List of Famous people who died at 58
Ricardo Larraín
Ricardo Larraín was a Chilean film editor and director. His 1991 film The Frontier won the Silver Bear for an outstanding single achievement at the 42nd Berlin International Film Festival.
Peter Law
Peter John Law was a Welsh politician. Formerly a member of the Labour Party, he stood as an independent candidate in the 2005 general election, defeating the Labour candidate by over 9,000 votes. The Daily Telegraph described his victory as "one of the most spectacular general election results of modern times".
Kerem Yılmazer
Muhittin Kerem Yılmazer was a Turkish actor and singer who was killed in the 2003 terrorist bombings in Istanbul.
Ümit Yaşar Oğuzcan
Ümit Yaşar Oğuzcan was a Turkish poet.
Joseph Fontanet
Joseph Fontanet was a French politician.
Gyula Lóránt
Gyula Lóránt, born as Gyula Lipovics, was a Hungarian footballer and manager of Croatian descent. He played as a defender and midfielder for, among others, UTA Arad, Vasas SC, Honvéd and Hungary.
Takeshi Kaikō
Takeshi Kaikō was a prominent post-World War II Japanese novelist, short-story writer, essayist, literary critic, and television documentary writer. He was distinguished by his knowledge, intellect, sense of humor and conversational skills, and although his style has been criticized as wordy and obtuse, he was one of the more popular Japanese writers in the late Shōwa period.
David Cesarani
David Cesarani was a British historian who specialised in Jewish history, especially the Holocaust. He also wrote several biographies, including Arthur Koestler: The Homeless Mind (1998).
Fabrizio De André
Fabrizio Cristiano De André was an Italian singer-songwriter.
Sergei Mylnikov
Sergei Aleksandrovich Mylnikov was an ice hockey goaltender and coach who competed in the Soviet Hockey League, National Hockey League, and the Swedish Division 2. He was the first Soviet goaltender to play in the National Hockey League. He mostly played for Traktor Chelyabinsk, and also briefly for SKA Leningrad (1980–82), the Quebec Nordiques (1989–90), Torpedo Yaroslavl (1991–93) and Skedvi/Säter IF (1993–95). He was a member of the Soviet national team, winning a gold medal at the 1988 Winter Olympics and at the 1989 and 1990 IIHF World Championships. He was named to the Soviet All-Star team in 1988 and inducted into the Russian and Soviet Hockey Hall of Fame in 1985. Mylnikov helped the Soviet junior team to back-to-back junior world championships in 1977 and 1978. He was also the starting Soviet goaltender at the Canada Cup in 1987.