Lista de Personas Famosas que murieron en 1973
Takis Hristoforidis
Takis Christoforidis was a Greek actor and cousin of Periklis Christoforidis.
Monica Wyldbore-Smith
Helmut Ruska
Helmut Ruska was a German physician and biologist from Heidelberg. After earning his medical degree, he spent several years working as a physician at hospitals in Heidelberg and Berlin. During this time, he also worked closely with his brother Ernst Ruska (1906-1988) and brother-in-law Bodo von Borries (1905-56), who were both research scientists at Siemens-Reiniger-Werke. Ernst Ruska was the inventor of the electron microscope, and later winner of a Nobel Prize. From 1948-1951, Helmut Ruska was a professor at the University of Berlin, in 1952 he moved to the United States where he was a micromorphologist for the New York State Department of Health in Albany. He returned to Germany in 1958 as director of biophysics at the University of Düsseldorf.
J. Hans D. Jensen
Johannes Hans Daniel Jensen fue un físico alemán que compartió la mitad del Premio Nobel de Física de 1963 con Maria Goeppert-Mayer por su propuesta de la estructura nuclear orbital. La otra mitad del premio fue para Eugene Paul Wigner por trabajos no relacionados.
Lila Lee
Lila Lee fue una prominente actriz cinematográfica de los inicios del cine mudo.
Frances Marion
Frances Marion fue una periodista, escritora y guionista de estadounidense, a menudo citada como una de las más renombradas mujeres guionistas del siglo XX, junto a June Mathis y Anita Loos. Fue la primera mujer en ganar dos Óscar como guionista: Óscar al mejor guion adaptado, en 1930 por la película The Big House, y en 1932 Óscar al mejor argumento por The Champ.
Philip Henry Herbert Hulton Preston
Robert Goldwater
Robert Goldwater was an art historian, African arts scholar and the first director of the Museum of Primitive Art, New York, from 1957 to 1973. He was married to the French-born American artist and sculptor Louise Bourgeois.
Alla Tarasova
Alla Konstantinovna Tarasova was a leading actress of Constantin Stanislavski's Moscow Art Theatre from the late 1920s onward.