It begins with her name.
Sometimes it’s one you recognize immediately. Other times it feels vaguely familiar, as if you’ve heard it before but can’t quite place it. Either way, the process on the Obituaries desk is the same: Pull the clips, read the old coverage, trace the arc of a life.
Her life story might appear in fragments — a photograph without a caption, a paragraph that hints at a larger story, a headline that starts with “wife of.” The pleasure of this work lies in the excavation — in watching a fuller life come into focus.
For Women’s History Month, we’re revisiting women whose deaths were recorded by The New York Times across generations. Not to rank them. Not to retrofit them into models of uncomplicated heroes. But to re-examine them with the benefit of distance — to see what was emphasized, what was minimized, what might have been left unsaid.
There were women whose deaths reopened arguments — figures who collided with power, scandal and reckoning. Their obituaries did not settle the debate; they extended it.
Jiang Qing 1914 – 1991
Mao’s widow, who helped carry out the Cultural Revolution in China
Christine Keeler 1942 – 2017
Central figure in Britain’s “Scandal of the Century”
Virginia Giuffre 1983 – 2025
Outspoken voice in the Jeffrey Epstein sex-trafficking scandal
Anita Bryant 1940 – 2024
Beauty queen whose anti-gay politics undid her singing career
Hannah Arendt 1906 – 1975
Incendiary political philosopher who escaped Hitler’s Germany
Nancy Wake 1912 – 2011
World War II spy who saved the lives of hundreds of Allied soldiers
Leni Riefenstahl 1902 – 2003
German filmmaker who was denounced as a Nazi propagandist
Valerie Solanas 1936 – 1988
Radical feminist and author who shot Andy Warhol
Madame Nhu 1924 – 2011
Glamorous presidential palace hostess who gained political power during the Vietnam War
There were women who survived and molded the aftermath of something history recognized for a moment: War. Displacement. Violence. Illness. The news cycle marched on. The cameras were packed up. These women went on living — sometimes for decades — carrying stories that outlasted the moment that briefly made them visible.
Fania Fenelon 1908 – 1983
Memoirist who survived Auschwitz by performing in an inmate orchestra
Millvina Dean 1912 – 2009
Survivor of the Titanic disaster when she was 9 weeks old
Hannah Senesh 1921 – 1944
Poet and paratrooper who defied the Nazis
Rose Freedman 1893 – 2001
Last survivor of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire
Anna Akhmatova 1889 – 1966
Leading Soviet poet who was silenced in a Stalinist literary purge
Assata Shakur 1947 – 2025
Convicted revolutionary who found refuge in Cuba
Ana Orantes 1937 – 1997
Bold artist whose gruesome murder brought change to Spain
Josette Molland 1923 – 2024
Painter who endured horrors as a captured member of the French Resistance
Gil Won-ok 1928 – 2025
Crusading survivor of sexual slavery for Japan’s World War II troops
Noor Inayat Khan 1914 – 1944
Indian princess who engaged in espionage for the British during World War II
Jirdes Winther Baxter 1924 – 2026
Last known survivor of a diphtheria epidemic in Alaska that precipitated the Iditarod
There were firsts, onlys and lasts — barrier breakers whose achievements were framed as singular events that defined them, narrowing how they were remembered.
Mildred Loving 1939 – 2008
Activist who battled the ban on mixed-race marriage in the Supreme Court
Frances Gabe 1915 – 2016
Inventor who created the world’s only self-cleaning home
Claudette Colvin 1939 – 2026
Civil rights activist who refused to give her bus seat to a white woman
Helen Keller 1880 – 1968
Humanitarian who became a symbol of the indomitable human spirit
Dorothy Wise 1914 – 1995
“Grandmother of Pool” who won a national championship
Mia Love 1975 – 2025
First Black Republican woman elected to Congress
Charlotta Bass around 1880 – 1969
Journalist and first Black woman to be a vice presidential candidate
Bessie Coleman 1892 – 1926
Pioneering aviatrix who performed death-defying stunts
Norma McCorvey 1947 – 2017
Plaintiff who was the anonymous “Roe” in Roe v. Wade
There were women who reshaped culture from the margins, whose ideas traveled widely whether or not their names did.
Anna May Wong 1905 – 1961
Captivating Chinese American Hollywood star
Norma Swenson 1932 – 2025
An author of “Our Bodies, Ourselves”
Charlotte Perriand 1903 – 1999
Furniture and interior designer who collaborated with Le Corbusier
Josephine Baker 1906 – 1975
American who became one of France’s great music-hall stars
Kate Worley 1958 – 2004
Pioneering author of erotic comics
Agnes Varda 1928 – 2019
Influential French New Wave filmmaker
Hedy Lamarr 1914 – 2000
Sultry Hollywood star turned inventor
Maya Angelou 1928 – 2014
Literary force and lyrical witness to the Jim Crow South
Oriana Fallaci 1929 – 2006
Provocative journalist and interviewer of the powerful
There were those for whom art could not be disentangled from life, whose creations, often read as confessions, were intrinsically connected to their identities.
Maria Callas 1923 – 1977
Most electrifying opera singer of her time
Tina Turner 1939 – 2023
Earthshaking singer and one of the most successful recording artists of all time
Amy Winehouse 1983 – 2011
British singing prodigy who led a troubled life
Beate Uhse 1919 – 2001
Entrepreneur of erotic goods
bell hooks 1952 – 2021
Author whose incisive writing on gender and race helped expand feminism’s focus
Tempest Storm 1928 – 2021
Burlesque dancer who disrobed to enduring acclaim
Audre Lorde 1934 – 1992
Black feminist poet and memoirist
Lucille Clifton 1936 – 2010
Poet who explored the intricacies of Black lives
Billie Holiday 1915 – 1959
Celebrated jazz singer whose last years were tumultuous
Dorothy Parker 1893 – 1967
Sardonic humorist who never met anyone she couldn’t skewer
There were women who were introduced to the public in the shadows of famous men — wives, partners, collaborators, mothers — whose influence proved foundational, even when history saw them as supporting characters.
Coretta Scott King 1927 – 2006
Civil rights icon and wife of the Rev Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Ruth Clement Bond 1904 – 2005
Artist who turned the quilt into a work of social commentary
Louise Little 1894 or 1897 – 1989
Influential activist and mother of Malcolm X
Eleanor Roosevelt 1884 – 1962
Brilliant first lady who was voted “the world’s most admired woman”
Martha Gellhorn 1908 – 1998
Daring war correspondent who married Ernest Hemingway
Lise Meitner 1878 – 1968
Nuclear physicist who was forced to leave a lab on the brink of a great discovery
Margaret Keane 1927 – 2022
Painter of sad-eyed waifs whose husband claimed credit for her art
Marthe Gautier 1925 – 2022
Scientist whose male colleague took credit for her work in identifying the cause of Down syndrome
Molly Drake 1915 – 1993
Musical force behind her son Nick Drake’s sound
Kitty Dukakis 1936 – 2025
Activist wife of former Governor Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts and proponent of electroshock therapy
Gladys Bourdain 1934 – 2020
Editor who helped her son Anthony Bourdain reach an audience
There were women who made headlines …
Marlene Dietrich 1901 – 1992
Magnetic movie star who became a symbol of androgynous glamour
Nellie Bly 1864 – 1922
Muckraking journalist who exposed poor conditions in a mental asylum
Toni Morrison 1931 – 2019
Towering Nobel laureate and novelist of the Black experience
Julia Child 1912 – 2004
Chef who turned the art of French cooking into prime-time entertainment
Sylvia Rivera 1951 – 2002
Revolutionary who led the charge of the modern LGBTQ+ liberation movement
Hattie Wiener 1936 – 2024
Sex-positive therapist known as the world’s “Oldest Cougar”
Judy Garland 1922 – 1969
Singer and star of “The Wizard of Oz” and other Hollywood classics
Jane Addams 1860 – 1935
Renowned social welfare worker and founder of Hull House
Estée Lauder 1908 – 2004
Cosmetics titan who believed in the pursuit of beauty
… world leaders remembered for decisions that altered the course of a nation …
Indira Gandhi 1917 – 1984
Dominant political figure in India for almost two decades
Golda Meir 1898 – 1978
Onetime teacher in Milwaukee who became prime minister of Israel
Vilma Espín 1930 – 2007
Cuba’s unofficial first lady for decades
Mother Teresa 1910 – 1997
Roman Catholic nun who answered a call to serve the poor
Violeta Chamorro 1929 – 2025
Nicaraguan president and first woman to lead a Central American country
Wangari Maathai 1940 – 2011
Kenyan environmentalist who began a movement to reforest her country
… athletes who reimagined what was physically possible …
Wilma Rudolph 1940 – 1994
Statuesque sports hero who won three gold medals in track and field
Patti McGee 1945 – 2024
Skateboarding’s first female champion
Alice Coachman 1923 – 2014
First Black woman to win an Olympic gold medal
Miki Gorman 1935 – 2015
Won the New York City Marathon after recently giving birth
Joan Joyce 1940 – 2022
Softball sensation who struck out baseball star Ted Williams
Babe Zaharias 1911 – 1956
World’s reigning all-around female athlete
Toni Stone 1921 – 1996
First woman to play big-league baseball
… and there were those who died before their time, leaving behind an unfinished draft or a song — the outlines of what might have been.
Marilyn Monroe 1926 – 1962
Hollywood bombshell and enduring sex symbol
Selena 1971 – 1995
Reigning queen of Tejano music
Aaliyah 1979 – 2001
R&B singer who first hit the charts at 14
Natalie Wood 1938 – 1981
Glamorous actress in “Rebel Without a Cause,” “Splendor in the Grass” and other classic movies
Yu Gwan-sun 1902 – 1920
Korean independence activist who defied Japanese rule
Sophie 1986 – 2021
Inventive producer and performer who spearheaded hyperpop
Anna Nicole Smith 1967 – 2007
Playboy centerfold who was famous for being rich and litigious
Karen Carpenter 1950 – 1983
Musician who sold more than 30 million records with her brother