from 1969 to 1981.
AP FILE, 2007
John Langley
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
John Langley , who was the creator of the long-running TV series โCops,โ died June 26, 2021, of an apparent heart attack during a road race in Mexico. He was 78. โCopsโ was among the first reality series on the air when it debuted in 1989, and it would become an institution through 32 seasons. Langley and production partner Malcolm Barbour had shopped the idea for years, and found a home for it on the fledgling Fox network.
AP FILE, 2014
Richard Donner
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Filmmaker Richard Donner , who helped create the modern superhero blockbuster with 1978โs โSupermanโ and mastered the buddy comedy with the โLethal Weaponโ franchise, died July 5, 2021. He was 91.
AP FILE, 2013
Dilip Kumar
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Bollywood icon Dilip Kumar , hailed as the โTragedy Kingโ and one of Hindi cinema's greatest actors, died July 7, 2021. He was 98. The โTragedy Kingโ title came from Kumarโs numerous serious roles. In several, his character died as a frustrated lover and a drunkard. He also was known as Bollywoodโs only Method actor for his expressive performances identifying a characterโs emotions.
AP FILE, 2008
Jovenel Moรฏse
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Haitian President Jovenel Moรฏse , a former banana producer and political neophyte who ruled Haiti for more than four years as the country grew increasingly unstable under his watch, was assassinated at his home July 7, 2021. He was 53.
AP FILE, 2020
Jehan Sadat
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Jehan Sadat , widow of former Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, the first Arab leader to make peace with Israel, died in Egypt on July 9, 2021. She was 87.
AP FILE, 2006
Edwin Edwards
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Edwin Washington Edwards , the high-living four-term governor whose three-decade dominance of Louisiana politics was all but overshadowed by scandal and an eight-year federal prison stretch, died July 12, 2021. He was 93.
AP FILE, 2001
Gloria Richardson
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Gloria Richardson , an influential yet largely unsung civil rights pioneer whose determination not to back down while protesting racial inequality was captured in a photograph as she pushed away the bayonet of a National Guardsman, died July 22, 2021. She was 99. Richardson was the first woman to lead a prolonged grassroots civil rights movement outside the Deep South. In 1962, she helped organized and led the Cambridge Movement on Maryland's Eastern Shore with sit-ins to desegregate restaurants, bowling alleys and movie theaters in protests that marked an early part of the Black Power movement.
AP FILE, 1963
Robert "Bob" Moses
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Robert Parris Moses , a civil rights activist who was shot at and endured beatings and jail while leading Black voter registration drives in the American South during the 1960s and later helped improve minority education in math, died July 25, 2021. He was 86. Moses, who was widely referred to as Bob, worked to dismantle segregation as the Mississippi field director of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee during the civil rights movement and was central to the 1964 โFreedom Summerโ in which hundreds of students went to the South to register voters.
AP FILE, 2014
Mike Enzi
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Retired Sen. Mike Enzi , a Wyoming Republican known as a consensus-builder in an increasingly polarized Washington, died July 26, 2021, after he broke his neck in a bicycle accident. He was 77.
AP FILE, 2019
Bill Freehan
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Bill Freehan , an 11-time All-Star catcher with the Detroit Tigers and key player on the 1968 World Series championship team, died Aug. 19, 2021, at age 79. He played his entire career with the Tigers, from 1961 through 1976. Besides All-Star appearances, including all 15 innings in the 1967 game, Freehan was awarded five Gold Gloves.
AP FILE, 1975
Sonny Chiba
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Japanese actor Sonny Chiba , who wowed the world with his martial arts skills in more than 100 films, including โKill Bill,โ died Aug. 19, 2021. He was 82. Chiba rose to stardom in Japan in the 1960s, portraying samurai, fighters and police detectives, the anguished so-called โanti-heroesโ trying to survive in a violent world. He did many of the stunt scenes himself. Quentin Tarantino cast Chiba in the role of Hattori Hanzo, a master swordsmith in โKill Bill.โ
AP FILE, 2003
Tom T. Hall
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Tom T. Hall , the singer-songwriter who composed โHarper Valley P.T.A.โ and sang about lifeโs simple joys as country musicโs consummate blue collar bard, died Aug. 20, 2021. He was 85. Known as โThe Storytellerโ for his unadorned yet incisive lyrics, Hall composed hundreds of songs. He helped usher in a literary era of country music in the early โ70s, with songs that were political, like โWatergate Bluesโ and โThe Monkey That Became President,โ deeply personal like โThe Year Clayton Delaney Died,โ and philosophical like โ(Old Dogs, Children and) Watermelon Wine.โ
AP FILE, 2012
Rod Gilbert
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Rod Gilbert , the Hall of Fame right wing who starred for the New York Rangers and helped Canada win the 1972 Summit Series, has died. He was 80. From Montreal, Gilbert spent his entire 18-year NHL career with the Rangers. Gilbert recovered and ended up with 406 goals and 615 assists in 1,065 regular-season games and 34 goals and 33 assists in 79 playoff games. He holds Rangers records for goals and points.
AP FILE, 1974
George Holliday
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
George Holliday , the Los Angeles plumber who shot grainy video of four white police officers beating Black motorist Rodney King in 1991, died of complications of COVID-19 on Sept. 19, 2021. He was 61. Holliday's out-of-focus footage โ about 9 minutes worth โ was a key piece of evidence at the four officers' criminal trial for assault and excessive use of force.
AP FILE, 1997
Jane Powell
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Jane Powell , the bright-eyed, operatic-voiced star of Hollywood's golden age musicals who sang with Howard Keel in โSeven Brides for Seven Brothersโ and danced with Fred Astaire in โRoyal Wedding,โ died Sept. 16, 2021. She was 92.
AP FILE, 1986
Jo Lasorda
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Jo Lasorda , the widow of Los Angeles Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda, died Sept. 20, 2021. She was 91. The former Joan Miller met Tommy Lasorda at a minor league baseball game in her hometown of Greenville, South Carolina, where he was playing for the Spinners. They wed on April 14, 1950, a union that lasted 70 years until Tommyโs death last January at age 93.
AP FILE, 1984
Melvin Van Peebles
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Melvin Van Peebles , the groundbreaking filmmaker, playwright and musician whose work ushered in the โblaxploitationโ wave of the 1970s and influenced filmmakers long after, died Sept. 21, 2021. He was 89. Sometimes called the โgodfather of modern Black cinema,โ the multitalented Van Peebles wrote numerous books and plays, and recorded several albums โ playing multiple instruments and delivering rap-style lyrics. He later became a successful options trader on the stock market.
AP FILE, 2008
Alan Kalter
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Alan Kalter , the quirky, red-headed announcer for David Letterman for two decades who frequently appeared in the show's comedy bits, died Oct. 4, 2021. He was 78. Kalter was born in Brooklyn, New York, on March 21, 1943. Nicknamed โBig Redโ for his hair, he provided the opening introductions on the โLate Show with David Letterman" on CBS from September 1995 until Letterman's last episode on May 20, 2015. As Letterman would walk and run onto the stage, Kalter would introduce him with a sarcastic flair as โthe king of unsocial media,โ โnocturnal rainforest mammalโ and other monikers.
AP FILE, 2006
Raymond T. Odierno
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Raymond T. Odierno , a retired Army general who commanded American and coalition forces in Iraq at the height of the war and capped a 39-year career by serving as the Army's chief of staff, died Oct. 8, 2021. He was 67.
AP FILE, 2007
Gary Paulsen
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Gary Paulsen , the acclaimed and prolific children's author who often drew upon his rural affinities and wide-ranging adventures for tales that included โHatchet,โ โBrian's Winterโ and โDogsong,โ died Oct. 13, 2021, at age 82. Author of more than 100 books, with sales topping 35 million, Paulsen was a three-time finalist for the John Newbery Medal for the year's best children's book and recipient in 1997 of the American Library Association's Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime achievement.
AP FILE, 2005
Betty Lynn
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Betty Lynn , the film and television actor who was best known for her role as Barney Fife's sweetheart Thelma Lou on โThe Andy Griffith Show,โ died Oct. 16, 2021. She was 95. Lynn appeared as Thelma Lou on the show from 1961 until 1966. She reprised her role in the made-for-TV movie โReturn to Mayberry,โ in which Thelma Lou and Barney got married.
AP FILE, 2007
Colin Powell
Updated
Jan 3, 2022
Colin Powell , who served Democratic and Republican presidents in war and peace but whose sterling reputation was stained when he went before the U.N. and made faulty claims to justify the U.S. war in Iraq, has died of COVID-19 complications. He was 84. In 1989 Powell became the first Black chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In that role he oversaw the U.S. invasion of Panama and later the U.S. invasion of Kuwait to oust the Iraqi army in 1991. He served as secretary of state under President George W. Bush.
AP FILE, 2001