Real-world deaths
The following is a list of people who have worked on The Simpsons, both the show and other franchise elements, but later died. For the main series, the list includes deceased voice cast, staff and guest stars. Often, subsequent episodes have been dedicated to them. Those who have work on the show's comics, albums, video games and other related productions, are also included here.
To clarify, this list only includes people who died after their work on The Simpsons took place, for example:
- Eartha Kitt is included because she recorded a guest spot for the show, but died before it aired.
- Neil Armstrong is included because, although he did not knowingly make an appearance on the series, archive audio of his first steps on the moon were used by the show whilst he was still alive.
- Theodore Roosevelt is not included because the archive audio of his speeches were used in the show long after his death.
- Similarly, the writer Edgar Allan Poe was credited with co-writing "The Raven" section of "Treehouse of Horror", as this primarily consisted of the actual text of Poe's The Raven. Poe died aged 40 on October 7, 1849 from unknown causes, some 141 years before the episode aired.
Contents
The Simpsons
The following people have been credited with working on The Simpsons. Several have worked on other aspects of the franchise as well, but they are principally associated with the TV show.
Cast
- Christopher Collins, 44 (died June 12, 1994) - Provided several voices during season 1, including Mr. Burns in the episode "Homer's Odyssey" and the host of America's Most Armed and Dangerous in "Some Enchanted Evening", before leaving the show. Cerebral hemorrhage.
- Doris Grau, 71 (died December 30, 1995) - Provided the voice of Lunchlady Doris and several minor parts. She had previously served as a script supervisor. Lunchlady Doris was retired, but has since made appearances. "Team Homer" was dedicated to her. Emphysema.
- Phil Hartman, 49 (died May 28, 1998) - Hartman regularly provided the voices of Troy McClure and Lionel Hutz as well as other minor one-time parts. Following his murder, his characters were retired and "Bart the Mother" was dedicated to him. Murdered; gun shot.
Crew
- Michael O'Conner, 54 (died May 5, 1992) - O'Conner was a layout artist for season one.
- Michael P. Schoenbrun, 54 (died June 5, 1993) - Schoenbrun was Executive in Charge of Production at Gracie Films. "Homer's Barbershop Quartet" was dedicated to him.
- Ray Johnson Jr. (died 1994) - Johnson was a layout artist.
- Thomas Chastain, 73 (died September 1, 1994) - Co-wrote the story of the episode "Black Widower".
- Jackie Banks (died 1995) - Banks was an animation checker and scene planner, who worked on the show during seasons two, four, five and six. "Mother Simpson" was dedicated to her.
- Constantin Mustatea (died April 17, 1996) - was an animator for "Homer's Odyssey".
- Tom Coppola (died July 13, 1996) - was a layout artist.
- Ed DeMattia (died January 11, 1997) - was an animator for 3 episodes.
- Andy Houts, 31 (died February 26, 1997) - was a production assistant for 20 episodes.
- Phyllis Craig, 67 (died May 18, 1997) - ink and paint supervisor for 61 episodes.
- Art Seidel, 66 (died February 21, 1998) - Seidel was the first assistant director and unit production manager for the live-action segment at the end of "Treehouse of Horror VI".
- Lee Mishkin, 74 (died June 19, 2001) - Animation timer for "Bart Gets Hit by a Car" and "Homer vs. Lisa and the 8th Commandment".
- Kent Holaday, 49 (died June 22, 2001) - Holaday worked as a lip sync for the show. Thyroid condition.
- Ted Bemiller, 79 (died October 26, 2003) - animation camera operator for 23 episodes.
- Barrington T. Bunce, 60 (died June 14, 2005) - layout artist on "Homer's Night Out".
- Jamie O'Brien (died 2005) - O'Brien was a layout artist on "Homer the Moe". "The Girl Who Slept Too Little" was dedicated to him.
- Ron Scalera, 49 (died April 21, 2010) - was the executive in charge of production of "The Simpsons 138th Episode Spectacular".
- Daria Paris, 60 (died October 2, 2010) - assistant to the executive producers in season 1; Sam Simon's assistant from season 2 to 4. Cancer.
Guest stars
- Audrey Meadows, 73 (died February 3, 1996) - Voiced Beatrice Simmons in "Old Money". Lung cancer.
- George Fenneman, 77 (died May 29, 1997) - Appeared as the narrator in "Marge on the Lam". Emphysema.
- Linda McCartney, 56 (died April 17, 1998) - Appeared as herself in "Lisa the Vegetarian". "Trash of the Titans" was dedicated to her. Breast and liver cancer.
- Jim Varney, 50 (died February 10, 2000) - Played Cooter in "Bart Carny". Lung cancer.
- Tito Puente, 77 (died June 1, 2000) - Appeared as himself in "Who Shot Mr. Burns? (Part One)" and "Who Shot Mr. Burns? (Part Two)". Heart problem.
- Steve Allen, 78 (died October 30, 2000) - Appeared as the "electronically altered" voice of Bart in "Separate Vocations" and as himself in "'Round Springfield". Heart attack.
- Joe C., 26 (died November 16, 2000) - Appeared as himself in "Kill the Alligator and Run". Celiac disease
- Werner Klemperer, 80 (died December 6, 2000) - Appeared as Colonel Klink from Hogan's Heroes in "The Last Temptation of Homer". Cancer.
- Joey Ramone, 49 (died April 15, 2001) - Appeared as himself, with the rest of The Ramones in "Rosebud". Lymphoma.
- Jack Lemmon, 76 (died June 27, 2001) - Voiced Frank Ormand in "The Twisted World of Marge Simpson". Colon cancer.
- George Harrison, 58 (died November 29, 2001) - Harrison played himself in "Homer's Barbershop Quartet". "A Hunka Hunka Burns in Love" was dedicated to him. Lung and brain cancer.
- Ron Taylor, 49 (died January 16, 2002) - Voiced Bleeding Gums Murphy in "Moaning Lisa" and "'Round Springfield". "Sweets and Sour Marge" was dedicated to him. Heart attack.
- Lawrence Tierney, 82 (died February 26, 2002) - Played Don Brodka in "Marge Be Not Proud". Pneumonia.
- Stephen Jay Gould, 60 (died May 20, 2002) - Appeared as himself in "Lisa the Skeptic". "Poppa's Got a Brand New Badge" was dedicated to him. Cancer.
- John Entwistle, 57 (died June 27, 2002) - Appeared as himself, with the rest of The Who in "A Tale of Two Springfields". Drug induced heart attack.
- Rod Steiger, 77 (died July 9, 2002) - Voiced Captain Tenille in "Simpson Tide". Pneumonia after gall bladder surgery.
- Chick Hearn, 85 (died August 5, 2002 - Voiced the Announcer in "Homer Defined". Head injury from fall.
- Johnny Unitas, 69 (died September 11, 2002) - Appeared as himself in "Homie the Clown". Heart attack.
- Barry White, 58 (died July 4, 2003) - Appeared as himself in "Whacking Day" and "Krusty Gets Kancelled". Kidney failure.
- Bob Hope, 100 (died July 27, 2003) - Appeared as himself in "Lisa the Beauty Queen". Pneumonia.
- Johnny Cash, 71 (died September 12, 2003) - Voiced the Space Coyote in "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer". Complications from diabetes.
- George Plimpton, 76 (died September 29, 2003) - Appeared as himself in "I'm Spelling as Fast as I Can". Natural causes.
- Paul Winfield, 64 (died March 7, 2004) - Voiced Lucius Sweet in "The Homer They Fall" and "The Trouble With Trillions". Heart attack.
- Isabel Sanford, 86 (died July 9, 2004) - Appeared as herself in "Milhouse Doesn't Live Here Anymore". Heart disease.
- Johnny Ramone, 55 (died September 15, 2004) - Appeared as himself, with the rest of The Ramones in "Rosebud". Prostate cancer.
- Rodney Dangerfield, 82 (died October 5, 2004) - Played Larry Burns in "Burns, Baby Burns". Complications from heart surgery.
- Johnny Carson, 79 (died January 23, 2005) - Carson appeared as himself in "Krusty Gets Kancelled". "Mommie Beerest" was dedicated to him. Emphysema.
- Henry Corden, 85 (died May 19, 2005) - Voiced Fred Flintstone in the episode "Sideshow Bob Roberts". Emphysema.
- Anne Bancroft, 73 (died June 6, 2005) - Voiced Dr. Zweig in "Fear of Flying". Uterine cancer.
- Bob Denver, 70 (died September 2, 2005) - Played himself in "Simpson Tide". Complications from throat cancer surgery.
- Dennis Weaver, 81 (died February 24, 2006) - Played Buck McCoy in "The Lastest Gun in the West". Complications from cancer.
- Bob Papenbrook, 50 (died March 17, 2006) - Papenbrook voiced the Garbageman in "The City of New York vs. Homer Simpson, though remained uncredited
- James Brown, 73 (died December 25, 2006) - Appeared as himself in "Bart's Inner Child". Heart failure induced by pneumonia.
- Tom Poston, 85 (died April 20, 2007) - Appeared as the Capital City Goofball in "Dancin' Homer". Respiratory failure.
- Robert Goulet, 73 (died October 30, 2007) - Appeared as himself in episode "$pringfield (Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Legalized Gambling)". Pulmonary fibrosis.
- George Carlin, 71 (died June 22, 2008) - Voiced Munchie in "D'oh-in' in the Wind". Heart failure.
- Paul Newman, 83 (died September 26, 2008) - Appeared as himself in "The Blunder Years". "Lost Verizon" was dedicated to his memory. Lung cancer.
- Eartha Kitt, 81 (died December 25, 2008) - Appeared posthumously in a "Once Upon a Time in Springfield". Colon cancer.
- Patrick McGoohan, 80 (died January 13, 2009) - Appeared as Number Six in "The Computer Wore Menace Shoes". Short illness.
- John Updike, 76 (died January 27, 2009) - Appeared as himself in "Insane Clown Poppy". Lung cancer.
- Ed McMahon, 86 (died June 23, 2009) - Appeared as himself in "Treehouse of Horror IX". Bone cancer and pneumonia.
- Michael Jackson, 50 (died June 25, 2009) - Appeared as Leon Kompowsky in "Stark Raving Dad" and also co-wrote "Do the Bartman". A repeat of "Wedding for Disaster" was dedicated to him. Drug overdose induced cardiac arrest.
- Gary Coleman, 42 (died May 28, 2010) - Appeared as himself in "Grift of the Magi". Archive audio of his performance was also used in "Behind the Laughter" and "A Tale of Two Springfields". Intercranial hemorrhage from fall.
- Robert Schimmel, 60 (died September 3, 2010) - Appeared as a convict in "Pokey Mom". Car accident.
- Jack LaLanne, 96 (died January 23, 2011) - Appeared as himself in "The Old Man and the "C" Student". Pneumonia.
- Elizabeth Taylor, 79 (died March 23, 2011) - Voiced Maggie in "Lisa's First Word" and appeared as herself in "Krusty Gets Kancelled"; "Love Is a Many-Strangled Thing" was dedicated to her. Heart failure.
- Clarence Clemons, 69 (died June 18, 2011) - Narrated the episode "Grift of the Magi". Stroke.
- Charles Napier, 75 (died October 5, 2011) - Voiced three different characters in four episodes, including the recurring character The Warden. Unknown cause.
- Joe Frazier, 67 (died November 7, 2011) - Appeared as himself in the episodes "Brother, Can You Spare Two Dimes?" and "Homer's Paternity Coot". Liver cancer.
- Harry Morgan, 96 (died December 7, 2011) - Appeared as his Dragnet character Bill Gannon in "Mother Simpson". Pneumonia.
- Tom Ardolino, 56 (died January 6, 2012) - As NRBQ's drummer, Ardolino performed with the rest of the band in three episodes. Diabetes.
- Dick Tufeld, 85 (died January 22, 2012) - Tufeld reprised his role as the voice of the robot from the series Lost in Space in "Mayored to the Mob" and "Milhouse Doesn't Live Here Anymore".
- Dick Clark, 82 (died April 18, 2012) - Appeared as himself in "Treehouse of Horror X". Heart attack.
- Ernest Borgnine, 95 (died July 8, 2012) - Appeared as himself in "Boy-Scoutz 'N the Hood". Kidney failure.
- Gore Vidal, 86 (died July 31, 2012) - Appeared as himself in "Moe'N'a Lisa". Pneumonia.
- Marvin Hamlisch, 68 (died August 6, 2012) - To appear as a character in an upcoming season 24 episode. Unknown illness.
Archive audio
- Neil Armstrong, 82 (died August 25, 2012) - Twice voiced himself via audio footage. Complications following surgery.
The Simpsons Movie
- Kevyn L. Wallace, 47 (died September 14, 2011) - Wallace was a background layout artist on The Simpsons Movie.
Other franchise elements
The following people worked exclusively on an aspect of The Simpsons' franchise independent of the series, such as the comics, albums or video games.
Comic crew
- Dan DeCarlo, 82 (died December 18, 2001) - comic artist. Pneumonia.
- Al Williamson, 79 (died June 12, 2010) - one time comic artist. Unknown causes.
- Gene Colan, 84 (died June 23, 2011) - one time comic illustrator. Cancer and liver disease.
- Earl Kress, 60 (died September 19, 2011) - comic book writer for Bongo Comics Group.
- John Severin, 90 (died February 12, 2012) - one time comic artist. Unknown causes.
Album crew
- David Cole (died January 24, 1995) - Cole co-wrote the song "I Just Can't Help Myself" for The Yellow Album. Complications from spinal meningitis.
The following people have had no direct employment on to the series or franchise, but have been connected to it some way, such as appearing on something about the show.
- Sunni Walton, 59 (died December 29, 1997) - Walton has no known direct connection to The Simpsons, but the episode "This Little Wiggy" was "Dedicated to Sunni Walton O'Neil". Brain tumor.
- Levi Kereama (died October 4, 2008) - Was interviewed in The Simpsons Extravaganza. Fell of a balcony.
- Daryl Gates, 83 (died April 16, 2010) - Appeared in the special Springfield's Most Wanted, made to promote "Who Shot Mr. Burns? (Part Two)", as himself. Blood cancer.
- Polly Platt, 72 (died July 27, 2011) - Gave James L. Brooks the Life in Hell cartoon "The Los Angeles Way of Death" by Matt Groening and suggested the two meet and that the characters be given their own show; the meeting spawned the Tracy Ullman Show shorts. ALS.
Foreign voice cast
- Jean-Louis Millette, 64 (died September 29, 1999) - Voiced Abraham Simpson, Apu and Smithers in the Quebec dubbing. Heart attack.
- Elisabeth Volkmann, 70 (died July 27, 2006) - Voiced Marge, Patty and Selma in the German dub.
- Sayuri Yamauchi, 55 (died March 7, 2012) - Voiced Maude Flanders and Itchy in the Japanese dub.
References