List of people from Redding, Connecticut
Appearance
People associated with Redding, Connecticut, listed in the area they are best known:
This section needs additional citations for verification. (April 2008) |
Actors, musicians and entertainers
[edit]- Paul Avgerinos (born 1957),[1] musician and electronic music composer
- Leonard Bernstein (1918–1990),[2] composer and conductor, lived on Fox Run Road in the 1950s
- Michael Ian Black (born 1971),[3] actor, comedian and author
- Ritchie Blackmore (born 1945),[4] musician, former resident
- John Byrum (born 1947), motion picture director, screenwriter, and producer, long-time resident of West Redding
- Diana Canova (born 1953),[5] actress; spouse of Grammy Award-winning producer Elliott Scheiner[6]
- Rachel Crothers (1979–1958), playwright and director[7]
- Hume Cronyn (1911–2003), Academy Award-nominated actor, lived with his wife, Jessica Tandy, on Stepney Road in the 1940s and 1950s
- Morton DaCosta (1914–1989), director and producer of films and Broadway shows[8]
- Daryl Hall (born 1946), musician with Hall & Oates, lived on Topstone Road
- Jascha Heifetz (1901–1987),[9] violinist, lived on Sanfordtown Road in the 1940s
- Matt Hoverman (born 1968), actor, playwright[10]
- Charles Ives (1874–1954), musician, composer[11]
- Igor Kipnis (1930–2002),[12] musician who died at his home in town
- John Kirkpatrick (born 1947), musician, professor and writer[13]
- Hope Lange (1933–2003),[14] Emmy Award-winning, Oscar-nominated actress
- Jack Lawrence (1912–2009), composer inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1975[15]
- Barry Levinson (born 1942),[16] Academy Award-winning film director
- Enoch Light (1905–1978),[17] composer, musician, music label executive and sound technician
- Meat Loaf (1947–2022), rock singer, Joel Barlow High School softball coach during the 1990s[18]
- Lori March Scourby (1923–2013), once known as the "first lady of daytime television" for her roles in soap operas[19]
- Carmen Mathews (1911–1995), actress, environment and philanthropist; created New Pond Farm preserve and camp for disadvantaged children[20]
- Fred Newman (born 1952),[21] actor, voice actor, composer, and sound effects artist, current resident
- Colleen Zenk Pinter (born 1953),[22] actress; spouse of Mark Pinter
- Mark Pinter (born 1950),[22] actor; spouse of Colleen Zenk Pinter
- Derek Piotr (born 1991), composer and vocalist[23]
- Andy Powell (born 1950), guitarist and only constant member of British progressive rock group Wishbone Ash, has lived in Redding since 1991
- Elliot Scheiner (born 1947), engineer and five-time Grammy Award-winning producer; spouse of actress Diana Canova[5]
- Karen Kopins Shaw (born 1961), actress in films; winner of Miss Connecticut pageant in 1977[24]
- Jessica Tandy (1909–1994), Academy Award-winning actress, lived with her husband, Hume Cronyn (1911–2003), on Stepney Road in the 1940s and 1950s
- Russ Titelman (born 1944), Grammy-winning record producer, lived in town in the 1980s
- Mary Travers (1936–2009),[25] of the Peter, Paul and Mary group
- Guinevere Van Seenus (born 1977), model, photographer and jewelry designer
- Marcy Walker (born 1961), actress, lived in West Redding during the mid-1990s[26]
- Maura West (born 1972),[27] daytime Emmy Award-winning actress on As the World Turns
- Frank Whaley (born 1963),[28] actor, director, and screenwriter who had roles in multiple films by Oliver Stone
Authors and other writers
[edit]- Joel Barlow (1754–1812),[29] poet and diplomat, born in Redding
- Julian Barry (born 1930),[30] Oscar nominee for Lenny, resident since 2001
- Ann Beattie (born 1947),[31] author of eight novels and short stories in The New Yorker and other publications
- Marcia Brown (1918–2015), children's book author and illustrator[32]
- Stuart Chase (1988–1985), author credited with coining the slogan "A New Deal" for Franklin D. Roosevelt, lived in Redding[33] from the 1930s until his death in 1985
- Les Daniels (1943–2011), author and noted historian on comic books[34]
- Howard Fast (1914–2003),[35] author, lived on Cross Highway in the 1980s
- Robert Fitzgerald (1910–1985), translator, poet, mentor of Flannery O'Connor, lived on Seventy Acre Road[36]
- William Honan (1930–2014),[37] Pulitzer Prize-nominated author
- Eliot Janeway (1913–1993),[38] author and economist; spouse of Elizabeth Janeway and father of Michael Janeway
- Elizabeth Janeway (1913–2005),[38] novelist, spouse of Eliot Janeway and father of Michael Janeway
- Michael Janeway (1940–2014),[38] author and editor of The Boston Globe; son of Eliot and Elizabeth Janeway
- Holly Keller (born 1942),[39] children's author and illustrator, lived in West Redding in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s
- Phyllis Krasilovsky (1926–2014),[40] authored 20 books for children between 1950 and 1997
- Joseph Wood Krutch (1893–1970),[41] author and naturalist, lived on Limekiln Road in the 1940s
- Flannery O'Connor (1925–1964),[36] novelist, wrote Wise Blood while a boarder at the home of Robert Fitzgerald and family on Seventy Acre Road (from 1949 to 1951)
- Albert Bigelow Paine (1861–1937),[42] writer, lived on Diamond Hill
- Jane and Michael Stern (both born 1946), of West Redding,[43] write the "Roadfood" column for Gourmet magazine; authors of Roadfood and other books
- Ruth Stout[44] (1884–1980), writer about organic gardening
- Anne Parrish Titzell (1888–1957), children's book author,[45] lived on Peaceable Street
- Ada Josephine Todd (1858–1904), author and educator[46]
- Alvin Toffler (1928–2016), author of Future Shock, lived on Mountain Road
- Aaron Louis Treadwell Ph.D. (1866–1947), college professor; author of The Cytogeny of Podarke obscura and other scientific books[47]
- Tasha Tudor (1915–2008),[48] children's author and artist, lived on Tudor Road
- Mark Twain (born Samuel Clemens) (1835–1910), lived in mansion dubbed "Stormfield" built on land located on present-day Mark Twain Lane from 1908 to 1910[49]
Artists, art experts and critics, cartoonists
[edit]- Dan Beard (1850–1941), illustrator and one of the founders of the Boy Scouts of America; lived on Great Pasture[13]
- Rebecca Couch (1788–1863), painter[50]
- Katherine Sophie Dreier (1877–1952),[51] late artist and patron of the arts who helped found the Museum of Modern Art, lived on Marchant Road in 1912
- Hal Foster (1892–1982), Prince Valiant cartoonist[52]
- Gill Fox (1915–2004), two-time Pulitzer Prize-nominated cartoonist[53]
- Anna Hyatt Huntington (1876–1973), artist; with husband Archer Huntington, gave land to create Collis P. Huntington State Park[54]
- Robert Natkin (1930–2010), abstract expressionist[55]
- Edward Steichen (1879–1973), artist and photographer, lived on Topstone (Topstone Park was his property)[56]
People in government and politics
[edit]- Stephen Barlow (1779–1845), member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania 1827-29, born in Redding[57]
- Dudley S. Gregory (1800–1874), member of the U.S. House of Representatives from New Jersey 1847-49, born in Redding[58]
- Ebenezer J. Hill (1845–1917), Connecticut member of the United States House of Representatives from 1895 to 1913[59]
- David Lilienthal (1899–1981), scientist and director of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and the Tennessee Valley Authority, lived on Stepney Road
- Dick Morris (born 1946), political consultant and author
- Walter White (1893–1955), former head (executive secretary) of NAACP, lived on Seventy Acres Road
Other
[edit]- Adam D'Angelo, former CTO of Facebook, co-founder of Quora
- Wendell Garner (1921–2008), Yale University researcher who made significant contributions to the cognitive revolution,[60] retired to Meadow Ridge[61]
- Frank M. Hawks (1897–1938), aviator who made the fourth-ever nonstop coast-to-coast flight in the United States in 1929,[62] lived in town
- Alfred Winslow Jones (1900–1989), hedge fund manager, lived on Poverty Hollow Road[63]
- Alex Kroll, inductee of the College Football Hall of Fame[64] and Advertising Hall of Fame,[65] lived in town[66]
- Lawrence Kudlow (born 1947), host of Kudlow and Company television program, current resident[67]
- Gerald M. Loeb (1899–1974),[68] author and founding partner of brokerage E.F. Hutton
- Lee MacPhail (1917–2012), former Major League Baseball commissioner and inductee to the National Baseball Hall of Fame[69]
- Christopher McCormick, CEO of L.L. Bean[70]
- Lauren S. McCready (1915–2007), a founder of the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy[71]
- Charlie Morton (born 1983), Major League Baseball pitcher; raised in Redding, attended Joel Barlow High School
- Arthur D. Nicholson, United States Army officer shot and killed by a Soviet sentry in 1985, while conducting intelligence activities in East Germany
- Clementine Paddleford (1898–1967),[72] author and food critic who coined the term "hero" for the submarine sandwich
- Major General Samuel Holden Parsons (1737–1789), commander in the Continental Army under Gen. Israel Putnam, later chief judge of the Northwest Territory, lived on Black Rock Turnpike[73]
- Lucien M. Underwood (1853–1907), founding member of the New York Botanical Society[74]
- Chickens Warrups, established a Native American village on land that eventually became part of Redding[75]
See also
[edit]- 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 Ridgefield, Connecticut
- List of people from Stamford, Connecticut
- List of people from Westport, Connecticut
References
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