Lista de Personas Famosas que murieron en 2011
Leonora Carrington
Leonora Carrington fue una pintora surrealista y escritora inglesa nacionalizada mexicana.
Jackie Cooper
Jackie Cooper fue un actor nominado al premio Oscar, ganador del premio Emmy como director de televisión, y productor de televisión. Fue un actor infantil que consiguió hacer la transición hacia la carrera de adulto.
Anne Francis
Anne Francis fue una actriz estadounidense.
Tatyana Shmyga
Tatyana Ivanovna Shmyga was a Soviet and Russian operetta/musical theatre performer. She went on to act in films as well. She was a People's Artist of the USSR (1978).
Gay Kindersley
Gay Kindersley was a British champion amateur jump jockey, horse trainer and a "drinker, gambler and serial womaniser".
Vitaly Shlykov
Vitaly Shlykov was a spymaster in the GRU, Russian deputy minister of defence and founder of the influential Council for Foreign and Defence Policy.
Alfred Czech
Alfred Zech, también conocido como Alfred Czèch fue un niño soldado y posteriormente constructor alemán de ascendencia polaca, famoso por haber sido condecorado con la Cruz de Hierro al final de la Segunda Guerra Mundial.
Andrew Gold
Andrew Maurice Gold was an American multi-instrumentalist, singer, songwriter, and record producer who influenced much of the sound of Los Angeles-dominated pop rock in the 1970s. Gold played on scores of records by other artists, most notably Linda Ronstadt's, and had his own success with the U.S. Top 40 hits "Lonely Boy" (1977) and "Thank You for Being a Friend" (1978), as well as the UK Top Five hit "Never Let Her Slip Away" (1978). In the 1980s, he had further international chart success as half of Wax, a collaboration with 10cc's Graham Gouldman.
Loulou de la Falaise
Loulou de la Falaise was an English fashion muse and designer of fashion, accessories and jewellery associated with Yves Saint Laurent. Author Judith Thurman, writing in The New Yorker magazine, called La Falaise "the quintessential Rive Gauche haute bohémienne". The daughter of an Anglo-Irish fashion model and a French Marquis, she helped inspire Saint Laurent's 1966 women's tuxedo Le Smoking and his see-through blouses, according to The Independent.
Robert Berks
Robert Berks was an American sculptor, industrial designer and planner. He created hundreds of bronze sculptures and monuments including the Mary McLeod Bethune Memorial, and the Albert Einstein Memorial in Washington, D.C.