List of suicides
Encyclopedia
The following are lists of notable people who intentionally terminated their own lives
Suicide
Suicide is the act of intentionally causing one's own death. Suicide is often committed out of despair or attributed to some underlying mental disorder, such as depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, alcoholism, or drug abuse...

. Suicides committed under duress are included. Deaths by accident or misadventure are excluded. Individuals who might or might not have died by their own hand, or whose intention to die is in dispute, but who are widely believed to have deliberately killed themselves, may be listed under Possible suicides.

A

  • Chris Acland
    Chris Acland
    Chris Acland was an English musician, best known for being the drummer of the London based shoegazing and britpop musical ensemble, Lush.-Biography:Christopher John Dyke Acland was born in Lancaster Infirmary...

     (1996), British drummer for the band Lush
    Lush (band)
    Lush were an English alternative rock band, formed in 1987 and disbanded in 1998. They were one of the first bands to attract the "shoegazing" label...

    , hanging
  • Manuel Acuña
    Manuel Acuña
    Manuel Acuña Narro was a 19th-century Mexican writer. He focused on poetry, but also wrote some novels and plays. Even though he was famous at an early time of his life, he decided to commit suicide...

     (1873), Mexican poet
  • Robert Adams, Jr.
    Robert Adams, Jr. (Pennsylvania)
    Robert Adams, Jr. was a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania.Robert Adams, Jr. was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He attended Doctor Fairies Physical Institute in Philadelphia and was graduated from the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia in 1869,...

     (1906), congressman from Pennsylvania, shot himself after heavy losses in stock speculation
  • Stuart Adamson
    Stuart Adamson
    Stuart Adamson , born William Stuart Adamson, was an English-born Scottish guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter, described by legendary music journalist John Peel as “Britain’s answer to Jimi Hendrix”...

     (2001), Scottish guitarist and singer (Big Country
    Big Country
    Big Country are a Scottish rock band formed in Dunfermline, Fife in 1981. They were most popular in the early to mid-1980s, but they still release material for a cult following...

    , Skids), self-strangulation after alcohol ingestion
  • Ahn Jae-hwan
    Ahn Jae-hwan
    Ahn Jae-hwan was a South Korean actor.His wife was comedienne Jung Sun-hee.Ahn was found dead in his car on September 8, but the exact time of his death has not been revealed. It is considered to be a case of suicide by carbon monoxide poisoning. He was 36 years old.-External links:* at HanCinema...

     (2008), South Korean actor, carbon monoxide poisoning
    Carbon monoxide poisoning
    Carbon monoxide poisoning occurs after enough inhalation of carbon monoxide . Carbon monoxide is a toxic gas, but, being colorless, odorless, tasteless, and initially non-irritating, it is very difficult for people to detect...

  • Sergey Akhromeyev (1991), Marshal of the Soviet Union
    Soviet Union
    The Soviet Union , officially the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics , was a constitutionally socialist state that existed in Eurasia between 1922 and 1991....

    , hanging
  • Clodius Albinus
    Clodius Albinus
    Clodius Albinus was a Roman usurper proclaimed emperor by the legions in Britain and Hispania upon the murder of Pertinax in 193.-Life:...

     (197), Roman emperor, killed himself after a defeat in battle
  • Ross Alexander
    Ross Alexander
    Ross Alexander was an American stage and film actor.- Early life :Born Alexander Ross Smith in Brooklyn, New York, Alexander began his acting career in Broadway productions during the 1920s. By 1926 he was regarded as a promising leading man, with good looks and an easy and charming style and...

     (1937), American actor, gunshot
  • Michael Alfonso, a.k.a. Mike Awesome
    Mike Awesome
    Michael Lee Alfonso , better known by his ring name Mike Awesome, was an American professional wrestler best known in America for his work in Extreme Championship Wrestling, World Championship Wrestling, and in World Wrestling Federation and also in Japan for his work with Frontier Martial-Arts...

     (2007), American professional wrestler, hanging
  • Prince Alfred of Edinburgh (1899), member of the British Royal Family, shot himself
  • Leandro Alem
    Leandro Alem
    Leandro Nicéforo Alem was an Argentine politician, born in Buenos Aires, a founder and leader of the Radical Civic Union. Alem was the uncle and political teacher of Hipólito Yrigoyen. His father, was the chief of Rosas' political police, the Mazorca. He was executed after the battle of Caseros...

     (1896), Argentine politician, founder of the Radical Civic Union, gunshot to the head
  • Salvador Allende
    Salvador Allende
    Salvador Allende Gossens was a Chilean physician and politician who is generally considered the first democratically elected Marxist to become president of a country in Latin America....

     (1973), president of Chile; shot himself during a coup d'état — some sources allege that he was killed. See also Death of Salvador Allende
    Death of Salvador Allende
    Salvador Allende, President of Chile, reportedly committed suicide during the Chilean coup of 1973. Since that time, there has been great controversy between supporters and detractors of Allende on the circumstances of his death, since the military junta's version of his suicide was discounted by...

  • Jeff Alm
    Jeff Alm
    Jeffrey Lawrence Alm was an American football player who played defensive tackle for the Houston Oilers of the National Football League.-Death:...

     (1993), American NFL player, gunshot
  • Marwan al-Shehhi
    Marwan al-Shehhi
    Marwan Yousef Mohamed Rashid Lekrab al-Shehhi was the hijacker-pilot of United Airlines Flight 175, crashing the plane into the South Tower of the World Trade Center as part of the September 11 attacks....

     (2001), United Arab Emirate member of Al-Qaeda
    Al-Qaeda
    Al-Qaeda is a global broad-based militant Islamist terrorist organization founded by Osama bin Laden sometime between August 1988 and late 1989. It operates as a network comprising both a multinational, stateless army and a radical Sunni Muslim movement calling for global Jihad...

    , and one of the 9/11 hijackers
  • Jason Altom
    Jason Altom
    Jason Altom was a Ph.D. student working in the research group of Nobel laureate Elias James Corey at Harvard University. He committed suicide by taking potassium cyanide in 1998, citing in his suicide note "abusive research supervisors" as one reason for taking his life...

     (1998), American Ph.D. student, ingested potassium cyanide
  • Jean Améry
    Jean Améry
    Jean Améry , born Hanns Chaim Mayer, was an Austrian-born essayist whose work was often informed by his experiences during World War II...

     (1978), Austrian writer; overdose of sleeping pills
  • Korechika Anami, Japanese War Minister
    Ministry of War of Japan
    The , more popularly known as the Ministry of War of Japan, was cabinet-level ministry in the Empire of Japan charged with the administrative affairs of the Imperial Japanese Army...

     (1945), seppuku
  • Forrest Howard Anderson (1989), Governor of Montana, gunshot
  • Roger Angleton (1998), American murderer, cutting or hanging
  • Mark Antony
    Mark Antony
    Marcus Antonius , known in English as Mark Antony, was a Roman politician and general. As a military commander and administrator, he was an important supporter and loyal friend of his mother's cousin Julius Caesar...

     (30 BC), Roman politician and general, by sword.
  • Marshall Applewhite
    Marshall Applewhite
    Marshall Herff Applewhite, Jr. , known among his followers as "Do", was the leader of the Heaven's Gate religious group. A self-proclaimed prophet and messiah, he died in the group's mass suicide of 1997.-Early life:...

     (1997), American leader of the Heaven's Gate religious cult, overdose
  • Diane Arbus
    Diane Arbus
    Diane Arbus March 14, 1923 – July 26, 1971) was an American photographer and writer noted for black-and-white square photographs of "deviant and marginal people or of people whose normality seems ugly or surreal." A friend said that Arbus said that she was "afraid.....

     (1971), American photographer, overdosed on pills and slashed wrists
  • Reinaldo Arenas
    Reinaldo Arenas
    Reinaldo Arenas was a Cuban poet, novelist, and playwright who despite his early sympathy for the 1959 revolution, grew critical of and then rebelled against the Cuban government.- Life :...

     (1990), Cuban-American artist and writer, drug and alcohol overdose
  • José María Arguedas
    José María Arguedas
    José María Arguedas Altamirano was a Peruvian novelist, poet, and anthropologist who wrote mainly in Spanish, although some of his poetry is in Quechua...

    , (1969), Peruvian novelist and poet, gunshot
  • Pedro Armendáriz
    Pedro Armendáriz
    Pedro Armendáriz was a Mexican actor of the cinema of Mexico and Hollywood.-Early life:Born Pedro Gregorio Armendáriz Hastings in Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico to Pedro Armendáriz García-Conde and Adela Hastings . He was also the cousin of actress Gloria Marín...

    , (1963), Mexican actor, gunshot
  • Edwin Armstrong
    Edwin Armstrong
    Edwin Howard Armstrong was an American electrical engineer and inventor. Armstrong was the inventor of modern frequency modulation radio....

     (1954), American inventor of FM radio, jumped from a 13th floor window
  • John Atchison
    John Atchison
    John David R. Atchison was an assistant U.S. Attorney in Florida's northern district who gained notoriety when he was arrested for suspicion of soliciting sex from a 5-year old girl....

     (2007), American federal prosecutor and alleged child sex offender
  • Mohamed Atta
    Mohamed Atta
    Mohamed Mohamed el-Amir Awad el-Sayed Atta was one of the masterminds and the ringleader of the September 11 attacks who served as the hijacker-pilot of American Airlines Flight 11, crashing the plane into the North Tower of the World Trade Center as part of the coordinated attacks.Born in 1968...

     (2001), Egyptian member of Al-Qaeda
    Al-Qaeda
    Al-Qaeda is a global broad-based militant Islamist terrorist organization founded by Osama bin Laden sometime between August 1988 and late 1989. It operates as a network comprising both a multinational, stateless army and a radical Sunni Muslim movement calling for global Jihad...

    , and leader of the 9/11 hijackers
  • Pekka-Eric Auvinen (2007), Finnish Jokela High School shooter, gunshot to the head
  • May Ayim
    May Ayim
    May Ayim was an Afro-German poet, educator, and activist.-Early life:...

     (1996), German author, jumped from 13th floor of a Berlin building
  • Albert Ayler
    Albert Ayler
    Albert Ayler was an American avant-garde jazz saxophonist, singer and composer.Ayler was among the most primal of the free jazz musicians of the 1960s; critic John Litweiler wrote that "never before or since has there been such naked aggression in jazz" He possessed a deep blistering tone—achieved...

     (1970), American jazz saxophonist, jumped into New York City's East River

B

  • Nikki Bacharach (2007), Daughter of Burt Bacharach and Angie Dickinson, suffocated using plastic bag and helium
  • James Robert Baker
    James Robert Baker
    James Robert Baker was an American author of sharply satirical, predominantly gay-themed transgressional fiction. A native Californian, his work is set almost entirely in Southern California. After graduating from UCLA, he began his career as a screenwriter, but became disillusioned and started...

     (1997), American writer
  • José Manuel Balmaceda
    José Manuel Balmaceda
    José Manuel Emiliano Balmaceda Fernández was the 11th President of Chile from September 18, 1886 to August 29, 1891. Balmaceda was part of the Castilian-Basque aristocracy in Chile...

     (1891), President of Chile, gunshot
  • Lou Bandy
    Lou Bandy
    Lodewijk Ferdinand Dieben , better known under his pseudonym Lou Bandy, was a Dutch singer and conferencier who was one of the most popular artists in the Netherlands, between both world wars...

     (1959), Dutch singer and comedian, overdose medicals
  • Robert Hayward Barlow (1951), American writer and anthropologist, barbiturate overdose
  • Amelie "Melli" Beese
    Amelie Beese
    Amelie Hedwig Boutard-Beese , also known as Melli Beese was an early German female aviator born in Laubegast, on the outskirts of Dresden, Saxony.-Youth:...

     (1925), German pioneer aviatrix, gunshot
  • Chris Benoit
    Chris Benoit
    Christopher Michael "Chris" Benoit was a Canadian professional wrestler whose career and life ended in a murder–suicide...

     (2007), American professional wrestler, hanged himself after murdering his wife and son.
  • Mary Kay Bergman
    Mary Kay Bergman
    Mary Kay Bergman was an American voice actress and animation voice over teacher, who was the lead female voice actress on South Park from the show's 1997 debut until her death and was best known as the official voice of Snow White for the Walt Disney Company starting in 1989 with the Snow White...

     (1999), American voice actress
    Voice acting
    Voice acting is the art of providing voices for animated characters and radio and audio dramas and comedy, as well as doing voice-overs in radio and television commercials, audio dramas, dubbed foreign language films, video games, puppet shows, and amusement rides.Performers are called...

    , shotgun
    Shotgun
    A shotgun is a firearm that is usually designed to be fired from the shoulder, which uses the energy of a fixed shell to fire a number of small spherical pellets called shot, or a solid projectile called a slug...

    .
  • Clara Bloodgood
    Clara Bloodgood
    Clara Bloodgood Clara Bloodgood Clara Bloodgood (August 23, 1870 - December 5, 1907 was an American socialite who became a successful Broadway stage actress.-Early Life:Clara Stephens was born in Long Branch, New Jersey, the daughter of Edward and Annie (née Sutton) Stephens. Her father, a...

     (1907), American Broadway
    Broadway theatre
    Broadway theatre, commonly called simply Broadway, refers to theatrical performances presented in one of the 40 professional theatres with 500 or more seats located in the Theatre District centered along Broadway, and in Lincoln Center, in Manhattan in New York City...

     actress; gunshot.
  • Ludwig Boltzmann
    Ludwig Boltzmann
    Ludwig Eduard Boltzmann was an Austrian physicist famous for his founding contributions in the fields of statistical mechanics and statistical thermodynamics...

     (1906), Austrian physicist famous for thermodynamics and the atomic theory, hanging
  • Jeremy Michael Boorda
    Jeremy Michael Boorda
    Jeremy Michael Boorda was an admiral of the United States Navy and the 25th Chief of Naval Operations . Boorda is the only CNO to have risen to the position from the enlisted ranks.-Early life and education :...

     (1996), Chief of Naval Operations, US Navy
  • Jonathan Brandis
    Jonathan Brandis
    Jonathan Gregory Brandis was an American actor, director, and screenwriter.-Early life and career:Brandis was born in Danbury, Connecticut, the only child of Mary, a teacher and personal manager, and Gregory Brandis, a food distributor and firefighter. He began his career as a child model and...

     (2003), American actor, hanging
  • Mike Brant
    Mike Brant
    Mike Brant was an Israeli pop star who achieved fame after moving to France. His most successful hit was "Laisse-moi t'aimer"...

     (1975), Israel
    Israel
    The State of Israel is a parliamentary republic located in the Middle East, along the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea...

    i pop star who achieved fame after moving to France
    France
    The French Republic , The French Republic , The French Republic , (commonly known as France , is a unitary semi-presidential republic in Western Europe with several overseas territories and islands located on other continents and in the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic oceans. Metropolitan France...

    , jumping from the window of a Paris
    Paris
    Paris is the capital and largest city in France, situated on the river Seine, in northern France, at the heart of the Île-de-France region...

     apartment
  • Herman Brood
    Herman Brood
    Hermanus "Herman" Brood was a Dutch musician, painter and media personality. Initially a musician who achieved artistic and commercial success in the 1970s and 1980s, and called "the Netherlands' greatest and only rock 'n' roll star," later in life he became a well-known painter.Known for his...

     (2001), Dutch
    Dutch people
    The Dutch people are an ethnic group native to the Netherlands. They share a common culture and speak the Dutch language. Dutch people and their descendants are found in migrant communities worldwide, notably in Suriname, Chile, Brazil, Canada, Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, and the United...

     musician, artist, composer , jumping from the roof of the Hilton Hotel Amsterdam
    Amsterdam
    Amsterdam is the largest city and the capital of the Netherlands. The current position of Amsterdam as capital city of the Kingdom of the Netherlands is governed by the constitution of August 24, 1815 and its successors. Amsterdam has a population of 783,364 within city limits, an urban population...

    .
  • Joseph Brooks
    Joseph Brooks (songwriter)
    Joseph Brooks was an American screenwriter, director, producer, and composer. He composed the song "You Light Up My Life" for the film of the same name that he also wrote, directed, and produced. In his later years he became the subject of an investigation after being accused of a series of...

     (2011), American screenwriter, director, producer, and composer known for the song "You Light Up My Life
    You Light Up My Life (song)
    Many artists have covered "You Light Up My Life" since 1977. The following year, Johnny Mathis recorded and named his album after the song. LeAnn Rimes released her version as a single in 1997, 20 years after Boone's version was released and on the same record label . Her version fared modestly...

    ".

C

  • George Caragonne
    George Caragonne
    George Caragonne was a writer of comic books, primarily for Marvel Comics and their subsidiary Star Comics, throughout the 1980s...

     (1995), American comic book writer, jumped from the 45th floor of the Marriott Marquis Hotel in Manhattan.
  • Wallace Carothers
    Wallace Carothers
    Wallace Hume Carothers was an American chemist, inventor and the leader of organic chemistry at DuPont, credited with the invention of nylon....

     (1937), American inventor of nylon
    Nylon
    Nylon is a generic designation for a family of synthetic polymers known generically as polyamides, first produced on February 28, 1935, by Wallace Carothers at DuPont's research facility at the DuPont Experimental Station...

    , cyanide poisoning.
  • Kevin Carter
    Kevin Carter
    Kevin Carter was an award-winning South African photojournalist and member of the Bang-Bang Club.-Early life:...

     (1994), South African photojournalist.
  • Iris Chang
    Iris Chang
    Iris Shun-Ru Chang was an American historian and journalist. She is best known for her best-selling 1997 account of the Nanking Massacre, The Rape of Nanking. She committed suicide on November 9, 2004...

     (2004), American historian and author of The Rape of Nanking
    The Rape of Nanking (book)
    The Rape of Nanking: The Forgotten Holocaust of World War II is a bestselling 1997 non-fiction book written by Iris Chang about the 1937–1938 Nanking Massacre, the massacre and atrocities committed by the Imperial Japanese Army after it captured Nanjing, then capital of China, during the Second...

    , gunshot wound to the head
  • Tyler Clementi
    Suicide of Tyler Clementi
    Tyler Clementi was an eighteen-year-old student at Rutgers University in Piscataway, New Jersey, who jumped to his death from the George Washington Bridge on September 22, 2010. His roommate Dharun Ravi had video streamed Clementi kissing another man over the Internet without Clementi's knowledge,...

     (2010), gay American student at Rutgers University, jumped off the George Washington Bridge after his roommate secretly recorded him having sex.
  • Cleopatra (30 BC), Queen of Egypt, inducing a snake to bite her.
  • Kurt Cobain
    Kurt Cobain
    Kurt Donald Cobain was an American singer-songwriter, musician and artist, best known as the lead singer and guitarist of the grunge band Nirvana...

     (1994), American rock singer (Nirvana
    Nirvana (band)
    Nirvana was an American rock band that was formed by singer/guitarist Kurt Cobain and bassist Krist Novoselic in Aberdeen, Washington in 1987...

    ), shotgun wound to the head.
  • Hart Crane
    Hart Crane
    -Career:Throughout the early 1920s, small but well-respected literary magazines published some of Crane’s lyrics, gaining him, among the avant-garde, a respect that White Buildings , his first volume, ratified and strengthened...

     (1932), American poet, jumped off ship.
  • Ian Curtis
    Ian Curtis
    Ian Kevin Curtis was an English singer and lyricist, famous for leading the post-punk band Joy Division. Joy Division released their debut album, Unknown Pleasures, in 1979 and recorded their follow-up, Closer, in 1980...

     (1980), English singer songwriter (Joy Division
    Joy Division
    Joy Division were an English rock band formed in 1976 in Salford, Greater Manchester. Originally named Warsaw, the band primarily consisted of Ian Curtis , Bernard Sumner , Peter Hook and Stephen Morris .Joy Division rapidly evolved from their initial punk rock influences...

    ), death by hanging.

D

  • Alice de Janzé
    Alice de Janzé
    Alice de Janzé, née Silverthorne , also known as Alice de Trafford and holder of the noble title Comtesse de Janzé for a few years, was an American heiress who spent years in Kenya, as a member of the Happy Valley set of colonials...

     (1941), American heiress, committed suicide with a firearm.
  • Penelope Delta
    Penelope Delta
    Penelope Delta was a Greek author of books for children. Practically the first Greek children's books writer, her historical novels have been widely read and influenced Greek popular perceptions on national identity and history...

     (1941), Greek writer, killed herself when the Germans invaded Greece during WWII
  • Peter Delmé (MP) (10 April 1770), committed suicide with a firearm.
  • Brad Delp
    Brad Delp
    Bradley E. Delp was an American musician, best known as the lead vocalist of the rock band Boston. Delp was known for his vocal histrionics, and especially his high range.-Early life:...

     (2007), American rock musician (Boston
    Boston (band)
    Boston is an American rock band from Boston, Massachusetts that achieved its most notable successes during the 1970s and 1980s. Centered on guitarist, keyboardist, songwriter, and producer Tom Scholz, the band is a staple of classic rock radio playlists...

    ), carbon monoxide poisoning in his bathroom using two charcoal grills.
  • Michael Dorris
    Michael Dorris
    Michael Anthony Dorris was a prominent American novelist and scholar. During his career he presented himself as Native American and this identity was a key part of his professional activities and his public reputation; but its factuality is in doubt...

     (1997), American novelist, took sleeping pills with vodka, placed a plastic bag over his head, and died of asphyxiation
  • Jon Dough
    Jon Dough
    Jon Dough was the stage name of Chester Anuszak , an American pornographic actor who worked steadily from 1985 to 2006.- Early life :...

     (2006), American pornographic actor, hanging.
  • Charmaine Dragun
    Charmaine Dragun
    Charmaine Dragun was an Australian broadcast journalist and presenter. She was, with Tim Webster, the regular presenter of Ten News Perth's 5pm bulletin, which was broadcast at the time from the TEN-10 Sydney studios at Pyrmont...

     (2007), Australian television newsreader, jumped off The Gap
    The Gap, New South Wales
    The Gap is an ocean cliff, in eastern Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is located in the eastern suburb of Watsons Bay, in the Municipality of Woollahra, near South Head....

     in Sydney
    Sydney
    Sydney is the most populous city in Australia and the state capital of New South Wales. Sydney is located on Australia's south-east coast of the Tasman Sea. As of June 2010, the greater metropolitan area had an approximate population of 4.6 million people...

     after a long battle with depression.
  • R. Budd Dwyer (1987) American politician who shot himself in the mouth during a press conference.

E

  • George Eastman
    George Eastman
    George Eastman was an American innovator and entrepreneur who founded the Eastman Kodak Company and invented roll film, helping to bring photography to the mainstream...

     (1932), American inventor and philanthropist, gunshot to the heart.
  • Robert Enke
    Robert Enke
    Robert Enke was a German football goalkeeper.Enke played at leading clubs in several European countries, namely Barcelona, Benfica and Fenerbahçe, but made the majority of his appearances for Bundesliga side Hannover 96 in his homeland.He won eight full international caps for the German national...

     (2009), German footballer, killed himself by standing on rail road tracks near Neustadt am Rübenberge
    Neustadt am Rübenberge
    Neustadt am Rübenberge is a town in the district of Hanover, in Lower Saxony, Germany. At 357 km², it is the 9th largest settlement in Germany by area , though only about 45,000 inhabitants live there...

    .
  • Peg Entwistle
    Peg Entwistle
    Peg Entwistle was an English stage and screen actress who gained notoriety after her suicide at the age of 24 by leaping off of the Hollywood Sign.-Early life:...

     (1932), English-born American actress, leapt to her death from the "H" in the Hollywood Sign
    Hollywood Sign
    The Hollywood Sign is a landmark and American cultural icon in the Hollywood Hills area of Mount Lee, Santa Monica Mountains, in Los Angeles, California. The sign spells out the name of the area in and white letters. It was created as an advertisement in 1923, but garnered increasing recognition...

    .

F

  • Moni Fanan
    Moni Fanan
    Shimon Fanan was the team manager of the Israeli basketball team Maccabi Tel-Aviv during the years 1992–2008.-Career:...

     (2009), Team manager of the Israel
    Israel
    The State of Israel is a parliamentary republic located in the Middle East, along the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea...

    i basketball team Maccabi Tel-Aviv during the years 1992–2008, hanging.
  • René Favaloro
    René Favaloro
    Dr. René Gerónimo Favaloro was an Argentine cardiac surgeon who created the technique for coronary bypass surgery....

     (2000), Argentine cardiac surgeon (created technique for coronary bypass surgery
    Coronary artery bypass surgery
    Coronary artery bypass surgery, also coronary artery bypass graft surgery, and colloquially heart bypass or bypass surgery is a surgical procedure performed to relieve angina and reduce the risk of death from coronary artery disease...

    ), gunshot to the heart.
  • Robert FitzRoy
    Robert FitzRoy
    Vice-Admiral Robert FitzRoy RN achieved lasting fame as the captain of HMS Beagle during Charles Darwin's famous voyage, and as a pioneering meteorologist who made accurate weather forecasting a reality...

     (1865), English meteorologist
    Meteorology
    Meteorology is the interdisciplinary scientific study of the atmosphere. Studies in the field stretch back millennia, though significant progress in meteorology did not occur until the 18th century. The 19th century saw breakthroughs occur after observing networks developed across several countries...

    , surveyor and hydrographer
    Hydrography
    Hydrography is the measurement of the depths, the tides and currents of a body of water and establishment of the sea, river or lake bed topography and morphology. Normally and historically for the purpose of charting a body of water for the safe navigation of shipping...

    , who captained the HMS Beagle
    HMS Beagle
    HMS Beagle was a Cherokee-class 10-gun brig-sloop of the Royal Navy. She was launched on 11 May 1820 from the Woolwich Dockyard on the River Thames, at a cost of £7,803. In July of that year she took part in a fleet review celebrating the coronation of King George IV of the United Kingdom in which...

     during Charles Darwin
    Charles Darwin
    Charles Robert Darwin FRS was an English naturalist. He established that all species of life have descended over time from common ancestry, and proposed the scientific theory that this branching pattern of evolution resulted from a process that he called natural selection.He published his theory...

    's famous voyage.
  • Anton Furst (1991), English production designer who created the Gotham City
    Gotham City
    Gotham City is a fictional U.S. city appearing in DC Comics, best known as the home of Batman. Batman's place of residence was first identified as Gotham City in Batman #4 . Gotham City is strongly inspired by Trenton, Ontario's history, location, atmosphere, and various architectural styles...

     and Batmobile used in the 1989 Batman
    Batman (1989 film)
    Batman is a 1989 superhero film based on the DC Comics character of the same name, directed by Tim Burton. The film stars Michael Keaton in the title role, as well as Jack Nicholson, Kim Basinger, Robert Wuhl and Jack Palance...

    film, as well as the look of Planet Hollywood
    Planet Hollywood
    Planet Hollywood, a restaurant inspired by the popular portrayal of Hollywood, was launched in New York on October 22, 1991, with the backing of Hollywood stars Sylvester Stallone, Bruce Willis, Demi Moore, and Arnold Schwarzenegger.-History:...

    , jumped from an eighth story window.

G

  • Sam Gillespie
    Sam Gillespie
    Sam Gillespie was a philosopher with a particular interest in the work of Alain Badiou. Gillespie was described by Joan Copjec as "one of the most gifted and promising philosophers of his generation". He was a co-founder of the academic journal Umbr , a talented graphic designer and a committed...

     (2003), Australian-born philosopher whose writings and translations were crucial to the initial reception of Alain Badiou
    Alain Badiou
    Alain Badiou is a French philosopher, professor at European Graduate School, formerly chair of Philosophy at the École Normale Supérieure . Along with Giorgio Agamben and Slavoj Žižek, Badiou is a prominent figure in an anti-postmodern strand of continental philosophy...

    's work in the English-speaking world.
  • Spalding Gray
    Spalding Gray
    Spalding Rockwell Gray was an American actor, playwright, screenwriter, performance artist and monologuist...

     (2004), American actor, playwright, screenwriter, performance artist, and monologuist; jumped off Staten Island Ferry.
  • Mark Green
    Mark Green (ice hockey)
    Mark R. Green was an American professional ice hockey player who played 10 seasons in various North American minor leagues. He was chosen in the ninth round by the Winnipeg Jets, 176th overall in the 1986 NHL Entry Draft....

     (2004), American record-setting minor league hockey star, hung himself after being accused of stealing from a car dealership.
  • Vincent van Gogh
    Vincent van Gogh
    Vincent Willem van Gogh , and used Brabant dialect in his writing; it is therefore likely that he himself pronounced his name with a Brabant accent: , with a voiced V and palatalized G and gh. In France, where much of his work was produced, it is...

     (1890), Dutch Post-Impressionist highly influenced by other artists, later shot himself.

H

  • Hannibal (183–181 BC), a Carthaginian military commander and tactician, poison.
  • Eric David Harris (1999), one of the two American high school seniors who committed the Columbine High School massacre
    Columbine High School massacre
    The Columbine High School massacre occurred on Tuesday, April 20, 1999, at Columbine High School in Columbine, an unincorporated area of Jefferson County, Colorado, United States, near Denver and Littleton. Two senior students, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, embarked on a massacre, killing 12...

    , gunshot.
  • Ernest Hemingway
    Ernest Hemingway
    Ernest Miller Hemingway was an American author and journalist. His economic and understated style had a strong influence on 20th-century fiction, while his life of adventure and his public image influenced later generations. Hemingway produced most of his work between the mid-1920s and the...

     (1961), American writer and journalist, death gunshot wound to the head.
  • Margaux Hemingway
    Margaux Hemingway
    Margaux Hemingway was an American fashion model and actress.- Early life :Margot Louise Hemingway was born in Portland, Oregon, and was the older sister of actress Mariel Hemingway and the granddaughter of writer Ernest Hemingway...

     (1996); American fashion model, actress; overdose of phenobarbital
    Phenobarbital
    Phenobarbital or phenobarbitone is a barbiturate, first marketed as Luminal by Friedr. Bayer et comp. It is the most widely used anticonvulsant worldwide, and the oldest still commonly used. It also has sedative and hypnotic properties but, as with other barbiturates, has been superseded by the...

    .
  • Adolf Hitler
    Adolf Hitler
    Adolf Hitler was an Austrian-born German politician and the leader of the National Socialist German Workers Party , commonly referred to as the Nazi Party). He was Chancellor of Germany from 1933 to 1945, and head of state from 1934 to 1945...

     (1945); Austrian-born, Nazi Germany dictator, it's been speculated that he died by shooting himself in the mouth to avoid capture by the Soviet military.
  • Michael Hutchence
    Michael Hutchence
    Michael Kelland John Hutchence was an Australian musician and actor. He was the founding lead singer-songwriter of rock band :INXS from 1977 to his death in 1997, a period of twenty years. Hutchence was a member of short-lived pop rock group Max Q and recorded solo material which was released...

     (1997), Australian singer and songwriter (INXS
    INXS
    INXS are an Australian rock band, formed as The Farriss Brothers in 1977 in Sydney, New South Wales. Mainstays are Garry Gary Beers on bass guitar, Andrew Farriss on guitar/keyboards, Jon Farriss on drums, Tim Farriss on lead guitar and Kirk Pengilly on guitar/sax...

    ), hanged himself with a belt.

J

  • Jon Nödtveidt
    Jon Nödtveidt
    Jon Andreas Nödtveidt was a lead guitarist and vocalist of the Swedish black metal band Dissection, which he founded in 1989....

     (2007), Swedish guitarist (Dissection
    Dissection (band)
    Dissection was a black metal band from Strömstad, Sweden. The band was formed in 1989, by Jon Nödtveidt. The band released its first EP in 1991. They disbanded in 2006, after Nödtveidt's suicide.- Band overview :...

    ), gunshot.
  • Marcel Jacob
    Marcel Jacob
    Marcel Karl Jacob was a Swedish musician, best known as the bassist in the hard rock bands Talisman and Last Autumn's Dream.-Biography:In 1978, Jacob formed the band Rising Force together with guitarist Yngwie Malmsteen...

     (2009), Swedish musician.
  • Clayne Jeffs, nephew of Warren Jeffs
    Warren Jeffs
    Warren Steed Jeffs was the president of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints . In 2011, Jeffs was convicted of two felony counts of child sexual assault....

    , committed suicide with a firearm after admitting that Warren Jeffs had sexually assaulted him as a child.
  • Richard Jeni
    Richard Jeni
    Richard John Colangelo , better known by the stage name of Richard Jeni, was an American stand-up comedian and actor.-Early life:...

     (2007), American standup comedian and actor, gunshot.

K

  • Antonie Kamerling
    Antonie Kamerling
    Antonie Kamerling was a Dutch television and film actor and musician.-Biography:Antonie Kamerling was still a law student when in 1990 he was cast in the then new Dutch soap opera Good Times, Bad Times. His character, Peter Kelder, quickly became one of the most popular on the program...

     (2010), Dutch actor and musician, hanging.
  • Kostas Karyotakis
    Kostas Karyotakis
    Kostas Karyotakis is considered one of the most representative Greek poets of the 1920s and one of the first poets to use iconoclastic themes in Greece. His poetry conveys a great deal of nature, imagery and traces of expressionism and surrealism...

     (1928), Greek poet, gunshot.
  • Chris Kanyon
    Chris Kanyon
    Christopher Klucsarits was an American professional wrestler, best known for his work in World Championship Wrestling and the World Wrestling Federation, under the ring names Chris Kanyon and Mortis.-Early career:After college, he began training under Pete McKay Gonzalez, Ismael Gerena and Bobby...

     (2010), American professional wrestler, overdose of anti-depressant pills.
  • Bruno Kastner
    Bruno Kastner
    Bruno Kastner was a German stage and film actor, screenwriter and film producer whose career was most prominent in the 1910s and 1920s during the silent film era...

     (1932), German actor, hanging.
  • Daul Kim
    Daul Kim
    Kim Daul was an international South Korean fashion model and blogger. She committed suicide at the age of 20.-Career:...

     (2009), South Korean model and blogger, hanged in her Paris apartment
  • Ji-hoo Kim
    Kim Ji-hoo
    Kim Ji-hoo was an openly gay South Korean actor and model.-Career and coming out:Kim made his debut as a fashion model in 2007. Regarded as "one to watch", he later appeared as a guest on the MBC drama series Before and After Plastic Surgery, and on family sitcom The Unstoppable High Kick...

     (2008), South Korean actor and model, hanging.
  • R. B. Kitaj
    R. B. Kitaj
    Ronald Brooks Kitaj was an American artist who spent much of his life in England.-Life:Born in Chagrin Falls, Ohio, near Cleveland, United States, his Hungarian father, Sigmund Benway, left his mother, Jeanne Brooks, shortly after he was born and they were divorced in 1934. His mother was the...

     (2007), American artist; suffocation.
  • Dylan Klebold (1999), one of the two American high school seniors who committed the Columbine High School massacre
    Columbine High School massacre
    The Columbine High School massacre occurred on Tuesday, April 20, 1999, at Columbine High School in Columbine, an unincorporated area of Jefferson County, Colorado, United States, near Denver and Littleton. Two senior students, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, embarked on a massacre, killing 12...

    , gunshot.
  • Jerzy Kosinski
    Jerzy Kosinski
    Jerzy Kosiński , born Józef Lewinkopf, was an award-winning Polish American novelist, and two-time President of the American Chapter of P.E.N.He was known for various novels, among them The Painted Bird and Being There...

     (1991), Polish-born American writer; suffocation with plastic bag.

L

  • Deborah Laake
    Deborah Laake
    Deborah Laake was a columnist at the Dallas Morning News in the 1980s and later a staff writer, columnist, editor, and executive at the Phoenix New Times...

     (2000), U.S. staff writer, columnist and writer; overdose of pills
  • Meriwether Lewis
    Meriwether Lewis
    Meriwether Lewis was an American explorer, soldier, and public administrator, best known for his role as the leader of the Lewis and Clark Expedition also known as the Corps of Discovery, with William Clark...

     (1809), U.S. explorer with William Clark, gunshot. There is some debate as to whether his death was a suicide.
  • Max Linder
    Max Linder
    Max Linder was an influential French pioneer of silent film.-Birth and early career:Born Gabriel-Maximilien Leuvielle in Saint-Loubès, Gironde, France to a Catholic wine-growing family, he grew up with a passion for the theatre and as a young man joined a theatre troupe touring the country...

     (1925), French film and stage actor, double suicide with wife; veronal and morphine
    Morphine
    Morphine is a potent opiate analgesic medication and is considered to be the prototypical opioid. It was first isolated in 1804 by Friedrich Sertürner, first distributed by same in 1817, and first commercially sold by Merck in 1827, which at the time was a single small chemists' shop. It was more...

     ingestion, cut wrists.
  • Roman Lyashenko
    Roman Lyashenko
    Roman Lyashenko was a Russian ice hockey player. He played professionally in North America for the Dallas Stars and New York Rangers of the National Hockey League, and also suited up for affiliate teams in the American Hockey League and the now-defunct International Hockey League...

     (2003), Russian NHL hockey player, hanged himself with a belt
    Belt (clothing)
    A belt is a flexible band or strap, typically made of leather or heavy cloth, and worn around the waist. A belt supports trousers or other articles of clothing.-History:...

    .

M

  • Donald R. Manes (1986), American politician, stabbed self in chest
  • Mădălina Manole
    Mădălina Manole
    Magdalena-Anca Mircea better known by her stage name Mădălina Manole , was a Romanian pop recording artist.-Early life:...

     (2010), Romanian pop singer, pesticide poisoning.
  • Andrew Martinez
    Andrew Martinez
    Luis Andrew Martinez commonly known as Andrew Martinez, was an activist who achieved fame at the University of California, Berkeley, where he was known as the Naked Guy.-Early fame:...

     (2006), nudism activist who became known on the University of California, Berkeley
    University of California, Berkeley
    The University of California, Berkeley , is a teaching and research university established in 1868 and located in Berkeley, California, USA...

     campus as the "Naked Guy", suffocation.
  • Vladimir Mayakovsky
    Vladimir Mayakovsky
    Vladimir Vladimirovich Mayakovsky was a Russian and Soviet poet and playwright, among the foremost representatives of early-20th century Russian Futurism.- Early life :...

     (1930), Russian and Soviet poet, shot himself.
  • Tom McHale (1983), American novelist
  • Robert M. McLane (1904), American mayor of Baltimore, gunshot
  • Kenny McKinley
    Kenny McKinley
    Kendrick L. McKinley was an American football wide receiver for the Denver Broncos of the National Football League. He was drafted by the Broncos in the fifth round of the 2009 NFL Draft. He played college football at South Carolina.-Early years:Born in Mableton, Georgia, he graduated from South...

     (2010), American football player, gunshot
  • Alexander McQueen
    Alexander McQueen
    Lee Alexander McQueen, CBE was a British fashion designer and couturier best known for his in-depth knowledge of bespoke British tailoring, his tendency to juxtapose strength with fragility in his collections, as well as the emotional power and raw energy of his provocative fashion shows...

     (2010), British fashion designer and couturier, hanged himself in his wardrobe.
  • Ulrike Meinhof
    Ulrike Meinhof
    Ulrike Marie Meinhof was a German left-wing militant. She co-founded the Red Army Faction in 1970 after having previously worked as a journalist for the monthly left-wing magazine Konkret. She was arrested in 1972, and eventually charged with numerous murders and the formation of a criminal...

     (1976), German journalist and RAF
    Red Army Faction
    The radicalized were, like many in the New Left, influenced by:* Sociological developments, pressure within the educational system in and outside Europe and the U.S...

    -terrorist, hanged herself
  • Miroslava (1955), Czech-born Mexican actress, overdose of sleeping pills
  • Antonin Moine
    Antonin Moine
    Antonin-Marie Moine was a French romantic sculptor of the first half of the 19th century.-Biography:...

     (1849), French sculptor, gunshot
  • Mario Monicelli
    Mario Monicelli
    Mario Monicelli was an Italian director and screenwriter and one of the masters of the Commedia all'Italiana , three times nominated for Oscar.-Biography:...

     (2010), Italian film director, jumped out of a hospital window

N

  • Scott Nearing
    Scott Nearing
    Scott Nearing was an American radical economist, educator, writer, political activist, and advocate of simple living.-The early years:...

     (1983), American political activist and conservationist, by self-starvation at 100 years of age

P

  • Cesare Pavese
    Cesare Pavese
    Cesare Pavese was an Italian poet, novelist, literary critic and translator; he is widely considered among the major authors of the 20th century in his home country.- Early life and education :...

     (1950), Italian author, overdose of barbiturates.
  • Jeret "Speedy" Peterson
    Jeret Peterson
    Jeret "Speedy" Peterson was an American World Cup aerial skier from Boise, Idaho, skiing out of Bogus Basin. A three-time Olympian, he won the silver medal at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Peterson was found dead in Lambs Canyon, Utah on July 25, 2011...

     (2011), American skier, Olympic medalist; gunshot
  • Sylvia Plath
    Sylvia Plath
    Sylvia Plath was an American poet, novelist and short story writer. Born in Massachusetts, she studied at Smith College and Newnham College, Cambridge before receiving acclaim as a professional poet and writer...

     (1963), American poet, novelist, children's author; committed suicide by gassing herself in her kitchen.
  • Freddie Prinze
    Freddie Prinze
    Freddie Prinze was an American actor and stand-up comedian. He was known as the star of Chico and the Man. He is the father of actor Freddie Prinze, Jr.-Early life:...

     (1977), American actor and comedian; gunshot.

R

  • Roy Raymond
    Roy Raymond (businessman)
    Roy Raymond was an American businessman who started the Victoria's Secret lingerie retail store.Raymond, an alumnus of Tufts University and The Stanford Graduate School of Business, opened the first Victoria's Secret store at the Stanford Shopping Center after feeling embarrassed trying to...

     (1993), American founder of Victoria's Secret
    Victoria's Secret
    Victoria's Secret is an American retailer of women's wear, lingerie and beauty products. It is the largest segment of publicly-traded Limited Brands with sales of over US$5 billion and an operating income of $1 billion in 2006...

    , jumped off the Golden Gate Bridge
    Golden Gate Bridge
    The Golden Gate Bridge is a suspension bridge spanning the Golden Gate, the opening of the San Francisco Bay into the Pacific Ocean. As part of both U.S. Route 101 and California State Route 1, the structure links the city of San Francisco, on the northern tip of the San Francisco Peninsula, to...

    .
  • Liam Rector
    Liam Rector
    Liam Rector was an American poet, essayist and educator. He had administered literary programs at the Association of Writers and Writing Programs , the National Endowment for the Arts, the Academy of American Poets, and the Folger Shakespeare Library...

     (2007), U.S. poet and educator; gunshot.
  • David Reimer
    David Reimer
    David Reimer was a Canadian man who was born as a healthy male, but was sexually reassigned and raised as female after his penis was accidentally destroyed during circumcision. Psychologist John Money oversaw the case and reported the reassignment as successful, and as evidence that gender...

    , Canadian man who after a botched circumcision in infancy, was unsuccessfully reassigned as a girl until he learned the truth at age 13, gunshot.
  • Angelo Reyes
    Angelo Reyes
    Angelo Tomas Reyes was the Armed Forces of the Philippines Chief of Staff from 2000 to 2001 under President Joseph Estrada...

     (2011), Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, gunshot
  • Dale Roberts
    Dale Roberts (footballer born 1986)
    Dale Roberts was an English footballer who played as a goalkeeper.Roberts started his career in his native North-East with the academy sides at Sunderland and Middlesbrough before he moved to Nottingham Forest. He failed to make Forest's first team and had loans spells with Eastwood Town and...

    , English football, hanging

S

  • Robert Schommer
    Robert Schommer
    Robert A. Schommer was an American observational astronomer. He was a professor at Rutgers University and later a project scientist for the U.S. office of the Gemini Observatory Project at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile...

     (2001), American astronomer
  • Anne Sexton
    Anne Sexton
    Anne Sexton was an American poet, known for her highly personal, confessional verse. She won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1967...

     (1974), American poet, carbon monoxide inhalation by running automobile in closed garage
  • Gary Speed
    Gary Speed
    Gary Andrew Speed, MBE was a Welsh football player and manager. He was captain of the Wales national football team until he retired from international football in 2004 and he remains the most capped outfield player for Wales and the second overall, having appeared 85 times at senior level between...

     (2011), Welsh footballer and manager, hanging
  • Otto Strandman
    Otto Strandman
    Otto August Strandman VR III/1 was an Estonian politician, who served as Prime Minister and State Elder of Estonia . He was one of the leaders of the centre-left Estonian Labour Party, that saw its biggest support after the 1919 and 1920 elections...

     (1941), Estonian politician, gunshot

T

  • Samuel J. F. Thayer
    Samuel J. F. Thayer
    Samuel J. F. Thayer was an American architect, notable for designing buildings such as the Providence City Hall and the Cathedral of St...

     (1893), American architect, gunshot
  • Hunter S. Thompson
    Hunter S. Thompson
    Hunter Stockton Thompson was an American journalist and author who wrote The Rum Diary , Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail '72 .He is credited as the creator of Gonzo journalism, a style of reporting where reporters involve themselves in the action to...

     (2005), gonzo journalist, author of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, gunshot
  • Li Tobler
    Li Tobler
    Li Tobler was a Swiss stage actress. She is best known as model to several of H. R. Giger's works , as well as for being his life partner up until her suicide in 1975....

     (1975), Swiss actress, model and life partner of artist H. R. Giger
    H. R. Giger
    Hans Rudolf "Ruedi" Giger is a Swiss surrealist painter, sculptor, and set designer. He won an Academy Award for Best Achievement for Visual Effects for his design work on the film Alien.-Early life:...

    , gunshot
  • Dudu Topaz
    Dudu Topaz
    Dudu Topaz was an Israeli TV personality, comedian, actor, screenwriter, playwright, author and radio and television host. In August 2009 he committed suicide during his arrest, after being criminally charged with conspiring violence against prominent media figures in Israel.In 2005, he was voted...

     (2009), Israel
    Israel
    The State of Israel is a parliamentary republic located in the Middle East, along the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea...

    i TV personality and entertainer, hanging
  • Kurt Tucholsky
    Kurt Tucholsky
    Kurt Tucholsky was a German-Jewish journalist, satirist and writer. He also wrote under the pseudonyms Kaspar Hauser, Peter Panter, Theobald Tiger and Ignaz Wrobel. Born in Berlin-Moabit, he moved to Paris in 1924 and then to Sweden in 1930.Tucholsky was one of the most important journalists of...

     (1935), German-Jewish journalist, satirist and writer, overdose
  • Alan Turing
    Alan Turing
    Alan Mathison Turing, OBE, FRS , was an English mathematician, logician, cryptanalyst, and computer scientist. He was highly influential in the development of computer science, providing a formalisation of the concepts of "algorithm" and "computation" with the Turing machine, which played a...

     (1954), English mathematician, logician, cryptanalyst and computer scientist, eating an apple laced with cyanide

V

  • Edwin Valero
    Edwin Valero
    Edwin Valero was a Venezuelan professional boxer. He was born in Bolero Alto, and raised in El Vigía ....

     (2010), Venezuelan boxer, hanging, after arrest on suspicion of murdering his wife
  • Johannes Vares
    Johannes Vares
    Johannes Vares , commonly known as Johannes Vares Barbarus, was an Estonian poet, doctor, and politician.Vares was born in Heimtali, now in Pärsti Parish, Viljandi County, and educated at Pärnu Gymnasium...

     (1946), Estonian poet, doctor and politician
  • Getúlio Vargas
    Getúlio Vargas
    Getúlio Dornelles Vargas served as President of Brazil, first as dictator, from 1930 to 1945, and in a democratically elected term from 1951 until his suicide in 1954. Vargas led Brazil for 18 years, the most for any President, and second in Brazilian history to Emperor Pedro II...

     (1954), two-time President of Brazil, gunshot.
  • Lupe Vélez
    Lupe Vélez
    Lupe Vélez was a Mexican film actress. Vélez began her career in Mexico as a dancer, before moving to the U.S. where she worked in vaudeville. She was seen by Fanny Brice who promoted her, and Vélez soon entered films, making her first appearance in 1924. By the end of the decade she had...

     (1944), Mexican actress, overdose of seconal tablets
  • Juhan Viiding
    Juhan Viiding
    Juhan Viiding , also known under the pseudonym of Jüri Üdi was an Estonian poet and actor.-Childhood, education, and family:Juhan Viiding was born June 1, 1948 in Tallinn to Linda and Paul Viiding...

     (1995), Estonian poet and actor, cut his veins

W

  • David Foster Wallace
    David Foster Wallace
    David Foster Wallace was an American author of novels, essays, and short stories, and a professor at Pomona College in Claremont, California...

     (2008), American author; hanging
  • Dorrit Weixler
    Dorrit Weixler
    Dorrit Weixler was a German film actress of the early 20th century who is best recalled for her comedic roles in German films from the World War I era.-Career:...

     (1916), German film actress; hanging
  • Assia Wevill
    Assia Wevill
    Assia Wevill was a German-born woman who escaped the Nazis, lived in British Palestine and later in Britain, and is best known for her relationship with the English poet Ted Hughes. She killed herself and also her four-year-old daughter Alexandra Tatiana Elise . Six years earlier, Hughes's wife...

     (1969), German born lover of English poet Ted Hughes
    Ted Hughes
    Edward James Hughes OM , more commonly known as Ted Hughes, was an English poet and children's writer. Critics routinely rank him as one of the best poets of his generation. Hughes was British Poet Laureate from 1984 until his death.Hughes was married to American poet Sylvia Plath, from 1956 until...

    ; murder-suicide of her daughter with Hughes, gas
  • Dan White
    Dan White
    Daniel James "Dan" White was a San Francisco supervisor who assassinated San Francisco Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, on Monday, November 27, 1978, at City Hall...

     (1985), San Francisco politician who assassinated Mayor George Moscone
    George Moscone
    George Richard Moscone was an American attorney and Democratic politician. He was the 37th mayor of San Francisco, California, US from January 1976 until his assassination in November 1978. Moscone served in the California State Senate from 1967 until becoming Mayor. In the Senate, he served as...

     and Harvey Milk
    Harvey Milk
    Harvey Bernard Milk was an American politician who became the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California when he won a seat on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors...

    , carbon monoxide poisoning
  • Wendy O. Williams
    Wendy O. Williams
    Wendy Orlean Williams , better known as Wendy O. Williams, was the lead singer for the American punk band the Plasmatics, as well as a solo artist...

     (1998), American singer songwriter (Plasmatics
    Plasmatics
    The Plasmatics were an American heavy metal and punk band formed by Yale University art school graduate Rod Swenson with Wendy O. Williams. The band was a controversial group known for wild live shows that broke countless taboos...

    ), gunshot
  • Tobi Wong
    Tobi Wong
    Donald Tobias Wong was a Canadian born designer and artist. His work had been heavily influenced by subversive art movements including Dada and Fluxus, and having received numerous cease and desist orders, Wong become known for appropriating work by others...

     (2010), Canadian born designer
    Designer
    A designer is a person who designs. More formally, a designer is an agent that "specifies the structural properties of a design object". In practice, anyone who creates tangible or intangible objects, such as consumer products, processes, laws, games and graphics, is referred to as a...

    , and conceptual artist.
  • Virginia Woolf
    Virginia Woolf
    Adeline Virginia Woolf was an English author, essayist, publisher, and writer of short stories, regarded as one of the foremost modernist literary figures of the twentieth century....

     (1941) English author, essayist, publisher, and writer of short stories; suicide by drowning

Z

  • Stefan Zweig
    Stefan Zweig
    Stefan Zweig was an Austrian novelist, playwright, journalist and biographer. At the height of his literary career, in the 1920s and 1930s, he was one of the most famous writers in the world.- Biography :...

     (1942), Jewish Austrian novelist, playwright, journalist and biographer

External links

  • Artists Who Committed Suicide
  • Hollywood Suicides - slideshow by Life
    Life (magazine)
    Life generally refers to three American magazines:*A humor and general interest magazine published from 1883 to 1936. Time founder Henry Luce bought the magazine in 1936 solely so that he could acquire the rights to its name....

  • Famous Artist Suicides - slideshow by Life
    Life (magazine)
    Life generally refers to three American magazines:*A humor and general interest magazine published from 1883 to 1936. Time founder Henry Luce bought the magazine in 1936 solely so that he could acquire the rights to its name....

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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