To put survival periods in context, a Norwegian hospital reviewed 1,218 patient records from 1960–1994 and reported median survival times for several tumor types over this 35 year period as listed in the table below.1
| Name |
Life |
Comments |
Diagnosis |
Survival |
Reference |
| Margo Albert |
1917–1985 |
Mexican-born film actress and dancer. |
|
|
3 |
| Tony Anholt |
1941–2002 |
An actor best known for his role as Charles Frere in the 80s TV series Howards' Way. |
|
|
4 |
| Pamela Britton |
1923–1974 |
An actress who played Lorelei Brown on the television program My Favorite Martian. |
|
2 weeks |
5 |
| Patrick Cargill |
1918–1996 |
British film and television actor who had been in ill health since being treated for a brain tumour and died a year later. Initially his death was blamed on a 'hit and run' accident |
|
|
6 |
| Bert Convy |
1933–1991 |
Stage, film and TV actor/host. |
|
15 months |
7 |
| Ross Davidson |
1949–2006 |
An actor who played Andy O'Brien in the BBC soap opera, EastEnders. |
glioblastoma multiforme |
20 months |
8 |
| Brenda De Banzie |
1915–1981 |
British actress of stage and film; died during or after surgery on a benign brain tumour. |
|
|
9 |
| Esmeray Diriker |
1950–2002 |
A singer and actress. |
|
|
10 |
| Sandy Duncan |
1946— |
Tony Award nominated Broadway actor, television star. |
|
1971– |
11 |
| Linda Gary |
1944–1995 |
Voice artist for Scooby Doo and other animated series. |
|
|
12 |
| Brian Glover |
1934–1997 |
An actor and former professional wrestler and teacher. |
|
|
13 |
| Richard Greene |
1918–1985 |
An actor best known as the star of the long running British TV series The Adventures of Robin Hood. |
|
3 years |
14 |
| Olivia Hamnett |
19??–2001 |
English born Australian actor. |
|
|
15 |
| Susan Hayward |
1917–1975 |
Academy Award-winning film actress. |
|
2 years |
16 |
| Richard Jordan |
1938–1993 |
An actor of stage, screen and film. |
|
|
1718 |
| Martin Kemp |
1961— |
An actor and former pop musician with brother Gary Kemp in the band Spandau Ballet. |
|
1995— |
19 |
| Arthur Kennedy |
1914–1990 |
Stage and film actor; Tony Award winner. |
|
|
20 |
| Lois Kibbee |
1922–1993 |
An actress best remembered for her role of Geraldine Weldon Whitney Saxon on the TV soap opera The Edge of Night. |
|
|
21 |
| Alan Lake |
1940–1984 |
An actor and widower of actress Diana Dors. Committed suicide. |
|
|
22 |
| Eugene Gordon Lee |
1933–2005 |
Child actor who played Porky in the Our Gang (Little Rascals) comedies. |
metastatic tumor |
|
23 |
| Katherine Locke |
1910–1995 |
A leading Broadway actress in the late 1930s. |
|
|
24 |
| Meredith MacRae |
1944–2000 |
A TV actress/host. |
|
|
25 |
| Victor Maddern |
1926–1993 |
A supporting actor on film. |
|
|
26 |
| Lea De Mae |
1976–2004 |
A pornographic model and actress. |
glioblastoma multiforme |
4 months |
27 |
| Joseph Maher |
1933–1998 |
Irish-born stage actor and film/TV character actor. |
|
|
28 |
| Irish McCalla |
1928–2002 |
A film and television actress best known as the title star of the 1950s TV series Sheena, Queen of the Jungle. |
|
under 18 months |
29 |
| Buster Merryfield |
1920–1999 |
The actor who played Uncle Albert in the BBC comedy Only Fools and Horses. |
|
|
30 |
| Bueno de Mesquita |
1918–2005 |
A comedian, actor and stage artist, known for his ability to make funny faces; lung cancer also (probable metastasis). |
|
|
3132 |
| Greg Morris |
1933–1996 |
African-American television actor (Mission: Impossible series). |
|
|
33 |
| Pola Negri |
1894–1987 |
A Polish-American silent movie actress, famous for playing a femme fatale role. Refused treatment; died of pneumonia. |
|
2 years |
34 |
| Jerry Paris |
1925–1986 |
An actor and director best known for his role as Jerry Helper on The Dick Van Dyke Show. |
|
|
35 |
| Pat Paulsen |
1927–1997 |
Comedian, starred on the Smothers Brothers television show in the 1960s. |
|
|
36 |
| Slim Pickens |
1919–1983 |
Rodeo clown turned film actor (Dr. Strangelove). |
|
|
3738 |
| Kate Reid |
1930–1993 |
Noted Canadian actress of stage, film and television. |
|
|
39 |
| Mark Ruffalo |
1967— |
American film actor. The operation to remove the benign tumor caused him temporary partial paralysis. |
acoustic neuroma |
2001— |
40 |
| Irene Ryan |
c. 1902–1973 |
"Granny" from The Beverly Hillbillies. Never told of tumor; died after suffering a stroke onstage while performing in Pippin, her Broadway debut. |
|
|
41 |
| Zachary Scott |
1914–1965 |
American film actor; specialized in villains (Mildred Pierce) |
|
|
4243 |
| Alexis Smith |
1921–1993 |
Canadian-born film, stage, musical theatre and television actress. |
|
|
44 |
| Michelle Stafford |
1965— |
An actress best known for her role as Phyllis Summers Abbott Newman on the soap opera The Young and the Restless. |
|
1985— |
45 |
| Werner Stocker |
1955–1993 |
Bavarian Film Award (Bayerischer Filmpreis) for Best Young Actors shared with Dana Vávrová for Herbstmilch; featured role in television's Highlander: The Series. |
|
|
46 |
| Kinuyo Tanaka |
1910–1977 |
A Japanese film actress and director. |
|
|
47 |
| Anya Taranda |
1915–1970 |
A model, showgirl, actress and wife of renowned songwriter Harold Arlen. |
|
|
48 |
| Elizabeth Taylor |
1932— |
Academy Award winning actor, star of numerous films. |
meningioma |
1997– |
49 |
| Bobby Van |
1928–1980 |
Broadway musician and actor. |
|
|
50 |
| Henry Victor |
1892–1945 |
A character actor (played "Hercules") in the 1932 film, Freaks. |
|
|
5152 |
| Kim Walker |
1968–2001 |
An actress whose most notable role was as Heather Chandler in the film Heathers. |
malignant glioma |
under 2 years |
53 |
| Penelope Dudley Ward |
1914–1982 |
British actress and socialite; wife of acclaimed film director Carol Reed |
|
|
54 |
| Johnny Wayne |
1918–1990 |
Canadian comedian/entertainer (Wayne and Shuster). |
|
|
55 |
| Bill Williams |
1915–1992 |
A movie actor who starred as Kit Carson in the 1950s TV series Adventures of Kit Carson. |
|
|
56 |
| Jeff Winkless |
1941–2006 |
Composer, TV and voice actor. |
|
|
57 |
| Lee Ae-Jung |
1987–2007 |
a Korean teenage actress |
encephaloma |
|
58 |
| Name |
Life |
Comments |
Diagnosis |
Survival |
Reference |
| Jon Bannenberg |
1929–2002 |
A designer of over 200 yachts. |
|
|
86 |
| Ben Bowen |
2002–2005 |
Huntington, West Virginia child, attracted a great deal of media attention and fundraising efforts. |
ATRT |
1 year |
87 |
| Margaret Brown |
1867–1932 |
Socialite, philanthropist, and activist. Survivor of the Titanic disaster. Portrayed in the 1964 film The Unsinkable Molly Brown and the 1997 film Titanic. |
|
|
88 |
| Johnnie Cochran |
1937–2005 |
Prominent defense attorney. |
|
1 year |
89 |
| Robert W. Funk |
1926–2005 |
An academic theologian, author and founder of the controversial Jesus Seminar. |
|
|
90 |
| Katharina Hammerschmidt |
1943–1975 |
A member of the Baader-Meinhof Gang, one of the most significant terrorist organisations in post-war West Germany. |
|
|
91 |
| Henry Kock |
1952–2005 |
A horticulturist at the University of Guelph Arboretum. |
|
18 months |
92 |
| Anatoli Levchenko |
1941–1988 |
Research cosmonaut. |
|
|
93 |
| Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent |
1906–1968 |
Member of the British royal family |
|
|
94 |
| Marshall McLuhan |
1911–1980 |
Communications theorist and educator. |
|
11 years |
95 |
| Enric Miralles |
1955–2000 |
An architect whose largest work is the Scottish Parliament Building. |
|
|
96 |
| John Cardinal O'Connor |
1920–2000 |
The eleventh bishop (eighth archbishop) of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York |
|
|
97 |
| Deke Slayton |
1924–1993 |
One of the original seven United States astronauts. |
|
|
98 |
| Craig Shergold |
1979— |
A former brain cancer patient who is most famous for receiving over 33 million greeting cards, earning him a place in the Guinness Book of Records. He fully recovered, but the cards are still coming and are no longer welcome. |
|
1989— |
99 |
| Doris Tate |
1924–1992 |
Prominent activist in the victims' rights movement, mother of murder victim Sharon Tate. |
metastatic tumor |
|
100 |
| Charles Whitman |
1941–1966 |
Ascended the University of Texas at Austin's 27-story tower in 1966, and shot passersby in the city and on the campus below before being shot dead by Austin Police. Tumor found on autopsy. |
|
|
101 |
| Richard Wild |
1912–1978 |
Former Chief Justice of New Zealand (1966–1978) |
|
|
102 |
| Mary Hayward Weir |
1915–1968 |
A steel heiress and socialite. |
|
|
103 |
| Frank Wills |
1948–2000 |
The security guard who uncovered the break-in that led to the Watergate scandal. |
|
|
104 |
| Name |
Life |
Comments |
Diagnosis |
Survival |
Reference |
| William "Cat" Anderson |
1916–1981 |
A jazz trumpeter who played with Duke Ellington's orchestra. |
|
|
105 |
| Luther Allison |
1939–1997 |
Blues guitarist. |
metastatic tumor |
less than 1 year |
106 |
| David M. Bailey |
1966– |
Contemporary Christian songwriter and musician. |
Glioblastoma |
July 1996– |
107 |
| Bill Black |
1926–1965 |
Rock and roll bass player, recorded with Elvis Presley during 1954–1958. |
|
|
108 |
| Davey von Bohlen |
1975— |
A musician and songwriter. |
meningioma |
2000— |
109 |
| Ray Bumatai |
1952–2005 |
A musician, comedian and voice actor. |
glioblastoma |
3 years |
110 |
| Gregg Burge |
1957–1998 |
A tap dancer and choreographer |
|
|
111 |
| A. J. Croce |
1971— |
A singer-songwriter and the son of singer-songwriter Jim Croce. |
|
1975— |
112 |
| Celia Cruz |
1925–2003 |
Cuban salsa singer, important figure in Afro-Cuban music. |
|
|
113 |
| William Finn |
1952— |
Tony Award winning Broadway songwriter. Finn wrote the show A New Brain about his experiences. |
1992— |
|
114 |
| Sergio Franchi |
1926–1990 |
Italian-American singer; world-renowned tenor |
|
|
115116 |
| Marie Fredriksson |
1958— |
The lead singer of the Swedish pop duo Roxette |
|
2002— |
117 |
| George Gershwin |
1898–1937 |
Jazz and classical music composer, co-wrote many stage musicals and film scores. |
glioblastoma multiforme |
1 month |
118 |
| Lou Gramm |
1950— |
A rock music vocalist and songwriter best known for his role as the lead vocalist for the rock band Foreigner. |
|
1996— |
119 |
| Bill Haley |
1925–1981 |
Leader of one of the first rock and roll bands, The Comets. |
|
2 years |
120121 |
| George Harrison |
1943–2001 |
Lead guitarist of the Beatles. |
metastatic tumor |
|
122 |
| Simon Jeffes |
1949–1997 |
A guitarist, composer and arranger who was a member of the Penguin Cafe Orchestra. |
|
under 2 years |
123 |
| Barney Kessel |
1923–2004 |
Jazz guitarist who played with Charlie Parker, Billie Holiday, Benny Goodman, Elvis Presley, and the Beach Boys. |
|
|
124 |
| Otto Klemperer |
1885–1973 |
Conductor; father of actor Werner Klemperer. |
|
40 years |
125 |
| John Loder |
1946–2005 |
A sound engineer, record producer and founder of Southern Studios. |
|
under 2 years |
126 |
| John Mack |
1926–2006 |
Principle oboist with the Cleveland Orchestra. |
|
|
127 |
| Brian MacLeod |
1952–1992 |
A musician, songwriter and music producer, best known as a member of the bands Chilliwack and The Headpins. |
|
under 3 years |
128 |
| Bob Marley |
1945–1981 |
Reggae legend. |
metastatic tumor |
|
33 |
| Johnny Mercer |
1909–1976 |
Songwriter and lyricist. |
|
|
129 |
| Ethel Merman |
1908–1984 |
Legendary Broadway singer and actress. |
glioblastoma multiforme |
10 months |
130131 |
| Robert Moog |
1934–2005 |
Inventor of the modern music synthesizer. |
glioblastoma multiforme |
|
132 |
| Ted Mulry |
1947–2001 |
Singer, songwriter and musician, who formed the band Ted Mulry Gang (TMG). |
|
|
133 |
| James Murphy |
1967— |
Heavy metal guitarist, played in a number of different groups. |
pituitary macro-adenoma |
2001— |
134 |
| Wayne Osmond |
1951— |
Singer, second oldest of the Osmond brothers. |
|
1994— |
135 |
| Junior Parker |
1932–1971 |
Blues singer. |
|
|
136 |
| Frank Patterson |
1938–2000 |
A classically-trained Irish tenor. |
|
|
137 |
| Lucia Popp |
1939–1993 |
An operatic soprano. |
|
|
138 |
| Louis Prima |
1910–1978 |
An entertainer, singer, actor, and trumpeter known as the King of the Swingers. He never recovered from an operation to remove a benign brain-stem tumor, which left him in a coma for nearly three years. |
|
|
139 |
| Rainer Ptacek |
1951–1997 |
Guitarist, singer and songwriter. |
|
|
140 |
| Lou Rawls |
1933–2006 |
Soul, jazz, and blues singer. Noted philanthropist. |
metastatic tumor |
7 months |
141 |
| Buddy Rich |
1917–1987 |
A jazz drummer and bandleader. |
|
|
142 |
| Chuck Schuldiner |
1967–2001 |
Former guitarist and singer for the band Death, former guitarist for Control Denied. Influential figure in the development of death metal. |
pontine glioma |
2 years |
143 |
| Sam Sneed |
1968— |
A record producer and rapper. |
|
1999— |
144 |
| Tammi Terrell |
1945–1970 |
Singer, duettist with Marvin Gaye on "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" and other hit singles. |
|
2 years |
145 |
| Russell Watson |
1966— |
An English tenor, who has released popular albums of operatic-style songs. |
|
2006— |
146 |
| Sandy West |
1959–2006 |
A musician, singer-songwriter and drummer. |
Metastatic Lung Cancer |
|
147 |
| Kai Winding |
1922–1983 |
A trombonist and jazz composer. |
|
|
148 |
| Webster Young |
1932–2003 |
A jazz trumpeter and cornetist. |
|
|
149 |
| Name |
Life |
Comments |
Diagnosis |
Survival |
Reference |
| Lee Atwater |
1951–1991 |
Chairman of the United States Republican National Committee. |
glioblastoma multiforme |
1 year |
150 |
| William Casey |
1913–1987 |
Director of the Central Intelligence Agency |
|
5 months |
151 |
| Chakufwa Chihana |
1939–2006 |
Trade unionist and politician. |
|
1 month |
152 |
| Alan Clark |
1928–1999 |
A British Conservative politician, historian and diarist. |
|
|
153 |
| Clair Engle |
1911–1964 |
United States senator from California. Late in his illness he broke a filibuster and helped pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Wheelchair bound and no longer able to speak, he raised his hand to his eye to signal his vote ("aye"). |
|
1 Year |
154 |
| Wayne Goss |
1951— |
Former premier of Queensland, Australia. His tumor thwarted a potential career in federal politics. |
|
1997— |
155 |
| Paul B. Henry |
1942–1993 |
An evangelical Christian, professor of political science, and politician |
|
|
156 |
| David Hermelin |
1936–2000 |
United States ambassador to Norway. |
|
1 year |
157 |
| Ted Kennedy |
1932– |
United States Senator. |
malignant glioma |
2008– |
158 |
| Peter Law |
1948–2006 |
Welsh politician, independent MP and AM. |
|
|
159 |
| Clare Booth Luce |
1903–1987 |
American politician and diplomat; also an editor, playwright, social activist & journalist |
|
|
160 |
| Jean-Philippe Maitre |
1949–2006 |
A politician and former President of the Swiss National Council. |
|
|
161 |
| Gladys Marín |
1941–2005 |
A political activist and former president of the Communist Party of Chile. |
glioblastoma multiforme |
|
162163 |
| Robert Evander McNair |
1923–2007 |
A former governor of South Carolina. |
|
50 days |
164 165 |
| Lennart Meri |
1929–2006 |
A former president of Estonia. |
|
7 months |
166 |
| Mo Mowlam |
1949–2005 |
Britain's Secretary of State for Northern Ireland. |
|
7 years |
167 |
| Bob O'Connor |
1944–2006 |
Former Mayor of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. |
CNS lymphoma |
|
168 |
| Arlen Specter |
1930— |
United States senator from Pennsylvania. |
|
1993— |
169 |
| Mike Synar |
1950–1996 |
United States congressional representative from Oklahoma. |
glioblastoma multiforme |
5 months |
33 |
| Frank Tejeda |
1946–1997 |
United States congressional representative from Texas. |
|
1 year |
170 |
| Joop den Uyl |
1919–1987 |
Former prime minister of the Netherlands from 1973 until 1977, as a member of the social-democratic PvdA party. |
|
|
171 |
| Name |
Life |
Comments |
Diagnosis |
Survival |
Reference |
| Max Abraham |
1875–1922 |
A physicist and contemporary of Einstein and Lorentz. |
|
|
172 |
| William Bright |
1928–2006 |
A linguist who specialized in Native American and South Asian languages and descriptive linguistics. He is the father of Susie Bright. |
|
|
173 |
| Édouard Brissaud |
1852–1909 |
A physician and pathologist. His tumor was unsuccessfully operated on by Sir Victor Horsley. |
|
|
174 |
| Thomas Donaldson |
1945–2006 |
A mathematician and cryonics advocate. |
|
|
175 |
| Rhodes Fairbridge |
1914–2006 |
A geologist and expert on climate change. |
|
|
176 |
| Paul Feyerabend |
1924–1994 |
A philosopher of science. |
|
under 1 year |
177 |
| Thor Heyerdahl |
1914–2002 |
Marine biologist famous for the Kon-Tiki expedition and other journeys that reproduced ancient technology and demonstrated the feasibility of ancient sea migrations. |
|
under 1 year |
178 |
| J. Allen Hynek |
1910–1986 |
An astronomer, professor, and ufologist. |
|
|
179 |
| Norman Levinson |
1912–1975 |
A mathematician. |
|
|
180 |
| John von Neumann |
1903–1957 |
Hungarian mathematician who made numerous contributions to many fields, including quantum physics, functional analysis, set theory, economics, computer science, numerical analysis, hydrodynamics (of explosions) and statistics. |
|
under 1 year |
181 |
| John Vlissides |
1961–2005 |
A software scientist specialising in object oriented technology, design patterns and software modelling. |
|
|
182 |
| Aleksandr Zinovyev |
1922–2006 |
A logician, sociologist, writer and satirist. |
|
|
183 |
| Name |
Life |
Comments |
Diagnosis |
Survival |
Reference |
| Lyle Alzado |
1949–1992 |
NFL football player. Made public statements attributing his tumor to anabolic steroids, a claim not supported by medical research. |
CNS lymphoma |
|
184 |
| Lance Armstrong |
1971— |
Cycling champion who won the Tour de France seven consecutive times after diagnosis and treatment for testicular cancer that spread to his abdomen, lungs and brain. |
metastatic tumor |
1996— |
185186 |
| Severiano Ballesteros |
1949— |
Spanish golf player, winner of 5 major tournaments |
oligoastrocytoma |
|
187188 |
| Kevin Berry |
1945–2006 |
A butterfly swimmer and Olympic gold medalist. |
|
|
189 |
| Angelo Bertelli |
1921–1999 |
An American football quarterback. |
|
|
190 |
| Bobby Bonds |
1946–2003 |
A right fielder in Major League Baseball from 1968 to 1981, primarily with the San Francisco Giants. Father of Barry Bonds. |
|
|
191 |
| Ken Brett |
1948–2003 |
A Major League Baseball pitcher. |
|
|
192 |
| José María Buljubasich |
1971— |
Football goalkeeper. |
|
2006— |
193 |
| Richard Burns |
1971–2005 |
Race car driver, Rally world champion |
astrocytoma |
2 years |
194 |
| Matt Cappotelli |
1979— |
A professional wrestler. |
|
|
195 |
| Richard Chelimo |
1972–2001 |
Track champion from Kenya, former 10,000 meter world record holder. |
|
|
196 |
| Maurice Colclough |
1953–2006 |
Rugby player, played a noteworthy role in England's grand slam win in 1980. |
|
|
197 |
| Dan Duva |
1951–1996 |
Boxing promoter behind over 100 world championship bouts. |
primary brain tumor |
|
198 |
| Josh Gibson |
1911–1947 |
Negro League baseball player, famous home run hitter with the highest career batting average in league history. |
|
4 years |
199 |
| Tim Gullikson |
1951–1996 |
Champion doubles tennis player and coach of Pete Sampras. |
|
|
200 |
| Scott Hamilton |
1958— |
A figure skater and Olympic gold medalist. |
pituitary gland |
2004— |
201 |
| Craig "Ironhead" Heyward |
1966–2006 |
An American football running back who played in the National Football League. |
chordoma |
8 years |
202 |
| Heiko Herrlich |
1971— |
German soccer player, UEFA Champions League and Intercontinental Cup winner |
brain tumor |
2000— |
203 |
| Terry Hoeppner |
1947–2007 |
Indiana University, Miami (Ohio) University Head Football Coach |
|
18 months (2005-2007) |
204 |
| Dick Howser |
1936–1987 |
Major League Baseball shortstop and manager. |
|
1 year |
205 |
| Emlyn Hughes |
1947–2004 |
Soccer player, European Cup winner of 1977, also known from the BBC quiz show A Question of Sport. |
|
15 months |
206 |
| Colin Ingleby-Mackenzie |
1933–2006 |
English cricketer |
|
4 months |
207 |
| "Badger" Bob Johnson |
1931–1991 |
Ice hockey coach, won the 1991 Stanley Cup with the Pittsburgh Penguins. |
|
2 months |
208 |
| Walter Johnson |
1887–1946 |
A right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball. |
|
|
209210 |
| Eric Liddell |
1902–1945 |
Olympic gold medalist in track, portrayed in the film Chariots of Fire. |
|
|
211 |
| Jushin Liger |
1964— |
A professional wrestler. |
|
1996— |
212 |
| Reginald Lisowski |
1926–2005 |
A professional wrestler known as "The Crusher". |
|
|
213 |
| Wayne Maki |
1944–1973 |
A professional ice hockey player and an early star of the Vancouver Canucks club in the NHL. |
|
under 5 months |
214215 |
| Peter May |
1929–1994 |
An English cricketer who played for Surrey, Cambridge University and England. |
|
|
216 |
| Frank Edward "Tug" McGraw |
1944–2004 |
Major league baseball pitcher. |
glioblastoma multiforme |
9 months |
217 |
| Lenny "The Guv'nor" McLean |
1949–1998 |
Champion bare knuckle fighter, undefeated in 3000 fights. Also acted small roles in films including The Fifth Element. |
metastatic tumor |
|
218 |
| Bobby Murcer |
1946–2008 |
Major league baseball player, broadcaster. |
|
19 months |
219 |
| Johnny Oates |
1946–2004 |
Major league baseball catcher and manager. |
glioblastoma multiforme |
3 years |
220 |
| Kim Perrot |
1967–1999 |
Basketball player, WNBA Houston Comets. |
metastatic (lung cancer) |
|
221 |
| John Prentice |
1926–2006 |
A former football player and Scotland manager. |
|
|
222 |
| Remy Presas |
1936–2001 |
The founder of Modern Arnis, a popular Filipino martial art. |
|
10 months |
223 |
| Dan Quisenberry |
1953–1998 |
Major league baseball pitcher, mostly as a closer; noted for unusual "submarine" pitching style. |
|
9 months |
224 |
| Bobby Robson |
1933— |
A former football player and England manager. |
|
|
225 |
| Glenn Roeder |
1955— |
An English football manager and former player. |
|
2003— |
226227 |
| Pete Rozelle |
1926–1996 |
NFL commissioner. |
|
|
33 |
| Wilma Rudolph |
1940–1994 |
Olympic gold medalist in track. |
|
|
228 |
| Nick Sanborn |
1935–1999 |
Automobile racer. |
|
|
229 |
| Robert Stone |
1956–2005 |
A rugby league player and official who played for the St. George Dragons. |
|
17 months |
230 |
| Earl Strom |
1927–1994 |
A basketball referee for 29 years in the National Basketball Association (NBA) and for three years in the American Basketball Association (ABA). |
|
|
231 |
| Fritz Von Erich |
1929–1997 |
Wrestler and wrestling promoter of independent promotion WCCW. |
|
|
232 |
| John Vukovich |
1947–2007 |
Major League Baseball infielder and third base coach. |
|
18 months |
233 |
| Dick Wantz |
1940–1965 |
A relief pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the California Angels. |
|
1 month |
234 |
| Name |
Life |
Comments |
Diagnosis |
Survival |
Reference |
| Barbara Albright |
1955–2006 |
An author of about 25 food and knitting books. |
|
|
248 |
| Duygu Asena |
1946–2006 |
An author and activist for women's rights. |
|
2 years |
249 |
| Susan Bergman |
1957–2006 |
Best known for her 1984 book Anonymity, also sister of Anne Heche. |
|
3 years |
250 |
| Joseph Reylan B. Viray |
1977— |
An educator from the Polytechnic University of the Philippines, a kapampangan and tagalog poet. |
Meningioma |
|
251 |
| Reginald Horace Blyth |
1898–1964 |
An author and devotee of Japanese culture. |
|
|
252 |
| Bebe Moore Campbell |
1950–2006 |
An author whose books dealt with race and mental health issues. |
|
|
253 |
| Raymond Carver |
1938–1988 |
Short story writer and poet. |
metastatic tumor |
|
254 |
| Hugh Cook |
1956— |
Author of fantasy series Chronicles of an Age of Darkness. |
|
|
255 |
| Carl Foreman |
1914–1984 |
A screenwriter and film producer. |
|
|
256 |
| Robert Forward |
1932–2002 |
Physicist and science fiction writer. |
|
4 months |
257 |
| John Galsworthy |
1867–1933 |
A Nobel prize winning novelist and playwright whose works include The Forsyte Saga. |
|
|
258 |
| Veronica Geng |
1941–1997 |
A writer, humorist and former editor of The New Yorker. |
|
13 months |
259 |
| Johnny Gunther |
1929–1947 |
Teenage brain tumor patient, son of novelist John Gunther. Johnny's illness became the central theme of his father's book Death Be Not Proud. |
|
14 months |
260 |
| Frigyes Karinthy |
1887–1938 |
An author, playwright, poet, journalist and translator. |
|
|
261 |
| Pat Kavanagh |
1940–2008 |
Distinguished British literary agent. |
|
5 weeks |
262 |
| Stephen Knight |
1951–1985 |
An author who was known for his books criticising the Freemasons. He started having seizures in 1977 and in 1980, agreed to take part in a BBC documentary TV program Horizon on epilepsy. The producers arranged for a brain scan, which showed up a tumour. This was removed but returned in 1984 and despite further surgery he died in 1985. |
|
5 years |
263 |
| Jonathan Kwitny |
1941–1998 |
A writer and investigative journalist. |
|
|
264 |
| Lynda Lee-Potter |
1935–2004 |
Columnist for the British newspaper Daily Mail. |
|
|
265 |
| Paulo Marques |
1948–2006 |
A journalist and broadcaster. |
|
|
266 |
| Terence McKenna |
1946–2000 |
Writer and counterculture figure. |
glioblastoma multiforme |
under 1 year |
267 |
| William Vaughn Moody |
1869–1910 |
A dramatist and poet. |
|
|
268 |
| Ivan Noble |
1967–2005 |
BBC journalist and science writer who published columns about his experience with the illness, author of Like a Hole in the Head (Hodder & Stoughton 2005) ISBN 0-340-86428-1 |
glioblastoma multiforme |
2 1/2 years |
269270 |
| Chaim Potok |
1929–2002 |
Author and rabbi best known for his 1967 novel The Chosen. |
|
2 years |
271 |
| Timothy Reuter |
1947–2002 |
A historian who specialized in the study of medieval Germany |
|
|
272 |
| David Shaw |
1943–2005 |
A Los Angeles Times journalist who won the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism in 1991. |
|
under 3 months |
273 |
| Charles Sheffield |
1935–2002 |
Mathematician, physicist and science fiction writer. |
|
3 months |
274 |
| Mary Shelley |
1797–1851 |
Author of Frankenstein, wife of Percy Bysshe Shelley. |
|
|
275 |
| Lou Stathis |
1952–1997 |
A writer, editor and critic. |
|
10 months |
276 |
| Trumbull Stickney |
1874–1904 |
Swiss born American poet. |
|
|
277 |
| James Weinstein |
1926–2005 |
A socialist historian and journalist best known as the founder and publisher of In These Times. |
|
|
278 |