Clockwise from left: James Earl Jones, Michaela DePrince, Bob Newhart, Maggie Smith, Nikki Giovanni and Richard Simmons.
Clockwise from left: James Earl Jones, Michaela DePrince, Bob Newhart, Maggie Smith, Nikki Giovanni and Richard Simmons.
NPR/Jesse Dittmar for The Washington Post/Getty Images; Ian Gavan/Getty Images; Gerald Smith/NBCUniversal via Getty Images; Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP; Getty Images/Hulton Archive; American Broadcasting Companies/Getty Images

Remembering the Actors, Musicians, Writers and Artists we Lost in 2024

Share
Clockwise from left: James Earl Jones, Michaela DePrince, Bob Newhart, Maggie Smith, Nikki Giovanni and Richard Simmons.
Clockwise from left: James Earl Jones, Michaela DePrince, Bob Newhart, Maggie Smith, Nikki Giovanni and Richard Simmons.
NPR/Jesse Dittmar for The Washington Post/Getty Images; Ian Gavan/Getty Images; Gerald Smith/NBCUniversal via Getty Images; Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP; Getty Images/Hulton Archive; American Broadcasting Companies/Getty Images
Remembering the Actors, Musicians, Writers and Artists we Lost in 2024
Copy

Every year, we remember some of the writers, actors, musicians, filmmakers and performers who died over the past year, and whose lifetime of creative work helped shape our world. Here are just a few of them. (You can find a tribute to many more musicians here.)

Seiji Ozawa, classical conductor for the Boston Symphony Orchestra

Born in China to Japanese parents, Ozawa shook up the classical music establishment when he was appointed to lead a top American orchestra in 1973. Young, hip and unorthodox, he represented a radical departure from an artistic tradition that rarely placed men of color (or any women) on prestigious podiums. He was a protege of Leonard Bernstein, with whom he shared an adventurousness and dynamism that captivated fans beyond the world of classical music. Ozawa also championed cross-cultural exchange; notably, he brought the BSO to China in 1979. Read Andrea Shea and Tom Huizenga’s remembrance.

Maggie Smith, formidable dame of theater, film and television

You might know her as the tart-tongued Dowager Countess on Downton Abbey or as Professor Minerva McGonagall in the Harry Potter movies, but Maggie Smith’s illustrious stage career began decades earlier, as a teenage star of Shakespeare at the Oxford Playhouse in England. Her work on screen included indelible performances in such films as The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, A Room With A View and Gosford Park. Read Bob Mondello’s remembrance.

Judith Jamison, arts visionary who defined Black modern dance

Jamison’s celebrated collaboration with Alvin Ailey began in the 1960s as a star member of his troupe. Her lithe elegance transfixed audiences; her interpretation of his piece “Cry” made Jamison an immediate modern dance icon when it premiered in 1971. Eventually, Jamison moved into a different kind of role, as artistic director of the company, which she led for more than two decades. Read Andrew Limbong’s remembrance.

Read more about those we lost in 2024 here.

Copyright 2024 NPR.

New England will face a West Coast challenger for the Feb. 8 championship
Higher taxes on Rhode Island’s richest are increasingly likely, although not without a lot of debate
The National Weather Service warns of dangerous wind chills and up to 15 inches of snow across southern New England
Starting Feb. 1, TSA will require travelers without compliant forms of identification to verify their identity through a biometric or biographic system
About 6.5% of postcard recipients file claims, court records show
Program chair Amy VanderWeele explains why this year’s pick—Happy Land by Dolen Perkins-Valdez—resonates with Rhode Islanders, from land rights to who gets to tell history