Lista de Personas Famosas que murieron en 1993
Ryōichi Hattori
Ryōichi Hattori was a Japanese pop and jazz composer. Katsuhisa Hattori is his son. He had a great influence on Japanese pop and was awarded the People's Honor Award. Japanese jazz was downtrodden during World War II, but he created a jazz boom after the war. He composed many songs for various artists such as Noriko Awaya, Shizuko Kasagi, Ichimaru and Ichirō Fujiyama. He also composed Li Xianglan's song "Suzhou Nocturne", which created an embarrassing controversy over half a century though it was not a militaristic song.
Jesús Castro González
Jesús Antonio Castro González, conocido como Castro, fue un futbolista español que jugaba de portero. Desarrolló toda su carrera deportiva en el Real Sporting de Gijón de la Primera División de España. Además, era hermano del también futbolista Quini. Falleció en la playa cántabra de Amió después de salvar la vida de dos niños ingleses y su padre que se estaban ahogando.
Robert De Niro, Sr.
Robert Henry De Niro, más conocido como Robert De Niro Sr., fue un pintor expresionista abstracto estadounidense de origen italiano, padre del actor Robert De Niro Jr.
Tsunemi Tsuda
Tsunemi Tsuda was a Japanese baseball player of the Hiroshima Toyo Carp of Japan's Central League.
Dinmujamed Kunaev
Dinmukhamed Akhmetuly "Dimash" Kunaev fue un político comunista kazajo.
Bernard Bresslaw
Bernard Bresslaw was an English comic actor, best remembered as a member of the Carry On team.
Kentaro Yano
Kentaro Yano was a mathematician working on differential geometry who introduced the Bochner–Yano theorem.
Harry Bush
Harry Bush (1925–1994) was an American artist known for his homoerotic illustrations. Bush's meticulously detailed boy next door-style depictions of men made him one of the most notable artists of the era of beefcake magazines.
Ichirō Fujiyama
Ichirō Fujiyama , born Takeo Masunaga , was a popular Japanese singer and composer, known for his contribution to Japanese popular music called ryūkōka by his Western classical music skills. He was born in Chūō, Tokyo, and graduated from the Tokyo Music School. Although he was regarded as a tenor singer in Japanese popular music, he was originally a classical baritone singer. He also acted in various films, and was a close friend of Minoru Matsuya (1910–1995). His workroom has been reproduced inside the "NHK museum of broadcasting" as an exhibit.
Sarban
Abdul-Rahim Sārbān' , known as Sarban, was an Afghan singer born in Kabul.