List of Famous people who died at 75
O. E. Hasse
Otto Eduard Hasse was a German film actor and director.
Margaretha Krook
Margaretha Knutsdotter Krook was a Swedish stage and film actress. She won the Eugene O'Neill Award in 1974. In 1976, she won the Guldbagge Award for Best Actress for the film Release the Prisoners to Spring.
Agustín Balbuena
Agustín Alberto Balbuena was an Argentine football striker who won four Copa Libertadores and the Copa Intercontinental with Club Atlético Independiente.
Héctor Silva
Héctor Jesús "Lito" Silva is a Uruguayan football forward who played for Uruguay in the 1962 and 1966 FIFA World Cups. He also played for Danubio and C.A. Peñarol.
John Nicholson
John Nicholson was a racing driver from Auckland, New Zealand. He participated in two Formula One World Championship Grands Prix, debuting on 20 July 1974. He scored no championship points.
Viktar Dashkevich
Viktar Mikalayevich Dashkevich was a Belarusian stage actor.
Hein Verbruggen
Hein Verbruggen was a Dutch sports administrator who was president of the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) from 1991 till 2005 and president of SportAccord from 2004 to 2013. He was an honorary member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) since 2008. Previously, he was a member of the IOC and Chairman of the Coordination Commission for the Games of the XXIX Olympiad in Beijing in 2008.
Alf Lüdtke
Alf Lüdtke was a historian and a leading German representative of the history of everyday life. He said his main fields of interest and research include work as a social practice, the connection of production and destruction through "work", forms of taking part and acquiescing in European dictatorships in the 20th century, and remembering and memorialising forms of dealing with war and genocide in the modern era.
Pierre Molinier
Pierre Molinier was a French painter, photographer and "maker of objects".
Doug Woog
Douglas William Woog was an American ice hockey coach and broadcaster. He was a member of the United States Hockey Hall of Fame, inducted in 2002. Woog was coach of the University of Minnesota Golden Gophers ice hockey team from 1985 to 1999. He was assistant coach of the 1984 U.S. Olympic ice hockey team.