List of people from the Bronx

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of people who were either born or have lived in The Bronx, a borough of New York City, at some time in their lives. Many of the early historical figures lived in that part of Westchester County which later became part of The Bronx.

Academics and science[]

  • Richard Alba (born 1942)--Distinguished CCNY Professor of ethnicity and assimilation
  • Jill Bargonetti (born 1962) – biologist and Presidential Early Career Award winner
  • Marshall Berman (1940–2013) – philosopher of modernity; author of All That Is Solid Melts into Air
  • Norman Birnbaum (1926–2019) – author, educator, political advisor; University Professor Emeritus, Georgetown University Law Center; taught at Amherst College, London School of Economics, Oxford University, University of Strasbourg
  • Ira Black (1941–2006) – neuroscientist and stem-cell researcher; first director of the [1]
  • Xavier Briggs (born 1968) Former professor of planning at MIT, former associate director of Office of Management and Budget, former vice-president of Ford Foundation. Sometimes known as "Xavier de Souza Briggs"
  • Roscoe Brown (1922–2016) – Tuskegee airman, exercise physiologist, President, Bronx Community College, New York City political adviser[2]
  • Morton Deutsch (1920–2017) – conflict resolution expert[3]
  • W.E.B. Du Bois (1868–1963) – sociologist, historian, civil rights activist, Pan-Africanist.[4]
  • Gertrude B. Elion (1918–1999) – Nobel Prize biochemist and pharmacologist[5]
  • Murray Gell-Mann (1929–2019), Nobel Prize physicist of sub-atomic particle.[6]
  • Todd Gitlin (born 1943) – sociologist; co-founder of Students for a Democratic Society[7]
  • Fred Greenstein (1930–2018) – political scientist who psychologically assessed U.S. presidents[8]
  • Henry Heimlich (1920–2016) – physician inventor of the Heimlich maneuver[9]
  • Matthew Henson (1866–1955) – Explorer, co-discoverer of the North Pole (with Robert Peary)
  • Gary Hermalyn (born 1953) – Centennial Historian of New York City, Edgar Allan Poe scholar
  • Irving Howe (1920–1993) – literary critic, socialist writer, author of World of Our Fathers
  • Samuel P. Huntington (1927–2008) – Government Professor at Harvard University; co-editor of Foreign Policy; author of political science works related to the modernization of societies, particularly those of developing nations
  • Barbara Jasny (born 1952) – deputy editor of Science; co-editor Catalysts, Women of Science Fiction
  • Adrian Kantrowitz (1918–2008) – cardiac-surgery pioneer[10]
  • Arthur Kantrowitz (1913–2008) – nose cone physicist; co-inventor of the intra-aortic balloon pump[11]
  • Jeffrey Lane – urban ethnographer, Rutgers University
  • Robert Lefkowitz (born 1943) – 2012 recipient of Nobel prize for chemistry of protein receptors[12]
  • Howard Lesnick (1931–2020), Jefferson B. Fordham Professor of Law, University of Pennsylvania Law School
  • Norman Levitt (1943–2009) – mathematician at Rutgers University[13]
  • Paul Levinson (born 1947) – science-fiction and non-fiction author; communications professor
  • Kenneth Lewes (1943–2020) – psychoanalyst who challenged prejudicial view of homosexulaity.[14]
  • Ronald Mallett (born 1945) – theoretical physicist of time travel
  • Barry Mazur (born 1937) – mathematician and Fellow of the National Academy of Science
  • Joseph M. McShane (born 1942) – Jesuit priest; president of Fordham University
  • Stanley Milgram (1933–1984) – psychologist known for obedience to authority and small world studies[15]
  • Joseph A. O'Hare (1931–2020) – Jesuit priest; longest-serving president of Fordham University (1984–2003); first chair of New York City Campaign Finance Board (1988–2003)
  • Jay Pasachoff (born 1943) – astronomer, umbraphile[16]
  • Carolyn Porco (born 1953) – planetary scientist; leader of the Cassini space observatory team at the Colorado Space Science Institute, studying Saturn[17]
  • Allan Pred (1936–2007) – geographer at University of Chicago and University of California, Berkeley[18]
  • Howard Raiffa (1924–2016) – economist; negotiation scientist[19]
  • Murray Rothbard (1926–1995) – economist; helped define modern libertarianism
  • Ken Schaffer (born 1947) – inventor; invented , video placeshifting[20]
  • Joseph Francis Shea (1925–1999) – aerospace engineer; headed NASA's Apollo program
  • Gary Simons – founder of Prep for Prep gifted education program in NYC[21]
  • Robert Sobel (1931–1999) – historian and writer; history professor at Hofstra University; writer of business histories
  • Edward Soja (1940–2015) – postmodern political geography and urban theorist at UCLA[22]
  • Michael I. Sovern (1931–2020) – Chancellor Kent Professor of Law and President Emeritus of Columbia University
  • Robert Spinrad (1932–2009) – computer designer; director of the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center[23]
  • Mark Steiner (1942–2020) – professor of philosophy of mathematics and physics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • Leonard Susskind (born 1940) – theoretical physicist[24]
  • Neil deGrasse Tyson (born 1959) – astrophysicist; director of the American Museum of Natural History's Hayden Planetarium; host of PBS's educational-television series NOVA scienceNOW and Cosmos: A SpaceTime Odyssey (2014) and Cosmos: Possible Worlds (2020).
  • Lloyd Ultan (historian) (born 1938) – official historian of the Bronx
  • Allen Weinstein (1937–2015) – historian; Archivist of the United States
  • Barry Wellman (born 1942) – sociologist; University of Toronto professor studying social networks, community and the Internet
  • Rosalyn Sussman Yalow (1921–2011) – medical physicist; co-winner of the 1977 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine[25]
  • Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi (1932–2009) – historian; Salo Baron Professor of Jewish history at Columbia University[26]

Arts[]

Architecture, art and photography[]

  • Vito Acconci (1940–2017) – architect, landscape architect and installation artist
  • Robert Altman (born 1944) – photographer
  • Richard Avedon (1923–2004) – photographer
  • Alvin Baltrop (1948–2004) – photographer
  • Margaret Bourke-White (1904–1971) – photographer (including documentary photographer)
  • Cope2 (born 1968) – graffiti artist
  • Willie Cole (born 1955) – artist; uses found material such as his "America" blackboard[27]
  • Ralph Fasanella (1914–1997) – painter
  • Ron Galella (born 1931) – paparazzo photographer[28]
  • Horace Ginsbern (1902–1987) – architect; designed the landmark Art Deco Park Plaza Apartments on Jerome Avenue in the Bronx, and other New York City structures[29]
  • Milton Glaser (1929–2020) – graphic designer; designer of the "I Love New York" logo
  • Garry Gross (1937–2010) – fashion photographer (including nude images of Brooke Shields at age ten), dog portraiture photographer and dog trainer[30]
  • Sabin Howard (born 1963) – figurative sculptor, noted for U.S. World War I national monument
  • Al Held (1928–2005) – abstract painter; associated with Abstract expressionism, Hard-edge and Color Field painting[31]
  • Joel Iskowitz (born 1946) illustrator, artist, designer for United States Mint[32]
  • Marcey Jacobson (1911–2009) – photographer; images of daily life in Chiapas, Mexico[33]
  • C. Paul Jennewein (1890–1978) – sculptor
  • Ivan Karp (1926–2012) – art dealer
  • Stanley Kubrick (1928–1999) – director, screenwriter, editor, cinematographer, storyteller
  • Ronnie Landfield (born 1947) – abstract painter; associated with lyrical abstraction, and color field painting[34]
  • Daniel Libeskind (born 1946) – architect
  • Glenn Ligon (born 1960) – conceptual artist
  • Whitfield Lovell[35] (born 1959) – painter and installation artist;[36] focuses on African-American themes; MacArthur Fellow (2007)[37][38]
  • Jules Maidoff (born 1933) – artist, teacher and founder of Studio Art Centers International, Florence, Italy
  • Gerard Malanga (born 1943) – poet, photographer, filmmaker, actor, curator and archivist
  • Joel Meyerowitz (born 1938) – photographer
  • Rick Meyerowitz (born 1943) – artist
  • Ralph Morse (1917–2015) – photographer
  • Piccirilli Brothers (including father, Giuseppe Piccirilli (1844–1910), and his six sons – Ferruccio (1864–1945), Attilio (1866–1945), Furio (1868–1949), Masaniello (1870–1951), Orazio (1872–1954) and Getulio (1874–1956)) – sculptors
  • Larry Rivers (1923–2002) – artist
  • Joel Arthur Rosenthal (born 1943) – jeweler
  • Merryll Saylan (born 1936) – woodturner[39]
  • Edwin Scheier (1910–2008) – artist
  • Phil Stern (1919–2014) – Hollywood, WWII and White House photographer[40]
  • George Sugarman (1912–1999) – sculptor[41]
  • Raven B. Varona – photographer.[42]
  • Lawrence Weiner (born 1942) – artist; associated with conceptual art
  • Marian Zazeela (born 1940) – light artist, painter, and set designer; also musician of Hindustani classical music

Journalists and writers[]

Edgar Allan Poe Cottage 2640 Grand Concourse, in the Fordham section of the Bronx. Poe spent the last few years of his life there.
  • Sholem Aleichem (1859–1916) – author
  • William Henry Appleton (1814–1899) – publisher
  • Army Archerd (1922–1999) – columnist for Variety
  • James Baldwin (1924–1987) – playwright and essayist
  • Harold Bloom (1930–2019) – literary critic
  • Leslie Brody (born 1952) – non-fiction author
  • Robert Caro (born 1935) – non-fiction author of biographies of Robert Moses and Lyndon Johnson
  • Jerome Charyn (born 1937) – prolific novelist and author of several memoirs
  • Mary Higgins Clark (1927–2020) – best-selling author of suspense novels
  • Avery Corman (born 1935) – novelist; author of The Old Neighborhood, set in the Bronx
  • Don DeLillo (born 1936) – novelist
  • E. L. Doctorow (1931–2015) – author
  • Will Eisner (1917–2005) – author of A Contract with God and other graphic novels and instruction books
  • Jules Feiffer (born 1929) – cartoonist (primarily in The Village Voice); playwright, screenwriter
  • Bill Finger (1917–1974) – writer co-creator of Batman comic book[43]
  • Vivian Gornick (born 1935) – American critic, journalist, essayist, and memoirist
  • Marilyn Hacker (born 1942) – poet, critic, reviewer
  • Phil Hall (born 1964) – film critic
  • Hy Hollinger (1918–2015) – journalist for Variety and The Hollywood Reporter[44]
  • Max Kadushin (1895–1980) – rabbi, theologian and author at Conservative Synagogue Adath Israel of Riverdale
  • Bel Kaufman (1911–2014) – novelist author of Up the Down Staircase about NYC schools in the 1950s[45]
  • William Melvin Kelley (1937–2017) – novelist, short-story writer, university professor
  • Annie Lanzillotto (born 1963) – poet, author, dramatist, songwriter
  • Stan Lee (1922–2018) – leading creator of Marvel Comics
  • Paul Levinson (born 1947) – science fiction and non-fiction author
  • Anthony Lewis (1927–2013) – New York Times legal reporter, specializing in coverage of the U.S. Supreme Court[46]
  • Miles Marshall Lewis (born 1970) – pop-culture critic
  • Kenneth Lonergan (born 1962) – playwright and screenwriter[47]
  • Lynda Lopez (born 1971) – journalist, multiple broadcast networks
  • Ray Marcano – medical reporter and music critic
  • John Matteson (born 1961) – Pulitzer Prize–winning biographer
  • Stanley Meisler (1931–2016) – foreign correspondent, biographer, art historian[48]
  • Judith Merril (1923–1997) – science-fiction editor and author
  • Steve MirskyScientific American columnist
  • Nicholasa Mohr (born 1938) – Nuyorican writer about Puerto Rican women in New York
  • Mwalim (born 1968) – playwright, composer, and novelist
  • Davi Napoleon (born 1946) – theater historian and arts journalist
  • Clifford Odets (1906–1963) – playwright, co-founder of the Group Theatre
  • Cynthia Ozick (born 1928) – award-winning novelist and short-story writer
  • Grace Paley (1922–2007) – award-winning short-story writer[49]
  • Michael Pearson (born 1949) – Old Dominion University English professor and author of several books, including his memoir, Dreaming of Columbus: A Boyhood in the Bronx
  • David J. Pecker (born 1951) – CEO of American Media, publisher of National Enquirer, US Weekly, Men's Fitness[50]
  • Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849) – author and poet
  • Chaim Potok (1929–2002) – author[51]
  • Richard Price (born 1949) – novelist and screenwriter
  • Chris Regan (born 1967) – television writer and author
  • Charles Rice-González (born 1964) – novelist and playwright[52]
  • Spider Robinson (born 1948) – science-fiction writer of novels and short stories
  • Joanna Russ (1937–2011) – feminist science-fiction writer
  • Oliver Sacks (1933–2015) – neurologist and author
  • Douglas Sadownick – gay fiction writer, journalist and psychotherapist
  • William Safire (1929–2009) – journalist, speech writer, literary stylist[53]
  • Tony Santiago (born 1950), military historian[54]
  • Kate Simon (1912–1990) – memoirist and popular travel guide author[55]
  • Arthur Spiegelman (1940–2008) – journalist {not the author of Maus}[56]
  • William Steig (1907–2003) – cartoonist and author[57]
  • Mark Twain (1835–1910) – author[58]
  • Dorothy Uhnak (1930–2006) – mystery writer who drew upon her past experience as a NYPD detective
  • Ben Wattenberg (1933–2015) – political/demographic analysis author (The Real Majority)[59]
  • Barry Wellman (born 1942) – sociologist of community, networks and the Internet, co-author Networked
  • Gene Weingarten (born 1951) – Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, author and cartoonist
  • Herman Wouk (1915–2019) – author

Film, television, radio, dance and theatre[]

  • Charlie Ahern (born 1951) – film director of Wild Style[60]
  • Danny Aiello (1933–2019) – actor[61]
  • Alan Alda (born 1936) – actor
  • Melissa Manchester (born 1951) singer
  • Nancy Allen (born 1955) – actress
  • Woody Allen (born 1935) – film director and actor[62]
  • June Allyson (1917–2006) – actress[63]
  • Bruce Altman (born 1955) – actor[64]
  • Christopher Aponte – ballet dancer and choreographer
  • Arthur Aviles (born 1963) – dancer and choreographer
  • Emanuel Azenberg (born 1934) – theatrical producer
  • Lauren Bacall (1924–2014) – actress[65]
  • Martin Balsam (1919–1996) – film actor
  • Anne Bancroft (1931–2005) – actress[66]
  • Ellen Barkin (born 1954) – actress[67]
  • Joseph Bassolino (Joey Boots) (1967–2016) – comedian who popularized the phrase "Baba Booey" on the Howard Stern Show[68]
  • Peter S. Beagle (born 1939) – fantasy and science fiction author
  • Tyson Beckford (born 1970) – model and actor
  • Ahmed Best (born 1973) – Jar Jar Binks
  • Joey Bishop (1918–2007) – entertainer[69]
  • Irving Brecher (1914–2008) – radio, television and film comedy writer[10]
  • Joy Bryant (born 1976) – actress
  • Cara Buono (born 1974) – actress
  • Red Buttons (1919–2006) – comedian and actor[70]
  • James Caan (born 1940) – actor[71]
  • Steven Canals – television scriptwriter.[72]
  • George Carlin (1937–2008) – comedian
  • Eddie Carmel, born Oded Ha-Carmeili (1936–1972), Israeli-born entertainer with gigantism and acromegaly, popularly known as "The Jewish Giant"
  • Paddy Chayefsky (1923–1981) – screenwriter[73]
  • Dominic Chianese (born 1931) – actor
  • Sanford "Sandy" Climan (born 1956) – film producer[74]
  • Lee J. Cobb (1911–1976) – actor
  • Kevin Corrigan (born 1969) – actor
  • Tony Curtis (1925–2010) – actor[75]
  • Stacey Dash (born 1966) – actress
  • Michael DeLorenzo (born 1959) – actor
  • Desus (born 1983) – comedian, former host of Viceland's Desus and Mero and current host of Showtime's Desus & Mero[76]
  • The Kid Mero (born 1983) – comedian, former host of Viceland's Desus and Mero and current host of Showtime's Desus & Mero[76]
  • (1930–2000) – actor, screenwriter, producer
  • Richard Dubin (born 1945) – television writer, director and producer
  • Peter Falk (1927–2011) – actor[77]
  • Jon Favreau (born 1966) – film and television director and actor[78]
  • Joe Franklin (1926–2015) – TV host of Joe Franklin's Memory Lane[75]
  • Cuba Gooding, Jr. (born 1968) – actor
  • Howard Gottfried (1923–2017) – film producer of academy awarding winning Network and The Hospital[79]
  • Don Gregory (1934–2015) – Broadway theatrical producer[80]
  • Mortimer Halpern (1909–2006) – Broadway stage manager
  • Jonathan Harris (1914–2002) – actor
  • Moss Hart (1904–1961) – playwright and theatre director
  • Amy Heckerling (born 1954) – film director
  • Bernard Herrmann (1911–1975) – film composer[81]
  • Richard Hunt (1951–1992) – Muppet puppeteer
  • Jharrel Jerome (born 1997) – actor
  • Robert Klein (born 1942) – comedian
  • Yaphet Kotto (1939–2021) – actor
  • Stanley Kubrick (1928–1999) – film director
  • Saul Landau (1936–2013) – documentary filmmaker, journalist
  • Annie Lanzillotto (born 1963) – actor, performance artist, director
  • Tom Leykis (born 1956) – radio host
  • Lindsay Lohan (born 1986) – actress[82]
  • Domenick Lombardozzi (born 1976) – actor
  • Kenneth Lonergan (born 1962) – screenwriter, director, playwright[83]
  • Jennifer Lopez (born 1969) – singer, actress and dancer
  • Linda Lovelace (1949–2002) – porn actor and anti-porn activist
  • Sonia Manzano (born 1950) – actress, Maria Figueroa Rodriguez on Sesame Street
  • Garry Marshall (1934–2016) – television and film director[84]
  • Penny Marshall (1943–2018) – actor and director[84]
  • Lea Michele (born 1986) – actor
  • Sal Mineo (1939–1976) – actor
  • Tracy Morgan (born 1968) – actor and comedian[85]
  • Romeo Muller (1928–1992) – television writer
  • Robert Mulligan (1925–2008) – film director[86]
  • Jan Murray (1916–2006) – comedian
  • Mwalim (born 1968) – playwright, actor, director; spoken-word artist; co-founder of the Urban Expressionists Lab
  • Bess Myerson (1924–2014) – actor; best known as first Jewish Miss America[87]
  • Carroll O'Connor (1924–2001) – actor
  • Okwui Okpokwasili – dancer, actor[88]
  • Jerry Orbach (1935–2004) – actor
  • Toby Orenstein (born 1937) – founder and director of the Columbia Center for Theatrical Arts, the Young Columbians, and Toby's Dinner Theatre[89]
  • Ronnie Ortiz-Magro (born 1986) – participant on MTV's reality-television series Jersey Shore[citation needed]
  • Al Pacino (born 1940) – actor
  • Chazz Palminteri (born 1952) – actor[90]
  • Ron Perlman (born 1950) – film actor; Hellboy, etc.
  • Regis Philbin (1931–2020) – media personality and television talk-show host
  • Carl Reiner (1922–2020) – comedian and film director
  • Rob Reiner (born 1945) – actor and film director
  • Kristina Reyes (born 1994) – actress and bass guitarist
  • Martin Richards (1932–2012) – theater and movie producer[91]
  • Martin Ritt (1914–1990) – Academy Award-nominated movie director
  • Tanya Roberts (1955–2020) – actor[92]
  • Leon Robinson (born 1962) – actor
  • Géza Röhrig (born 1967) – poet and film star of Son of Saul[93]
  • George Romero (1940–2017) – horror film director[94]
  • Saoirse Ronan (born 1994) – film actor[95]
  • Andre Royo (born 1968) – actor
  • Harmony Santana (born ?) --transgender film actress starred in Gun Hill Road[96]
  • Mike Savage (born 1942) – radio talk-show host[97]
  • Robert Schimmel (1950–2010) – comedian
  • Daniel Schorr (1918–2010) – journalist
  • Ben Schwartz (born 1981) - actor and comedian
  • John Patrick Shanley (born 1950) – playwright
  • Maggie Siff (born 1974) – actor
  • Neil Simon (1927–2018) – playwright and screenwriter
  • Wesley Snipes (born 1962) – actor
  • Lionel Stander (1908–1994) – actor
  • Arnold Stang (1918–2009) – actor
  • Joseph Stein (1912–2010) – playwright[98]
  • Renée Taylor (born 1933) – actress
  • Rachel Ticotin (born 1958) – actress[99]
  • Tony Vitale (born 1964) – film writer, producer and director
  • Kerry Washington (born 1977) – actress
  • Douglas Watt (1914–2009) – theater critic[100]
  • Fred Weintraub (1928–2017) – founder and impresario of the Bitter End 1960s hippie club; producer of movies about Woodstock, Bruce Lee
  • Burt Wolf (born 1938) – travel reporter and writer for CNN and ABC networks
  • Malik Yoba (born 1967) – actor

Music[]

  • A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie (born 1995)
  • Afrika Bambaataa (born 1957) – disc jockey[101]
  • Miguel Angel Amadeo – Latin musician-composer and owner of Casa Amadeo music store
  • Anthony Amato (1920–2011) – founder and director of Amato Opera[102]
  • Aventura (born 1996) – bachata music group
  • The Barry Sisters – Yiddish-American singers from the 1930s to 1970s[103]
  • The Belmonts – late-1950s singing group, with Dion
  • Jellybean Benitez (born 1957) – music producer credited with discovering Madonna
  • Big Pun (1971–2000) – rapper
  • Mary J. Blige (born 1971) – singer and songwriter
  • Angela Bofill (born 1954) – R&B singer and songwriter
  • Busy Bee Starski (born 1962) – old-school rapper from the 1980s
  • Jerry Calliste Jr (born 1965) – music-industry executive
  • Cardi B (born 1992) – hip-hop recording artist
  • Diahann Carroll (1935–2019) – actress and singer
  • The Chiffons – early-1960s girl group
  • Cheryl "Coko" Clemons (born 1970) – gospel singer and lead singer of R&B group
  • Sean Combs (born 1969) – "Puff Diddy" rapper, singer, record producer, entrepreneur[104]
  • Cold Crush Brothers – rap group
  • Willie Colón (born 1950) – trombonist
  • Judy Craig (born 1946) – lead singer of the Chiffons
  • Cuban Link (born 1974) – hip-hop artist
  • Bobby Darin (1936–1973) – 1950s–1960s singer
  • Dennis Day (1916–1988) – comedian and singer; regular on Jack Benny radio and television programs
  • Inspectah Deck (born 1970) – rapper; member of Wu-Tang Clan
  • Kat DeLuna (born 1987) – 1950s–1960s singer
  • Diamond D (born 1968) – hip-hop artist
  • Dion DiMucci (born 1939) – singer-songwriter; 1950s–1960s rock singer
  • DJ Chuck Chillout (born 1962) – disc jockey
  • DJ Kool Herc (born 1955) – hip hop pioneer
  • Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band – 1970s disco group
  • Drag On (born 1979) – rapper
  • Arnold Eidus (1922–2013) – concert violinist and session musician
  • Fat Joe (born 1970) – rapper
  • Charles Fox (born 1940) – Grammy-winning composer
  • Ace Frehley (born 1951) – Kiss guitarist
  • French Montana (born 1984) – rapper
  • Ross "The Boss" Friedman (born 1954) – guitarist and founding member of The Dictators and Manowar
  • Funkmaster Flex (born 1968) – disc jockey
  • Funky Four Plus One – rap group
  • Furious Five – rap group
  • Bob Gaudio (born 1942) – Four Seasons principal songwriter and group member[105]
  • Stan Getz (1927–1991) – jazz musician
  • Richard Goode (born 1943) – classical pianist
  • Eydie Gormé (1931–2013) – traditional pop music singer
  • Grand Mixer DXT – disc jockey
  • Grand Wizard Theodore (born 1963) – disc jockey
  • Grandmaster Flash (born 1958) – disc jockey
  • Cory Gunz (born 1987) – rapper
  • Aaron Hall (born 1964) – R&B singer-songwriter
  • Andre "Dr. Jeckyll" Harrell (born 1964) – half of rap duo Dr. Jeckyll & Mr. Hyde
  • Richie Havens (1941–2013) – musician[106]
  • Heatmakerz – hip-hop producers
  • Hell Rell (born 1979) – rapper
  • Rita Houston (1961–2020)--Disk jockey, producer, and program director of "The Whole Wide World",[107]
  • Bobby Hutcherson (1941–2016) – jazz vibraphonist who lived in the Bronx in the 1960s[108]
  • The Jaynetts (1961–1964) – singers, "Sally Go Round the Roses"
  • Jazzy Five – rap group
  • Billy Joel (born 1949) – singer
  • Jim Jones (born 1976) – rapper, actor
  • Helen Kane (1903–1966) – singer
  • Kid Capri (born 1967) – disc jockey and producer
  • Don Kirshner (1934–2011) – 1950s–1960s rock producer, 1970s television: "Rock Concert"[109]
  • Jann Klose – singer
  • Kool Keith (born 1963) – hip-hop artist
  • Joey Kramer (born 1950) – drummer from Aerosmith
  • KRS-One (born 1965) – rapper
  • La India (born 1969) – "The Princess of Salsa"
  • Héctor Lavoe (1946–1993) – salsa singer
  • Tom Lehrer (born 1928) – satirical songwriter and performer
  • Leanne "Lelee" Lyons (born 1973) – member of R&B group SWV*
  • Lord Finesse (born 1970) – hip-hop artist
  • Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz – hip-hop duo
  • Jennifer Lopez (born 1969) – singer, actress and dancer
  • Richard "Handsome Dick" Manitoba (born 1954) – singer, The Dictators, MC5 and Manitoba's Wild Kingdom; entertainer; radio DJ; saloon keeper
  • Johnny Marks (1909–1985) – composer of "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" and other songs
  • Anthony McGill (musician) (born 1979) – principal clarinetist of New York Philharmonic[110]
  • Abel Meeropol (1903–1986) – composer of "Strange Fruit", "The House I Live In"; adoptive father of Rosenberg boys[111]
  • Melle Mel (born 1961) – rapper
  • Alan Merrill (born 1951) – musician, singer, actor, model
  • Helen Merrill (born 1930) – jazz singer
  • Robert Moog (1934–2005) – inventor of the Moog synthesizer
  • Jerry Moss (born 1935) – co-founder of A&M Records; owner of Zenyatta race horse[112]
  • Chris Moy (born 1992) – member of Menudo
  • Mwalim (born 1968) – singer, pianist, composer, arranger, producer
  • Nice & Smooth – rap duo
  • Nine (born 1969) – rapper
  • Laura Nyro (1947–1997) – composer and singer
  • Jon Oliva (born 1960) – heavy-metal singer
  • Adelina Patti (1843–1919) – opera singer
  • Jan Peerce (1904–1984) – opera singer
  • Murray Perahia (born 1947) – pianist and conductor
  • Roberta Peters (1930–2017) – opera singer
  • Positive K – rapper
  • Tony Powers (born 1938) – actor, singer-songwriter, video artist
  • Prince Royce (born 1989) – bachata singer-songwriter
  • Tito Puente (1923–2000) – jazz musician
  • Lenny Santos (born 1979) – bachata producer, guitarist and songwriter
  • Rahzel – rapper, beatboxer
  • Drew Ramos (born 1997) – singer from the group in Real Life
  • Christopher "Kid" Reid (born 1964) – half of Kid 'n Play
  • Remy Ma (born 1981) – rapper
  • Jamar Rogers (born 1982) – singer
  • Sadat X (born 1968) – rapper; member of Brand Nubian
  • Romeo Santos (born 1981) – singer, bachata
  • Gil Scott-Heron (1949–2011) – "godfather of rap"[113]
  • Showbiz and A.G. – hip-hop duo
  • Carly Simon (born 1945) – singer-songwriter
  • Joanna Simon (born 1940) – mezzo-soprano opera singer; MacNeil/Lehrer News Hour arts correspondent; older sister of Carly Simon and Lucy Simon
  • Lucy Simon (born 1943) – composer and older sister of Carly Simon
  • Slick Rick (born 1965) – rapper
  • Soulsonic Force – rap group
  • Joey Spampinato (born 1948) – musician
  • Phil Spector (1939–2021) – composer and arranger; murderer
  • Regina Spektor (born 1980) – singer-songwriter
  • Maxine Sullivan (1911–1987) – jazz singer
  • Swizz Beatz (born 1978) – record producer/rapper
  • Max Santos (born 1982) – bass player, rapper
  • T La Rock (born 1961) – rapper
  • Ray Tabano (born 1946) – former guitarist and founding member of Aerosmith
  • Tim Dog (1967–2013) – rapper
  • Lil Tjay (born 2001) – rapper[114]
  • Arturo Toscanini (1867–1957) – cellist, conductor
  • Doris Troy (1937–2004) – R&B singer and songwriter
  • Richard Tucker (1913–1975) – operatic tenor, cantor, Temple Adath Israel
  • Steven Tyler (born 1948) – frontman of Aerosmith[115]
  • Ultramagnetic MCs – rap group
  • Dave Valentin (1952–2017) – Latin jazz flutist
  • Luther Vandross (1951–2005) – singer
  • Mario Vazquez (born 1977) – singer
  • Veronica Vazquez (born 1975) – singer
  • Louie Vega (born 1965) – disc jockey and music producer
  • Jesse West (born 1967) – rapper, producer
  • Christopher Williams (born 1967) – singer
  • Peter Wolf (born 1946) – lead singer of The J. Geils Band
  • Nanette Workman (born 1945) – Singer-songwriter. Backing vocalist Rolling Stones, Elton John, John Lennon
  • Government and politics[]

    JFK House 5040 Independence Avenue. The house where John F. Kennedy lived when he was a student at Riverdale Country School from 1927 through 1930. This house is located at 5040 Independence Avenue, across the street from Wave Hill.[116]
    • Robert Abrams (born 1938) – Assemblyman, Bronx Borough President, New York State Attorney General
    • Bella Abzug (1920–1998) – Congresswoman and international feminist leader
    • Brian G. Andersson (born 1957) – former New York City Commissioner of Records & Information Services.[117]
    • Herman Badillo (1929–2014) – former New York City housing official, Bronx Borough President, Congressman and CUNY board of trustees chair
    • Oxiris Barbot – Commissioner of Health of the City of New York
    • Adolfo Carrión, Jr. (born 1961) – former Bronx Borough President appointed by President Barack Obama to be Director of the White House Office of Urban Affairs
    • Darcel Clark (born 1962) – first female Bronx County District Attorney
    • Gray Davis (born 1942) – former Governor of California
    • Rubén Díaz Jr. (born 1973) Bronx borough president and former New York State assembly member
    • Louis Farrakhan (born 1933) – Black Muslim leader[67]
    • Luis A. Gonzalez[118] – first Latino to be named Presiding Justice of the New York State Appellate Division, First Judicial Department
    • Alan Grayson (born 1958) – Democratic Congressman, Florida[119]
    • Eric Holder (born 1951) – first African American-appointed United States Attorney General
    • Martin Jezer (1940–2005) – progressive activist in New York and Vermont; leader of stutterers' self-help movement
    • Lazarus Joseph (1891–1966), NY State Senator and New York City Comptroller.
    • Benjamin Kaplan (1911–2010) – law professor, judge, crafter of Nuremberg Trials indictments[120]
    • John F. Kennedy (1917–1963) – 35th President of the United States; U.S. Senator from Massachusetts (born in Brookline, Massachusetts)[121]
    • Bernard Kerik (born 1955) – former Commissioner of Police and of Corrections, New York City.[122]
    • Ed Koch (1924–2013) – politician; former U.S. Representative who became a three-term Mayor of New York City
    • Kenneth Kronberg (1948–2007) – leading member of LaRouche Movement
    • Fiorello H. La Guardia (1882–1947) – former Mayor of New York City
    • Nita Lowey (born 1937) – Congresswoman served from 1989 to 2021 whose Westchester district once included parts of the Bronx and Queens
    • Beatrice Lumpkin (born 1918) – American union organizer
    • Norman Marcus – former general counsel, New York City Planning Commission[123]
    • Francis W. Martin (1878–1947) – first Bronx County District Attorney
    • Gouverneur Morris (1752–1816) – revolutionary war statesman
    • Michael Mukasey (born 1941) – former U.S. judge and U.S. Attorney General (under George W. Bush)
    • Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (born 1989) – youngest woman ever elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, 2018
    • Colin Powell (born 1937) – former United States Secretary of State
    • Anthony Romero (born 1965) – executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union
    • Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919) – U.S. president who spent boyhood summers at Wave Hill in the Riverdale section of The Bronx, New York City
    • Frank Shannon (born 1961) – native of the Kingsbridge section of the Bronx, conservative activist, political analyst, columnist, and candidate for the Florida State House
    • Larry Sharpe (born 1968) – 2018 Libertarian nominee for Governor of New York; 2016 Libertarian vice-presidential candidate
    • Sonia Sotomayor (born 1954) – federal appeals court judge, New York; appointed by President Barack Obama to the Supreme Court of the United States
    • Eliot Spitzer (born 1959) – politician and television talk-show host; former New York State Attorney General (1999–2006); Governor of New York (2007–2008)
    • John Timoney (police officer) (1948–2016) – Philadelphia police commissioner; Miami police chief; New York City deputy police commissioner[124]
    • Leon Trotsky (1879–1940) Soviet revolutionary and political theorist[125][126]
    • Charles J. Urstadt (born 1928) – gubernatorial advisor and appointee noted for development of Battery Park City and as namesake of contentious Urstadt Law[127][128]

    Sports[]

    Lou Gehrig, Hall of Famer
    Hank Greenberg, Hall of Famer and two-time MVP
    Dolph Schayes, Hall of Famer
    • Nate Archibald (born 1948) – former NBA player
    • Albert Axelrod (1921–2004) – Olympic medalist foil fencer
    • Elías Larry Ayuso (born 1977) – Puerto Rican basketball player
    • Harrison Bader (born 1994) – MLB outfielder
    • Margaret Bailes (born 1951) – Olympic gold medalist
    • Iran Barkley (born 1960) – boxer
    • Saquon Barkley (born 1997) – football player
    • Bobby Bonilla (born 1963) – former MLB player
    • Willie Cager – player on 1966 Texas Western University NCAA basketball championship team[129]
    • Rod Carew (born 1945) – Baseball Hall of Famer signed by the Minnesota Twins in the Bronx[130]
    • Willie Colon (born 1983) – New York Jets guard
    • Cus D'Amato (1908–1985) – boxing manager
    • Aaron Davis (born 1967) – boxer
    • Bizunesh Deba (born 1987) – marathoner[131]
    • Art Donovan (1924–2013) – former NFL football tackle
    • Mike "SuperJew" Epstein (born 1943) – MLB first baseman
    • Chris Eubank (born 1966) – boxer
    • Harry Feldman (1919–1962) – Major League Baseball pitcher
    • Lou Gehrig (1903–1941) – Baseball Hall of Famer and New York Yankees first baseman
    • Marty Glickman (1917–2001) – athlete and sports announcer
    • Mitch Green (born 1957) – boxer
    • Hank Greenberg (1911–1986) – baseball Hall of Famer
    • Eric Holtz (born 1965) – Head Coach of the Israel national baseball team
    • Daryl Homer (born 1990) – Olympic fencer[132]
    • Nat Holman (1896–1995) – Hall of Fame basketball player and coach
    • Jonathan Isaac (born 1997) – basketball player, Orlando Magic forward
    • Cullen Jones (born 1984) – swimmer
    • Max Kellerman (born 1973) – sports-radio host
    • Ed Kranepool (born 1944) – former Major League Baseball player; New York Mets
    • Marie Kruckel (1924–2012) – All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player
    • Jake LaMotta (1921–2017) – boxer
    • Fred Lewis (born 1947) – American-handball player
    • Anibal Lopez (born 1942) – bodybuilder
    • Doug Marrone (born 1964) – head coach, Buffalo Bills
    • Floyd Mayweather, Sr. (born 1952) – boxing trainer
    • Shep Messing (born 1949) – Olympic soccer goalkeeper and current broadcaster
    • Nat Militzok (1923–2009) – basketball player
    • Marvin Miller (1917–2012) – founder, Major League Baseball Players Association[133]
    • Davey Moore (1959–1988) – WBA world middleweight champion boxer
    • Bernard Opper (1915–2000), All-American basketball player for the Kentucky Wildcats and professional player
    • Juan Orozco (born 1993) – champion gymnast, 2012 Olympian[134]
    • Justin Pierce (1975–2000) – skateboarder
    • Ed Pinckney (born 1963) – basketball player, Villanova Wildcats Championship Team; 13-year NBA; Current Lead Assistant Coach, Minnesota Timberwolves
    • Bill Polian (born 1942) – NFL executive
    • Alex Ramos (born 1961) – boxer
    • Tubby Raskin (1902–1981) - basketball player and coach
    • T.J. Rivera (born 1988) – New York Mets infielder[135]
    • Michele A. Roberts (born 1956) – executive director of NBA players' union[136]
    • Lennie Rosenbluth (born 1933) – basketball player
    • Dolph Schayes (1928–2015) – Hall of Fame NBA basketball player and coach
    • Babe Scheuer (1913–1997) – football player
    • Stephen A. Smith (born 1967) – commentator, ESPN First Take
    • Vin Scully (born 1927) – sportscaster
    • Amanda Serrano (born 1988) – IBF Female World Super Featherweight champion boxer
    • Nevil Shed (born 1943) – player on 1966 Texas Western University NCAA basketball championship team[129]
    • Benjamin (Benji) Ungar (born 1986) – fencer
    • Kemba Walker (born 1990) – basketball player; Boston Celtics point guard
    • (1933–1990) – basketball coach and community leader[129]
    • Andrew Velazquez (born 1994) - New York Yankee SS


    Name givers[]

    • Thomas Cornell (1595–1655) – one of the earliest settlers of the Bronx (area now named Clason Point)
    • Anne Hutchinson (1591–1643) – pioneer religious liberation
    • Thomas Pell (1608–1669) – physician

    Activists[]

    • Murray Bookchin (1921–2006) – anarchist, social ecologist, libertarian socialist
    • Roscoe Brown (1922–2016) – Tuskegee Airman, President
    • Stokely Carmichael (1941–1998) – Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee leader in the 1960s U.S. Civil Rights Movement
    • Majora Carter (born 1966) – MacArthur Genius Award-winning founder of Sustainable South Bronx
    • Claudette Colvin (born 1939) – first person to be arrested protesting bus segregation in the U.S. South, in Montgomery, Alabama, March 2, 1955[137]
    • Ita Ford (1940–1980) – Maryknoll nun, murdered by Salvadoran death squad
    • Jack Greenberg (1924–2016) – civil rights lawyer as head of NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund for 23 years[138]
    • Ray McGovern (born 1939) – retired Central Intelligence Agency officer turned political activist
    • Maurice Paprin (1920–2005) – Mitchell Lama apartments developer and social activist
    • Arlyn Phoenix (born 1943) – head of River Phoenix Center for Peacebuilding; mother of Joaquin Phoenix, River Phoenix
    • Sally Regenhard – 9/11 activist; Co-op City resident
    • Sylvia Rivera (1951–2002) – transgender activist, "the Rosa Parks of the transgender movement"[139]
    • Jim Steyer (born 1956) – child advocate[140]
    • Stephen Spiro (1939–2007) – conscientious objector and Vietnam War opponent
    • Elizabeth Sturz (1917–2010) – founder of Argus Community and Harbor House; folklorist with husband Alan Lomax[141]
    • Gary Waldron (born 1943) – founder of Glie Farms, commercial organic herb garden in low-income neighborhood.[142]
    • Suzanne (Werner) Wright (1946–2016) – co-founder of Autism Speaks[143]

    Business[]

    • Joseph Beninati (born 1964) – real estate developer and private equity investor
    • Lloyd Blankfein (born 1954) – businessman; chief executive officer of Goldman Sachs (since 2006)[144]
    • Eli Broad (1933–2021) – businessman and arts philanthropist; co-founder of Kaufman & Broad[145]
    • B. Gerald Cantor (1916–1996) – businessman; co-founder of securities firm Cantor Fitzgerald; with his wife Iris, amassed and then donated the largest private collection of sculptures by Auguste Rodin
    • Stanley Chais (1926–2010), investment advisor in the Madoff investment scandal
    • Marco Dedivanovic (born 1983) Award-winning make-up artist and businessman.[146]
    • Fred DeLuca (1947–2015) – founder and CEO of Subway fast food sandwich chain
    • Richelieu Dennis – co-founder of Sundial Brands personal care products.[147]
    • Millard "Mickey" Drexler" (born 1944) – businessman; chief executive officer of J. Crew; former chief executive officer of the Gap[148]
    • Reggie Fils-Aimé (born 1961) – president of Nintendo of America
    • Michael J. Freeman (born 1947) – inventor, educator, business consultant, and entrepreneur
    • Mike Greco (1929–2019) – 'salami king'[149]
    • Harry Helmsley (1909–1997) – real estate magnate in New York City
    • Roger Hertog (born 1941) – co-founder of investment firm; co-publisher of The New Republic magazine; philanthropist[150]
    • Richard March Hoe (1812–1886) – inventor of rotary printing press[151]
    • Collis Potter Huntington (1821–1900) – railroad and shipbuilding magnate; created the privately endowed Huntington Free Library and Reading Room near his summer home in the Throggs Neck neighborhood of the Bronx
    • Elaine Kaufman (1929–2010) – businessperson; proprietor of Elaine's, a restaurant in the Manhattan borough of New York City that was a haunt of writers, actors, politicians[152]
    • Calvin Klein (born 1942) – clothing designer
    • Ralph Lauren (born 1939) – clothing designer
    • George Lois (born 1932) – advertising[153]
    • William E. Macaulay (1945–2019) – billionaire businessman; CEO and chairman of First Reserve Corporation; co-founder of William E. Macaulay Honors College of City University of New York[154]
    • Reuben and Rose Mattus (1912–1994; 1916–2006) – founders of Häagen-Dazs ice cream
    • Walton McCarthy (born 1951) – businessman and principal mechanical engineer with NORAD Shelter Systems
    • George Meany (1894–1980) – labor union leader: first president of the AFL-CIO
    • Jordan L. Mott (1799–1866) – inventor of coal kitchen stove, founder of J.L. Mott Ironworks in Mott Haven, and developer of the South Bronx neighborhood now named after him[155]
    • Mark Penn (born 1954) – chief executive officer of the public-relations firm Burson-Marsteller; president of the polling firm Penn, Schoen and Berland Associates
    • Sol Price (1916–2009) – founder of the Price Club and FedMart retail stores[156]
    • Lewis Salton (1910–1997) – inventor and manufacturer of the Salton Hotray[157]
    • Fred Schwartz (1931–2016) – furrier, known nationally as "Fred the Furrier"[158]
    • Sy Sperling (1941–2020) – founder, long-time head and TV commercial star of HairClub[159]
    • Fred Trump (1905–1999) – real estate developer; father of Donald Trump

    Attorneys[]

    Infamous[]

    • David Berkowitz (born 1953) – "Son of Sam" serial killer
    • Evgeny Buryakov (born 1975) – Russian spy[163]
    • Richard Cottingham (born 1946), serial killer
    • Larry Davis (1966–2008) – drug dealer; shot multiple police officers[citation needed]
    • John Gotti (1940–2002) – crime boss
    • Sidney Gottlieb (1918–1999) – American chemist who led the Central Intelligence Agency's 1950s–1960s assassination attempts and mind control program, known as Project MKUltra
    • Moshe Lax (born 1974) – partner in Ivanka Trump Fine Jewelry; subject of multiple lawsuits[164]
    • Jeffry Picower (1942–2009) – investor and philanthropist involved in the Madoff investment scandal
    • Morton Sobell (1917–2018) – convicted along with Julius Rosenberg and Ethel Rosenberg in 1951 of being a spy for the Soviet Union.[165]
    • Howard Spira – instrumental in George Steinbrenner's ban from baseball

    See also[]

    References[]

    1. ^ Pearce, Jeremy (January 12, 2006). "Dr. Ira B. Black, 64, Leader in New Jersey Stem Cell Effort, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
    2. ^ Sam Roberts, "Roscoe C. Brown, 94, Tuskegee Airman and Political Confidant," New York Times, July 7, 2016
    3. ^ Sam Roberts, "Morton Deutsch, conflict resolution expert, dies at 97," New York Times, March 23, 2017
    4. ^ Ian Frazer, "Old Hatreds," New Yorker, August 26, 2019, p. 36.
    5. ^ "Gertrude Elion | Jewish Women's Archive". jwa.org. Retrieved September 1, 2019.
    6. ^ George Johnson, "Murray Gell-Mann,Who Peered at Particles and Saw the Universe, Dies at 89." New York Times, May 25, 2019.
    7. ^ Miller, Jim (November 8, 1987). "Tears and Riots, Love and Regrets". The New York Times. Retrieved October 29, 2011. "Mr. Gitlin was born in 1943. Growing up in the Bronx, the middle-class son of liberal Jewish parents, he was, as he recalls, 'studious and clean-cut,' a straight-arrow fan of Adlai Stevenson."
    8. ^ Katherine Seelye, "Fred Greenstein, 88, A Political 'Psychologist' Who Assessed Presidents." New York Times, December 16, 2018
    9. ^ Robert McFadden, "Inventor of a life-saving maneuver", The New York Times, December 21, 2016
    10. ^ Jump up to: a b The New York Times obituary. November 20, 2008.
    11. ^ The New York Times obituary. December 10, 2008.
    12. ^ "Nobel Prize Winner Hails from the Bronx," MyFoxNY.com "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 29, 2012. Retrieved September 28, 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
    13. ^ Pasachoff, Jay M. (February 2010). "Norm Levitt: An Obituary". The Skeptical Inquirer. Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. 34 (1). Retrieved April 28, 2016.
    14. ^ Sam Roberts "Kenneth Lewes, Who Challenged Views of Homosexuality, Dies at 76." New York Times June 28, 2020.
    15. ^ Thomas Blass, "The Man Who Shocked the World" Psychology Today, March 1, 2002
    16. ^ Jason Kersten, "Dept. of Superlatives: Totally" New Yorker, August 28, 2017: 28–29
    17. ^ Overbye, Dennis (September 21, 2009). "An Odyssey from the Bronx to Saturn's Rings". The New York Times. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
    18. ^ Natalia Vonnegut, "Alan Pred in Memoriam","Archived copy". Archived from the original on March 31, 2012. Retrieved March 30, 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
    19. ^ Sam Roberts, "Howard Raifa, 92, Negotiation Scientist" New York Times, July 18, 2016
    20. ^ "Ken Schaffer: What's the Frequency?" http://www.nutcom.com/?cat=3
    21. ^ Vinson Cunningham, "Test Case." New Yorker, March 9, 2020, 5667
    22. ^ [1]
    23. ^ Markoff, John (September 6, 2009). Robert Spinrad, a Pioneer in Computing, Dies at 77". The New York Times. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
    24. ^ Byrne, Peter (July 2011). "Bad Boy of Physics". Scientific American. pp. 80–83.
    25. ^ Gellene, Denise (June 2, 2011). "Rosalyn S. Yalow, Nobel Medical Physicist, Dies at 89". The New York Times.
    26. ^ Berger, Joseph (December 10, 2009). "Yosef H. Yerushalmi, Scholar of Jewish History, Dies at 77". The New York Times. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
    27. ^ Frazier, Ian (December 21, 2009). "Dept. of Orientation: El Super". The New Yorker, p. 50.
    28. ^ Friend, Tad (May 31, 2010). "Big Game Dept.: No Pictures". The New Yorker, pp. 24–25.
    29. ^ Rosenblum, Constance (August 20, 2009). "Grand Wasn't It?". The New York Times. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
    30. ^ Hevesi, Dennis (December 7, 2010)."Garry Gross Is Dead at 73; Photographer of Clothes and Their Absence". The New York Times. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
    31. ^ McNay, Michael (July 31, 2005). "Al Held – American Painter Who Found His Voice in Hard Edge Abstraction". The Guardian. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
    32. ^ (November 21, 2017). "Joel Iskowitz Artistic Infusion Program Designer". United States Mint. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
    33. ^ Weber, Bruce. (August 11, 2009). "Marcey Jacobson, a Photographer Inspired by Mexico, Dies at 97". The New York Times. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
    34. ^ Landfield, Ronnie; Morgan, Robert C.; Landfield, Jenny (2007). Ronnie Landfield – Paintings from Five Decades – September 16 – November 25, 2007 (exhibition catalogue). Youngstown, Ohio: Butler Institute of American Art. "Beginnings". pp. 7–10. ISBN 978-1-882790-50-0.
    35. ^ Whitfield Lovell
    36. ^ Yau, John (July–August 2006). "Whitfield Lovell with John Yau". The Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
    37. ^ "MacArthur Fellows 2007 – Whitfield Lovell". John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. September 2007. Archived from the original on October 27, 2011. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
    38. ^ Video (requires Adobe Flash; 00:02:11) (June 11, 2008). "2007 MacArthur Fellow: Whitfield Lovell". John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation (via its YouTube channel). Retrieved October 29, 2011.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
    39. ^ "Oral history interview with Merryll Saylan, 2006 May 20 – June 5". Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. 2006. Retrieved September 22, 2019.
    40. ^ Robert McFadden, "Phil Stern, Photographer; Chronicler of Movie Stars and a President was 95" New York Times, December 16, 2014"
    41. ^ Smith, Roberta (August 31, 1999). "George Sugarman, a Sculptor Of Colorful Works, Dies at 87". The New York Times. Retrieved October 28, 2011.
    42. ^ Kate Dwyer, "A Photographer of the Hip-Hop Age." New York Times, December 1, 2019, p. ST10
    43. ^ George Gene Gustines, "At Bronx Corner, Gothamd City Honors One of Its Own." New York Times, December 17, 2017
    44. ^ Hy Hollinger, Longtime Variety Reporter, Dies at 97
    45. ^ Margalit Fox, "Bel Kaufman, Who Told What School Was Really Like, Dies at 103." New York Times, July 28, 2014. [2]
    46. ^ Liptak, Adam (March 25, 2013). "Anthony Lewis, Supreme Court Reporter Who Brought Law to Life, Dies at 85". The New York Times.
    47. ^ Hilton Als, "Urban Blight: The World of Kenneth Lonergan," New Yorker, September 22, 2014, pp. 107–109
    48. ^ William Grimes, "Stanley Meisler, 85, Reporter Who Pivoted to Art History," New York Times, July 7, 2016
    49. ^ Sarah Crown, "A Reading Class in Masters of the Short Story." Guardian News Service, accessed via Toronto Globe and Mail, Review section, December 12, 2009.
    50. ^ Jeffrey Toobin, "Feeding the Beast." The New Yorker. July 3, 2017
    51. ^ Fox, Margalit (July 24, 2002). "Chaim Potok, 73, Dies; Novelist Illumined the World of Hasidic Judaism". The New York Times. Retrieved December 1, 2007. "Herman Harold Potok was born in the Bronx on Feb. 17, 1929."
    52. ^ Junco, Maite (March 29, 2012). "Gay coming-of-age novel 'Chulito' puts Hunts Point in the literary map". The New York Daily News. Retrieved October 16, 2015.
    53. ^ Robert McFadden, "Willim Safire, Political Columnist and Oracle of Language, Dies at 79" The New York Times, September 29, 2009.
    54. ^ Antonio "the Marine" Santiago Recognized as Puerto Rico's Foremost Military Historian, SomosPrimos.com, August 2010; retrieved May 15, 2013.
    55. ^ Flint, Peter B. (February 5, 1990). "Kate Simon, Acclaimed Memoirist And Travel Writer, Is Dead at 77". The New York Times. Retrieved March 14, 2011.
    56. ^ [3] Archived December 25, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
    57. ^ Boxer, Sarah (November 29, 1997). "Wry Child of the Unconscious; William Steig, 90, on Art, Life and the Mysterious Orgone". The New York Times. Retrieved November 5, 2007. "He was born in 1907, grew up in the Bronx and had what he once called a defective education."
    58. ^ Goodman, Jonathan (January–February 2001). "Wave Hill: Sculpture in the Garden". Sculpture. Retrieved August 7, 2013. "Mark Twain rented Wave Hill from 1901 through 1903, and Arturo Toscanini lived there from 1942 through 1945."
    59. ^ Sam Roberts, "Ben Wattenberg, Author and Commentator, Dies at 81", The New York Times, June 30, 2015
    60. ^ "Goings on About Town," New Yorker, June 26, 2017, p. 10.
    61. ^ Norman, Michael (January 21, 1990). "His Bus Came In". The New York Times. "Later, when the family moved near Boston Road in the Bronx, the progenitor showed himself even less."
    62. ^ Meade, Marion. The Unruly Life of Woody Allen. New York City: Charles Scribner's Sons. Chapter 1 reprinted in [4].
    63. ^ Harmetz, Aljean (July 11, 2006). "June Allyson, Adoring Wife in MGM Films, Is Dead at 88". The New York Times. Retrieved November 5, 2007. "June Allyson was born Ella Geisman on Oct. 7, 1917, in the Bronx."
    64. ^ [better source needed] [5]. Internet Movie Database.
    65. ^ [6]
    66. ^ Berkvist, Robert (June 8, 2005). "Anne Bancroft, Stage and Film Star in Voracious and Vulnerable Roles, Dies at 73". The New York Times. Retrieved November 5, 2007. "Anna Maria Louisa Italiano was born on Sept. 17, 1931, in the Bronx to Italian immigrant parents."
    67. ^ Jump up to: a b "Place of Birth Index". Who2.com. Retrieved March 14, 2011.
    68. ^ Associated Press,"Joey Boots of The Howard Stern Show dead at 49"
    69. ^ Severo, Richard (October 19, 2007). "Joey Bishop, 89, Last of the Rat Pack, Is Dead". The New York Times. Retrieved November 5, 2007. "Joey Bishop was born Joseph Abraham Gottlieb in the Bronx on Feb. 3, 1918, the fifth child and third son of Jacob Gottlieb and the former Anna Siegel, immigrants from Eastern Europe."
    70. ^ Rothstein, Mervyn (July 14, 2006). "Comedian Red Buttons Dies at 87". The New York Times. Retrieved November 5, 2007. "He first attended P.S. 104 on East Fourth Street, but then his family moved to the Bronx, to 176th Street and Marmion Avenue."
    71. ^ Weinraub, Bernard (May 17, 2004). "James Caan Takes a Gamble On 'Las Vegas,' and Scores". The New York Times. Retrieved November 5, 2007. "Born in the Bronx, reared in Queens, where his family owned a kosher meat market, Mr. Caan said he ran with a tough crowd, wanted to be a professional football player but wound up, for reasons he is still not entirely sure about, auditioning and being accepted at the Neighborhood Playhouse in Manhattan."
    72. ^ Emily Nussbaum, "Mr. Big." The New Yorker, May 14, 2018
    73. ^ David Marc and Robert Thompson, Prime Time Prime Movers, Boston: Little Brown, 1992
    74. ^ Leah Morrison, "Lights Camera Sandy!" Lifestyles Magazine, January 2017, pp. 22–25
    75. ^ Jump up to: a b Reeves Wiedeman, "Only in New York: Talk to Me." The New Yorker, p. 20. February 9, 2005
    76. ^ Jump up to: a b Weiner, Jonah How Desus and Kid Mero Went From Twitter Cranks to Comedy's Hottest Duo Rolling Stone. July 8, 2015
    77. ^ http://www.nycplus.com/nyc18/just79morethings.html
    78. ^ Bowles, Scott (May 7, 2010). "Favreau's a Comic-Book Hero." USA Today. pp. 1D-2D.
    79. ^ Dave Itzkoff, "Howard Gottfried, 94, Producer of 'Network', Dies. New York Times, December 17, 2017
    80. ^ Bruce Weber, "Don Gregory Dies at 80: Produced Solo Plays." New York Times, November 10, 2015
    81. ^ "Bernard Hermann (American Composer), Encyclopædia Britannica[7]; Jim Fusilli, "The Psycho Maestro at 100." Wall Street Journal, July 2, 2011.
    82. ^ "Lindsay Lohan's chequered life in the spotlight". BBC. July 7, 2010. Retrieved December 28, 2016.
    83. ^ Rebecca Mead, "Lost Time," New Yorker, November 7, 2016
    84. ^ Jump up to: a b Rosenblum, Constance (August 21, 2009). "Grand, Wasn't It?". The New York Times.
    85. ^ Wheeler, Brad (March 19, 2012). "Tracy Morgan". The Globe and Mail. p. R3.
    86. ^ Fox, Margalit (December 28, 2008). "Robert Mulligan, Director, Is Dead at 83". The New York Times.
    87. ^ [8]
    88. ^ Hilton Als, "Body Politics", New Yorker, April 24, 2017, p. 26
    89. ^ Maryland Commission for Women (2008). "Toby Barbara Orenstein, Maryland Women's Hall of Fame". msa.maryland.gov. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
    90. ^ James, Caryn (July 9, 1995). "Do the Movies Get New York Right?". The New York Times. Retrieved November 5, 2007. "Mr. Palminteri, who grew up in the Bronx on 187th Street and Belmont Avenue, said, Basically the story was about this medieval village in the Bronx, but it was so truthful and so real about the Bronx."
    91. ^ Weber, Bruce (November 28, 2012). "Martin Richards, Broadway Producer, Is Dead at 80". The New York Times.
    92. ^ [9].
    93. ^ Antony Lane, "Deeo and Dark", The New Yorker, December 21, 2015: 117
    94. ^ Chris Alexander, "Horror Legends Talk about Hollywood." Metro Toronto October 28, 2016
    95. ^ Steve Gow, "Saoirse Steps into Role She's Lived." Metro Toronto, November 20, 2015, p. 26.
    96. ^ Carlos Aguilar, "20 Essential Latino Films Since 2000", The New York Times, October 4, p. AR7
    97. ^ Sanneh, Kelefa (August 3, 2009). "Party of One". The New Yorker, p. 53.
    98. ^ Gates, Anita (October 26, 2010). "Joseph Stein, 'Fiddler on the Roof' Author, Dies at 98". The New York Times.
    99. ^ Rachel Tictotin Biography (1958–), Filmreference.com
    100. ^ Weber, Bruce (October 2, 2009). "Douglas Watt, New York Theater Critic, Dies at 95". The New York Times. Retrieved October 5, 2009.
    101. ^ Fernandez, Manny (June 17, 2006). "For One Week, a Bronx Cheer Means Cheering for the Borough", The New York Times. Retrieved October 28, 2011. "The Bronx is also Afrika Bambaataa, who, while growing up in the Bronx River Houses, became a D.J. in the early 1970s."
    102. ^ Fox, Margalit (December 15, 2011). "Anthony Amato, 91, Owner of Feisty Opera". The New York Times.
    103. ^ Joseph Berger, "Claire Barry, a Singer in Sister Duo, Dies at 94," New York Times, December 3, 2014
    104. ^ Erin Donnelly, "Jennifer Lopez opens up about dating Sean 'Diddy' Combs and Ben Affleck." Yahoo Entertainment, December 22, 2019. [10]
    105. ^ Rotella, Mark (October 2, 2005). "Straight Out of Newark", The New York Times. Retrieved October 9, 2007. "Originally from the Bronx, Mr. Gaudio had, at age 15, written the hit "Who Wears Short Shorts," which he made up while driving with friends along the main drag in Bergenfield."
    106. ^ Martin, Douglas (April 23, 2013). "Richie Havens, a Soulful Folk Singer Who Riveted Woodstock, Dies at 72". The New York Times.
    107. ^ Richard Sandomir, "Rita Houston, 59, Bronx D.J. who lifted music careers." New York Times. January 5, 2021.
    108. ^ Nate Chinen, "Bobby Hutcherson, 75, Jazz Vibraphonist with Luminescent and Cooly Fluid Style," New York Times, August 17, 2016
    109. ^ Sisario, Ben (January 19, 2011). "Don Kirshner, 76, TV Host and Shaper of Hit Records". The New York Times.
    110. ^ Tom Huizinga, "Clarinetist Anthony McGill Kneels, Pleads And Plays For Justice." NPR Music, June 4, 2020. [11]
    111. ^ Joan Cook, "Abel Meeropol, 83, a songwriter, dies" New York Times October 31, 1986, https://www.nytimes.com/1986/10/31/obituaries/abel-meeropol-83-a-songwriter-dies.html
    112. ^ Drape, Joe (November 11, 2010). "The Sweet Tune of Perfection". The New York Times, pp. B12, B15.
    113. ^ Wilkinson, Alec (August 9, 2010). "New York Is Killing Me". The New Yorker. August 9, 2010, pp. 26–32.
    114. ^ Holmes, Charles (January 3, 2019). "Rising Bronx Rapper Lil Tjay Will Make You Feel Old". Rolling Stone. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
    115. ^ Walk This Way: The Autobiography of Aerosmith (1999 paperback edition) Harper Collins Publishers, p. 23. ISBN 0-06-051580-5
    116. ^ JFK in the Bronx
    117. ^ Anders, "Interview with Brian G. Andersson", Lightray
    118. ^ "Governor Andrew M. Cuomo". Ny.gov. March 10, 2011. Archived from the original on December 25, 2010. Retrieved March 14, 2011.
    119. ^ Barbaro, Michael (January 3, 2011). "Enter Swinging: Exit: Much the Same Way". The New York Times.
    120. ^ Weber, Bruce (August 24, 2010). "Benjamin Kaplan, Crucial Figure in Nazi Trials, Dies at 99". The New York Times.
    121. ^ Gross, Max (April 24, 2008). "Riverdale Run". The New York Post. New York. Retrieved May 3, 2008. John F. Kennedy spent his youth in an enormous white mansion on Independence Avenue
    122. ^ Ottoman, Sharon (February 12, 2020). "The Bizarre Life of the Man Accused in the Sarah Lawrence Sex Case". New York Times. [12]
    123. ^ Hevesi, Dennis (July 7, 2008). "Norman Marcus, New York City Zoning Expert, Dies at 75". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
    124. ^ Rick Rojas and Emily Palmer, "At Funeral Mass, Police Leader is Remembered as 'One of a Kind'". New York Times, August 24, 2016
    125. ^ Bronx Man Leads Russian Revolution”
    126. ^ Casey Cep, "A radical faith", New Yorker, April 10: 74.
    127. ^ "Gotham Gazette". www.gothamgazette.com. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
    128. ^ http://downtownexpress.com/de_357/urstadt.html
    129. ^ Jump up to: a b c Grant, Jason (August 3, 2009). "More Than Playing Ball on a South Bronx Playground". The New York Times.
    130. ^ Baseball Digest 1977. Retrieved March 14, 2011.
    131. ^ Julie Bosman (October 31, 2011). "Elite Runner Lives and Trains in New York". The New York Times.
    132. ^ Andrew Marantz, "Up Life's Ladder: Touche" New Yorker, April 8, 2016, pp. 24–25
    133. ^ Goldstein, Richard (November 28, 2012). "The Bargainer Who Remade the Old Ball Game". The New York Times.
    134. ^ Juliet Macur, Juliet (August 1, 2012). "Getting Back Up is Nothing New for Bronx Gymnast". The New York Times.
    135. ^ James Wagner, "A Minor League Hit Machine Tries to Keep Producing with the Mets." New York Times, August 18, 2016
    136. ^ Andrew Keh, "Smashing a Ceiling and A Lot of Egos," New York Times sports section, August 17, 2014
    137. ^  • Hoose, Phillip H. (2009). Claudette Colvin – Twice Toward Justice. New York City: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0-374-31322-7.
       • Barnes, Brooks (November 26, 2009). "From Footnote to Fame in Civil Rights History". The New York Times.
    138. ^ Richard Severo and William McDonald, "Jack Greenberg Dies at 91, Las Survivor of a Legendary Civil Rights Legal Team," New York Times, October 13, 2016
    139. ^ Gina Bellafante, "These Pioneers Reclaimed Pride," New York Times, May 19, 2019, p. A26
    140. ^ Connie Loizos, "Jim Steyer runs the powerful nonprofit Common Sense Media; now he's using his influence to battle big tech". 'TechCrunch, February 12, 2019.[13]
    141. ^ Martin, Douglas (October 22, 2010). "Elizabeth L. Sturz, 93, Dies; Salvaged Troubled Lives". The New York Times, p. A23.
    142. ^ Sam Howe Verhovek, "Herb Garden, an Oasis in Bronx, Withers". New York Times, June 23, 1988; Ligaya Mishan, "How It Changed: Food." New York Times T Magazine, April 22, 2018
    143. ^ Daniel S. Slotnik, "Suzanne Wright, 69, a Founder of the Charity Autism Speaks," New York Times, August 2, 2016
    144. ^ "Report on Business". The Globe and Mail. April 17, 2010.
    145. ^ Bruch, Connie (December 10, 2010). "The Art of the Billionaire". The New Yorker.
    146. ^ Rachel Syme, "Back to School," The New Yorker, September 7, 2020, pp. 28–33
    147. ^ [14]; Jeffrey Toobin, "After Trump", New Yorker, November 19, 2018, p.26.
    148. ^ Paumgarten, Nick (September 20, 2010). "The Merchant" The New Yorker, pp. 74–87.
    149. ^ Sam Roberts, "Mike Greco, 89, Colorful 'Salami King' of Little Italy in the Bronx, Dies." New York Times, April 2, 2019.
    150. ^ "This page is available to GlobePlus subscribers". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved March 14, 2011.
    151. ^ The Inland Printer, Volume 69, Maclean-Hunter Publishing Corporation, 1922, p. 851.
    152. ^ Talese, Gay (January 22, 2011). "Four Hundred Dresses". The New Yorker, p. 22.
    153. ^ James Barron, "An Adman's Big Pitch: His Life Work", The New York Times, January 18, 2016
    154. ^ Sam Roberts, "Wiliam E. Macaulay, 74, Patron of Tuition-Free College", The New York Times, December 8, 2019, p. 38.
    155. ^ J.T.Scharf, History of Westchester County New York, Including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West Farms, which Have Been Annexed to New York City, Volume 1, Part 2, 1886, p. 831
    156. ^ Fox, Margait (December 16, 2009). "Sol Price, Who Founded Price Club, Is Dead at 93". The New York Times.
    157. ^ Malcolm Gladwell. What the Dog Saw. p. 4. New York: Little, Brown; Russell Hobbs, Inc; "Lewis L. Salton, 87, a Developer Of Quirky Household Appliances". New York Times, May 9, 1999. [15]
    158. ^ Sam Roberts, "Fred Schwartz is Dead at 84, Furrier and Philanthropist." New York Times, August 10, 2016
    159. ^ Yuhas, Alan (February 20, 2020). "Sy Sperling, Founder of Hair Club for Men (and Also a Client), Dies at 78". The New York Times. Seymour Sperling was born in the Bronx on June 25, 1941.
    160. ^ Mattathias Schwartz, "The Advocate" New York Times Magazine, June 7, 2020,pp. 2025, 42–45.
    161. ^ Karen Freifeld, "White House lawyer in Trump trial is both defender and key witness to events". Reuters, January 21, 2020. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-trump-impeachment-cipollone/white-house-lawyer-in-trump-trial-is-both-defender-and-key-witness-to-events-idUSKBN1ZK1DD?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews
    162. ^ Genzlinger, Neil (September 6, 2020). "Gerald Shur, Architect of Witness Protection Program, Dies at 86". The New York Times. Retrieved December 15, 2020.
    163. ^ Scott Pham, et al., "The Banker Was A Spy." Buzzfeed News, September 22, 2020. [16]
    164. ^ Ben Schreckinger. "The Trouble With Ivanka's Business Partner. Politico, August 27, 2017 [17]
    165. ^ [Michael Kaufman and Sam Roberts, "Morton Sobell, 101, Who Spent Years Denying His Role as Soviet Spy, Dies, The New York Times, January 31, 2019]
    Retrieved from ""