Actors who died in Ernst Iosifovich Unknown

The outgoing year claimed the lives of many people whose names will remain in Russian and world history. Well-known inventors and actors, politicians and musicians, scientists and writers, directors and athletes... Lenta.ru offers to recall some of them.

January 2. Nimr al-Nimr, Shiite preacher, 56 years old.

Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr was considered for decades one of the leaders of the Shiite minority in Saudi Arabia and actively opposed the oppression of the subjects of the kingdom on religious grounds. When serious unrest broke out in the east of the country, the Saudi authorities considered al-Nimr one of their instigators. After a quick trial, the preacher was sentenced to death for "out of obedience to the rulers." The king approved the death sentence, and al-Nimr was executed. The death of the preacher caused a diplomatic crisis in the Middle East: in Tehran, the crowd stormed the Saudi embassy, ​​in response, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Sudan, Djibouti and Somalia severed diplomatic relations with Iran, Kuwait withdrew its ambassador, and the UAE lowered the level of diplomatic relations.

January 3rd Igor Sergun, Colonel General, head of the GRU, 58 years old.

A career officer of the GRU, Sergun worked for many years in the central office and on business trips abroad. His name is largely associated with the restoration of the authority of the GRU after a flurry of criticism from the country's leadership following the results of the 2008 Georgian campaign. Under him, the GRU proved to be excellent in the events of 2014-2016, in particular in the Crimea and Syria. Died of a heart attack. In May 2016, he was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of Russia.

January 7. Sergey Shustikov, footballer, 45 years old

Shustikov is a graduate of the football school of the Moscow "Torpedo". For eight years he acted as part of the car factory. In 1991 he became the bronze medalist of the USSR championship, in 1993 he won the Russian Cup. In 1996 he left for Spain, where he played for Racing. In 1997-1998 he played for CSKA, winning silver medals in the Russian Championship. In 2005-2007 he worked as a coach at FC Moscow. In 2008, following Leonid Slutsky, he moved to Wings of the Soviets. In October 2009, after the resignation of Slutsky from the Samara club, he got a job with him at CSKA, where until 2014 he worked as an assistant head coach.

January 10th. David Bowie, British musician, 69

"The Chameleon of Rock Music" has recorded 27 studio albums during his career, starred in almost 40 films and changed his image dozens of times. One of the most influential rock musicians in history, one of the hundred greatest Britons. Two days before his death, on his 69th birthday, he made a gift to fans by releasing his last record, Blackstar, which for the first time in Bowie's career started at number one on the US Billboard 200.

January 14th. Alan Rickman, British actor, 69

He can no longer get rid of the image of Snape, aka Snape, whom he played in all eight Potter films, although there are many other roles in his filmography. For participation in the television movie Rasputin, he received the Emmy and Golden Globe awards, for the film Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves - a BAFTA prize, for which he was nominated several more times for his roles in the films Sincerely, Madly, Strongly ”, “Sense and Sensibility” and “Michael Collins”. Rickman was a well-known theater actor, and also directed two films: The Winter Guest and The Versailles Romance.

January 14th. Leonid Zhabotinsky, weightlifter, two-time Olympic champion, 77 years old

Zhabotinsky is a four-time world champion in weightlifting, a two-time European champion, a five-time champion of the USSR. Set 19 world records in the heavyweight division. He won gold medals at the 1964 Tokyo Games and the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City. He was awarded two Orders of the Red Banner of Labor, Orders of Merit (Ukraine) II and III degree. Honorary citizen of Zaporozhye.

January 18th. Michel Tournier, French writer, Prix Goncourt winner, 91

He started his career as a journalist, hosted the program "The Hour of French Culture" on Radio France, collaborated with the newspapers "Le Monde" and "Figaro". In 1967 he wrote the novel "Friday, or Pacific Limb", for which he was awarded the Grand Prize of the French Academy. In 1970, he won the Prix Goncourt for his book The King of the Forest, which was later filmed by Volker Schlöndorff.

January 26th. Georgy Mirsky, Chief Researcher at IMEMO RAS, 89 years old

Doctor of Historical Sciences Mirsky specialized in such topics as Islamic fundamentalism, the Palestinian problem, the Arab-Israeli conflict, international terrorism, the history and modernity of the countries of the Middle East. Over the years, he taught at MGIMO, the State University Higher School of Economics, Princeton and New York Universities, and at Hofstra University.

January 29. Jacques Rivette, French New Wave director, 87

According to one of the main French directors Francois Truffaut, the new wave was born largely thanks to Jacques Rivette. He was a constant critic and one of the ideologists of the magazine Les Cahiers du cinema (and later the editor-in-chief), around which this direction developed. Rivette shot his first film, Paris Belongs to Us, in 1960, followed by 20 more films, including Celine and Julie are completely lying, North Bridge, Wuthering Heights, Gang of Four, History Marie and Julien. Rivette's tapes are plotless and protracted, so it is not surprising that it is his authorship that belongs to one of the longest films in the history of cinema - the 13-hour Don't Touch Me.

February 16th. Boutros Boutros-Ghali, former UN Secretary General, 93

Born into a Coptic family, his grandfather was the prime minister of Egypt. Studied political science and law, actively engaged in research, rotating in Western scientific circles. From 1977 to 1991, he headed the Egyptian Foreign Ministry, participated in the preparation of the Camp David Accords with Israel. In 1992 he was elected to the post of UN Secretary General. He promoted the idea of ​​"building peace", which provided for agreements solely on the basis of consensus. Boutros-Ghali's attempts to strengthen the role of the UN after the collapse of the bipolar system ended in failure. Gradually his popularity fell. In 1996, he tried to re-run for Secretary General, but the United States vetoed his candidacy, and Kofi Annan became Secretary General.

February 19th. Umberto Eco, Italian philosopher and writer, 84

Eco's bibliography includes seven fictional novels, including The Name of the Rose, Foucault's Pendulum, and Prague Cemetery. He is also considered to be one of the leading specialists in semiotics, he wrote "Treatise on General Semiotics" and "Semiotics and Philosophy of Language". He taught aesthetics and cultural theory at the universities of Milan, Florence and Turin, was a professor of semiotics at the University of Bologna and an honorary doctorate from many universities, such as Paris III, the University of Athens, Moscow State University and the University of Jerusalem.

February 19th. Harper Lee, American writer, 89

Lee's novel To Kill a Mockingbird was published in 1960 and won the Pulitzer Prize for it. After 55 years, the book Go Set a Watchman was unexpectedly printed. Harper Lee wrote it before the publication of To Kill a Mockingbird, it is considered a continuation of the famous novel. In 1966, US President Lyndon Johnson appointed Lee to the National Council of the Arts, and George W. Bush awarded the writer the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

February 26th. Mikhail Titarenko, orientalist, scientific director of the Institute of the Far East of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 81 years old

In the 1960s, Titarenko was in the diplomatic service at the Consulate General of the USSR in Shanghai, then at the Soviet embassy in Beijing. Later he became one of the leading experts on the Far East and China, worked in the international department of the Central Committee of the CPSU. In 1985 he headed the Institute of the Far East of the Russian Academy of Sciences. In October 2015, he left the post of director and moved to the position of scientific director of the institute, which he held until the end of his life. Author of over 300 scientific publications.

March, 3rd. Natalya Krachkovskaya, Russian actress, 77 years old

Honored Artist of Russia Natalya Krachkovskaya is known for her roles in such films as Ivan Vasilievich Changes Profession and Leonid Gaidai's 12 Chairs, as well as Be My Husband, Pokrovsky Gates, The Man from Capuchin Boulevard and others. In total, the filmography of the actress has more than 100 paintings.

March 11th. Keith Emerson, British musician and composer, 71

Keith Emerson is one of the most famous keyboardists in rock music. He began with The Nice, and in 1970 formed the prog-rock super trio Emerson, Lake and Palmer (ELP) with bassist Greg Lake and drummer Carl Palmer. A fan of Mussorgsky, Emerson recorded his version of Pictures at an Exhibition (1971) with ELP. In 2009, the musician was diagnosed with focal dystonia, a disease that manifests itself in muscle spasms. On the night of March 11, Emerson committed suicide at his home in Santa Monica.

March 17. Alexander Prokhorenko, senior lieutenant of the Special Operations Forces Command, 25 years old

Advanced aviation gunner Prokhorenko ensured the operation of Russian combat aircraft in Syria. Having been surrounded during the battles for Palmyra, he caused fire on himself. He was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of Russia.

March 24. Johan Cruyff, Dutch football coach, 68

During his time as a football player, he gained fame thanks to his performances for the Amsterdam Ajax and the Spanish Barcelona. Three times he received the prize for the best player in Europe - the Golden Ball (in 1971, 1973 and 1974). He began his coaching career at Ajax in 1986. With the Amsterdam team he won the Cup Winners' Cup and the UEFA Super Cup. After that, he headed Barcelona and won four times with her in the Spanish Championship. Also under the leadership of Cruyff, the Catalans won the Cup Winners' Cup and the European Cup.

March 27, Anatoly Savin, academician, developer of space reconnaissance, 95 years old

One of the leading specialists in the USSR and Russia in the creation of special space-based information systems - satellite reconnaissance and orbital missile attack warning systems. For many years he worked at the Central Research Institute "Kometa". In 2004-2006 - general designer, since 2007 - scientific director of the Almaz-Antey concern.

March 31. Hans-Dietrich Genscher, former German Foreign Minister, 89

In his youth, Genscher served in the Wehrmacht, joined the NSDAP and even volunteered for the front, but was quickly captured. After the war, he made a quick career in the Free Democratic Party, rose to chairman. Twice he served as head of the German Foreign Ministry, advocated a policy of compromise and détente in relations with the Soviet Union, while at the same time supporting the national democratic movements in Eastern Europe. Genscher did a lot for the development of the EU and the unification of Germany. Died of heart failure.

March 31. Zaha Hadid, Iraqi-British architect and designer, 65

Zaha Hadid is the first woman in history to receive the Pritzker Prize, which is considered the equivalent of the Nobel Prize in architecture. A bright representative of deconstructivism, among her most famous buildings are the Museum of Transport in Glasgow, the Heydar Aliyev Center in Baku, the Rosenthal Center for Contemporary Art in Cincinnati, the Ordrupgaard Museum of Art in Copenhagen. There is one building according to her project in Moscow, this is the Dominion Tower business center on Sharikopodshipnikovskaya Street, commissioned in 2015.

April 10th. Howard Marks, "Mr. Ganjubas", 71 years old.

During his life, he managed to visit a nuclear physicist, an agent of the British secret service, an anarchist and a prisoner in the United States. But he is best known as a drug dealer. In his best years, he turned millions of dollars selling marijuana in Asia, America and Europe and controlled a tenth of the entire world turnover of hashish. Marx did not deal with hard drugs on principle. He died of rectal cancer in the arms of a large family.

April 21. Prince, American musician, 57

The prince of funk and the king of musical erotica - in the 1980s was perceived as the messiah of pop rock. After the release of Purple Rain, trumpeter Miles Davis called Prince the new Duke Ellington. In the 1990s, the artist entered a period of long litigation with record companies, renounced his stage name and generally freaked out. In the 2000s, he began a new creative upsurge.

Zorin is the author of many scientific articles, books and publications on international relations. Known as a TV presenter and radio announcer - in different years he was the author and host of the programs “9 Studio”, “Today in the World”. The author of the series of television films "America of the Seventies" and others, he interviewed many world leaders - John F. Kennedy, Charles de Gaulle, Margaret Thatcher.

April 28th. Igor Fesunenko, Soviet and Russian international journalist, lecturer at MGIMO, 83 years old

Fesunenko is a member of the legendary team of the International Panorama program. He came to television in 1963, in the Latin American edition, worked in Brazil, where he learned Portuguese. He was a correspondent for the USSR State Radio and Television in South America, worked in Cuba, and then in Portugal. In the 2000s, he hosted a program on Channel Five, and in the last years of his life he was engaged in teaching.

May 3rd Kaname Harada, the last Japanese pilot involved in the attack on Pearl Harbor, 99

He flew a fighter aircraft based on the Soryu aircraft carrier. He did not participate directly in the attack on Pearl Harbor, but provided an air patrol over the ships of the formation. In the Battle of Midway, he shot down several American aircraft and escaped after the death of an aircraft carrier: he sat on the water and was picked up by Japanese sailors. In the campaign on Guadalcanal, he was seriously injured, was decommissioned from combat strength, served as a flight instructor, including teaching kamikaze. After the war, he adhered to radically pacifist views, worked on a dairy farm, from the 1960s he ran a kindergarten with his wife, and participated in the global anti-war movement.

May 11th. François Morellet, French artist, pioneer of kinetic art and pop art, 90 years old

“In 1963, my neon works were considered provocative, vulgar and not in demand - I had to wait 20 years before I managed to sell the first one. Today they are stylish, expensive and very fashionable,” Morelle said about his lighting works. The manifesto of the "Visual Arts Research Group", which he founded in the early 1960s, called for "provocation" and "visual aggression" in art, and the provocation succeeded. In doing so, he became the second artist in history to create a work commissioned by the Louvre.

May 21st. Mullah Akhtar Mansour, leader of the Taliban, believed to be 48 years old

Akhtar Mansour's war began in 1985 when he joined the jihad against Soviet Shuravi soldiers and the government in Kabul. Then Mansour joined the Taliban, rose to the rank of Minister of Civil Aviation, survived during the retreat into the mountains after the American invasion. When the death of the permanent leader of the Taliban, Mullah Omar, was announced, Mansour was chosen as his successor. Many field commanders immediately rebelled against this, and Mansur had to concentrate on fighting the disaffected. The reign of the new leader turned out to be short and inglorious: less than a year later, Akhtar Mansur was overtaken by an American drone missile.

June 3rd. Muhammad Ali, boxer, 74

The famous American boxer, considered by many to be the greatest in history. Champion of the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome in the light heavyweight category, the absolute world champion in heavyweight (1964-1966, 1974-1978). Five-time winner of the title "Boxer of the Year" (1963, 1972, 1974, 1975, 1978) and "Boxer of the Decade" (1970s) according to The Ring magazine. "Athlete of the Century" according to several sports publications. Included in the Boxing Hall of Fame (1987), engaged in social and charitable activities, was a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador. In 1984, Muhammad Ali was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease.

June 3rd. Viktor Chepkin, aircraft engine designer, head of NPO Saturn, 82 years old

He worked in the Perm Engine Design Bureau, Minaviaprom, in 1984-2001 he was the director and general designer of the Rybinsk NPO Saturn. Chief designer of the D-30F6 engine for MiG-31 interceptors. Supervised the development of engines of the AL-31F family for Su-27/Su-30 aircraft, including the AL-31FP with a deflectable thrust vector.

June 4th. Farid Seiful-Mulyukov, Soviet and Russian international journalist, writer, Arabic orientalist, 85 years old

He started in the print press, and in 1964 he came to the Central Television to conduct "Today in the World" and "International Panorama". He headed the bureau in Lebanon, and then in Switzerland. Author of books about Iraq, Portugal and journalism in troubled areas.

June 6th Viktor Korchnoi, chess player, grandmaster, 85 years old

Soviet chess player, grandmaster, who never managed to become a world champion. In the duel for the world crown, Korchnoi lost twice to Anatoly Karpov - in 1978 and 1981. Emigrated to Switzerland in 1976. Four-time champion of the USSR (1960, 1962, 1964, 1970), three-time champion of Leningrad (1955, 1957, 1964). He was the oldest playing grandmaster in the world.

the 9th of June. Sergey Eremenko, pilot of the Russian Knights group, 34 years old

He graduated from college in 2003, flew the MiG-29 fighters, and since 2011 - the Su-27 as part of the Russian Knights aerobatic team. It crashed in the area of ​​the village of Ashukino near Moscow during a demonstration performance at the opening of the monument to the dead aviators. Taking the car with failed engines away from the dense residential area, he did not leave himself time for ejection.

June 16th. Jo Cox, British MP, 41

Helen Joanne "Jo" Cox was an exemplary Labor MP: the daughter of a worker and an employee, she graduated from Cambridge and immediately went into politics, dealing mainly with humanitarian issues, opposed Britain's participation in the operation in Syria. In mid-June, when the standoff between supporters and opponents of the United Kingdom's exit from the European Union reached its peak, Cox, an active supporter of maintaining EU membership, was attacked by the neo-Nazi Thomas Meir. He shot the MP three times and stabbed her several times while shouting "Britain First!" After Cox's death, campaigning before the referendum was suspended, political scientists started talking about how her murder could have a decisive impact on the vote, playing into the hands of supporters of Britain's membership in the EU. However, the referendum ended in their defeat.

June 18th. Vladimir Poplavsky, physicist, head of research on fast neutron reactors, 78 years old

Poplavsky's work since 1960 has been inextricably linked with the Physico-Energy Institute in Obninsk. The country's leading specialist in the design and operation of fast neutron reactors with liquid metal sodium coolant is one of the most promising topics in the nuclear power industry in the near future. With his participation and under his leadership, sodium technology was mastered at the BR-5, BR-10, BOR-60, BN-350, BN-600 reactors. One of the organizers of the construction of the new BN-800 reactor and scientific adviser on the topic of the serial BN-1200 reactor.

June 19. Anton Yelchin, American actor of Russian origin, 27 years old

Born in Leningrad, in 1989 his family emigrated to the United States. Known for a series of fantastic films "Star Trek", where he played Pavel Chekhov, as well as the films "Alpha Dog", "Terminator: May the Savior Come" and "New York, I Love You." He died in an accident - was crushed by his own jeep at the gate of the house.

27th of June. Alvin Toffler, political scientist, author of the concept of post-industrial society, 87 years old

He is known primarily as the author of the thesis that humanity is on the verge of a transition to a new type of society - the information society, which is replacing the industrial one, which has replaced the once agrarian one. In 1970, Toffler predicted that people at the turn of the new century would face what is known as a "future shock," a shock of the future: the pace of progress will increase so much that people will have difficulty adapting to it. Life, however, has shown that the danger of future shock is exaggerated: even many older people are successfully mastering new technologies, and the global transition to the information society has not yet taken place.

July 1. Robin Hardy, British director, 86

For the mystical "folk horror" "The Wicker Man" Hardy received the Saturn Award in the nomination "Best Horror Film". It was the first film by a director who made only five films in his career. The study of the relationship between paganism and Christianity runs like a red thread through all his works, including literary ones. In 2006, Hardy wrote the book Cowboys for Christ, which he himself filmed under the title Wicker Tree.

July 2nd Michael Cimino, American director, 77

The seven films of Michael Cimino's filmography range from Heaven's Gate, considered one of the biggest box office flops in Hollywood history, to The Deer Hunter, which won five Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Director. . Cimino's films starred Mickey Rourke, Robert De Niro, Clint Eastwood, Christopher Walken and Meryl Streep. Quentin Tarantino noted that Cimino's Year of the Dragon had a great influence on his work.

4th of July. Abbas Kiarostami, Iranian director, 76

His most famous film is A Taste of Cherry, for which he received the Palme d'Or at the 50th Cannes Film Festival in 1997, becoming the first Iranian filmmaker to receive this award. Abbas Kiarostami is also a laureate of the Venice Film Festival, the Locarno Film Festival and the winner of the Sergei Parajanov Prize of the Yerevan Film Festival.

July 8. Vladimir Troepolsky, former CEO of NTV-Plus, founder of the 2x2 channel, 61 years old

He began his television career at the Main Directorate for External Relations of the Central Television. He took part in the creation of the first commercial TV channel in the USSR "2x2", which he headed from 1991 to 1994. In the mid-1990s, he moved to NTV-Plus, where he first worked as deputy general director, and then headed the company. Then he held a leading position in the All-Russian State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company. He was one of the initiators of the rebranding of the RTR channel, which later became known as "Russia". For some time he headed the St. Petersburg Channel Five, and then returned to the All-Russian State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company, where he worked in recent years.

10 July. Abu Umar ash-Shishani, IS "Minister of War", 30 years old.

Ash-Shishani (real name Tarkhan Batirashvili), served in the Georgian army during the war in South Ossetia in 2008. Later he was convicted of illegal possession of weapons, in prison he became interested in radical Islam. After his release, he left for Syria, where he joined the Islamic State (IS) terrorist group banned in Russia. He became infamous for the massacres of captured soldiers of government forces and militants of other groups. In October 2014, he announced that he plans to invade Russia in the near future. More than 20 times, the Syrian, Iraqi and US military reported that they managed to destroy al-Shishani, but each time this information was not confirmed. An end to the "career" of the terrorist was put by American pilots who bombed the house where the meeting of ISIS leaders took place. Among the dead was Batirashvili.

10 July. Anatoly Isaev, Olympic football champion, 83 years old

Forward of the Moscow "Spartak" in the 1950s, the winner of the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne as part of the USSR national team. At that tournament, Isaev scored four goals in three matches. In total, the footballer has six goals in 16 games for the national team. He worked as a coach at Spartak, Ararat Yerevan and the Indonesian national team.

July 15. Carl Case, American economist, 69

His main achievement is the creation, together with Robert Shiller, of the US housing price index (Case-Shiller index), which later became generally accepted. Case's main area of ​​scientific activity was the study of the patterns of the real estate market, primarily boom-bust cycles. Case and Shiller, in particular, foresaw the market crash in 2007 by allowing for the improbability of a steady rise in house prices for far too long.

July 16. Alan Vega, American musician, leader of the band Suicide, 78

Suicide is the first duet formed according to the scheme "frontman-vocalist + keyboardist-instrumentalist". The band's sound has influenced such genres as post-punk, synth-pop, techno, no-wave and industrial. In addition, it was Alan Vega who first used the word "punk" in relation to music, after which it came into use as a designation for one of the most important genres.

July 19. Alexander Margelov, Colonel, Airborne Forces equipment tester, 70 years old

The youngest (fifth) son of the commander of the USSR Airborne Forces, General of the Army Vasily Margelov. In 1973 and 1976, for the first time in the world, he carried out airborne landing inside a combat vehicle using parachute ("Centaur") and parachute-reactive ("Reaktaur") systems, respectively. Hero of Russia (1996).

July 20. Pavel Sheremet, journalist, 44 years old

Born in Minsk, he began his career in the 1990s in a bank, then switched to Belarusian television. In 1997, after the ORT TV channel aired a story about smuggling on the Belarusian-Lithuanian border, he was arrested and convicted on charges of illegally crossing the state border. Three months later he was deported from the republic. In addition to ORT (now Channel One), he also worked in the Ogonyok magazine, on REN TV, and the Public Television of Russia. For the last five years he lived in Ukraine, was a journalist for Ukrayinska Pravda. He died on July 20 in a car explosion. The car belonged to the head of Ukrayinska Pravda, Alena Prytula, but she herself was not there at that moment.

July 31st. Fazil Iskander, Russian and Abkhazian writer and poet, 87 years old

“I am definitely a Russian writer who sang a lot about Abkhazia. Unfortunately, I did not write anything in Abkhazian. The choice of Russian culture for me was unequivocal,” Iskander said about his work. One of his most famous works is the story-parable "Rabbits and Boas". His "Sandro from Chegem" is often compared with the novel "One Hundred Years of Solitude", calling the writer "Russian Marquez". Iskander's works have been translated into all European languages, as well as into Chinese and Japanese.

Monumental sculptor, citizen of the world, author of such works as the 75-meter "Lotus Flower" - installed on the Aswan Dam in honor of the friendship of peoples; The Tree of Life, installed inside the capital's Bagration Bridge (the sculpture was conceived back in 1956 after the events in Hungary, but only realized half a century later), the TEFI award figurines and even the tombstone of Nikita Khrushchev. The Secretary General at the 1962 exhibition said: “An angel and a devil are sitting in you. If the angel wins, we will help; if the devil, we will destroy.

August 13th. Rada Adjubey, daughter of Nikita Khrushchev, 87 years old

The daughter of the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU Nikita Khrushchev was born in 1929. She worked as a journalist, collaborated with the journal Science and Life. Her husband Alexei Adzhubei was the editor-in-chief of the Komsomolskaya Pravda and Izvestiya newspapers in the 1950s and 1960s.

August 16th. Joao Havelange, 7th FIFA President, 100 years old

Participant of two Olympic Games - in 1936 in Berlin as a swimmer, in 1952 as a player of the Brazilian national water polo team. After completing his sports career, he moved to administrative work. He headed the International Football Federation from 1974 to 1998. He died at the age of 101 from pneumonia in the days when the Olympic Games were held in his native Rio de Janeiro.

August 19. Nina Ponomareva, the first Olympic champion in the history of the USSR, 87 years old

Soviet athlete, discus thrower, eight-time champion of the USSR, the first Olympic champion in the history of the USSR. In total, Ponomareva has two gold medals at the Olympic Games - 1952 in Helsinki and 1960 in Rome. Immediately after the Finnish Olympics, Ponomareva went to competitions in Odessa, where she set a world record by throwing a discus at 53 meters 61 centimeters.

August 23. Reinhard Selten, German economist, 85

Together with the Hungarian-American researcher John Harsanyi and the American John Nash Jr., he was awarded the Nobel Prize "for the fundamental analysis of equilibrium in the theory of non-cooperative games." Researchers have used game theory to explain human behavior in various fields such as economics, politics and biology. Selten was a supporter of the spread of the international language Esperanto.

24 August. Walter Scheel, German politician, 97

During the Second World War, Scheel served in the German army, was a member of the NSDAP. After the war, he joined the Free Democratic Party. He was Minister of Foreign Affairs, Vice-Chancellor and President of Germany. A supporter of the course towards the normalization of relations with the Soviet Union, together with Willy Brandt, he developed the basic principles of the policy of détente and the so-called "new Ostpolitik". In 1970, Bonn and Moscow signed an agreement on the recognition of post-war borders in Europe, and in 1972 the FRG recognized the GDR. Scheel died in a nursing home after a serious illness. Germany's longest-lived leader ever.

August 29th. Gene Wilder, American actor, 83 years old

Gene Wilder (real name Jerome Silberman) became famous for his starring role in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971), the first film adaptation of Roald Dahl's novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Subsequently, a frame from this tape became the basis for a popular Internet meme. Wilder's other films include Bonnie and Clyde, Blazing Saddles, Young Frankenstein and the Will & Grace series.

August 30th. Vitaly Boyarov, lieutenant general, Soviet counterintelligence figure, 88 years old

As a teenager, he joined the partisans during the war when his father, an NKVD officer, died. He served in counterintelligence (the last position - the first deputy head of the Second Main Directorate of the KGB), and in 1963-1973 - in foreign intelligence. Including four years he led the Soviet foreign counterintelligence - the protection of citizens of the USSR who are abroad from the actions of foreign special services. It is considered the prototype of General Konstantin Konstantinov in Yulian Semenov's novel "TASS is authorized to declare ..." - he led the operation against the Soviet diplomat Alexander Ogorodnik (Trianon) recruited by American intelligence.

August 30th. Vera Chaslavska, seven-time Olympic champion in artistic gymnastics, 74 years old

The owner of the largest number of gold Olympic medals in the history of Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic, one of the best gymnasts in history. She was an opponent of the entry of Soviet troops into Czechoslovakia. At the awards ceremony for the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City, Chaslavska turned her head to the side during the performance of the Soviet anthem, for which she was expelled from the national team and banned from traveling abroad for many years. Died of cancer.

Smirnov was born in Leningrad, survived the blockade. After the war, he moved to the capital, where he first collaborated with Moscow News, and then got a job at Izvestia, where he worked for more than 50 years. Smirnov found the thaw, stagnation, perestroika, the 1990s, had "access to the body" of the first persons of the USSR and the RSFSR. He became the author of several iconic photographs reflecting the era, in particular the famous photograph in which Nikita Khrushchev shows Yuri Gagarin the evening edition of Izvestia.

2 September. Antonina Seredina, two-time Olympic champion in kayaking, 86 years old

One of the greatest Soviet athletes of the 1960s. In the asset of the Middle, in addition to two Olympic gold medals, two victories at the world championships (in 1963 and 1966). At the end of her career, she became a coach, trained Olympic champions Yulia Ryabchinskaya, Ekaterina Kuryshko, Nina Gopova and Galina Kreft. In 1976 she was recognized as the best coach of the USSR.

2 September. Islam Karimov, the first President of Uzbekistan, 78 years old

Islam Karimov became President of Uzbekistan in 1991. Prior to that, in the Soviet period, he served as First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Uzbekistan (from 1989 to 1991) and Minister of Finance of the Republic. Karimov was called the patriarch of post-Soviet Central Asia, as he was involved in many political processes in the region. In the early 90s, he did not allow the fundamentalists to come to power in the country, helped the secular government of neighboring Tajikistan in the civil war. On September 2, the Uzbek authorities officially announced the death of Islam Karimov. The first president of the republic was buried in Samarkand.

September 3rd. Fu Suqing, the oldest woman in the world, 119 years old

Fu Suqing was born in Sichuan in 1897 during the Qing Dynasty in China. At the age of five, her parents married her. The life of a woman was not easy. She survived two world wars, the Japanese occupation and the Cultural Revolution. Of Fu Suqing's six children, only two survived. In August, relatives and friends celebrated her last birthday. The elderly Chinese woman had almost 70 grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren, so the celebration was crowded. Almost two hundred people came to congratulate her.

September 13th. Artem Bezrodny, footballer, 37 years old

Russian football player who played for Spartak in the golden years - 1995-2003. On account of Bezrodny one match for the Russian national team. After leaving Spartak, he played four matches for a club from Azerbaijan, after which he disappeared for many years. “And no news from him for a hundred years. But such a ruthless person. Always adventure with him. Either the apartment is on fire, or the car is fired with rubber bullets. That will leave her in the parking lot at the station and go to her parents in Sumy. Three weeks later, he returns - the parking lot was demolished. Where the car is unknown. Somehow Artem once again disappeared. Then he showed up in Tarasovka, and Romantsev, jokingly, began to persuade him in front of the whole team: you, please, come to training tomorrow. We will all get together, too, ”said Bezrodny’s teammate Dmitry Parfyonov. Artem died in his native Sumy at the age of 37, returning from a run.

September 28th. Shimon Peres, former Prime Minister and President of Israel, 93

Shimon Peres served three times as Minister of Defense, twice as Prime Minister and once as President of Israel. His life was inextricably linked with the history of the Jewish state. During the Israeli War of Independence, he was responsible for the procurement of weapons, during the Suez Crisis - for coordinating actions with France. It is Peres who is believed to owe Israel its officially non-existent nuclear bomb. He advocated the normalization of relations with the Arab countries, it was he who owns the formula "peace in exchange for territories." In politics, however, Perez has earned an offensive reputation for being “always second” for repeated defeats. He took patience: few of his fellow competitors could boast more than 70 years of experience on the political stage. In the end, Shimon Peres achieved the highest positions in the country.

October 13th. Bhumibol Adulyadej, aka Rama IX, King of Thailand, 89

King Bhumibol ruled the country for over 70 years - longer than any other monarch in Thai history. Initially, the son of a prince and a commoner, born in the United States, did not count on the throne, but after the tragic death of his brother, he became king. Despite the fact that the monarch in Thailand is mostly a sacred figure, Bhumibol personally oversaw the implementation of social programs, doing a lot to make life easier for ordinary people. Rama IX was fond of engineering, photography and painting, was an avid radio amateur. Most Thais sincerely loved their king: a huge crowd of grieving subjects saw him off on his last journey.

16 October. Viktor Zubkov, two-time Olympic medalist in basketball

One of the best centers in the history of Soviet basketball. Three times as part of the national team he became the champion of Europe (1957, 1959, 1961) and twice - the silver medalist of the Olympic Games (1956, 1960). According to the results of the European Championship in 1959, he was recognized as the best center of the continent. He played for the Moscow CSKA, rose to the rank of colonel.

16 October. Arseniy Pavlov (Motorola), commander of the Sparta battalion of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic (DPR), 33

Arseniy Pavlov was born in Komi. He received the nickname Motorola after military service in the Marine Corps - Pavlov was a signalman in a military specialty. In 2014, he came to the south-east of Ukraine, where he joined the ranks of the militia. He participated in the fighting in the area of ​​Slavyansk, Donetsk airport and Debaltseve. Pavlov was awarded the St. George Cross of the DPR, the Order "For Military Valor" of the first degree, and was also awarded the title of Hero of the DPR. One of the leaders of the Donbass militia died on October 16: an explosive device went off on the elevator cable in the house where he lived.

The 20th of October. Junko Tabei, the first woman to summit Mount Everest, is 77

When Junko Tabei took up mountaineering, other athletes didn't take her seriously. Many believed that a girl goes to the mountains only to find a husband. In 1975, she refuted these speculations and became the first woman to summit Everest. Climbing the highest peak in the world began with a failure: an avalanche buried the climbers. That didn't stop Junko. When the guide dug her out from under the snow, she continued on her way and reached her goal. The woman did not give up climbing even in extreme old age. A few months before her death from cancer, a 77-year-old Japanese woman climbed Mount Fuji with a group of schoolchildren who were hit by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

October 23. Pete Burns, British musician, lead singer of Dead or Alive, 57

Dead or Alive gained popularity in 1985 after the release of the single You Spin Me Round (Like a Record). This song has been covered by Jessica Simpson, Thalia and Dope, Flo Rida and Indochine. Pete Burns was also a member of the Mystery Girls and Nightmares in Wax.

October 24th. Bohdan Gavrylyshyn, Ukrainian-Canadian economist, 90 years old

Born in 1926 in the Ternopil region, which was part of Poland, and after the Second World War he emigrated to Canada. A member of the Club of Rome, he became the founder of the European Management Forum, which later became the World Economic Forum in Davos. In 1988 he returned to the USSR, becoming one of the consultants on the course of reforms, and later carried out this activity in Ukraine.

October 31. Vladimir Zeldin, People's Artist of the USSR, 101 years old

Vladimir Zeldin was the oldest acting actor in the world and the first theater actor to continue acting on stage after 100 years. For more than 70 years, since 1945, Zeldin served in the Central Academic Theater of the Russian Army (formerly called the Theater of the Red Army and the Theater of the Soviet Army). All-Union popularity came to Vladimir Zeldin after the role of Musaib Gatuev in Ivan Pyryev's film The Pig and the Shepherd (1941). Zeldin considered the theater to be his main vocation. In 1951, the actor was awarded the Stalin Prize - for playing the role of Senyavin in the play "Admiral's Flag".

November 2. Oleg Popov, clown, 86 years old

Oleg Popov is a clown familiar to many generations of Soviet children. In his image, he debuted in 1951. He actively participated in children's television programs, acted in films, including in the role of himself. Popov's name became a household name, he created the artistic image of the Solar Clown. In the 1990s he emigrated to Germany, where he performed under the pseudonym Happy Hans. Popov died on tour in Rostov-on-Don.

the 3rd of November. Misha Brusilovsky, Honored Artist of Russia, 85 years old

Misha Shayevich Brusilovsky is one of the most recognizable Russian artists of the 20th and 21st centuries. He was born in Kyiv, but lived most of his life in Sverdlovsk-Yekaterinburg, becoming such a characteristic representative of the Ural bohemia that a monument was erected to him during his lifetime. The sculptural group "Citizens" on one of the Yekaterinburg streets depicts Brusilovsky and his artist friends German Metelev (also deceased) and Vitaly Volovich.

the 3rd of November. Iosif Drize, designer of air defense systems, 89 years old

One of the leading specialists of the Scientific Research Electromechanical Institute (NIEMI), since 1986 - chief designer. With the direct participation of Drize, anti-aircraft missile systems of the military air defense "Krug", "Osa" and "Tor" were created. In particular, Drize was the chief designer of the combat vehicle of the Thor complex.

November 7th. Leonard Cohen, Canadian singer and songwriter, 82

A poet and writer who took up the guitar, Cohen has always been critical of his singing, but his voice is one of the most recognizable in contemporary music. Cohen managed to be native to everyone - from fragile decadents to lovers of Russian chanson. A sage, a ladies' man, a man of the world: a Jew, a Buddhist, always singing about Christ - all this is Cohen. Although the singer half-ironically warned about his departure in advance, his death was one of the most acute losses in modern culture.

November 9. Fedor Mitenkov, designer of nuclear power plants, 91 years old

The work of Academician Mitenkov is connected with the Afrikantov OKBM, one of the leading domestic centers of nuclear engineering: since 1969 he headed the enterprise, since 1997 he was its supervisor. Under his leadership, nuclear steam generating plants were created for the Arctic icebreakers and the Sevmorput lighter carrier, for nuclear submarines and surface ships of the Navy, and the BN-350 and BN-600 fast neutron reactors were developed.

10th of November. Harry Grodberg, Russian organist, 87

Garry Grodberg is a world-famous Russian organist, performer and interpreter of Bach's music. He was an honorary member of the Bach Society of Leipzig and the Handel Society of Germany, founder of the Bach Service festival in Kaliningrad and the Bach Festival in Tver. In Soviet times, records with his recordings were sold in huge numbers.

the 13th of November. Leon Russell, American musician, 74

Russell worked in the genres of country, folk and blues. British singer Elton John, with whom the American recorded the album The Union in 2009, said that the musician has been his idol since the 1970s. His 1970 record Leon Russell featured Joe Cocker, Steve Winwood, Eric Clapton, Mick Jagger, Charlie Watts, Bill Wyman and Ringo Starr, and Bob Dylan appeared on Leon Russell & The Shelter People in 1971 and Dave Mason. In 1977, the musician received a Grammy for This Masquerade.

November 25. Fidel Castro, revolutionary and leader of Cuba, 90 years old

Every Soviet schoolboy knew the name of Fidel Castro Ruz at one time. A fearless commander who landed in Cuba with a detachment of associates and overthrew the dictatorship of Batista after a guerrilla war in the Sierra Maestra mountains, a true friend of the USSR and the permanent leader of the Island of Freedom, Castro was a symbol of a new path for the former colonies. Cuba survived the American blockade, sent its soldiers around the world to fight against imperialism. The country under the leadership of Castro continued to follow the socialist path after the fall of the Soviet Union. Fidel stepped down from power only in 2008 for health reasons, handing over the posts to his younger brother Raul. Before his death, the commandant bequeathed that his name should not be given to streets and squares, and forbade erecting monuments to himself in order to avoid a cult of personality.

November 25. Polina Oliveros, American accordionist and composer, 84

Oliveros began experimenting with expanding the possibilities of electronic music in the early 1960s, but the composer's most significant work was within the Deep Listening Band, which she founded, recording music in heightened resonance spaces. Oliveros coined the term "Deep Listening" to express creativity through active listening to environmental sounds and meditative music.

November 25. Ivan (Vano) Mikoyan, aircraft designer at Mikoyan Design Bureau, 89 years old

Son of party leader Anastas Mikoyan and nephew of aircraft designer Artem Mikoyan. Worked in KB since 1953. He was the lead designer for the MiG-21 and MiG-23 aircraft. Since 1973 - Deputy Chief Designer of the MiG-29 aircraft, engaged in the improvement and testing of aircraft.

November 28. Mark Taimanov, chess player, 90

Taimanov became a grandmaster in 1952. He participated in the championships of Leningrad from the age of 19 (1945) until 1998, he became the winner five times. In the championships of the USSR he played 23 times, in 1956 he became the champion. In 1971, he lost the match for the world crown to Bobby Fischer with a score of 0:6, which was a shock to the Soviet chess leadership. At the customs, they found Solzhenitsyn's book published abroad by Taimanov, after which the chess player was deprived of the title of master of sports and became restricted to travel abroad. In 2014, Grandmaster Taimanov's chess school was opened in St. Petersburg.

November 28. Jim Delligati, creator of the Big Mac sandwich, 98

In 1957, Jim Delligati became one of the first American entrepreneurs to buy a McDonald's franchise. At first, the menu of these restaurants consisted of hamburgers, cheeseburgers, french fries and milkshakes. The most famous McDonald's dish, the Big Mac sandwich with two cutlets instead of one, was invented by Delligati only in 1967. The idea turned out to be successful. Within two years, the Big Mac accounted for as much as 19 percent of sales. This is not Delligati's only contribution to the history of McDonald's: in 1970, he invented the Egg McMuffin, which formed the basis of a separate breakfast menu.

5th of December. Heydar Dzhemal, Chairman of the Islamic Committee of Russia, theologian, 69 years old

Jemal began his social and political activities in the late Soviet era. In 1990, he took part in the creation of the Islamic Renaissance Party in Astrakhan, and in 1995, with his participation, the interregional public movement "Islamic Committee" appeared. In 1999, he tried to enter the State Duma on the list of the Movement in Support of the Army bloc. Dzhemal repeatedly made ambiguous statements, in particular indirectly endorsing the actions of suicide bombers.

December 7th. Greg Lake, British musician, member of King Crimson and Emerson, Lake and Palmer, 69

Greg Lake sang and played bass on the first two King Crimson albums. The first of them - In The Court Of The Crimson King (1969) - is one of the masterpieces of music of the second half of the 20th century. In 1970, Lake joined one of the most influential art and progressive rock bands: Emerson, Lake and Palmer (ELP). In 1975, he released the solo song I Believe in Father Christmas, which became very popular in the UK. After the collapse of ELP in 1979, he continued his solo career. Lake died a few months later following the death of friend and fellow ELP keyboardist Keith Emerson.

December 8th. John Glenn, American astronaut, 95 years old.

American astronaut John Glenn, the first in US history to make an orbital flight and visited space at the age of 77, has died at the age of 96. Glenn became the third person in world history, after Soviet cosmonauts Yuri Gagarin and German Titov, to complete an orbital space flight. On February 20, 1962, on the Mercury-Atlas-6 spacecraft, he circled the Earth three times, upon his return he was awarded the NASA Distinguished Service Medal.

December 13th. Evgeny Yufit, Russian director, founder of "parallel cinema" and necrorealism, 55 years old

"Parallel Cinema", one of the founders of which was Yufit, is an underground trend in Soviet cinema in the 1970s and 1980s. The main stylistic features of the movement were apoliticality, independence from official structures, as well as an appeal to the themes of violence, perversion and death, which also distinguishes the direction of necrorealism. Among the most famous films of the director are such films as "Daddy, Santa Claus is dead", "Silver Heads" and "Killed by Lightning". Yufit is also known as an artist and photographer. His works are presented in the halls of the State Russian Museum, the Netherlands Film Museum, the New York Museum of Modern Art, the Moscow Museum of Modern Art.

December 13th. Thomas Schelling, Nobel Laureate in Economics, 95

The most famous work of this American economist was the "Strategy of Conflict" published in 1960, which was included in the list of the 100 most influential books in the West since 1945. This work is one of the key in game theory. Schelling also became famous as the first scientist to use the expression "collateral damage" in a speech. It refers to casualties among persons against whom no hostile action was originally planned, such as civilians during a mass bombing of enemy targets.

December 14th. Gennady Tsygurov, hockey player, ice hockey coach, 74 years old

The coaching career of Gennady Tsygurov turned out to be brighter than the game one. When he was a hockey player, he played for the Chelyabinsk Traktor for 17 years, his highest achievement was the bronze medals of the USSR championship. As a coach, Tsygurov worked with such teams as Lada Togliatti, Avangard Omsk, Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk, and the Tver HC MVD. The specialist managed to lead Lada twice to victory in the Russian championship, with Avangard he won silver medals in the national championship. In 1999, the Russian youth team led by Tsygurov took the gold of the World Championship.

December 23rd. Vesna Vulovich, 67-year-old survivor of a fall from a height of 10 kilometers

In 1972, the plane on which Vesna Vulovich worked as a stewardess was blown up by Croatian terrorists. The plane fell from a height of 10,160 meters. All crew members and passengers, except Vesna, were killed. Rescuers found a 22-year-old flight attendant under the rubble. She received numerous injuries, but survived. For 27 days the girl was in a coma, it took her 16 months to fully recover. A miraculous rescue brought fame to Vesna Vulovich. The Guinness Book of Records recognized her as the person who survived a fall without a parachute from the highest height in history. The woman continued to work in the airline, and in the nineties she became one of the prominent critics of the Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic. In 2000, Vesna Vulovich was actively involved in the events that led to his resignation.

December 24th. Rick Parfitt, Status Quo vocalist, 68

Parfitt rose to fame as a member of Status Quo, a British band known for their allegiance to energetic and straightforward rock 'n' roll. The team gained worldwide popularity thanks to such hits as Down Down, Rockin "All Over the World (a cover version of a song by John Fogerty) and In The Army Now (a cover version of a song by the Dutch duo Bolland & Bolland). In the summer of 2016, Parfitt suffered a heart attack, and in December he went to a Spanish hospital complaining of pain in his shoulder.According to the manager of Status Quo, the musician died of a serious infection.

December 25th. Elizaveta Glinka, aka Doctor Lisa, Executive Director of the Fair Help Foundation, 54

Elizaveta Glinka is a pediatric resuscitator and anesthesiologist by education. In the United States, she was introduced to the work of hospices, after which she graduated from Dartmouth Medical School with a degree in palliative medicine. Dr. Lisa participated in the work of the First Moscow Hospice, created the first hospice at the Oncological Hospital in Kyiv. In 2007, in Moscow, Glinka founded the Fair Aid International Public Organization, which provided support to cancer patients, the poor and the homeless. Her foundation participated in the collection of aid for the victims of forest fires in 2011 and floods in Krymsk in 2012. Dr. Liza has repeatedly visited the Donbass and Syria with humanitarian missions. Glinka died in a Tu-154 plane crash en route to Syrian Latakia. She was carrying medical supplies to Tishrin University Hospital.

December 25th. Valery Khalilov and 64 members of the Alexandrov Ensemble

Almost the entire choir of the Academic Song and Dance Ensemble of the Russian Army named after A.V. Alexandrova died in a plane crash over the Black Sea. On board was also the artistic director of the group, conductor Valery Khalilov, artists of the dance troupe, musicians of the orchestra. They flew to Syria to perform during a New Year's concert for military personnel at the Russian Khmeimim military base.

December 25th. George Michael, British singer, 53

Against the background of many deaths in 2016, the departure of George Michael was completely unexpected. The singer was not sick, although there are now rumors about his heroin addiction. Michael planned to release a new album next year. Glory came to him in the mid-1980s, when Michael was a member of the pop duo Wham!. After the breakup of this duo, he began a successful solo career. Being modest and shy by nature, George Michael preferred a defiantly sexy image on stage. He often shocked the audience with frank songs. In 1998, he publicly admitted that he was gay. Michael, like no one else, managed to adequately perform Queen songs.

27th of December. Carrie Fisher, American actress who plays Princess Leia, 60

Fisher has starred in films such as Sweet Revenge, Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, and The Suburb. Fame brought her the role of Princess Leia in the fantastic film epic directed by George Lucas "Star Wars". She starred in four films of the saga: “Episode IV. A New Hope (1977), Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back (1980), Episode VI: Return of the Jedi (1983). The last time she appeared on the screens was in 2015, when the movie Star Wars: The Force Awakens was released.

December 28th. Debbie Reynolds, American actress, mother of Carrie Fisher, 84

Reynolds mostly starred in comedies, most famous for her role in the film Singing in the Rain. She also successfully played in the films "The Unsinkable Molly Brown", "The Singing Nun" and "American Divorce". The actress died the day after the death of her daughter, Carrie Fisher.

December 30th. William Salice, creator of Kinder Surprise chocolate eggs, 83 years old.

William Salice, creator of the Kinder Surprise chocolate eggs, has died in Italy. At the age of 27, he began his career at Ferrero, a major manufacturer of chocolate, sweets and confectionery. Over time, the man became the right hand of the owner of the company, industrialist Michele Ferrero, who is known as the inventor of Nutella chocolate paste. In the early seventies, Salica was tasked with finding a solution to the seasonal demand for Ferrero's chocolate Easter eggs. They were sold out before Easter, and the rest of the year the equipment was idle. Salice suggested hiding inside the chocolate "shell" a plastic container with toy parts for self-assembly. The idea turned out to be successful. For forty years, Ferrero has sold billions of Kinder Surprises.

The cause of death of the 65-year-old singer was acute heart failure.

The rhythm and blues hit singer has released 20 albums, many of which have gone platinum.

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The famous British singer from liver cancer on January 10th. The 69-year-old musician struggled with the disease for about 18 months.

He released 25 music albums and made a huge contribution to modern rock culture.


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Inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame. The athlete is recognized as one of the greatest boxers of the century.


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The 78-year-old People's Artist of the USSR, a representative of the famous circus dynasty and the general director of the Russian State Circus from 2003 to 2009 was awarded many awards, in particular the Order of Merit for the Fatherland, IV degree.


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September 28th. A 93-year-old leader with a massive cerebral hemorrhage. After his death, he became an organ donor.

Shimon Peres ruled the country from 2007 to 2014. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his contribution to peace in the Middle East.


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October 12 from kidney failure. Deterioration of health followed after the hemodialysis procedure on 9 October.

The monk took the throne in 1946 and sat on it for over 70 years.


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The 101-year-old artist is recognized as the oldest acting actor on the planet. In addition to working in the theater, "The Pig and the Shepherd", "Carnival Night", "The Taming of the Shrew", "Ten Little Indians", "Matchmakers".


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November 2 . Cardiac arrest occurred in Rostov-on-Don, where he arrived with the new program "Let there always be sunshine."
. The Grand Commandant suffered from a long illness.

December 19th . The attacker shot the diplomat several times in the back while shouting "Allah Akbar" at the Center for Contemporary Art.

The Russian diplomat and Korean scholar has worked as the Russian Ambassador to Turkey since 2013.


December 25, 2016 . The musician died at his home in Goring. Law enforcement officers who arrived at the place of death did not find anything suspicious.

George Michael's agent said the singer died of a heart attack. It is also known that in recent years the artist has struggled with drug addiction.

08.01.1947 − 10.01.2016

For the last year and a half of his life, the legendary British rocker struggled with liver cancer, but, unfortunately, the disease took over, the doctors could not do anything. On January 10, two days after the release of his latest album Blackstar, the 69-year-old musician passed away in the company of his family. Throughout the months of illness, Bowie did not advertise his diagnosis and continued to work, recording his 27th album.

Alan Rickman

21.02. 1946 — 14.01. 2016

The news of the actor's passing struck and shocked fans of his talent and all fans of the Harry Potter film franchise, in which Rickman played potions professor Severus Snape. Rickman suffered from pancreatic cancer for several years, which caused his death. The actor did not live just a few days before his 70th birthday.

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Alexandra Zavyalova

04.02.1936 — 03.02.2016

The most famous Zavyalova brought the painting "Shadows disappear at noon" in 1971. Despite the popularity of the tape, the directors did not invite the actress to "loud" films, and she did not work in major projects for more than 20 years. At this time, Zavyalova struggled with depression and was treated several times in a psychiatric hospital.

Zavyalova did not live two days before her eightieth birthday. Despite her age, the actress did not die at all due to a state of health. During the investigation, it turned out that her son Peter was involved in the death of a woman. The young man killed his mother while drunk. The show “Live” on the channel “Russia 1” was attended by former colleagues of the actress, journalists, as well as the grandson of the actress Dmitry, the son of her eldest daughter, who said that his once famous grandmother wanted to help Peter, suffering from alcoholism, to the last.

Harper Lee

28.04.1926 — 19.04.2016


The American writer has died at the age of 90. Harper Lee is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning novel To Kill a Mockingbird. He saw the light in 1960. The book was published with a total circulation of 30 million copies and has been translated into many languages. Since the publication of the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, the writer has led a closed life. Her second book was published only in 2015. Go Set a Watchman is set 20 years after the events of the first novel. His manuscript was found in old papers by the lawyer of the writer Tonya Carter. Some believe that the novel should not have been published out of respect for the author.

Umberto Eco

05.01.1932 — 19.02.2016


The famous Italian writer and philosopher, author of the books "The Name of the Rose", "Foucault's Pendulum" and others, Umberto Eco has died at the age of 85. Eco was born in the Italian town of Alessandria. In 1954 he graduated from the University of Turin, where he studied medieval philosophy and literature. The writer worked on television, was a columnist for the major newspaper Espresso, taught aesthetics and cultural theory at the universities of Turin, Florence and Milan. Eco was an honorary doctor of many foreign universities and a knight of the French officer's Legion of Honor.

Eco wrote his first novel, The Name of the Rose, in 1980, when he was 48 years old. For the broad masses, this work is a complexly constructed detective story; for a narrower audience, a historical novel with unique information about the era; religion.

Eco's last book, Number Zero, was published in 2015.

Natalya Krachkovskaya

24.11.1938 — 03.03.2016


Krachkovskaya is a Soviet and Russian theater and film actress, known for the films “12 Chairs”, “Ivan Vasilyevich Changes Profession”, “Be My Husband”, “It Can't Be!”, “Pokrovsky Gates”. Her career spanned over 40 years. Natalya Leonidovna was hospitalized on February 27 with a diagnosis of myocardial infarction. The condition of the artist was assessed as serious, the doctors did everything possible to save her life. Krachkovskaya was connected to a ventilator, but she had a large number of concomitant diseases.

Prince

07.06.1958 — 21.04 2016


Legendary singer Prince Rogers Nelson, known as Prince, died on April 21 at the age of 57. According to a statement made by the police, the patrol arrived on a call to the Paisley Park studio in Shanhassen, Minnesota, USA. The singer's body was found in the elevator with no signs of life. He was given first aid, but the musician never regained consciousness. At 10 am he was declared dead.

On April 24, the artist's body was cremated in Minnesota. The farewell ceremony was held in the presence of relatives and friends of the singer. Cremation took place immediately after the autopsy. The relatives took such a step to avoid publicity.

A month and a half went on to investigate the death of a musician. A toxicology report showed that Prince died due to an overdose of the powerful opioid pain reliever fentanyl, which is dozens of times more potent than morphine.

Many believe that Prince repeated the fate of his main competitor Michael Jackson. The king of pop died at the age of 50 due to the fault of the attending physician - he gave him an injection of sleeping pills, which turned out to be critical for the depleted body of the musician. But unlike Jackson, Prince injected himself.

Muhammad Ali

17.01.1942 — 03.06.2016


The legendary boxer Muhammad Ali died at the age of 75. For the past 30 years, the boxer has been battling Parkinson's disease. This diagnosis was made to the athlete in 1984 - the news caused a considerable resonance in society. Doctors engaged in large-scale research in an attempt to prove that professional boxing brings irreparable harm to health. In America, they are seriously going to ban professional boxing. Nevertheless, Mohammed himself actively opposed such claims and plans. According to him, for an African American, boxing at a professional level is the only way to achieve something in life.

During his professional career, Muhammad Ali fought 61 fights, of which 56 ended in victory. In 1999, he was named "Athlete of the Century." Mohammed has been married four times and has nine children: two sons and seven daughters.

Anton Yelchin

11.03.1989 — 19.06.2016


Hollywood actor of Russian origin Anton Yelchin died at the age of 27. He died under strange circumstances: he was crushed by his own car, which rolled downhill. A few seconds before his death, Anton got out of his Grand Cherokee jeep to open the front gate of the house. At this point, the car was on a hill. Apparently, the car was not on the handbrake, but in neutral gear - the jeep rolled down, pushing Yelchin into the fence. The investigation and independent experts argued that car manufacturers were to blame for Yelchin's death. The actor's parents sued the Fiat Chrysler dealership, but they argue that the actor himself is to blame - he misused the car.

Which Russian celebrities died in 2016? The current year has become the last for many, including Russian celebrities who died in 2016. Today we remember some of the stars. SUBSCRIBE https://www.youtube.com/znayobovsem/?sub_confirmation=1 Vkontakte community https://vk.com/znayobovsem #RussianCelebrities #RussianStars #Show Business #KnowAboutEverything Natalya Krachkovskaya November 24, 1938 - March 3, 2016 Beloved by many actress and Honored Artist of Russia Natalya Krachkovskaya died at the age of 78 after a long illness. Albert Filozov June 25, 1937 - April 11, 2016 People's Artist of Russia Albert Filozov died at the age of 78. The cause of death was an incurable cancer. Pavel Usanov August 11, 1975 - April 19, 2016 The forty-year-old bass player of the Lyube group Pavel Usanov died from severe skull injuries that he received as a result of the attack. Nina Arkhipova May 1, 1921 - April 24, 2016 People's Artist of the RSFSR died at the age of ninety-four. Felix Antipov May 17, 1942 - May 5, 2016 People's Artist of Russia Felix Antipov died at the age of 73 after a serious illness. Sergei Nikolaev November 2, 1946 - May 16, 2016 Actor Sergei Nikolaev died at the age of 70. He had serious heart problems. Alexei Zharkov March 27, 1948 - June 5, 2016 Actor Alexei Zharkov died at the age of 68, the health of the people's artist was shaken by a stroke, and after a new attack he died. Irina Efremova July 28, 1963 - September 9, 2016 Actress Irina Efremova died at 53 from heart failure. Lyudmila Ivanova June 22, 1933 - October 7, 2016 People's Artist of the RSFSR Lyudmila Ivanova died at the age of 84. Vladimir Zeldin February 10, 1915 - October 31, 2016 Theater and film actor, People's Artist of the USSR Vladimir Zeldin died at the age of 102. Oleg Popov July 31, 1930 - November 2, 2016 At the age of 86, the legendary circus clown Oleg Popov died of cardiac arrest. Vyacheslav Shalevich May 27, 1934 - December 21, 2016 On December 21, after a serious illness at the age of 82, People's Artist of the RSFSR Vyacheslav Shalevich died. When the video was ready, the terrible news came. On December 25, 2016, a Tu-154 plane crashed with 92 people on board. Bright memory. The phrase "Watch the channel Know about everything and know about everything!" send to [email protected] Channel "Know about everything." Here you will find the top most relevant topics, the best selections of videos, interesting facts, show business news and shocking details from the life of stars. And also all the most amazing, strange and unusual about our life. Subscribe to the channel, comment on the video, put likes, share a good mood with friends and know about everything. ★ SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHANNEL https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWVMzWdBItcyjBVkygsMTwg?sub_confirmation=1★ Group in contact