Celebrities Who Have Died in 2023

The entertainment world said goodbye to many figures from the worlds of music, movies and television in 2023. Scroll down to see all the celebrities we lost in 2023 so far, including Andre Braugher, Ryan ONeal, Norman Lear, Matthew Perry, Raquel Welch, Lisa Marie Presley, Suzanne Somers, Cindy Williams, David Crosby, Jeff Beck, Sinead OConnor,

The entertainment world said goodbye to many figures from the worlds of music, movies and television in 2023. Scroll down to see all the celebrities we lost in 2023 so far, including Andre Braugher, Ryan O’Neal, Norman Lear, Matthew Perry, Raquel Welch, Lisa Marie Presley, Suzanne Somers, Cindy Williams, David Crosby, Jeff Beck, Sinead O’Connor, Pee-Wee Herman, Jimmy Buffett and more.

  • Tom Wilkinson

    Tom Wilkinson, the two-time Oscar nominated British actor who appeared in films including “The Full Monty,” “Shakespeare in Love” and “The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel,” died Dec. 30. He was 75.

    Read the full obit here

  • Tom Smothers

    Tom Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers musical comedy duo, died on Dec. 26 in Santa Rosa, Calif. He was 86.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Lee Sun-kyun

    Lee Sun-kyun, a South Korean actor who starred in the 2020 Oscar best picture winner “Parasite,” died Dec. 27. He was 48.

    Read the full obit here

  • Andre Braugher

    Andre Braugher, the two-time Emmy winning actor who starred in the hit television series “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” and “Homicide: Life on the Street,” died Dec. 11 after a brief illness. He was 61.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Ryan O’Neal

    Oscar-nominated actor Ryan O’Neal, who came to prominence on TV’s “Peyton Place” and became a top star of the 1970s in films including “Love Story,” “What’s Up, Doc?,” “Paper Moon” and “Barry Lyndon,” died Dec. 8.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Norman Lear

    Writer-producer-developer Norman Lear, who revolutionized American comedy with such daring, immensely popular early-‘70s sitcoms as “All in the Family” and “Sanford and Son,” died Dec. 5. He was 101.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Shane McGowan

    The Pogues frontman Shane McGowan died Nov. 30 at 65. 

    Read the full obit here.

  • Marty Krofft

    Marty Krofft, colorful producer with his brother Sid of ‘H.R. Pufnstuf,’ ‘Land of the Lost,’ and more, died at 86.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Matthew Perry

    Matthew Perry, the actor known for playing Chandler Bing on the hit NBC sitcom “Friends,” died Oct. 28. He was 54.

    Read the full obit here

  • Richard Roundtree

    Richard Roundtree, who starred in “Shaft,” died October 24. 

    Read the full obituary here.

  • Burt Young

    Burt Young, who played Paulie in the “Rocky” films, died October 18. 

    Read the full obituary here

  • Suzanne Somers

    Suzanne Somers, star of “Three’s Company,” died October 15. 

    Read her full obituary here.

  • Piper Laurie

    Piper Laurie, who starred in “Carrie” and “The Hustler,” died October 14.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Michael Gambon

    Michael Gambon, who played Dumbledore in the “Harry Potter” films, died September 27.

    Read the full obituary here

  • David McCallum

    David McCallum, who starred in “The Man From UNCLE,” died September 25. 

    Read the full obituary here.

  • Gary Wright

    Gary Wright, the musician best known for his hit singles “Dream Weaver” and “Love Is Alive,” died Sept. 4. He was 80. 

    Read the full obit here

  • Jimmy Buffett

    Singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett, whose laid-back, good-humored, often tropically-themed brand of country-laced pop spawned a lucrative one-man business empire, died Sept 2. He was 76. 

    Read the full obit here.

  • Robbie Robertson

    Guitarist-songwriter-singer Robbie Robertson, who led the Canadian-American group the Band to rock prominence in the 1970s and worked extensively with Bob Dylan and Martin Scorsese, died Aug. 9. He was 80.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Bob Barker

    Emmy Award-winning gameshow host Bob Barker, who spent five decades associated with “The Price Is Right” and “Truth or Consequences,” died Aug. 26. He was 99. 

    Read the full obit here.

  • Ron Cephas Jones

    Ron Cephas Jones, the Emmy-winning actor known for his role as William Hill on NBC’s “This Is Us,” died Aug. 19. He was 66.

    Read the full obit here.

  • William Friedkin

    Director William Friedkin, best known for his Oscar-winning “The French Connection” and blockbuster “The Exorcist,” died Aug. 7 in Los Angeles. He was 87.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Angus Cloud

    “Euphoria” star Angus Cloud died July 31. He was 25.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Paul Reubens

    Paul Reubens, the actor best known for portraying the irrepressible, joyfully childlike Pee-wee Herman, died on July 30 after a private bout of cancer. He was 70.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Sinéad O’Connor

    Sinéad O’Connor, the Irish singer of “Nothing Compares 2 U,” died on July 26. She was 56. Her cause of death has yet to be revealed.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Tony Bennett

    Tony Bennett, the master pop vocalist who had a professional career spanning eight decades with a No. 1 album at age 85, died on July 21 in New York City. He was 96.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Alan Arkin

    Alan Arkin, an Oscar-winning actor for “Little Miss Sunshine” with a body of work that spans seven decades of stage and screen acting, died June 29 at his home in Carlsbad, Calif. He was 89.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Julian Sands

    Julian Sands, the British actor who pivoted from the romantic lead in “A Room With a View” to playing sinister characters in films like “Warlock,” was confirmed dead on June 27 after being reported missing near Mt. Baldy in Southern California on Jan. 13. He was 65.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Glenda Jackson

    Glenda Jackson, who segued from a successful actress — Oscars for “Women in Love” and “A Touch of Class” and two Emmys for “Elizabeth R” — into a 23-year career as member of the U.K.’s House of Commons, died on June 15 in London. She was 87.  

    Read the full obit here.

  • Treat Williams

    Treat Williams, a veteran screen actor who received acclaim for his lead performance in the musical “Hair” and starred in The WB series “Everwood,” died June 12 after being involved in a motorcycle accident near Dorset, Vt. He was 71.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Tina Turner

    Soulful diva Tina Turner, who had a lengthy run of ’60s and ’70s R&B hits and struck major pop stardom in the ’80s, died on May 24 in Switzerland. She was 83.

    Read the full obit here. 

  • Gordon Lightfoot

    Singer-songwriter Gordon Lightfoot, the Canadian folk music laureate who crossed over to major pop fame in the U.S. during the ‘70s, died of natural causes on May 1 at Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto. He was 84 years old.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Jerry Springer

    Jerry Springer, the former Cincinnati news anchor and mayor who came to preside over the controversial and extremely profitable talk show bearing his name, died on April 27. He was 79.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Harry Belafonte

    Singer, actor, producer and activist Harry Belafonte, who spawned a calypso craze in the U.S. with his music and blazed new trails for African American performers, died April 25 of congestive heart failure at his Manhattan home. He was 96.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Barry Humphries

    Australian satirist Barry Humphries, known for his onstage and TV drag persona Edna Everage and for his character Sir Les Patterson, died on April 22. He was 89.

    Read the full obit here. 

  • Lance Reddick

    Lance Reddick, who appeared in major TV series like “The Wire,” “Fringe” and “Bosch” and films like the “John Wick” franchise, died of natural causes on March 17. He was 60.

    Read the full obit here. 

  • Bobby Caldwell

    Bobby Caldwell, the soulful singer-songwriter behind the 1978 hit “What You Won’t Do for Love,” died on March 14 after a long illness. He was 71.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Tom Sizemore

    Tom Sizemore died after being taken off life support, his manager Charles Lago confirmed. The 61-year-old actor suffered a brain aneurysm on Feb. 18.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Richard Belzer

    Richard Belzer, who started his career as a stand-up comedian before becoming a household name for his role as Det. John Munch in “Homicide: Life on the Street” and “Law & Order: SVU,” died Feb. 19 in Beaulieu-sur-Mer, France. He was 78.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Stella Stevens

    Stella Stevens, who starred with Elvis Presley in “Girls! Girls! Girls!” and with Jerry Lewis in “The Nutty Professor” as well as in disaster film “The Poseidon Adventure,” died Feb. 17 in Los Angeles.

    Read the obit here.

  • Raquel Welch

    Raquel Welch, the actor who became an icon and sex symbol thanks to films like “One Million Years B.C.” and “Three Musketeers,” died Feb. 15. She was 82.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Burt Bacharach

    Legendary pop composer Burt Bacharach, who wrote dozens of hit songs in the 1960s and ’70s, died Feb. 9. 

    Read the full obit here

  • Barrett Strong

    Barrett Strong, who sang Motown’s first hit with “Money (That’s What I Want” and co-wrote “I Heard it Through the Gravevine,” died Jan. 29. 

    Read the full obit here

  • Annie Wersching

    Annie Wersching, an actor best known for her roles in “24” and “Bosch” and for originating the role of Tess in the 2013 video game “The Last of Us,” died Jan. 29.

  • Tom Verlaine

    Tom Verlaine, who redefined rock guitar in the punk era of the 1970s with his band Television, died Jan. 28.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Lisa Loring

    Lisa Loring, who played the pig-tailed young Wednesday in the original “Addams Family” series, died Jan. 28.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Cindy Williams

    Cindy Williams, star of “Laverne & Shirley,” died Jan. 25. 

    Read the full obit here.

  • Lance Kerwin

    Lance Kerwin, who starred in TV series “James at 15” and as Mark Petrie, the teen who becomes a vampire hunter in Stephen King mini-series “Salem’s Lot,” died Jan. 24. 

    Read the full obit here.

  • David Crosby

    David Crosby, of the Byrds and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, died Jan. 18.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Gina Lollobrigida

    Gina Lollobrigida, the 1950s Italian bombshell who starred in films including “Fanfan la Tulipe,” “Beat the Devil,” “Trapeze” and “Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell,” died Jan. 16.

    Read the full obit here

  • Lisa Marie Presley

    Lisa Marie Presley, Elvis Presley’s only child whose tumultuous life included a music career, died Jan. 12 at Los Angeles hospital. She was 54.

    Read the full obituary here.

  • Robbie Bachman

    Robbie Bachman, who co-founded and played drums for the hard-riffing 1970s Canadian rock band Bachman-Turner Overdrive, died Jan. 12 at the age of 69.  

    Read the full obit here.

  • Carole Cook

    Carole Cook, a veteran stage and screen actor who was a protégé of Lucille Ball, died Jan. 11 in Beverly Hills, Calif., of heart failure. She was 98.

    Read the full obit here

  • Ben Masters

    Ben Masters, who played Julian Crane in the daytime drama “Passions,” died Jan. 11 of COVID-19 in Palm Springs, Calif., after battling dementia for several years. He was 75.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Jeff Beck

    Jeff Beck, among the most innovative and certainly the most unpredictable of ’60s guitar heroes, died Jan 10. He was 78.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Melinda Dillon

    Oscar and Tony-nominated actor Melinda Dillon, who played Mother Parker in “A Christmas Story,” and appeared in “Magnolia” and “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” died Jan. 9. She was 83.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Fred White

    Fred White, one of the two drummers for soul group Earth Wind & Fire during the most successful decade in its history, 1974-84, died Jan. 9 at age 67.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Adam Rich

    Adam Rich, the former child actor best known for starring as the youngest child on the ABC dramedy “Eight Is Enough,” died Jan. 7. He was 54.

    Read the full obit here.

  • Gangsta Boo

    Gangsta Boo, a rapper and former member of hip-hop group Three 6 Mafia, died Jan. 1, her representative confirmed to Variety. She was 43.

    Read the full obit here.

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