Lista de Personas Famosas que murieron en 2003
Guillermo González Calderoni
Guillermo González Calderoni fue el comandante de la Policía Judicial de México e importante servidor del Procurador General de México, quien acusó a Raúl Salinas de Gortari, hermano de Carlos Salinas de Gortari, de estar involucrado en el tráfico de estupefacientes. Fue asimismo acusado de varios actos de corrupción.
Trevor Goddard
Trevor Joseph Goddard fue un actor y boxeador inglés. Conocido por haber interpretado a Kano en la película de Mortal Kombat y como el teniente comandante Mic Brumby en la serie de televisión JAG.
Jean Drucker
Jean Drucker was a French Television executive. He was born in Vire (Calvados) and died of a heart attack in Mollégès (Bouches-du-Rhône).
Gene Anthony Ray
Gene Anthony Ray fue un bailarín y actor estadounidense conocido por interpretar el papel de Leroy Johnson en la serie de televisión Fama (1982-1987).
Hume Cronyn
Hume Cronyn, OC fue un actor teatral y cinematográfico canadiense, con una prolongada carrera artística a lo largo de la cual actuó con frecuencia junto a su segunda esposa, Jessica Tandy.
Peter Blunt
Major-General Peter Blunt, was a British Army officer and businessman. As a logistics officer in 1959, he was awarded the George Medal for risking his own life to save one of his drivers. He was the father of politician Crispin Blunt and grandfather of actress Emily Blunt.
Yuri Senkevich
Yuri Aleksandrovich Senkevich was a Soviet doctor, and scientist. He is a Candidate of Sciences. Became famous in the USSR and worldwide for his participation in the Ra Expedition, in which he sailed together with Thor Heyerdahl.
Kató Lomb
Kató Lomb was a Hungarian interpreter, translator and one of the first simultaneous interpreters in the world. Originally she graduated in physics and chemistry, but her interest soon led her to languages. Native in Hungarian, she was able to interpret fluently in nine or ten languages, and she translated technical literature and read belles-lettres in six languages. She was able to understand journalism in further eleven languages. As she put it, altogether she earned money with sixteen languages. She learned these languages mostly by self-effort, as an autodidact. Her aims to acquire these languages were most of all practical, to satisfy her interest.
Susan Travers
Susan Mary Gillian Travers was an Englishwoman who served in the French Red Cross as a nurse and ambulance driver during the Second World War. She later became the only woman to be matriculated in the French Foreign Legion, having also served in French Indochina, during the First Indochina War.
Mamie Till
Mamie Elizabeth Till-Mobley was an American educator and activist. She was the mother of Emmett Till, who was murdered in Mississippi on August 28, 1955 at the age of 14, after allegedly offending a white cashier woman, Carolyn Bryant, at the grocery store. For her son's funeral in Chicago, Mamie Till insisted that the casket containing his body be left open, because, in her words, "I wanted the world to see what they did to my baby." Born in Mississippi, Till-Mobley moved with her parents to the Chicago area during the Great Migration. After her son's murder she became an educator and activist in the Civil Rights Movement.