Lista de Personas Famosas que murieron en 2004
Antoine Abel
Antoine Abel poeta de Seychelles nacido el 27 de noviembre de 1934 en Anse Boileau y fallecido el 19 de octubre de 2004 en la isla de Mahé, es considerado el padre de la literatura de Seychelles.
Jean Rouch
Jean Rouch Cineasta, ingeniero y antropólogo francés. Inspirador de Nouvelle Vague, también es conocido como el creador de películas etnográficas notables y de docufiction, uno de los fundadores del Cinema Verité.
Mehmet Sabancı
Mehmet Sabancı, a member in third generation of the renowned Sabancı family in Turkey, was a businessman.
Tappei Shimokawa
Tappei Shimokawa was a Japanese actor. He attended Musashino Art University, but withdrew before completing his degree. In 1939, he joined Bungakuza Theatre Company but left in 1952. He is well known for his roles in Taiyō ni Hoero! and Akira Kurosawa`s Dodes'ka-den.
Alexei Khvostenko
Alexei Khvostenko was a Russian avant-garde poet, singer-songwriter, artist and sculptor. Khvostenko is also frequently referred to by the nickname Khvost, meaning "tail".
John Charles
John Charles, CBE fue un futbolista Galés.
Alexander Bovin
Aleksandr Yevgenyevich Bovin was a Soviet and Russian journalist, political scientist and diplomat, notable for being the first Soviet, and then Russian ambassador to Israel after the re-establishment of Soviet-Israeli diplomatic relations. He was a leading journalist of Soviet Union and Russia of the late 20th century. The New York Times called him "one of the most colorful and daring commentators of the late Soviet period" and The Washington Post also said he was "widely regarded as the Soviet Union's most sophisticated and best-informed political commentator".
Egon von Fürstenberg
Eduard Egon Peter Paul Giovanni Prinz zu Fürstenberg fue un diseñador de moda alemán.
Nurnaningsih
Nurnaningsih was an Indonesian actress. She has been described as Indonesia's first sex bomb.
Yavuz Selekman
Yavuz Selekman was a Turkish wrestler and film actor. He competed in the men's Greco-Roman middleweight at the 1964 Summer Olympics.