List of people with bipolar disorder

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Numerous notable people have had some form of mood disorder. This is a list of people accompanied by verifiable sources associating them with some form of bipolar disorder (formerly known as "manic depression"), including cyclothymia, based on their own public statements; this discussion is sometimes tied to the larger topic of creativity and mental illness. In the case of dead people only, individuals with a speculative or retrospective diagnosis should only be listed if they are accompanied by a source reflective of the mainstream, academic view. Individuals should not be added to this list unless the disorder is regularly and commonly mentioned in mainstream, reliable sources.

Vincent van Gogh, painter
Russell Brand, comedian
Chris Brown, musician
Frank Bruno, boxer
Mariah Carey, singer-songwriter
Dick Cavett, comedian
Francis Ford Coppola, film director
Richard Dreyfuss, actor
Carrie Fisher, actress and writer
Stephen Fry, actor
Larry Flynt, publisher
The Game, Gangster Rapper
Paul Gascoigne, footballer
Mel Gibson, actor and filmmaker
Selena Gomez, singer and actress
Linda Hamilton, actress
Ernest Hemingway, writer
Vivien Leigh, actress
Alison Moyet, musician
Edvard Munch, painter
Kim Novak, actress
Lou Reed, musician
Bebe Rexha, musician
Rene Russo, actress
Robert Schumann, composer
Frank Sinatra, singer
Britney Spears, singer
Dusty Springfield, singer
Ted Turner, businessman
Jean-Claude Van Damme, actor
Ruby Wax, actress
Kanye West, musician
Brian Wilson, musician
Amy Winehouse, singer-songwriter
Catherine Zeta-Jones, actress

A[]

  • Alvin Ailey, American choreographer, diagnosed with bipolar disorder (then called manic depression).[1]
  • Sherman Alexie, Native American poet, writer, and filmmaker.[2]
  • Lily Allen, English musician.[3][4]
  • Louis Althusser, French Marxist philosopher.[5]
  • August Ames, Canadian pornographic actress.[6]
  • Desmond Daniel Amofah, American YouTuber, Streamer, and model.
  • Michael Angelakos, American musician, frontman of Passion Pit.[7]
  • Adam Ant, English musician and actor.[8]
  • Emilie Autumn, American singer and violinist.[9]

B[]

  • Tyler Baltierra, American reality television personality.[10]
  • Maria Bamford, American comedian, stated in an interview with The Salt Lake Tribune that she has been diagnosed with bipolar II disorder.[11]
  • Marcel Barbeau, Canadian artist and painter.[12]
  • Maria Bello, producer, actress and writer.[13][14]
  • Helena Belmonte, American model.[15]
  • Max Bemis, frontman of the band Say Anything, spoke about his diagnosis in an interview with Alternative Magazine in 2014.[16]
  • Maurice Benard, actor, discussed his diagnosis on The Oprah Winfrey Show, and has since become active in promoting bipolar awareness.[17]
  • Benga (Adegbenga Adejumo), British dubstep DJ and producer.[18]
  • A. C. Benson, English essayist, poet, author and the 28th Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge.[19]
  • Davone Bess, American football player.[20]
  • Jayson Blair, American journalist formerly with The New York Times.[21]
  • Paul Boyd, classical animator.[22]
  • Ronald Braunstein, American orchestra conductor and cofounder of the ME2/Orchestra for individuals like himself who have mental illness.[23][24]
  • L. Brent Bozell Jr., American conservative activist and writer. He wrote publicly about his experiences with and recovery from bipolar disorder.[25]
  • Russell Brand, British comedian, actor, radio host, author, and activist.[26]
  • Jeremy Brett, English Shakespearian actor, known for his definitive portrayal of A. Conan Doyle's detective Sherlock Holmes in the 1984–1994 Granada TV Series, "Sherlock Holmes", diagnosed with manic depression. Days before his death in 1995, he recorded a frank and uplifting message for the Manic/Depressive Fellowship in London.[27]
  • Chris Brown, American singer, songwriter, rapper, dancer, and actor, Brown has been diagnosed with Bipolar II disorder.[28]
  • Tiffany Lee Brown, American writer, artist, and musician, has created works that reference her Bipolar I diagnosis[29][30] including the Noise music composition "Belly" appearing on Women Take Back the Noise.[31]
  • Frank Bruno, British boxer, was hospitalized for a short period, and as of 2005 was on lithium.[32][33][34]
  • Barney Bubbles, English graphic artist whose work encompassed graphic design and music video direction. Bubbles committed suicide when he was 41.[35]
  • Art Buchwald, humorist and Pulitzer Prize winner.[36]
  • Elbridge Ayer Burbank, artist and painter, Burbank was diagnosed with manic depression and was treated at several different facilities during his life.[37]

C[]

  • Eoin Cameron, former member of the Australian House of Representatives and radio personality in Perth, Western Australia.[38][39]
  • Robert Campeau, Canadian financier and real estate developer.[40]
  • Cosmo Campoli, American sculptor and teacher.[41]
  • Mariah Carey, American singer-songwriter. Diagnosed with Bipolar II disorder in 2001.[42]
  • Aaron Carter, American singer.[43]
  • Quincy Carter, American football quarterback.[44]
  • Keisha Castle-Hughes, New Zealand actress.[45]
  • Dick Cavett, comedian and television journalist.[46]
  • Eason Chan, Hong Kongese popular music singer.[47]
  • Changjo, South Korean singer, actor and dancer.[48]
  • Akio Chiba, Japanese manga artist, committed suicide due to issues related to bipolar disorder.[49][50]
  • Rosemary Clooney, American singer and actress.[51]
  • Kurt Cobain, American musician and frontman of Nirvana.[52]
  • Neil Cole, former Australian Labor party politician. "Associate Professor Cole was the first politician in Australia or overseas to admit to having a mental illness, namely bipolar mood disorder."[53]
  • Samuel Taylor Coleridge, English Romantic poet.[54]
  • Mary Ellen Copeland, PhD, author, educator and mental health advocate.[55]
  • Francis Ford Coppola, American film director, producer, and screenwriter, was diagnosed by a psychiatrist as having bipolar disorder.[56]
  • Patricia Cornwell, American crime writer.[57][58]
  • Robert S. Corrington, American philosopher and professor of Philosophical Theology. In his book Riding the Windhorse: Manic-Depressive Disorder and the Quest for Wholeness,[59] he gives a personal account of his own experience with the condition.
  • Michael Costa, former Australian Labor party politician and Treasurer of NSW. "Mr Costa said a number of state parliamentary colleagues approached him about their mental health problems after he publicly revealed his battle with bipolar disorder in 2001."[60]
  • Sean Costello, American blues musician.[61]
  • Vincent Crane, keyboard player of Atomic Rooster.[62]
  • John Curtin, 14th Prime Minister of Australia (1941–1945).[63]

D[]

  • Paul Dalio, American writer, director and composer. He made his feature directorial debut with Touched with Fire (2016), a film which drew upon his own experience with bipolar disorder.[64]
  • Penina Davidson, Former college basketball player at University of California-Berkeley.[65] Current professional basketball player for the Melbourne Boomers[66] of the Women's National Basketball League in Australia. She also represents New Zealand on their national team, the Tall Ferns.[67] While in college, she was self-harming. Her teammate suggested that she get admitted to a hospital where she got diagnosed with bipolar disorder[68][69]
  • Ray Davies, English composer. Davies was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and he attempted suicide.[70]
  • Adam Deacon, English film actor, rapper, writer and director. Deacon discussed his diagnosis in a 2016 interview with Stephen Fry.[71]
  • Swadesh Deepak, Indian playwright, novelist and short-story writer.[72]
  • Disco D, record producer and composer.[73]
  • DMX, American rapper and actor.[74]
  • Gaetano Donizetti, Italian composer, Donizetti was exhibiting symptoms of syphilis and probable bipolar disorder.[75]
  • Mike Doughty, singer from alternative rock band Soul Coughing.[76][29]
  • Robert Downey Jr. American actor and film producer.[77]
  • Richard Dreyfuss, actor, appeared in a BBC documentary to talk about his experience with the disorder.[78]
  • Patty Duke, actress, author, and mental health advocate.[79]

E[]

  • Thomas Eagleton, United States Senator from Missouri. He was privately diagnosed with bipolar type II in 1983, eleven years after stepping down as George McGovern's running mate during the latter's presidential campaign in 1972 due to the revelation of Eagleton receiving electroconvulsive therapy in the 1960s.[80][81]
  • Matt Edmondson, British Television and radio presenter, has cyclothymia.[82]

F[]

  • David Feherty, former professional golfer on the European Tour and PGA Tour.[83]
  • Carrie Fisher, actress and writer. Starred in the Star Wars films as Princess Leia.[78][84]
  • Zelda Fitzgerald, American socialite and novelist, and the wife of American author F. Scott Fitzgerald, diagnosed at the time as schizophrenia, but now thought likelier to be bipolar disorder.[85]
  • Helen Flanagan, English model, Actress.[86]
  • Tom Fletcher, English singer, songwriter, pianist, and guitarist, of McFly, discussed his bipolar disorder in the book Unsaid Things... Our Story.[87][88]
  • Larry Flynt, publisher and the president of Larry Flynt Publications (LFP).[89]
  • Ellen Forney, graphic artist and cartoonist and creator of Marbles: Madness, Depression, Michelangelo, and Me.[90]
  • Connie Francis, singer.[91]
  • Jennifer Frey, journalist.[92]
  • Stephen Fry, actor, comedian, and writer. Fry was the center of the Emmy Award-winning documentary Stephen Fry: The Secret Life of the Manic Depressive in which he shares his experience being diagnosed with cyclothymic disorder and interviews a number of celebrities who are also diagnosed with bipolar-related disorders.[78]
  • Justin Furstenfeld, lead singer of Blue October.[93]

G[]

  • The Game, Gangster Rapper.[94]
  • Alan Garner, novelist, wrote about having bipolar disorder in a collection of critical and autobiographical essays.[95][96]
  • Paul Gascoigne, English footballer, wrote about his treatment for bipolar disorder in his second book.[97]
  • Isa Genzken, German contemporary artist.[98]
  • Mel Gibson, actor and director.[99]
  • Selena Gomez, American singer-songwriter and actress. Revealed her bipolar diagnosis in April 2020 in an Instagram livestream with Miley Cyrus.[100]
  • Matthew Good, Canadian musician. He first disclosed his illness in a personal blog.[101]
  • Boon Gould, British musician.[102]
  • Glenn Gould, Canadian pianist.[103]
  • Philip Graham, publisher and businessman.[104][105]
  • Graham Greene, English novelist.[106][107][108]
  • Everson Griffen, American football player

H[]

  • Charles Haley, American football linebacker.[109]
  • Terry Hall, lead singer of The Specials.[110][111]
  • Halsey, American singer and songwriter.[112]
  • Charles Hamilton, American hip hop recording artist.[113]
  • Linda Hamilton, actress, star of the Terminator movies. Was diagnosed at the age of 40.[114]
  • Suzy Favor Hamilton, American former middle distance runner.[115]
  • Jeff Hammerbacher, data scientist, chief scientist at Cloudera.[116]
  • David Harbour, American actor.[117]
  • Anthony Hardy, English serial killer.[118]
  • Beth Hart, American singer and songwriter.[119]
  • Teddy Hart, Canadian professional wrestler.[120]
  • Mariette Hartley, American actress, has publicly spoken about her bipolar disorder, was a founder of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.[121][122]
  • Doug Harvey, Canadian professional ice hockey player.[123]
  • Jonathan Hay, Australian rules footballer.[124]
  • Ernest Hemingway American journalist, won the Pulitzer Prize (1953) and the Nobel Prize in Literature (1954) for his novel The Old Man and the Sea, He was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and insomnia in his later years, He committed suicide in 1961.[125][126][127]
  • Drewe Henley, British actor, Henley and his illness were discussed in her autobiography White Cargo.[128]
  • Kristin Hersh, musician, of rock band Throwing Muses, has spoken about her bipolar disorder.[129]
  • Derek Hess, designer and visual artist.[130]
  • Shane Hmiel, NASCAR driver.[131]
  • Abbie Hoffman, political activist, anarchist.[132]
  • Marya Hornbacher, writer.[133]
  • Byron Houston, basketball player.[134]
  • Cat Hulbert, American card player.[135]
  • Meg Hutchinson, American folk singer-songwriter.[136]
  • Julian Huxley, British evolutionary biologist, eugenicist, and internationalist. In his wife's autobiography it seems that he had the form of bipolar disorder.[137][138]
  • Phyllis Hyman, American R&B singer-songwriter.[139]

J[]

  • Jesse Jackson, Jr., former member of the United States House of Representatives, has stated he's been diagnosed with bipolar II disorder.[140]
  • Kay Redfield Jamison, American clinical psychologist, professor of psychiatry and writer, has written extensively about her personal experiences with bipolar disorder, including in An Unquiet Mind.[141]
  • Jang Keun Suk, South Korean actor and singer. [142]
  • Jill Janus, American heavy metal singer.[143]
  • Adam Jasinski, winner of the U.S. series Big Brother 9.[144]
  • Andrew Johns, Australian rugby league player. Publicly announced his condition following retirement.[145]
  • "Fast" Eddie Johnson, American basketball player, was diagnosed with manic depression.[146]
  • Daniel Johnston, musician, singer-songwriter and visual artist.[147]
  • Lucia Joyce, daughter of writer James Joyce, was diagnosed with cyclothymia.[148]
  • Sarah Joyce, British singer–songwriter.[149]
  • Helmi Juvonen, American artist and painter, hospitalized and diagnosed with manic-depression.[150]

K[]

  • Krizz Kaliko, American hip hop musician.[151]
  • Antonie Kamerling, Dutch actor.[152]
  • Chris Kanyon, American professional wrestler.[153]
  • Margarita Karapanou, Greek novelist.[154]
  • Kerry Katona, English television presenter, writer, magazine columnist, and former pop singer with girl band Atomic Kitten.[155]
  • Patrick J. Kennedy, former member of the United States House of Representatives, has spoken on his mental health issues, including diagnosed bipolar disorder.[156]
  • Morio Kita, Japanese psychiatrist, novelist, and essayist.[157]
  • Margot Kidder, American actress.[158][159]
  • Otto Klemperer, German-born American conductor and composer, was diagnosed with cyclothymia.[160]
  • Cássia Kis, Brazilian actress.[161]
  • John Konrads, Australian freestyle swimmer.[162]

L[]

  • David LaChapelle, American commercial photographer, fine-art photographer, music video director, film director, and artist.[163]
  • Mary Lambert, American actress, singer, and writer, revealed that she had the illness in an interview with shewired.com[164] and in her 2014 song "Secrets".
  • Debra LaFave, schoolteacher who had sexual relations with minor student.[165]
  • Andrew Lange, astrophysicist and Goldberger Professor of Physics at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California, he was awarded Balzan Prize and Dan David Prize. Had from mood disorder and committed suicide in a hotel in 2010.[166]
  • René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, French explorer who explored the Great Lakes region and claimed the Mississippi River basin for France.[167]
  • Yung Lean, Swedish rapper and singer.[168]
  • AJ Lee, American professional wrestler and author.[169]
  • Yoon Ha Lee, Korean-American science fiction writer.[170]
  • Lee Joon, South Korean singer and actor.[171]
  • Chyler Leigh, American actress[172]
  • Vivien Leigh, English actress, most famous for her role as Scarlett O'Hara in David O. Selznick's movie Gone with the Wind.[173]
  • Jenifer Lewis, American actress, spoke about her diagnosis on Oprah in September 2007.[174]
  • Bill Lichtenstein, print and broadcast journalist and documentary filmmaker, profiled in Time magazine, 10 October 1994.[175]
  • Thomas Ligotti, American horror author[176]
  • Arthur Lipsett, film director.[177]
  • Bernard Loiseau, French chef, was the chef and the owner of 3-star Michelin restaurant-La Côte d'Or, Loiseau committed suicide on 24 February 2003.[178][179]
  • Ellen Joyce Loo, Hong Kong singer and songwriter.[180]
  • Ada Lovelace, British mathematician, often regarded as the first computer programmer.[181][182]
  • Ris Low, beauty pageant titleholder, Miss Singapore World 2009.[183]

M[]

  • Gustav Mahler, composer.[184]
  • Tina Malone, British television actress, writer, director, and producer (Brookside, Shameless). Diagnosed with obsessive compulsive disorder and bipolar disorder in 1998.[185][186]
  • Jesse Zook Mann, American television producer.[187]
  • Elizabeth Manley, Canadian former competitive figure skater.[187]
  • Johnny Manziel, American football player. In an interview in 2018, Manziel recounted his personal problems, and has stated that he had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder.[188]
  • Jessica Marais, South African-Australian actress. She has stated that she has had bipolar episodes since she was 12 years old, suggesting that these episodes have been caused by the death of her father from a heart attack.[189][190]
  • Emily Martin, sinologist, anthropologist, feminist, professor at New York University; drew on her own experience with bipolar disorder to write Bipolar Expeditions: Mania and Depression in American Culture.[191]
  • Karen McCarthy, former member of the United States House of Representatives, was revealed to have been diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2009.[192]
  • Arthur McIntyre, Australian artist.[193]
  • Kristy McNichol, actress.[194]
  • Burgess Meredith, actor, had cyclothymia.[195]
  • Randy Meisner, American musician.[196]
  • H. V. Meyerowitz, artist, educator and British colonial administrator in Africa, had cyclothymia.[197]
  • Dimitri Mihalas, astrophysicist.[198]
  • Liz Miller, British physician, surgeon, campaigner and writer.[199]
  • Kate Millet, artist, activist and Feminist writer.[200]
  • Eric Millegan, actor.[201]
  • Spike Milligan, comedian.[202]
  • Valdemar Schønheyder Møller, Danish painter, known for his depictions of sunlight. He had bipolar episodes. In 1901, he was admitted to the psychiatric hospital in Aarhus and remained there until his death in 1905.[203]
  • Melody Moezzi, activist, lawyer, and author of Haldol and Hyacinths: A Bipolar Life.[204]
  • Seaneen Molloy, Northern Irish blogger.[205]
  • Ben Moody, guitarist, musician, formerly with Evanescence.[206]
  • Jonathan Morrell, English radio and television producer, was diagnosed with cyclothymia.[207]
  • Charles Mount, American artist.[208]
  • Allison Moyet, British singer[209]
  • Petr Muk, Czech singer.[210]
  • John A. Mulheren, American financier, stock and option trader, and philanthropist.[211]
  • Edvard Munch, Norwegian painter.[212]
  • Robert Munsch, author.[213]
  • Craig Murray, former British ambassador to Uzbekistan and political activist.[214]

N[]

  • Kim Novak, actress.[215]
  • Jason Nash, YouTuber.[216]
  • Isaac Newton, English Physicist, Inventor of Calculus.[217]

O[]

  • Phil Ochs, singer-songwriter, political activist. Suicide at age 36.[218]
  • Bill Oddie, naturalist, comedian, and television presenter.[219]
  • Dolores O'Riordan, Irish musician and singer-songwriter, leader of the rock band The Cranberries.[220]
  • Craig Owens, singer for American bands Chiodos, and Destroy Rebuild Until God Shows.[221]

P[]

  • Steven Page, former singer for rock band Barenaked Ladies.[222]
  • Nicola Pagett, actor. Wrote about her bipolar disorder in her autobiography Diamonds Behind My Eyes.[223]
  • Chris Palko, better known by his stage name Cage, was diagnosed with bipolar during his stay at Stony Lodge Hospital[224]
  • Jaco Pastorius, jazz musician. "Jaco was diagnosed with this clinical bipolar condition in the fall of 1982. The events which led up to it were considered "uncontrolled and reckless" incidents."[225]
  • Jane Pauley, TV presenter and journalist. The former Today and Dateline host describes being diagnosed with bipolar disorder in her 2004 autobiography Skywriting: A Life Out of the Blue, as well as on her short-lived talk show.[226][227]
  • Ota Pavel, Czech writer, journalist and sport reporter.[228]
  • Lynne Perrie, English actress (Coronation Street, Queenie's Castle, Kes), singer, comedienne, presenter and author. In an interview with the Daily Mirror newspaper, in 2000 she spoke about her manic depression, as well as memory loss and spending ten weeks in a psychiatric hospital.[229]
  • Jimmy Piersall, American baseball player.[230]
  • William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham, British statesman.[231]
  • Sylvia Plath, poet and writer, may have experienced bipolar disorder.
  • Edgar Allan Poe, poet and writer, may have experienced bipolar disorder.[232][233][234]
  • Benoît Poelvoorde, Belgian comedian and actor.[235]
  • Jackson Pollock, American artist.[212]
  • Odean Pope, American jazz musician.[236]
  • Gail Porter, British TV presenter.[237]
  • Amber Portwood, American reality television personality.[238]
  • Emil Post, American mathematician and logician. He is best known for his work in the field that eventually became known as computability theory. Post was bipolar and had his first attack in 1921, for the rest of his life he would have to be periodically hospitalized and given electroshock the standard treatment at that time.[239][240]
  • Genesis Potini, New Zealand chess player. Potini had bipolar disorder and was regularly admitted to hospital.[241]
  • Heinz Prechter, entrepreneur, philanthropist, founder of the American Sunroof Company (ASC); after his suicide, his family established the Heinz C. Prechter Bipolar Research Fund at the University of Michigan in his memory.[242]
  • Charley Pride, country music artist.[243]
  • Aubrey Peeples, American actress and singer.[244]

R[]

S[]

  • Gary Lee Sampson, American murderer.[255]
  • Alex Sangha, Canadian social worker and documentary film producer.[256]
  • Cher Scarlett, American software engineer, workers' rights activist, and corporate whistleblower.[257]
  • Francesco Scavullo, artist, fashion photographer. In 1981, after four nervous breakdowns Scavullo was diagnosed as manic-depressive.[258]
  • Robert Schumann, German composer.[259][260][261]
  • Katja Schuurman, Dutch television presenter[262]
  • Reggie Sears, American recording artist, musician, singer, songwriter, composer, producer.[263]
  • Tommy Lynn Sells, American serial killer.[264]
  • Anne Sexton, American poet won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1967 for her book Live or Die, diagnosed with bipolar disorder after many suicide attempts.[265]
  • Paul Sharits, visual artist.[266]
  • Charlie Sheen, American actor.[267]
  • Nina Simone, American singer.[268]
  • Naomi Sims, American model, businesswoman and author, widely credited as being the first African-American supermodel.[269]
  • Frank Sinatra, American singer and actor. "Being an 18-karat manic depressive, and having lived a life of violent emotional contradictions, I have an over-acute capacity for sadness as well as elation."[270]
  • Yo Yo Honey Singh, Indian rapper, music producer, singer, and film actor.[271]
  • Sushant Singh Rajput, Indian actor[272][273]
  • Amy Sky, Canadian songwriter.[187]
  • Michael Slater, International Australian cricketer, forced to retire because of related symptoms.[274][275]
  • Tony Slattery, actor and comedian. "I rented a huge warehouse by the river Thames. I just stayed in there on my own, didn't open the mail or answer the phone for months and months and months. I was just in a pool of despair and mania."[78]
  • Harry Smith, American Olympian.[276]
  • Tim Smith, rugby league player whose career with NRL side Parramatta Eels was ended due to his bipolar condition, and pressure from the media.[277]
  • Charlene Soraia, British singer-songwriter, musician has cyclothymia.[278]
  • Britney Spears, American singer, songwriter, and dancer.[279]
  • Phil Spector, American record producer.[280]
  • Alonzo Spellman, American football player.[281]
  • Dusty Springfield, English pop singer.[282][283]
  • Scott Stapp, frontman, Creed.[284]
  • Peter Steele, frontman, Type O Negative.[285][286]
  • Brody Stevens, American comedian.[287]
  • Noelle Stevenson, cartoonist and animation producer.[288]
  • Ben Stiller, American actor.[289]
  • David Strickland, actor, Suddenly Susan.[290][291]
  • Michael Strunge, Danish Poet, killed himself by jumping from a building during mania.[266]
  • Gilbert Stuart, American painter.[292]
  • Poly Styrene (real name Marion Elliot-Said), singer.[293]
  • Stuart Sutherland, British psychologist and writer.[294]
  • Matthew Sweet, American singer-songwriter.[295][296]

T[]

  • Corey Taylor, singer and songwriter for Stone Sour and Slipknot (band)
  • Michael Thalbourne, Australian psychologist and parapsychologist.[297]
  • Abbott Handerson Thayer, American artist and painter.[298][299]
  • Debi Thomas, Olympic medalist, former figure skater and physician.[300]
  • Steven Thomas, American entrepreneur.[301][302]
  • Ron Thompson, American politician, former member of the West Virginia House of Delegates; has Bipolar II disorder.[303]
  • Gene Tierney, actress, nominated for Academy Award for Best Actress (1945).[304]
  • Devin Townsend, musician of Strapping Young Lad and The Devin Townsend Band. He took himself off of his medication to write lyrics for Alien.[305]
  • Nick Traina, American singer, son of American bestselling writer Danielle Steel.[306]
  • Timothy Treadwell, American environmentalist and bear enthusiast, featured in the 2005 documentary film by Werner Herzog titled Grizzly Man.[307][308]
  • Margaret Trudeau, Canadian celebrity and ex-wife of former Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau. She now travels Canada and other countries speaking out against the stigmas on mental illness.[309]
  • Michael Tunn, Australian radio announcer and television presenter.[310]
  • Ted Turner, American media businessman. Founder of CNN.[311]

U[]

V[]

W[]

  • James Wade, English professional darts player.[323]
  • Ayelet Waldman, Israeli-American novelist and essayist, has written about her bipolar II disorder.[324]
  • Dorothy Wall, Australian author and illustrator best known for creating Blinky Bill[325]
  • David Walliams, actor, author, comedian and charity fundraiser.[326][327]
  • Tom G. Warrior, lead singer and guitarist for heavy metal bands Celtic Frost, Apollyon Sun and Triptykon.[328]
  • Ruby Wax, American actress, mental health campaigner, lecturer, and author.[329]
  • Scott Weiland, musician for Stone Temple Pilots, Velvet Revolver.[330]
  • Pete Wentz, musician for Fall Out Boy.[331]
  • Delonte West, American basketball player.[332]
  • Kanye West, musician, entrepreneur and fashion designer.[333]
  • Norman Wexler, screenwriter.[334]
  • Mark Whitacre, business executive depicted in the film The Informant.[335]
  • Norbert Wiener, American mathematician, philosopher, originator of cybernetics.[336][337]
  • Brian Wilson, musician and founding member of The Beach Boys.[338]
  • Amy Winehouse, English singer-songwriter.[339]
  • Jonathan Winters, American comedian, actor, author, and artist.[340]
  • Frank Wisner, OSS officer.[341]
  • Virginia Woolf, writer.[342]

Y[]

Z[]

See also[]

References[]

Resources[]

  • Jamison, Kay Redfield (1993): Touched with Fire: Manic-Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament, New York, The Free Press. ISBN 0-02-916030-8

Notes[]

  1. ^ Roy, Sanjoy (9 September 2010). "Step-by-step guide to dance: Alvin Ailey". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  2. ^ "Sherman Alexie on Living Outside Cultural Borders". BillMoyers.com. Moyers & Company. 12 April 2013. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  3. ^ "Lily Allen was attacked online after revealing she suffered from PTSD after stillbirth". Newsbeat. BBC. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  4. ^ Perry, Keith (26 February 2017). "Lily Allen reveals she's bipolar and suffered PTSD after loss of her baby son". Daily Mirror.
  5. ^ "Louis Althusser, 72, a Marxist Who Harshly Criticized Moscow". The New York Times. 24 October 1990. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  6. ^ Bitette, Nicole (7 December 2017). "Porn star August Ames revealed depression struggles before death". NY Daily News. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  7. ^ Hyman, Dan. "Passion Pit Singer on Battling Mental Illness and Taking New Songs on the Road". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 6 December 2012.
  8. ^ Baltin, Steve (19 February 2013). "Q&A: Adam Ant on Returning to Music From Bipolar Disorder". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 20 May 2016.
  9. ^ J Salmeron (17 April 2012). "Emilie Autumn Interview". Metal Blast.
  10. ^ "Teen Mom OG's Tyler Baltierra Reveals He Was Diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder: 'It's Still So New to Me'". PEOPLE.com.
  11. ^ David Burger (22 June 2011). "Comic Maria Bamford will cross personal boundaries at Utah show". The Salt Lake Tribune. I was re-diagnosed (after a three-day stay at the hospital) as Bipolar II
  12. ^ Robert Everett-Green (21 January 2016). "Obituary: Marcel Barbeau: Painter was a Quebec pioneer of abstract art". Globe & Mail.
  13. ^ Annie L. Scholl (27 April 2015). "Maria Bello's Whatever... Love Is Love Lives in the Question". HuffPost.
  14. ^ John Lui (17 August 2016). "Maria Bello draws on her battle with bipolar disorder for horror film Lights Out". The Straits Times. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  15. ^ "Model Helena Belmonte had bipolar disorder". Retrieved 26 November 2016.
  16. ^ Moseley, Brittany (3 June 2014). "'It's healthy for a band to become slightly less relevant' – Max Bemis on Say Anything's new album". Alternative Press. Retrieved 20 May 2016.
  17. ^ "Coping with Bipolar Disorder". Archived from the original on 6 October 2008. Retrieved 18 November 2016.
  18. ^ "Benga bipolar disorder, was off meds during incident". the guardian. 2 October 2015.
  19. ^ "Selected poetry of Arthur Christopher Benson, 1862 – 1925". Representative Poetry Online. University of Toronto. Archived from the original on 15 May 2009. Retrieved 19 July 2009.
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