Notable people that died from
mesothelioma
Mesothelioma, though rare, has had a number of
notable patients. Australian anti-racism activist Bob Bellear died
in 2005. British science fiction writer Michael G. Coney,
responsible for nearly 100 works also died in 2005. American film
and television actor Paul Gleason, perhaps best known for his
portrayal of Principal Richard Vernon in the 1985 film The
Breakfast Club, died in 2006. Mickie Most, an English record
producer, died of mesothelioma in 2003. Paul Rudolph, an American
architect known for his cubist building designs, died in 1997.
Bernie Banton was an Australian workers' rights
activist, who fought a long battle for compensation from James
Hardie after he contracted mesothelioma after working for that
company. He claimed James Hardie knew of the dangers of asbestos
before he began work with the substance making insulation for power
stations. Mesothelioma eventually took his life along with his
brothers and hundreds of James Hardie workers. James Hardie made an
undisclosed settlement with Mr Banton only when his mesothelioma
had reached its final stages and he was expected to have no more
than 48hrs to live. Australian Prime Minister-elect Kevin Rudd
mentioned Mr Banton's extended struggle in his acceptance speech
after winning the 2007 Australian Federal Election.
Steve McQueen was diagnosed with peritoneal
mesothelioma on December 22, 1979. He was not offered surgery or
chemotherapy because doctors felt the cancer was too advanced.
McQueen sought alternative treatments from clinics in Mexico. He
died of a heart attack on November 7, 1980, in Juárez, Mexico,
following cancer surgery. He may have been exposed to asbestos
while serving with the US Marines as a young adult—asbestos was
then commonly used to insulate ships' piping—or because of its use
as an insulating material in car racing suits. (It is also reported
that he worked in a shipyard during World War II, where he might
have been exposed to asbestos.
United States Congressman Bruce Vento died of
mesothelioma in 2000. The Bruce Vento Hopebuilder is awarded yearly
by his wife at the MARF Symposium to persons or organizations who
have done the most to support mesothelioma research and
advocacy.
After a long period of untreated illness and pain,
rock and roll musician and songwriter Warren Zevon was diagnosed
with inoperable mesothelioma in the fall of 2002. Refusing
treatments he believed might incapacitate him, Zevon focused his
energies on recording his final album The Wind including the song
"Keep Me in Your Heart," which speaks of his failing breath. Zevon
died at his home in Los Angeles, California, on September 7,
2003.
Christie Hennessy, the influential Irish
singer-songwriter, died of mesothelioma in 2007, and had stridently
refused to accept the prognosis in the weeks before his death. His
mesothelioma has been attributed to his younger years spent working
on building sites in London
Bob Miner, one of the founders of Software
Development Labs, the forerunner of Oracle Corporation died of
mesothelioma in 1994.
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