Obituaries Related to "Goodman" from New York Times Archive
Dawn Mello, Who Revived Bergdorf Goodman and Gucci, Dies at 88
She was one of the first women to rise to leadership in retailing, and her aesthetic helped shift the landscape of American fashion.
Norman Goodman, 95, Dies; Summoned Manhattanites to Jury Duty, Like It or Not
Yes, he existed. For generations, this clerk of New York County’s printed signature in the upper-left-hand corner of a mailed summons was something to dread.
Jeremiah Goodman, Portraitist of Gilded Homes, Dies at 94
In paintings, he captured bold interiors by the best designers at the homes of luminaries like Greta Garbo, Ronald and Nancy Reagan, and Wallis Simpson, the duchess of Windsor.
Roy Goodman, Liberal Republican Stalwart in New York, Dies at 84
Mr. Goodman was longtime state senator from the Upper East Side whose ambitions for higher office were thwarted.
George Goodman, Who Demystified the World of Money, Dies at 83
Mr. Goodman was probably best known as the amiable but intellectually rigorous host of “Adam Smith’s Money World,” seen on PBS from 1984 to 1997.
Jerry Goodman Is Dead
A friend, gone too soon.
Julian Goodman Dies at 90; Led NBC
Mr. Goodman produced the second Kennedy-Nixon debate and defended his network when it was pressured by the Nixon White House.
David Zelag Goodman, Far-Ranging Screenwriter, Dies at 81
The prolific screenwriter helped Sam Peckinpah write “Straw Dogs” and was nominated for an Academy Award for his work on the romantic comedy “Lovers and Other Strangers.”
Al Goodman, R&B Singer, Dies at 67
Mr. Goodman was the soothing bass in the trio the Moments, best known for the 1970 hit “Love on a Two-Way Street.”
Joya Sherrill, Who Sang With Ellington and Goodman, Is Dead at 85
Ms. Sherrill was also one of the first African-American performers to host a children’s television show.
Latest NY Times Obituaries
Robert Moskowitz, Abstract Painter of New York’s Skyscrapers, Dies at 88
He depicted the Empire State Building, the Flatiron Building and, most indelibly, the World Trade Center. Those paintings took on new meaning after 9/11.
Linda Bean, an L.L. Bean Heir and a Conservative Donor, Dies at 82
A granddaughter of the celebrated Maine brand’s founder, she set out as an entrepreneur in her mid-60s and used her wealth to fund right-wing causes.
Vernor Vinge, Innovative Science Fiction Novelist, Dies at 79
He conceived an early version of cyberspace and predicted the “technological singularity,” a tipping point at which machines would become smarter than humans.
Peter Eotvos, Evocative Modernist Composer and Conductor, Dies at 80
A tireless Hungarian advocate of contemporary music, he adapted literary sources both modern and classic, instilling his work with “inimitable character and pathos.”
Joe Lieberman, U.S. Senator and Vice Presidential Candidate, Dies at 82
He served four terms in the Senate from Connecticut and was chosen by Al Gore as his running mate in the 2000 election. He was the first Jewish candidate on a major-party ticket.
Daniel Kahneman, Who Plumbed the Psychology of Economics, Dies at 90
He helped pioneer a branch of the field that exposed hard-wired mental biases in people’s economic behavior. The work led to a Nobel.
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