By Olivier Holmey Dec 19 (Reuters) – A look back at some of the most notable figures who died this year, from Jane Goodall to Hulk Hogan. RELIGION Pope Francis, 88 years old “How much harm the women and men of the Church do when they erect walls,” Francis said late in life. “Rigidity is a sin that often enters into clerics.” The first Latin American pontiff shunned much of the papacy’s pomp, softened Catholic attitudes towards homosexuality, and put more women in senior roles than any predecessor. More than 250,000 people attended his funeral in April, according to the Vatican. The Aga Khan, 88 “Your name it is heard in high places; you know the Aga Khan,” Peter Sarstedt sang in 1969. Karim Al Husseini, the fourth Aga Khan, died in February. The wealthy racehorse owner was the hereditary spiritual leader of 15 million Ismaili Muslims. SCIENCE Jane Goodall, 91 The global activist, who turned her childhood love of primates into a lifelong quest to protect the environment, died in October. Jim Lovell, 97 Commander of Apollo 13, NASA's failed 1970 mission to the Moon that was immortalised in a film starring Tom Hanks. James Watson, 97 Biologist whose discovery of the structure of DNA ushered in the age of genetics. CINEMA Robert Redford, 89 Hollywood’s quintessential leading man starred in “The Sting”, “Out of Africa” and “All the President’s Men”. As the founder of the annual Sundance Film Festival, he was also an influential supporter of independent cinema. He died in September. Diane Keaton, 79 Diane Keaton's roles ranged from the tormented wife of a mob boss in Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Godfather” to a kooky Midwesterner in Woody Allen’s “Annie Hall”. She died in October. Gene Hackman, 95 The star of movies "The French Connection" and "Unforgiven" retired from acting some 20 years ago. He, his wife Betsy Arakawa and one of their dogs were found dead in their home in February. Hackman, who was in an advanced state of Alzheimer's, died of heart disease and other factors likely days after Arakawa, his primary caregiver, died of a rare virus spread by mice, according to autopsy results. David Lynch, 78 The writer and director made haunting movies "The Elephant Man" and "Mulholland Drive," as well as the TV series "Twin Peaks", a surrealist murder mystery. He died in January. Claudia Cardinale, 87 The Tunisian-born star of Italian cinema featured in Federico Fellini's "8-1/2" and Sergio Leone's "Once Upon a Time in the West". She died in September. Val Kilmer, 65 Known for playing Iceman in “Top Gun”, Jim Morrison in “The Doors” and Bruce Wayne in “Batman Forever”, the actor died of pneumonia in April. He had been in poor health for years due to throat cancer. Terence Stamp, 87 Terence Stamp was on the verge of becoming a tantric sex teacher at an ashram in India when, in 1977, he heard that he was being considered for the "Superman" film. "I was on the night flight the next day," Stamp later recalled. Getting the role of the arch-villain General Zod in that movie made him a star. He died in August. Rob Reiner, 78 The director of "When Harry Met Sally" and "The Princess Bride" was found dead with his wife Michele, 68, in their Los Angeles home in December. Their son Nick Reiner has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder over the stabbings. SPORT George Foreman, 76 The heavyweight boxing champion lost his first title to Muhammad Ali in their famous 1974 fight in Kinshasa – “The Rumble in the Jungle”. Hulk Hogan, 71 The bleach-blond, mahogany-tanned behemoth became the face of professional wrestling in the 1980s, helping transform the mock combat sport from a seedy spectacle into family-friendly entertainment worth billions of dollars. He died in July. Diogo Jota, 28 The Portuguese soccer player died in July when the Lamborghini he was in veered off the road and burst into flames. Just one month earlier, he had lifted the Premier League trophy for Liverpool. Nicola Pietrangeli, 92 Pietrangeli, Italy’s greatest tennis player before Jannik Sinner, was a master on clay. LITERATURE Tom Stoppard, 88 The Czech-born British playwright dazzled with verbal gymnastics. He died in November. Mario Vargas Llosa, 89 A leading light in Latin American fiction, the Peruvian author and would-be president won the Nobel Prize for literature in 2010. He died in April. Ngugi wa Thiong'o, 87 Kenyan author whose sharp critique of post-independence elites led to prison and exile. Frederick Forsyth, 86 Author of the bestselling novel “The Day of the Jackal”. Jilly Cooper, 88 British author whose 1980s bestsellers were a blend of sex, satire and class-based snobbery. MUSIC Ozzy Osbourne, 76 "The Prince of Darkness" fronted the heavy metal band Black Sabbath in the 1970s. His death in July led to an outpouring of grief in Birmingham, the English city where he grew up. Brian Wilson, 82 The co-founder of the Beach Boys created some of rock’s most enduring songs, “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” and “Good Vibrations”. He died in June. Roberta Flack, 88 Her covers of ballads "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" and "Killing Me Softly with His Song" topped the charts in the 1970s. She died in February. Jimmy Cliff, 81 The Jamaican singer, who along with Bob Marley brought reggae to a global audience, died in November. Ornella Vanoni, 91 Vanoni, a leading voice in Italian music, died in November. Sly Stone, 82 Leader of 1960s funk band Sly and the Family Stone. D'Angelo, 51 The trailblazing neo-soul singer died in October after a prolonged battle with cancer, his family said. Marianne Faithfull, 78 The singer of “As Tears Go By” was the voice of Britain's swinging '60s. She died in January. Alan Bergman, 99 He wrote a song with his future wife on the day they first met. Over the next 60 years they never stopped making music together. Bergman, one half of one of the greatest American songwriting duos, died in July. BUSINESS Giorgio Armani, 91 For the Italian designer, who died in September, elegance meant simplicity. That principle would produce bestselling minimalist suits and turn his eponymous brand into a conglomerate worth billions of dollars. His will, which instructs heirs to sell a large part of the Armani group, set off a feeding frenzy. Eddie Jordan, 76 Charismatic Irish entrepreneur whose team gave driver Michael Schumacher his Formula One debut in 1991. Frederick Smith, 80 He started the global delivery company FedEx with 14 small planes in 1973. By the time he resigned as CEO in 2022, FedEx operated some 700 aircraft and 86,000 vehicles. JOURNALISM Hussam al-Masri, 49 The Israeli military fired on a hospital in the Gaza Strip on August 25. Five journalists, including Reuters cameraman Hussam al-Masri, died in the attack. Their deaths are among some 200 journalist killings by Israel that it has yet to fully explain. Anthony Grey, 87 As a Reuters correspondent, Grey was detained for over two years in 1960s China. That experience shaped the rest of his life. Ruth Weiss, 101 The journalist bore witness to some of the 20th century's greatest crimes, from the antisemitism of Nazi Germany to the racism of apartheid South Africa. POLITICS Dick Cheney, 84 One of the most powerful vice presidents in U.S. history, Cheney was a driving force behind the invasion of Iraq in 2003. He died in November. Charlie Kirk, 31 The political activist and vociferous debater was credited with building Donald Trump's base among younger voters. His assassination in September set off a pro-Trump crackdown affecting more than 600 Americans. Jean-Marie Le Pen, 96 The former head of France's leading far-right party died in January. In 2015, his daughter and successor Marine Le Pen had him excluded from the organisation for saying once more that the Nazi gas chambers were “merely a detail” of World War Two history. After his death, she said she would “never forgive” herself for that decis…
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