List of people from Hampstead

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Keats House, Hampstead, where John Keats wrote "Ode to a Nightingale"

This is a list of notable people who have lived in Hampstead, an area of northwest London known for its intellectual, liberal, artistic, musical, and literary associations. After 1917, and again in the 1930s, it became base to a community of avant garde artists and writers and was host to a number of émigrés and exiles from the Russian Revolution and Nazi Europe.[1][2] Amongst the people on this list who were born in Hampstead are politician Nigel Lawson, racing driver Damon Hill, actors Stephen Fry and Dirk Bogarde, novelist Evelyn Waugh, and the English educator and administrator Robert Laurie Morant. Several of the people on this list, including John Constable, Eleanor Farjeon, and Hugh Gaitskell are buried in the churchyard of St John-at-Hampstead. The Hampstead post code district (NW3) includes the neighbourhoods of Frognal, Chalk Farm, Swiss Cottage, Belsize Park, and parts of Primrose Hill.

Note: * indicates people born in Hampstead.

Music and dance[]

Composer Frederick Delius who lived at 44 Belsize Park Gardens from 1918 to 1919
  • Larry Adler (American harmonica player)[3]
  • Thomas Augustine Barrett aka Leslie Stuart (English composer)[3]
  • Sir Arnold Bax (English classical composer and poet)[4]
  • Jane Goodall * (English explorer)
  • Arthur Bliss (English classical composer)[5]
  • Dennis Brain (English classical horn player)[5]
  • Alfred Brendel (Austrian classical pianist)[6]
  • Clara Butt (English contralto opera singer)[5]
  • Sir Edward Elgar (English classical composer)[7]
  • Frederick Delius (English classical composer)[5]
  • Jacqueline du Pré (British cellist)[8]
  • Jon English Australian singer, songwriter, musician and actor
  • Marianne Faithfull (English singer-songwriter)[9]
  • Howie Payne (English singer, songwriter, music producer)[10]
  • Kathleen Ferrier (English contralto opera singer)[5]
  • Liam Gallagher (singer and songwriter, frontman of popular rock 'n' roll band Oasis)[11]
  • Tamara Karsavina (Russian ballerina)[5]
  • Hans Keller (Austrian-born violinist and musicologist)[12]
  • Frederic King (Victorian era baritone and teacher of singing)[13]
  • Stephen Kovacevich (American classical pianist and conductor)[14]
  • Nick Mason (English drummer, member of Pink Floyd)[15]
  • Tobias Matthay (English classical pianist and composer)[5]
  • John McCormack (Irish tenor opera and concert singer)[5]
  • Yehudi Menuhin (American-born classical violinist of Lithuanian Jewish origin)[16]
  • Jon Moss (English drummer, best known as member of Culture Club)[17]
  • Anna Pavlova (Russian ballerina)[18]
  • Paul Robeson (American classical singer and actor)[5]
  • Cecil Sharp (English composer, principal of the Hampstead Conservatoire)[5]
  • Slash * (British-American musician, guitarist for Guns N' Roses and Velvet Revolver)[19]
  • Sting (English rock musician, singer-songwriter)[2]
  • Harry Styles (English singer and member of One Direction)
  • Jess Glynne * (English singer and songwriter)
  • Sam Smith * (English pop singer and songwriter)

Literature[]

Novelist and cartoonist George du Maurier who lived at 28 Hampstead Grove from 1874 to 1895

Theatre and film[]

Actress Judi Dench, whose cottage in Hampstead was destroyed by fire in 1993[52]
Sophie Hunter and Benedict Cumberbatch were residents of Hampstead until 2015 where they moved to neighbouring Dartmouth Park
  • Simon Amstell (English comedian, television presenter, screenwriter and actor)[53]
  • Dame Peggy Ashcroft (English actress)[54]
  • Peter Barkworth (English actor)[3]
  • Dirk Bogarde * (English actor and novelist)[55]
  • Michael Byrne [English actor] Born, schooled and resided in Hampstead[56]
  • Richard Burton (Welsh actor)[57]
  • Rhys Matthew Bond (British-born actor whose family moved to Canada when he was 10 years old)[58]
  • Emilia Clarke (English actress)[59]
  • Tom Conti (Scottish actor)
  • Peter Cook (English satirist, writer and comedian)[60]
  • Dame Judi Dench (English actress, widow of Michael Williams)[52]
  • Gerald du Maurier * (English actor and theatre manager)[5]
  • Stephen Fry * (English actor, screenwriter, playwright, comedian)[61]
  • Ricky Gervais (British comedian, actor, director, and writer)[62]
  • Michael Gothard (British actor)
  • Laurence Harvey (British actor)
  • Jim Henson (American puppeteer and filmmaker)[63]
  • Sophie Hunter (English theatre and opera director, wife of actor Benedict Cumberbatch)
  • Jeremy Irons (English actor)[2]
  • Wolf Kahler (German actor).
  • Hugh Manning (English actor)[64]
  • Margaret Nolan * (actress, artist, model)
  • Peter O'Toole (Irish actor)[57]
  • Harold Pinter (British playwright, screenwriter, director and actor)[22]
  • Karel Reisz (Czech-born British filmmaker)[65]
  • Ralph Richardson (English actor)[5]
  • Ridley Scott (British film director and producer)[22]
  • Alastair Sim (Scottish actor)[5]
  • Marie Studholme Musical comedy actress and picture postcard beauty.[citation needed]
  • Dame Elizabeth Taylor * (London-born British-American actress)[66]
  • Marti Webb (British actress and singer)
  • Tom Wilkinson (British actor)
  • Finty Williams (English actress, daughter of Judi Dench and Michael Williams)[52]
  • Michael Williams (English actor, late husband of Judi Dench)[52]

Visual arts and architecture[]

Self-portrait of George Romney who lived at 5 Holly Bush Hill
Former Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald, who lived at 103 Frognal Lodge

Politics and social activism[]

  • H.H. Asquith (British Liberal Prime Minister 1908–1916)[92]
  • Henrietta Barnett (English social reformer and author, married to Samuel Augustus Barnett)[5]
  • Samuel Augustus Barnett (Anglican clergyman and social reformer)[5]
  • Aneurin Bevan (Welsh Labour Party politician)[22]
  • Henry Brooke (British Conservative Party politician)[49]
  • Anthony Crosland (British Labour Party politician)[22]
  • Andrew Fisher (Australian Prime Minister 1908–1909, 1910–1913)[93]
  • Michael Foot (British Labour Party politician and journalist)[1]
  • Charles de Gaulle (French general and statesman, President of France 1959–1969),[2] whose family lived at 99 Frognal[94] for the last ten months of their English exile in the Second World War[95]
  • Hugh Gaitskell (British Labour Party politician)[1]
  • Denis Healey (British Labour Party politician)[22]
  • Louisa Gurney Hoare (writer on education)[96]
  • Leonard Trelawny Hobhouse (British liberal politician and sociologist)[97]
  • Henry Hyndman (English writer and socialist politician)[5]
  • Douglas Jay (British Labour Party politician)[22]
  • Roy Jenkins (British Labour Party politician)[22]
  • Muhammad Ali Jinnah (lawyer, statesman and the founder of Pakistan)[98]
  • Lord Leverhulme (English industrialist, philanthropist, and Liberal Party politician)[5]
  • Ramsay MacDonald (British Labour politician and twice Prime Minister)[1]
  • Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk (Czech philosopher and politician living in exile in Platts Lane during the First World War; in 1918 became first President of the Czechoslovakia)[99]
  • Temple Moore (British architect)[68]
  • Onora O'Neill (British philosopher, cross bench member of the House of Lords)[100]
  • Frank Pakenham later Lord Longford (British Labour Party politician)[22]
  • William Pitt the Elder (British Prime Minister)[22]
  • Barbara Robb (British campaigner for the elderly)[101]
  • Adrian Gilbert Scott (British architect)[68]
  • Sir Neil Shields (British Conservative Party politician and businessman)[102]
  • Harry Vane (English statesman and Member of Parliament, Governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony 1636–1637)[5]
  • Beatrice Webb (British sociologist, economist, and socialist reformer; married to Sidney Webb)[5]
  • Sidney Webb (British economist, socialist reformer and co-founder of the London School of Economics)[5]

Science and medicine[]

Media, journalism, and broadcasting[]

Sport[]

Other[]

Notes and references[]

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  78. ^ Resident of 2 Willow Road
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