list of people from stamford connecticut

      List of people from Stamford, Connecticut GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21

      This is a list of notable people in the past and present associated with Stamford, Connecticut.


      Art



      Gutzon Borglum (1867–1941), sculptor of Mount Rushmore, lived in Stamford 1910–1920
      Paul Calle (1928–2010), artist who created the 1969 stamp commemorating the first crewed Moon landing
      J.A. Ten Eyck III (1893–1932), painter and etcher
      Helen Ross(1928–2011), artist, had a home in the Shippan section of town
      Joe Harris((1928–2017), commercial illustrator and storyboard artist, creator of Underdog and the Trix™️ Rabbit. aka Joe Harris III
      Hildreth Meière (1892–1961), artist and designer, lived in North Stamford
      Alex Raymond (1909–1956), creator of the Flash Gordon comic strip, lived in North Stamford
      Kevin Salatino, art curator and former director of Huntington Library and Bowdoin College Museum of Art
      Alexander Rummler (c.1867–1959), painter, lived in the city


      Business


      Ralph Bahna (1942–2014), CEO of Cunard Line, chairman of Priceline.com, founder of Club Quarters
      Jeph Loeb (born 1958), comic book writer, film and television writer, producer, former head of Marvel Television
      Vince McMahon (born 1945) and Linda McMahon (born 1948), founders of World Wrestling Entertainment


      Entertainers


      Christopher Abbott (born 1986), American actor
      Elizabeth Crocker Bowers (1830–1895), stage actress and theatrical manager, also known professionally as Mrs. D. P. Bowers
      Michael Dante (born 1931), actor and professional baseball player, born in the city
      Dana Delany (born 1956), actress, grew up in Stamford
      Kenny Delmar (1910–1986), actor, died in the city
      Kim Greist (born 1958), actress, was born in the city
      Eileen Heckart (1919–2001), Oscar-winning actress and city resident
      John Henson (born 1967), comedian, was born in the city
      Earl Hindman (1942–2003), actor, died in the city
      Harry Houdini (1874–1926), escape artist, had a summer home in Stamford
      Alan Kalter (1943–2021), announcer on Late Show with David Letterman, lived in the city
      Christopher Lloyd (born 1938), actor, born in Stamford
      Antonio Macia, screenwriter and actor
      Don Morrow (1927–2020), actor, announcer and voiceover artist
      Bill Moseley (born 1951), horror film actor, was born in the city
      Chris Noth (born 1954), actor
      Louise Platt (1915–2003), theatre and film actress, was born in the city
      Bruce Prichard (born 1963), professional wrestling executive
      Gilda Radner (1946–1989), comedian, actress, wife of Gene Wilder, lived in the city
      Katherine Reback (1950/51–2010), screenwriter (Fools Rush In), was a native of Stamford
      Rosemary Rice (1925–2012), actress (Mama), voice-over artist and children's musician
      Dan Sileo (born 1963), athlete, radio host, was born in the city
      Henry Simmons (born 1970), actor, was born in the city
      Stephen Sondheim (1930–2021), composer, lived in North Stamford when he was a boy
      Grant Tinker (1926–2016), former husband of Mary Tyler Moore and former chairman and CEO of NBC (1981–1986), was born in the city
      Mark Tinker (born 1951), producer, director, and writer, was born in the city
      Vivian Vance (1909–1979), actress who starred as Ethel Mertz in I Love Lucy
      Fredi Washington (1903–1994), actress, died in the city
      Marc Weiner (born 1955), Jewish comedian, clown, puppeteer, and television producer, lives in the city
      Gene Wilder (1933–2016), actor and director, lived and died in the city
      Peggy Wood (1892–1978), actress and a member of the Algonquin Round Table, died in the city


      Government and politics



      Andrew P. Bakaj (born 1982), former Department of Defense and CIA Official; lead counsel for the Whisteblower during the Impeachment Inquiry and the subsequent Impeachment of President Donald Trump, born and raised in Stamford
      J. Cofer Black (born 1950), former United States Department of State Coordinator for Counterterrorism with the rank of Ambassador at Large (2002–2004); born in Stamford
      Georges Clemenceau (1841–1929), French Premier during World War I; one of the major voices behind the Treaty of Versailles; taught in a girls' school in Stamford; married one of his pupils, Mary Plummer, in 1869
      Homer Stille Cummings (1870–1956), United States Attorney General, 1933–1939; in 1900, 1901, and 1904, he was elected mayor of Stamford; helped found the Cummings & Lockwood law firm in 1909
      Charles A. Duelfer, chief U.S. weapons inspector in Iraq; raised in Stamford
      Joe Lieberman (born 1942), U.S. Senator and 2000 Democratic nominee for vice president; born in Stamford
      Dan Malloy (born 1955), Governor of Connecticut
      John J. McCloy (1895–1989), prominent adviser to President Franklin D. Roosevelt and President Ronald Reagan; died in Stamford
      William T. Minor (1815–1889), 39th Governor of Connecticut, Consul-General to Havana, Cuba and judge on the Connecticut Superior Court; born in Stamford
      Candace Owens (born 1989), conservative commentator and political activist
      Jen Psaki (born 1978), former White House Press Secretary
      Chris Shays (born 1945), Fourth District U.S. representative; former resident of Stamford


      Literature, writing, journalism


      Christopher Buckley (born 1952), novelist, editor, William F. Buckley's son, partly grew up in the Cove section
      William F. Buckley, Jr. (1925–2008), founder of National Review magazine, longtime resident in the Cove section
      Albert K. Dawson (1885–1967), photojournalist and film correspondent in World War I. His firm "Brown & Dawson" was based in Stamford between 1912 and 1919
      Eric Jay Dolin (born 1961), author of numerous books on American history, including "Black Flags, Blue Waters: The Epic History of America's Most Notorious Pirates"; "Leviathan: A History of Whaling in America"; and "Rebels at Sea: Privateering in the American Revolution." Lived in Stamford from 1971 to 1979
      Greg Farshtey (born 1965), author, editor at Lego, known for his work on Bionicle, grew up in Stamford
      Estelle Feinstein (1923–2002), University of Connecticut professor, local historian, lived 45 years in Stamford
      Chris Hansen (born 1959), television journalist, lives in the city
      Harry Harrison (born Henry Maxwell Dempsey, 1925–2012), science-fiction author, was born in the city
      John Hawkes (1925–1998), novelist, was born in the city
      Carol Iovanna (born 1952), newscaster on Fox News, is a resident of the city
      Jeph Loeb, comic book, screen, and television writer, and television and motion picture producer, grew up in Stamford
      J. D. Salinger (1919–2010), author of The Catcher in the Rye, lived in north Stamford briefly in the late 1940s
      Chuck Scarborough (born 1943), television news anchor, lives in North Stamford
      Anthony Julian Tamburri (born 1949), professor, scholar, publisher (Bordighera Press); writes on literature and cinema
      Dana Tyler (born 1958), news anchor for WCBS-TV in New York City, lives in Stamford
      Mort Walker (1923–2018), comic artist, lived in Stamford


      Music


      Dave Abbruzzese (born 1968), Pearl Jam's drummer, 1991–1994, was born in the city
      Michael Bolton (born 1953), singer, lived in North Stamford
      Henry "Harry" Thacker Burleigh (1866–1949), singer who made "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot," a nineteenth-century spiritual, popular (in a 1917 compilation); died in the city
      Michael Cuscuna (1948-2024) Jazz record producer and founder of Mosaic Records
      Willy DeVille (1950–2009), R&B singer and composer, was born in Stamford in 1950
      Dorothy Fields (1905–1974), lyricist, rented Buttonwood Manor in North Stamford from William E. Stevens during World War II
      Benny Goodman (1909–1986), the 'King of Swing', lived the last 20 years of his life in Stamford; buried in Long Ridge Cemetery
      Jimmy Ienner (born 1945), music producer
      Jim Koplik, concert promoter, city resident since 1981
      Jim Kweskin(born 1940), the person who sang “Ladybugs Picnic”, was born in Stamford Went to school at Brunswick School.
      Cyndi Lauper (born 1953), singer, has a home in North Stamford
      Michael Lee Aday (Meat Loaf) (born 1947), rock singer and songwriter, lived in Stamford 1979–1982, coached Babe Ruth League and Little League baseball, born in Dallas, Texas
      Moby (born 1965), recording artist, previously lived in the South End
      Ezio Pinza (1892–1957), a star of the Metropolitan Opera, lived in the West Side
      Rakim (born 1968), rapper, lives in the city
      Chris Risola (born 1958), musician and songwriter, lead guitarist of Steelheart, was born in the city
      Sasha Sokol (born 1970), Mexican singer, has a home in Stamford
      Andrew Sterling (1874–1955), lyricist, died in the city
      Rida Johnson Young (1869–1926), lyricist, died in the city


      Religion


      Job Bishop (1760–1831), Shaker leader and community founder, born and raised in Stamford
      James Davenport (1716–1757), clergyman and itinerant preacher noted for often controversial actions during the First Great Awakening, born in Stamford
      Frederick Dibblee (1753–1826), Canadian Church of England clergyman
      Lubomyr Husar (1933–2017), major Archbishop of the Ukrainian Greek Major-Archdiocese of Lviv, was educated at St. Basil's College in Stamford
      Cardinal Ignatius Pin-Mei Kung (1901–2000), Roman Catholic Bishop of Shanghai, China from 1950 until his death, lived his final years in Stamford
      Robert Lombardo (1957-), Auxiliary Bishop of Chicago
      Thaddeus F. Malanowski (1922–2020), Deputy Chief of Chaplains of the U.S. Army
      Harriet Bradford Tiffany Stewart (1798–1830), missionary


      Sports



      Semyon Belits-Geiman (born 1945), Olympic medal-winning swimmer
      Keith Bennett (born 1961), American-Israeli basketball player
      Andy Bloom (born 1973), Olympic shot putter
      Matt Brennan (1897–1963), NFL player
      Garry Cobb (born 1957), NFL football player
      David Cone (born 1963), former MLB pitcher
      Michael Dante (born 1931), former professional baseball player and later a television and film actor, was born in the city
      Chris Dudley (born 1965), former NBA basketball player for teams including the Cleveland Cavaliers and New York Knicks; born in Stamford
      Fred Dugan (1933–2018), NFL player with SF 49ers, Dallas Cowboys and Washington Redskins
      Gigi Fernández (born 1964), member of the International Tennis Hall of Fame
      Jane Geddes (born 1960), winner of 11 LPGA Tour events
      Ryan Haggerty (born 1993), NHL hockey player on the Pittsburgh Penguins
      J. Walter Kennedy (1912–1977), NBA commissioner (1963–1975) and former athletic director at St. Basil's Preparatory School in Stamford; born in Stamford
      Parker Kligerman (born 1990), NASCAR driver, born in Stamford
      Dick Mayer (1924–1989), professional golfer, born in Stamford
      Dave Puzzuoli (born 1961), NFL football player
      Andy Robustelli (1925–2011), member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame; born and raised in Stamford
      Alex Rodriguez (born 1975), MLB player, has a home in Stamford
      Boris Said (born 1962), NASCAR driver, raised in Stamford
      Dan Sileo (born 1964), former NFL player and currently a radio personality in Los Angeles on The Mighty 1090, born and raised in Stamford
      William E. Stevenson (1900–1985), 1924 Olympic gold medal winner in track; president of Oberlin College; bought Buttonwood Manor in North Stamford in 1937
      Gene Tunney (1897–1978), boxing champion; interred in Long Ridge Union Cemetery in Stamford
      Bobby Valentine (born 1950), former baseball player and former manager of the Boston Red Sox, owner of downtown sports bar "Bobby V's", a downtown sports bar, the city's Director of Public Health and Safety, born in Stamford
      Herb Williams (born 1958), former NBA player and current New York Knicks assistant coach, has a home in Stamford


      Other


      Sandra Diaz-Twine (born 1974), two-time winner of Survivor (Pearl Islands and Heroes vs. Villains)
      Dennis Gabor (1900–1979), worked at the CBS Research Lab in Stamford and won a Nobel Prize in Physics
      Ina Garten (born 1948), cooking author, grew up in the city
      Esther A. Hopkins (1926–2021), chemist, environmental attorney and Framingham's first African-American selectwoman, born in Stamford
      Robert Jaffe (born approx. 1946), physicist, grew up in Stamford
      Robert Jarvik (born 1946), inventor of the first artificial heart, was reared in Stamford
      Harold June (1895–1962), U.S. Navy test pilot and Antarctic aviator
      F. N. Monjo (1875–1929), Arctic fur trader
      C.Henry Phillips (1820–1882), inventor of magnesium hydroxide, lived in and had a factory making the product in town
      Martha Pollack (born 1958), president of Cornell University
      Thomas H. Ruger (1833–1907), Union general in the Civil War and superintendent of West Point, died in the city
      Will Shortz (born 1952), puzzle editor of The New York Times, current resident and organizer of the annual World Puzzle Championship which was held in Stamford in 2000
      Mort Walker (1923–2018), cartoonist for Beetle Bailey and Hi and Lois


      See also


      List of people from Connecticut
      List of people from Bridgeport, Connecticut
      List of people from Brookfield, Connecticut
      List of people from Darien, Connecticut
      List of people from Greenwich, Connecticut
      List of people from Hartford, Connecticut
      List of people from New Canaan, Connecticut
      List of people from New Haven, Connecticut
      List of people from Norwalk, Connecticut
      List of people from Redding, Connecticut
      List of people from Ridgefield, Connecticut
      List of people from Westport, Connecticut


      References




      External links


      Media related to People of Stamford, Connecticut at Wikimedia Commons

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