List of people from Greenwich, Connecticut

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

People who have lived in or been associated with Greenwich, Connecticut now or in the past and are well-known beyond the town.

Listed category, based on area in which person is best known (in alphabetical order within each category):

Contents

[edit] Actors, directors, producers

Mel Gibson, actor, director, producer, Greenwich estate owner
Mel Gibson, actor, director, producer, Greenwich estate owner
  • Glenn Close was born in town and attended Greenwich's Rosemary Hall.
  • Mel Gibson, actor, director and producer with an estate in Greenwich.[2]
  • Shelley Hack (born 1947), an actress, was born in town.
  • Bryce Dallas Howard (born March 2, 1981), actress and daughter of actor/director Ron Howard, grew up in town and attended The Greenwich Country Day School (Class of 1996)
  • Ron Howard, film director, lives in town.
  • Leatrice Joy (1893-1985) an American film actress best known for her career in the early silent film era who lived in retirement in town.
  • Joseph E. Levine (1905–1987), a film producer and distributor responsible for such films as The Graduate and The Lion in Winter, died in town.
  • Rod Lurie (born 1962), a director, screenwriter, most successfully of The Contender (2000). He is the son of editorial cartoonist Ranan Lurie and partly grew up in town.
  • Mary Tyler Moore moved to town in 2006 with her husband, Dr. Robert Levine[1]
  • Bijou Phillips, actress/singer/model born in Greenwich
  • Linda Purl (born 1955), an actress and singer born in town and raised in Japan
  • Elisabeth Röhm (born 1973), actress, former resident[2]
  • Rick Schroder, actor, grew up in town.
  • George C Scott, actor, lived in Greenwich before his death.
  • Zack Snyder, (born 1966) film director, grew up in town and attended Greenwich's Daycroft School.
  • Heather Thomas (born 1957), actress and screenwriter, was born in town.
  • Dyanne Thorne (born 1932), an actress, model and now an ordained minister working with her husband at a private wedding chapel in Las Vegas, Nevada, was born in town.
  • Dave Maloney, Jr.- MSG, TV, assistant producer, born and raised in town.

[edit] Musicians, models, other entertainers

  • Jason Arhndt (born 1970), a professional wrestler ("Joey Abs") with a Southern accent who supposedly lives (or lived) in town. Part of the Mean Street Posse wrestling team (originally the "Greenwich Posse") whose shtick was that they were tough guys from Greenwich. Other members: "Pete Gas" (Peter Gasperino) and Rodney(Rodney Leinhardt.
  • Tom Bergeron, host of America's Funniest Home Videos, Dancing With the Stars, is a town resident.[3]
  • Victor Borge, lived in the Belle Haven section of town before his death.
  • Jane Condon, who made it to the semifinals of the "Last Comic Standing" television show on NBC, lives in town.[4]
  • Wilhelmina Cooper (1940–March 1, 1980) was a supermodel who founded her own agency Wilhelmina Models of New York City in 1970. She had a home in Cos Cob and died at the age of 40 in Greenwich Hospital.
  • Gary Dell'Abate (born 1961), producer and on-air personality at The Howard Stern Show satellite radio program, lives in town.
  • Tommy Dorsey (1905–1956) a jazz trombonist and band leader in the Big Band era who died in his home in town.[5]
  • Clyde Fitch (1865-1909), dramatist who wrote over 60 plays, 36 of them original. A generous host with an engaging personality he was renowned as a raconteur, his invitations in Greenwich, Connecticut at "Quiet Corner" were sought after.
  • Stephan Galfas, GRAMMY nominated record producer
  • Peter Gasperino (born 1970) a professional wrestler ("Pete Gas") who supposedly lives (or lived) in town. Part of the Mean Street Posse wrestling team, (originally the "Greenwich Posse") whose shtick was that they were tough guys from Greenwich. Other members: Rodney (Rodney Leinhardt) and Joey Abs (Jason Arhndt who has a Southern accent).
  • Kathy Lee Gifford, TV personality, wife of Frank Gifford, lives in town.
  • Roger Glover (born 1945), a bass guitarist and record producer, best known as songwriter and bassist for Deep Purple, lives in the Glenville section of town.
  • Cynthia Gregory, prima ballerina, lives in town.
  • Ray Henderson (1896-1970), a songwriter whose hits included "Bye, Bye Blackbird", "I'm Sitting on Top of the World", and "Button Up Your Overcoat", died in town.
  • Jana, GRAMMY nominated Native American singer/songwriter
  • Erich Kunzel (born 1935), the conductor of the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra, grew up in town.
Regis "Reeg" Philbin, TV host, local resident
Regis "Reeg" Philbin, TV host, local resident

[edit] Sports

[edit] Authors, writers

Truman Capote in 1959
Truman Capote in 1959
  • Colman Andrews, of Riverside, cofounder and former editor in chief of Saveur magazine, named contributing editor and restaurant columnist for Gourmet magazine in the summer of 2006.
  • Taylor Caldwell (1900–1985), novelist, died in town.
  • Truman Capote (1924-1984), the future author moved to town with his family in 1939 and Truman attended Greenwich High School, where he wrote for both the school's literary journal, The Green Witch, and the school newspaper.
  • Caroline B. Cooney (born 1947), the author of more than 100 books, especially horror and mystery books for teenagers, was born and raised in town.
  • Howard Fast (1914-2003), author, lived in town and had an editorial column in The Greenwich Time.
  • Jonathan Fast (born 1948), an American author, social work educator and son of Howard Fast.
  • John Jakes (born 1932), a writer of numerous fiction best-sellers.
  • Lawrence Riley (1896-1974), of Riverside, a playwright and screenwriter best known for his Broadway hit Personal Appearance (1934), which was turned into the classic Mae West film Go West, Young Man.
  • Mark Salzman (born 1959), a writer best known for his 1986 memoir Iron & Silk, was born in town.
  • Anya Seton (1904-1990), author of historical romances, died in town.

[edit] Artists, architects, designers, cartoonists

  • Robert Denning (1927–2005), an interior designer whose lush decor became popular among corporate raiders in the 1980s, lived with Edgar de Evia in the 1950s at "Quiet Corner" the former home of Clyde Fitch.
  • Tony DiPreta (born 1921), an American comic book and comic strip artist known as the longtime successor artist of the Joe Palooka strip and of the Rex Morgan, M.D. strip, lived in town.
  • Edgar de Evia (1910–2003) was a prominent American photographer, artist and author. He owned "Quiet Corner" the former home of Clyde Fitch on Hill Road in the 1950s.
  • Tommy Hilfiger, designer, lives in town.
  • Ranan Lurie (born 1932), editorial cartoonist and journalist, lives in town.
  • Robert Motherwell (1915-1991), one of the leading abstract expressionists, resided in Greenwich.
  • John Cullen Murphy (1919-2004), a comics artist probably best known for his work as the second artist to draw the Prince Valiant comic strip, was born in town.
  • Leonard Ochtman (1854-1935), his wife Mina Fonda Ochtman (1862-1924) and daughter Dorothy Ochtman (1892-1971), were all notable American impressionists and part of the Cos Cob Art Colony.
  • Edward Clark Potter (1857-1923) a sculptor and Greenwich native who designed the lions in front of the New York Public Library.

[edit] Famous guests at the Bush-Holley House

[edit] Government

Expert vote-counter Boss Tweed, by Thomas Nast.
Expert vote-counter Boss Tweed, by Thomas Nast.
  • Richard Blumenthal, state attorney general, lives in town.
  • George H.W. Bush, 41st president of the United States, was raised in town, where he attended Greenwich Country Day School.
  • George W. Bush, 43rd president of the United States was the 1st Connecticut-born President. He is the son of President George H.W. Bush and grandson of Senator Prescott Bush.
  • Prescott Bush, U.S. Senator and father of George H.W. Bush, lived in town.
  • Homer Stille Cummings (1870-1956), a political figure who most notably served as United States Attorney General from 1933 to 1939. In 1900, 1901, and 1904, Cummings was elected mayor of Stamford, and he helped found the Cummings & Lockwood law firm in 1909. A Democrat, he moved to town in his retirement and served on the Greenwich Democratic Town Committee until 1951.
  • Ned Lamont, unsuccessful Democratic nominee for United States Senate in 2006, former member of Greenwich Board of Selectmen
  • Clare Boothe Luce, congresswoman, ambassador, playwright, was a resident in her youth.
  • Craig Roberts Stapleton the United States ambassador to France. and former ambassador to the Czech Republic from 2001 to 2004.
  • David Stockman, best known as director of the Office of Management and Budget during the Reagan administration, Stockman runs the Greenwich-based investment firm, Heartland Industrial Partners L.P., and lives in town.[14]
  • Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, part of the Kennedy political family, former Lt. Governor of Maryland.
  • William M. "Boss" Tweed, famously corrupt New York City official in the nineteenth century, had a home in town and sailed his yacht from Greenwich.
  • Lowell P. Weicker, Jr. (born 1931), a former Governor of the state, U.S. Senator and U.S. Representative, lives in town.

[edit] Business

  • Mary Anselmo, billionaire widow of Reynold "Rene" Anselmo, founder of PanAmSat, one of the wealthiest people in the world.[15]
  • Reynold "Rene" Anselmo, founder of PanAmSat (d. 1995)[15]
  • Barton Biggs, runs the Traxis hedge fund and lives in town.[16]
  • Steven Black, Co-Chief Executive Officer of the Investment Bank at JP Morgan Chase & Co., lives in town.
  • Peter Brant, publisher of Warhol's Interwiew and of some of the leading art magazines, noted collector of art, and the founder of the Greenwich Polo Club.
  • Richard C. Breeden, former chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and current head of a hedge fund, lives in town.[17]
  • Robert Burton, Sr. head of Burton Capital Management, which took over Cenveo Inc., an envelope-maker with $1.6 million in projected 2006 revenues, and moved the headquarters to Stamford.[18]
  • Steven A. Cohen, 93rd richest American, according to Forbes magazine (2005 list), runs SAC Capital in Stamford, Connecticut.
  • Brady Dougan (born 1959) CEO of Credit Suisse First Boston; CEO-elect of Credit Suisse Group in Zurich (beginning May 2007); youngest CEO on Wall Street (2004).
  • Ray Dalio,resident, CEO Bridgewater Associatesof Westport
  • Robert Diamond (born 1951) is a banker who is President and CEO for investment banking at Barclays PLC, the third largest British-based banking group, formerly lived in town.
  • Martin Frankel (born 1954), a former financier convicted in 2002 of insurance fraud, racketeering and money laundering, lived in town.
  • Richard S. Fuld Jr., CEO of Lehman Brothers Inc.
  • Louis V. Gerstner, Jr., former CEO of IBM.
  • Leona Helmsley, hotel owner, lived in town or still does.
  • Joseph Hirshhorn, mining tycoon, art collector and namesake of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden on the Mall in Washington, D.C.
  • Paul Tudor Jones, runs the Tudor Tudor Investments (making him the ninth-largest hedge fund manager, managing $12.7 billion[19]) and lives in the Belle Haven section of town.[20]
  • Mel Karmazin, CEO of Sirius Radio since November 2004.
  • Eddie Lampert, "one of the best-known activist investors" and head of ESL Investments Inc. lives in town.[17]
  • Reuben Mark, CEO of The Colgate-Palmolive Company, lives in town.
  • Charles Peter McColough, former Chairman and CEO of Xerox Corporation, lives in the Belle Haven section of town.
  • Henry McKinnell (born 1943), former chief executive officer and current chairman of the board of directors of Pfizer Inc., lives in town.
  • Vince McMahon, World Wrestling Entertainment founder and chairman, and his wife and WWE CEO Linda
  • John Meriwether (born 1947) a financial executive and pioneer of fixed income arbitrage who now runs JWM Partners, a Greenwich, Connecticut, hedge fund with about $2 billion under management in 2006, according to SEC documents.
  • Indra Nooyi, CEO of PepsiCo[21]
  • David Schreff, entertainment, sports and licensing executive, former President/COO of Marvel Entertainment and former President, Marketing and Media for the National Basketball Association, lives in town.
  • Daniel Scotto— Former Director of Research at Bear Stearns, D.L.J., L. F. Rothschild and S&P, Institutional Investor ranked First Team Nine Years in a row and the Top U.S. Bond Analyst while at Bear Stearns, Financial Analyst, President & CIO of Whitehall Financial Advisors LLC.
  • John Sculley, former CEO of Apple Inc..
  • Christopher A. Sinclair, former chairman and CEO of Pepsi, lives in town and in Palm Beach, Florida.
  • Donald J. Trump, developer, has a home in town.
  • Sanford I. Weill (born March 16, 1933) is a banker, financier, formerly chief executive officer and chairman of Citigroup. He served in those positions until October 1, 2003 and April 18, 2006 respectively.
  • Bruce R. Zirinsky, a lawyer prominent in major corporate merger and reorganization cases and with numerous Fortune 500 clients, lives in town.

[edit] Journalists, sportscasters

[edit] Other

  • Carolyn Bessette Kennedy (1966-1999), lived in Greenwich before her death.
  • Col. Raynal C. Bolling (1877-1918), a town resident and the first high-ranking U.S. officer to be killed in combat in World War I.
  • Douglas Campbell (1896–1990) the first American World War I aviator flying in an American unit to achieve the status of ace died in town.
  • Roy Cohn (1927–1986), a lawyer made famous as an aide to U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy, had one of his homes in town.
  • Michael Fossel (born 1950), a professor of clinical medicine at Michigan State University who has appeared on many major news programs to discuss aging, was born in town.
  • Tommy Hilfiger, a fashion designer, lives in town.[4]
  • Kara Hultgreen (1965–1994), a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy, was the first female naval carrier-based fighter pilot. The Greenwich native was killed just months after she was certified for combat due to a combination of mechanical failure and pilot error.
  • Farah Pahlavi, former Iranian empress, previously had a residence in town.
  • Hubert Scott-Paine (1891–1954) a British-American aircraft and boat designer and record-breaking power boat racer who helped invent and promote the PT boats used in World War II, died in town.
  • Ernest Thompson Seton (1860-1946) a noted author, helped found the Boy Scouts of America, in part at his estate in Cos Cob.
  • Mickey Sherman, a criminal-defense attorney who has represented some famous clients, is a town native and resident.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Costaregni, Susie, "Stars come out for benefit at Greenwich Hyatt", from "The Dish" column in The Advocate of Stamford, Connecticut, January 14, 2007, page 2: "New Greenwich residents Mary Tyler Moore and her husband ..."
  2. ^ Costaregni, Susie, "'Law & Order' actress spotted in Greenwich", from "The Dish" column in The Advocate of Stamford, Connecticut and the Greenwich Time daily newspapers, November 12, 2006, page 2 of The Advocate: "Actress and former Greenwich resident Elisabeth Rohm ..."
  3. ^ "People & Places" column in Business section, The Advocate of Stamford, July 26, 2006, page A11
  4. ^ a b c d e Costaregni, Susie, "Jocks, movie star show up at Greenwich restaurant" the August 5, 2007 "The Dish with Suzie" column in The Advocate of Stamford, Connecticut, page 2
  5. ^ "From the Archives" feature in The Advocate of Stamford, November 27, 2006, page A7, "50 years ago:" section, "Nov. 26, 1956" subsection
  6. ^ [1] "Scene ... Motown's legendary singer and former Greenwich resident Diana Ross was seen recently at the Greenwich Library." From "The Dish with Suzie", by Susie Costaregni, identical column also in The Advocate, page 2, August 5, 2006, also available on Web sites for both newspapers; column accessed same day online, it tends to be up on the site for only two weeks.
  7. ^ Dixon, Ken, "Music Hall of Fame proposed for state ", article in Connecticut Post in Bridgeport, Connecticut, April 26, 2007 ("Motown icon Diana Ross of Greenwich")
  8. ^ Costagregni, Susie, "Mardi Gras comes to the Bruce Museum", headline for "The dish with susie" column in The Advocate of Stamford, Connecticut, February 11, 2007, page 2, "Montel Williams, a former Greenwich resident [...]"
  9. ^ Costaregni, Susie, "Director grabs a coffee before daughter's wedding", June 24, 2006, "The Dish with susie" column in The Advocate page A2
  10. ^ Costaregni, Susie, "Stars come out for benefit at Greenwych Hyatt", January 14, 2007, "The Dish with susie" column in The Advocate page A2
  11. ^ Dina Modianot-Fox, "Class on Court" article in Greenwich Magazine, September 2003; also, Vigdor, Neil, "Obama's campaign rolls into Greenwich for two fundraisers" news article in The Advocate of Stamford, Stamford and Norwalk editions, pp 1, A6: "Allan Houston, who retired from the Knicks [...] at his home in Conyers Farm [...]"
  12. ^ Costaregni, Susie, "The Dish With Susie" column: "Mathes to perform at NYC arts conference", column in The Advocate daily newspaper, Stamford, Connecticut, February 18, 2007
  13. ^ Costagregni, Susie, "Big prizes on tap at Down syndrome benefit", headline for "The dish with susie" column in The Advocate of Stamford, Connecticut, March 11, 2007, page 2
  14. ^ "Collins & Aikman seeks to emerge from bankruptcy", Bloomberg News article by Jeff Bennett, appearing in The Advocate of Stamford on September 5, 2006, page A7
  15. ^ a b Web page titled "The World's Billionaires / #1014 Mary Anselmo", Forbes magazine website. Retrieved March 15, 2008
  16. ^ "Greenwich hedge funds beating the average", article in The Advocate August 5, 2005, Business section p. B7, by Katherine Burton of Bloomberg News, article may have been adapted by The Advocate. From first sentence: "Multibillion-dollar hedge funds run by Greenwich residents Paul Tudor Jones and Barton Biggs ..."
  17. ^ a b "Contrarian pirates: Vilified by some, activist investors promote market efficiency" by Julie Fishman-Lapin, The Advocate of Stamford, June 4, 2006, Business section, page F1
  18. ^ "Fit to Print: With Cenveo, Burton seeks to revitalize his third print industry giant", article by Peter Healy, The Advocate of Stamford, Connecticut, July 30, 2006
  19. ^ "Goldman tops list of big hedge-fund managers" an article by Katherine Burton for Bloomberg News, as printed in The Advocate of Stamford, June 22, 2006, Business section, page B2
  20. ^ Costagregni, Susie, "Local honorees celebrated by Old Timers group", headline for "The dish with susie" column in The Advocate of Stamford, Connecticut, December 10, 2006, page 2
  21. ^ "Greenwich resident to lead PepsiCo: Nooyi succeeds Reinemund in October", a Bloomberg News article by Mary Jane Credeur in the business sections of The Advocate of Stamford (page A8) and the Greenwich Time newspapers, August 14, 2006: "PepsiCo Inc. has named Chief Financial Officer Indra Nooyi of Greenwich as its new chief executive officer ..."
  22. ^ Hagey, Keach, "A familiar face to speak at Greenwich High graduation", article in The Advocate of Stamford, Connecticut, p A3, Stamford edition, June 8, 2007
  23. ^ "The Dish" column by Suzie Costaregni, "Designer dines, preacher parties, Judge Judy, well, judges", Stamford Advocate, September 16, 2006, page 2
  24. ^ Costaregni, Susie, "Elegant cocktail party benefits programs at Community Centers", the November 26, 2006 The dish with susie column in The Advocate of Stamford (also appeared in Greenwich Time)
  25. ^ Costagregni, Susie, "Antares party raises funds for Greenwich YMCA", headline for "The dish with susie" column in The Advocate (Stamford) of Stamford, Connecticut, May 13, 2007, page 2

[edit] External links