List of Famous people who died at 90
Egon Günther
Egon Günther was a German film director and writer.
Mary Cover Jones
Mary Cover Jones was an American developmental psychologist and a pioneer of behavior therapy, despite the field being heavily dominated by males throughout much of the 20th century. Joseph Wolpe dubbed her "the mother of behavior therapy" due to her famous study of Peter and development of desensitization.
Jean Topart
Jean Topart was a French actor and voice actor. He was considered one of the best known voices on French television for decades. In addition to providing the voices and narration for television series and animated films, Topart often dubbed American and other foreign films into French.
Daisy Lúcidi
Daisy Lopes Lúcidi Mendes was a Brazilian actress, radio broadcaster, and politician.
Tahsin Şahinkaya
Tahsin Şahinkaya was a Turkish Air Force general. He was Commander of the Turkish Air Force from 1978 to 1983, and previously Secretary-General of the National Security Council (1977–1978). He was one of the five leaders of the 1980 military coup, and after the coup he was a member of the Presidential Council.
Conrad Phillips
Conrad Philip Havord, known professionally as Conrad Phillips, was an English television and film actor. He is best known for playing William Tell in the adventure series The Adventures of William Tell (1958–1959).
Aleksandr Vedernikov
Alexander Filippovich Vedernikov was a Russian Soviet era opera and chamber singer (bass) and teacher. He was soloist of the Bolshoi Theater of the USSR in 1958–1990.
Heinz Felfe
Heinz Paul Johann Felfe was a German spy.
Ágnes Heller
Ágnes Heller was a Hungarian philosopher and lecturer. She was a core member of the Budapest School philosophical forum in the 1960s and later taught political theory for 25 years at the New School for Social Research in New York City. She lived, wrote and lectured in Budapest.
Hans Riegel
Johannes Peter "Hans" Riegel, Hans Riegel Jr. was a German entrepreneur who owned and operated the confectioner Haribo since 1946.