This is a list of people who were either born or have lived in Brooklyn, a borough of New York City at some time in their lives.
A
edit- Aaliyah (1979–2001) – actress, dancer and singer[1]
- Cal Abrams (1924–1997) – Major League Baseball player (Madison)
- Monica Aksamit (born 1990), saber fencer; won a bronze medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics in the women's saber team competition
- Romeo Alaeff (born 1970) – visual artist
- Marv Albert (born 1941) – sportscaster (Manhattan Beach)
- Tatyana Ali (born 1979) – actress
- Rawle Alkins (born 1997) – basketball player in the NBA and Israeli Basketball Premier League
- Woody Allen (born 1935) – film director, actor and screenwriter (Midwood)[2]
- Lyle Alzado (1949–1992) – NFL All-Pro football player
- Franco Ambriz – playwright
- Barbara Anderson (born 1945) – actress
- Carmelo Anthony (born 1984) – National Basketball Association player (Red Hook)[3]
- Alan Arkin (1934–2023) – actor, director and screenwriter
- Jack Armstrong (born 1963) – sportscaster Toronto Raptors; former coach Niagara University
- Darren Aronofsky (born 1969) – film director
- Robert Asencio (born 1963) – Florida politician
- Isaac Asimov[4] (1920–1992) – author and biochemist
- Madeline Astor (1893–1970) – Titanic survivor, wife of John Jacob Astor IV
- W.H. Auden (1907–1973) – poet[5]
- Red Auerbach (1917–2006) – National Basketball Association coach and general manager, member of Hall of Fame (Williamsburg)
- Ken Auletta (born 1942) – journalist and writer
- Paul Auster (born 1947) – author (Park Slope)
B
edit- John Badalamenti (born 1973) – federal judge (Gravesend)
- Adrienne Bailon (born 1983) – actress
- Scott Baio (born 1960) – actor (Dyker Heights)
- Ralph Bakshi (born 1938) – film director (Haifa, Israel–born and Brownsville-reared)
- Folarin Balogun (born 2001) – soccer player
- Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960–1988) – artist
- Noah Baumbach (born 1969) – film director and writer (Midwood)
- Gary Becker (1930–2014) – economist; Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (1992) (Madison)
- Francis J. Beckwith (born 1960) – philosopher at Baylor University
- Henry Ward Beecher (1813–1887) – clergyman and social reformer[6]
- Lyman Beecher (1775–1863) – clergyman and father of Henry Ward Beecher, Thomas K. Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe[7]
- Begushkin – folk rock band[8]
- Joy Behar[9] (born 1942) – comedian and talk-show host (Williamsburg)
- Paul Ben-Victor (born 1965) – actor (Midwood)
- Pat Benatar (born 1953) – singer (Greenpoint)
- Randy E. Bennett – educational researcher (Flatbush)
- Mary Crowell Van Benschoten (1840–1921), author, newspaper publisher, clubwoman
- Bill Benulis (1928–2011) – penciller and inker
- David Berkowitz (born 1953) – serial killer known as "Son of Sam"
- Walter Berndt (1899–1979) – cartoonist
- Alan Bersin (born 1946) - President Obama's "Border Czar," US Attorney for the Southern District of California, California Secretary of Education, Commissioner of US Customs and Border Protection, US Department of Homeland Security Secretary for International Affairs, and INTERPOL vice president[10]
- Paul Bettany (born 1971) – actor (Brooklyn Heights)[11]
- Lloyd Blankfein (born 1954) – investment banker; chief executive officer of Goldman Sachs
- Corbin Bleu (born 1989) – actor
- George G. Bloomer (born 1963) – televangelist
- Emily Blunt (born 1983) – actress[12]
- Joseph Bologna (1934–2017) – actor
- Clara Bow (1905–1965) – actress (Prospect Heights)
- Riddick Bowe (born 1967) – boxer, heavyweight champion (Brownsville)[13]
- Barbara Boxer (born 1940)[14] – politician; U.S. Senator from California (since 1993)
- Harry Boykoff (1922–2001) – basketball player
- Steve Bracey (1950–2006) — basketball player
- Scott Brady (1924–1985) – actor
- Mark Breland (born 1963) – boxer; five-time New York Golden Gloves champion
- Shannon Briggs (born 1971) – boxer, heavyweight champion
- Gail Brodsky (born 1991) – tennis player
- Mel Brooks (born 1926) – actor, comedian, film director, film producer and screenwriter (Williamsburg)[15]
- Foxy Brown[16] (born 1978) – actress, model and rap artist (Park Slope)
- Larry Brown (born 1940) – basketball player and coach, point guard, three-time All-Star, three-time assists leader, Olympic champion, NCAA and NBA head coach
- Elliott Buckmaster (1889–1976) – U.S. Navy officer; naval aviator during World War I and World War II
- Buckshot (born 1974) – rapper (Crown Heights)
- Terry Burrus – musician; composer, conductor, producer
- Steve Buscemi[17] (born 1957) – actor, film director and screenwriter
- Busta Rhymes (born 1972) – rapper[18][19] (East Flatbush and Bedford–Stuyvesant)
C
edit- Red Cafe (born 1976) – rapper (Flatbush)
- Charlie Callas (1927–2011) – comedian
- Duncan Candler (1873–1949) – architect
- Giovanni Capitello (born 1979) – actor/filmmaker
- Al Capone (1899–1947) – gangster (Red Hook)
- Truman Capote (1924–1984) – writer (Brooklyn Heights)[20]
- Jack Carter (1922–2015) – comedian
- Fabiano Caruana (born 1992) – youngest chess grandmaster in United States history (Park Slope)
- Jack Catran (1918–2001) – industrial designer and linguist (Bensonhurst)[21]
- Jasmine Cephas Jones (born 1989) – actress, singer, songwriter [22]
- George S. Chase (1909–1972) – composer
- Roz Chast (born 1954) – cartoonist
- Bea Chester – All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player
- Shirley Chisholm (1924–2005) – first female African American U.S. Representative and first African American major-party candidate for U.S. President
- Andrew Dice Clay (born 1957) – comedian (Sheepshead Bay)
- Cheryl "Coko" Clemons (born 1970) – gospel singer and lead singer of R&B group SWV
- Abram Cohen (1924–2016) – Olympic fencer
- David Cohen (1917–2020) – member of the US Army, a liberator of the Ohrdruf concentration camp, and schoolteacher
- Herbert Cohen (born 1940) – Olympic fencer
- Norm Coleman (born 1949) – U.S. Senator from Minnesota, 2003–2009 (Madison)
- Kim Coles (born 1962) – comedian, actress from Living Single
- Jennifer Connelly (born 1970) – actress (Brooklyn Heights)[11]
- Chuck Connors (1921–1992) – actor
- Omar Cook (born 1982) – professional basketball player
- George H. Cooper (1821–1891) – United States Navy rear admiral[23]
- Pat Cooper (1929–2023) – comedian (Red Hook)
- Aaron Copland (1900–1990) – composer
- Larry Corcoran (1859–1891) – Major League Baseball player
- John Corigliano (born 1938) – Academy Award-, Pulitzer Prize for Music- and Grammy Award-winning composer (Midwood)
- Howard Cosell (1918–1995) – sportscaster[24]
- William R. Cosentini – mechanical engineer and founder of Cosentini Associates
- Delilah Cotto – dancer, model and actress (Coney Island)
- Jonathan Coulton (born 1970) – musician
- Hart Crane (1899–1932) – poet (The Bridge)[25]
- Melora Creager (born 1966) – singer
- Jimmy Crespo (born 1954) – former Aerosmith guitarist
- Peter Criss (born 1945) – musician
- Billy Cunningham (born 1942) – NBA player and coach
D
edit- Da Beatminerz – hip-hop production team
- Da Bush Babees – hip-hop group (Flatbush)
- Dana Dane (born 1965) – rapper (Fort Greene)
- Tony Danza (born 1951) – actor[26]
- John D'Aquino (born 1958) – actor
- Thomas Darden (1900–1961) – U.S. Navy rear admiral, 37th Governor of American Samoa[27]
- Jonathan David (born 2000) – soccer player
- Larry David (born 1947) – writer, producer, actor, and comedian (Sheepshead Bay)
- John Henry Davis (1921–1984) – U.S. weightlifter, 6-time world champion and 2-time Olympic gold medalist
- Noach Dear (1953–2020) – New York Supreme Court judge
- Mos Def (born 1973) – actor and rapper[28] (Bedford–Stuyvesant)
- Ronald DeFeo Jr. (1951–2021) – mass murderer who killed his family in 1974; inspiration for The Amityville Horror[29][30]
- David DeJesus (born 1979) – MLB player
- Dom DeLuise (1933–2009) – comedian and actor
- Alan Dershowitz (born 1938) – lawyer, professor, author[31] (Williamsburg)
- C.C. Deville (Bruce Johannesson) (born 1962) – musician
- Kevin Devine (born 1979) – musician
- Danny Devito (born 1944) – actor, comedian, filmmaker[32]
- Neil Diamond[33] (born 1941) – singer
- Mary E. Dillon (1886–1983) – engineer and president of Brooklyn Borough Gas Company
- Michael A. DiSpezio (born 1953) – writer, performer, and broadcast host
- Chris DiStefano (born 1984) – comedian
- Vincent D'Onofrio (born 1959) – actor
- Valerie D'Orazio (born 1974) – writer and blogger
- Irvin Dorfman (1924–2006) – tennis player
- Doug E. Doug (born 1970) – comedian
- David Draiman (born 1973) – singer
- Richard Dreyfuss (born 1947) – actor
- Jim Drucker (born 1952/1953) – former Commissioner of the Continental Basketball Association, former Commissioner of the Arena Football League, and founder of NewKadia Comics
- Don Dubbins (1928–1991) – actor
- Lena Dunham (born 1986) – actress and writer (Brooklyn Heights)
- Kyle Bobby Dunn (born 1986) – composer, musician, artist (RAMBO)
- Jimmy Durante (1893–1980) – actor and comedian
E
edit- Easy Mo Bee (born 1965) – hip-hop and R&B producer
- William J. Ecker – U.S. Coast Guard rear admiral
- Harry Eisenstat (1915–2003) – Major League Baseball player (Madison)[34]
- Erick Arc Elliott (born 1990) – rapper, producer
- The Epochs – rock band, formed in 2002
- Jeffrey Epstein – wealthy businessman and longtime child sex trafficker
- Etika (1990–2019) – YouTuber and online streamer
F
edit- Fab 5 Freddy (born 1959) – hip-hop pioneer
- Fabolous (born 1977) – rapper[35] (Bedford-Stuyvesant)
- Edie Falco (born 1963) – actress[36]
- Jimmy Fallon (born 1974) – actor and comedian[37]
- Anthony Fauci (born 1940) – infectious disease expert, director of NIAD at National Institutes of Health
- Lotta Faust (1880–1910) – musical comedy actress[38]
- Lillian Feickert (1877–1945) – suffragette and politician[39]
- Bob Ferguson (1845–1894) – MLB player ("Death to Flying Things")
- Jerry Ferrara (born 1979) – actor
- Frank Ferrer (born 1966) – Guns N' Roses drummer
- Suzi Ferrer (1940–2006) – US/Puerto-Rican visual artist and feminist
- Lou Ferrigno (born 1951) – former bodybuilder, actor (Midwood)[40]
- Martin Fettman (born 1956) – astronaut (Midwood)
- Ailene Fields (born 1948) – sculptor
- Harvey Fierstein (born 1954) – actor and playwright (Bensonhurst)[41]
- Bobby Fischer (1943–2008) – champion chess player (Flatbush)
- Mickey Fisher (1904/05–1963) – basketball coach
- Robert William Fisher (born 1961) – murderer and fugitive (FBI Ten Most Wanted)
- Percy Keese Fitzhugh (1876–1950) – author of children's books
- Rolf G. Fjelde (1926–2002) – playwright, educator and poet
- Farrah Fleurimond – singer-songwriter and member of R&B group Lyric
- James Florio (1937–2022) – 49th governor of New Jersey, 1990–1994[42]
- Cristina Fontanelli – opera singer[43]
- Yuri Foreman (born 1980) – world champion boxer
- John Forsythe (1918–2010) – actor
- Steve Franken (1932–2012) – actor
- Bruce Franklin (born 1934) – professor
- Frank Frazetta (1928–2010) – artist
- Gary William Friedman – composer
- Milton Friedman (1912–2006) – Nobel Prize-winning economist
- Fu-Schnickens – rapper
- Full Force – 1980s R&B and production group
G
edit- Vincent Gardenia (1920–1992) – actor (Bensonhurst)
- M. Elsa Gardner (1894–1963) – Engineer
- Ina Garten (born 1948) – Food Network television chef, cookbook author; known as the Barefoot Contessa
- Shad Gaspard (1981–2020) – professional wrestler
- David Geffen (born 1943) – media mogul (Borough Park)
- Sylvia Gerrish (1860–1906) – 19th-century musical comedy performer[44][45]
- George Gershwin (1898–1937) – composer and younger brother of Ira Gershwin
- Murray Gerstenhaber (1927–2024) – mathematician and lawyer
- Deborah Gibson (born 1970) – singer and songwriter
- Taj Gibson (born 1985) – NBA player
- Ruth Bader Ginsburg[46] (1933–2020) – Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (Madison)
- Johnny Gioeli (born 1967) – singer (Crush 40, Hardline, Axel Rudi Pell)
- Rudy Giuliani (born 1944) – former United States Attorney, former mayor of New York; 2008 Republican presidential candidate
- Jackie Gleason (1916–1987) – actor and comedian (Bushwick/[47] Bedford–Stuyvesant)
- Marty Glickman (1917–2001) – Olympian and broadcaster (Madison)
- James Newton Gloucester – African-American abolitionist
- Baruch Goldstein (1956–1994) – American-Israel extremist and perpetrator of the 1994 Cave of the Patriarchs massacre
- Jerry Goldstein (born 1970) – physicist
- Ben Goldwasser (born 1982) – member of the band MGMT
- Eric Gonzalez (born 1969) – politician
- Norman Gorbaty (1932–2020) – artist
- Sid Gordon (1917–1975) – two-time All-Star baseball player
- Louis Gossett Jr. (born 1936) – Oscar-winning actor[48] (Sheepshead Bay)
- Gilbert Gottfried (1955–2022) – stand-up comedian, actor[49]
- Alfred Gottschalk (1930–2009) – president of Hebrew Union College and leader in the Reform Judaism movement[50]
- Elliott Gould (born 1938) – actor[51]
- George E. Green (born 1932) – cardiac surgeon[52]
- Yossi Green (born 1955) – composer[53]
- Kai Greene (born 1975) – bodybuilder
- Adrian Grenier (born 1976) – actor[54] (Clinton Hill)
- Bill Griffith (born 1944) – cartoonist (Zippy)[55]
- David Grimm (born 1965) – award-winning playwright and screenwriter
- Leib Groner (1931–2020) – Chabad-Lubavitch Rabbai and secretary to Menachem Schneerson (Crown Heights)
- Karl Grossman (born 1942) – professor, journalist, author, TV program host
- Robert Grossman (1940–2018) – illustrator
- Bob Guccione (1930–2010) – adult-magazine publisher
- Louise Gunning (1879–1960) – singer, actress
- Sigrid Gurie (1911–1969) – actress
- Arlo Guthrie (born 1947) – singer (Coney Island)[56]
- Maggie Gyllenhaal (born 1970) – actress[57]
- GZA (born 1966) – rapper (Bedford–Stuyvesant)[58][59]
H
edit- Buddy Hackett (1924–2003) – actor and comedian (Williamsburg)
- Adelaide Hall (1901–1993) – jazz singer, songwriter, actress
- Jimmy Hall (born 1994), basketball player in the Israeli National League
- Bobby Hambel – guitarist, Biohazard
- Marvin Hamlisch (1944–2012) – Oscar-winning composer of film scores (Midwood)
- Andrew P. Harris (born 1957) – Maryland politician
- Barbara Grizzuti Harrison (1934–2002) – author
- Anne Hathaway (born 1982) – Oscar-winning actress[15]
- Knut Haukelid (1911–1994) – Norwegian resistance movement soldier
- Richie Havens (1941– 2013) – folk singer-songwriter, actor; first performer at the original Woodstock (Bedford–Stuyvesant)
- Susan Hayward (1917–1975) – Oscar-winning actress (Flatbush)
- Rita Hayworth (1918–1987) – actress[60]
- Leona Helmsley (1920–2007) – businessperson and real estate investor[61]
- Heltah Skeltah – hip-hop duo (Brownsville)
- Sidney Hertzberg (1922–2005) – pro basketball player
- Robert Hess (1935–2014) – sculptor
- Robert Hess (1938–1994) – President of Brooklyn College
- Henry Hill (1943–2012) – mobster, subject of Goodfellas
- Russel Hobbs – drummer; member of Gorillaz
- William E. Hoehle – member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
- Steven Hoffenberg – fraudster
- Zander Hollander (1923–2014) – sportswriter, journalist, editor and archivist
- Red Holzman (1920–1998) – Hall of Fame NBA two-time All-Star and coach
- Homicide (born 1977) – ring name of Nelson Erazo, professional wrestler signed to Ring of Honor (Bedford-Stuyvesant)
- Lena Horne (1917–2010) – singer and actress[62] (Bedford–Stuyvesant)
- Curly Howard (Jerome Lester Horwitz; 1903–1952) – comedian; member of The Three Stooges (Brownsville)
- Moe Howard (Moses Harry Horwitz; 1897–1975) – comedian; leader of The Three Stooges (Brownsville)
- Shemp Howard (Samuel Horwitz; 1895–1955) – comedian; member of The Three Stooges (Brownsville)
- William G. Hundley (1925–2006) – criminal defense attorney for high-profile clients, reared in Brooklyn
- Hezekiah Hunter (1837–1894) – teacher, minister, and politician; born in Brooklyn[63]
I
edit- Anthony Ingrassia (1944–1995) – playwright, producer and director
- Jimmy Iovine (born 1953) – entrepreneur, record producer and film producer (Red Hook)
- Breuk Iversen (born 1964) – designer and writer
J
edit- Mark Jackson (born 1965) – basketball player
- Cheryl James (born 1966) – rapper and actress
- Shawn James (born 1983) – basketball player for Maccabi Tel Aviv
- Tama Janowitz (born 1957) – novelist[64]
- Jay-Z (born 1969) – rapper and entrepreneur (Bedford–Stuyvesant)
- Jaz-O (born 1964) – rapper (Bedford–Stuyvesant)
- Charles Jenkins (born 1989) – NBA player
- Jennie Jerome (1854–1921) – Lady Randolph Churchill, mother of Winston Churchill (Cobble Hill)
- Jeru the Damaja (born 1972) – rapper[65] (East New York)
- Joey Badass (born 1995) – rapper
- Evan M. Johnson – US Army brigadier general[66]
- Evan Malbone Johnson (1791–1865) – clergyman[66]
- Tamara "Taj" Johnson-George (born 1971) – member of R&B group SWV (Bedford–Stuyvesant)[67]
- Lamont Jones (born 1972) – basketball player
- Norah Jones (born 1979) – musician, actress[68]
- Susannah Mushatt Jones (1899–2016) – oldest living New Yorker[69]
- E. Bernard Jordan (born 1959) – founder of Zoe Ministries
- Michael Jordan (born 1963) – basketball player
- William Joyce (1906–1946) – Nazi propaganda broadcaster; executed for treason
- Zab Judah (born 1977) – professional boxer
- David Julius (born 1955) – Nobel laureate
- Just-Ice (born 1965) – rapper
K
edit- KA (born 1972) – rapper (Brownsville, Brooklyn)
- Meir Kahane (1932–1990) – Orthodox Jewish rabbi, activist and founder of the Jewish Defense League
- Roger Kahn (1927–2020) – sportswriter and author of The Boys of Summer
- Big Daddy Kane (born 1968) – rapper[70] (Bedford–Stuyvesant)
- Eric Kaplan (born 1971) – writer (Flatbush)
- Gabe Kaplan (born 1943) – actor and comedian
- Abraham Katz (1926–2013) - diplomat, United States Ambassador to the OECD
- Kaves – fine art painter, graffiti artist, illustrator, director, actor, author, rapper, and entrepreneur[71] (Bay Ridge, Brooklyn) [72]
- KAWS, born Brian Donnelly – graffiti artist, limited-edition clothing and toy designer
- Danny Kaye (1911–1987) – actor and comedian (East New York)
- Lainie Kazan (born 1940) – actress and singer
- Ezra Jack Keats (1916–1983) – author and illustrator
- Monica Keena (born 1979) – actress
- Harvey Keitel (born 1939) – actor[73]
- Steven G. Kellman (born 1947) – author and critic
- Patsy Kelly (1910–1981) – actress
- David M. Kennedy (born 1958) – professor of criminology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, author of Don't Shoot
- The Kid Gashi (born 1989) – rapper
- Jimmy Kimmel (born 1967) – comedian and television talk-show host[15]
- Bernard King (born 1956) – NBA Hall of Famer (Fort Greene)
- Carole King (born 1942) – singer-songwriter (Madison)[74]
- Larry King (1933–2021) – television talk-show host and interviewer[75]
- Marvin Kitman (1929–2023) – television critic, humorist, and author
- Brian Kokoska (born 1988) – artist
- C. Everett Koop (1916–2013) – U.S. Surgeon General[76]
- Sandy Koufax (born 1935) – Hall of Fame baseball pitcher for Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers (Borough Park)
- Martin Kove (born 1946) – actor
- John Krasinski (born 1979) – actor and director[77]
- Talib Kweli (born 1975) – rapper and producer[78] (Park Slope)
L
edit- Jeffrey Laitman (born 1951) – anatomist
- Pierre Lallement (1843–1891) – inventor
- Sylven Landesberg (born 1990) – American-Israeli basketball shooting guard (Maccabi Tel Aviv)
- Michael Landon – actor, director, producer
- Abbe Lane (born 1932) – singer, dancer, actress
- Dulcinea Langfelder (born 1955) – multidisciplinary artist (drama, dance, song, mime, multimedia)
- Rudy LaRusso (1937–2004) – five-time All-Star NBA basketball player (Madison)
- Reuben Lasker (1929–1988) – marine biologist
- Cyndi Lauper (born 1953) – singer and activist
- Arthur Laurents (1917–2011) – writer and director
- Steve Lawrence (1935–2024) – singer and actor
- Heath Ledger (1979–2008) – actor[79]
- Ivan Lee (born 1981) – Olympic saber fencer
- Roy Lee (born 1969) – film producer
- Spike Lee (born 1957) – film director, screenwriter and actor (lived in Fort Greene)
- Shulem Lemmer (born 1990) – singer (Borough Park)
- Ivan Leshinsky (born 1947) – American-Israeli basketball player (Midwood)
- Jonathan Lethem (born 1964) – author (Boerum Hill)
- Andrew Levane (1920–2012) – NBA basketball player (Madison)
- Lewis (alive 1890) – former 19th-century professional baseball player
- Emmanuel Lewis (born 1971) – actor (Midwood)
- Richard Lewis (1947–2024) – actor and comedian
- Tillie Ehrlich Lewis (1901–1977) – businesswoman
- Nancy Lieberman (born 1958) – WNBA basketball player, coach and broadcaster; Hall of Fame
- Lil' Kim, born Kimberly Denise Jones (born 1974/1975) – Grammy Award-winning rapper (Bedford–Stuyvesant[80])
- Lil Mama (born 1989) – rapper[81]
- O. Winston Link (1914–2001) – photographer
- Paul Lo Duca (born 1972) – MLB baseball player
- Edie Locke – fashion journalist[82]
- Robert Logan (born 1941) – actor
- Robert K. Logan (born 1939) – scientist
- Steve Lombardi (born 1961) – professional wrestler, ring name "The Brooklyn Brawler"
- Vince Lombardi (1913–1970) – Pro Football Hall of Fame coach (Sheepshead Bay)
- Nia Long (born 1970) – actress
- Jackie Loughery (1930–2024) – Miss New York USA 1952, Miss USA 1952
- Mynette Louie – film producer
- Low Ki (born 1979) – ring name of Brandon Silvestry, professional wrestler
- Sid Luckman (1916–1998) – NFL quarterback and Pro Football Hall of Fame
- MC Lyte (born 1970) – actress and rapper[83]
M
edit- M.O.P. – hip-hop duo (Brownsville)
- John Buffalo Mailer (born 1978) – playwright and youngest child of author Norman Mailer
- Norman Mailer (1923–2007) – author and playwright[84]
- Maino (born 1973) – rapper (Bedford–Stuyvesant)
- Romany Malco (born 1968) – actor
- Paul Malignaggi (born 1980) – boxer (Bensonhurst)
- Barry Manilow (born 1943) – singer-songwriter (Williamsburg)[85]
- Stephon Marbury (born 1977) – NBA player[86] (Coney Island)
- Mario – fictional video-game character
- Marty Markowitz (born 1945) – Borough President of Brooklyn, New York City
- Constantine Maroulis (born 1975) – singer
- Branford Marsalis (born 1960) – saxophonist[87] (Clinton Hill)
- Duane Martin (born 1965) – actor (All of Us)
- George Willard Martin (1886–1971) – mycologist[88]
- Angie Martinez (born 1971) – radio personality, former rapper and actress
- Masta Ace (born 1966) – rapper[89] (Brownsville)
- Maxwell (born 1973) – singer-songwriter, producer, musician (East Brooklyn)
- Lee Mazzilli – professional baseball player, coach, and manager; part of the 1986 World Series Champion New York Mets
- Carson McCullers (1917–1967) – writer[90]
- Joseph McGoldrick (1901–1978) – NYC Comptroller and NY State Residential Rent Control Commissioner, lawyer, and professor
- Amy Upham Thomson McKean (1893–1972) – pianist, songwriter and composer
- Triston McKenzie – professional baseball pitcher for The Cleveland Indians
- Meechy Darko (born 1990) – rapper (Flatbush)
- Ronald Mellor (born 1940) – historian
- Boyd Melson (born 1981) – boxer
- Richard Merkin (1938–2009) – painter and illustrator[91]
- Robert Merrill (1917–2004) – opera singer
- Debra Messing (born 1968) – actress
- Sean Michaels (born 1958) – pornographic actor and director
- Thomas Mignone – film director, music video director, screenwriter
- Alyssa Milano (born 1972) – actress
- Arthur Miller (1915–2005) – Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright (Gravesend)
- Henry Miller (1891–1980) – author and raconteur (Williamsburg)
- Jarrell Miller (born 1988) – kickboxer
- Matthew Paul Miller (born 1979) – reggae singer
- Walter Miller (1890–1959) – jockey
- Wentworth Miller (born 1972) – actor
- William J. Millican (1904–1944) – double Navy Cross recipient
- Stephanie Mills (born 1957) – singer (Bedford–Stuyvesant)
- Irv Mondschein (1924–2015) – track and field champion
- Lenny Montana (1926–1992) – actor and professional wrestler
- Mary Tyler Moore (1936–2017) – actor
- Esai Morales (born 1962) – actor
- Ed Morris (1862–1937) – 19th-century MLB pitcher
- Joel Moses (1941–2022) – former provost, MIT (Midwood)
- Mr. Muthafuckin' eXquire (born 1986) – rapper (Crown Heights)
- Chris Mullin (born 1963) – NBA player and executive, Hall of Fame[92]
- Charlie Murphy (1959–2017) – actor and comedian
- Eddie Murphy (born 1961) – actor and comedian
N
edit- Boris Nachamkin (1933–2018) – NBA basketball player
- Sam Nahem (1915–2004) – Major League Baseball pitcher
- Larry Namer (born 1948) – founder of E! Entertainment TV networks
- Lia Neal (born 1995) – competitive swimmer and Olympic medalist[93]
- Nikita Nesterenko (born 2001), professional ice hockey center who plays in the National Hockey League for the Anaheim Ducks[94]
- Jack Newfield (1938–2004) – writer
- Mark Newgarden (born 1959) – artist, cartoonist, writer, creator of Garbage Pail Kids, author of We All Die Alone and How to Read Nancy (Williamsburg)
- Ed Newman (born 1951) – NFL All-Pro football player
- Harry Nilsson (1941–1994) – singer-songwriter (Bushwick)
- Joakim Noah (born 1985) – NBA basketball player
- Peggy Noonan (born 1950) – author, columnist
- The Notorious B.I.G. (1972–1997) – rapper, born Christopher George Latore Wallace; Biggie, Biggie Smalls
- Lupita Nyong'o (born 1983) – actress[95]
O
edit- O.C. (born 1971) – rapper (Bushwick)
- Henry Obst (1906–1975) – football player
- Tasker Oddie (1870–1950) – 12th Governor of Nevada and a United States Senator; born in Brooklyn[96]
- Dennis J. Patrick O'Grady (1943–1972) – Florida state senator
- Ol' Dirty Bastard (1968–2004) – rapper (Fort Greene)
- Originoo Gunn Clappaz – hip-hop group (Brownsville)
- Dave Orr (1859–1915) – MLB player, born in Brooklyn
- Joell Ortiz (born 1980) – rapper and producer (Williamsburg)
- Adam Ottavino (born 1985) – MLB pitcher for the New York Yankees
P
edit- Peter Pace (born 1945) – Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
- Shemuel Pagan (born 1988) – professional boxer
- Papoose (born 1978) – rapper
- Joseph Papp (1921–1991) – theatrical impresario who created New York City's Public Theater[97]
- Lana Parrilla (born 1977) – actress
- Ben Parris (born 1961) – author
- Joe Paterno (1926–2012)[98] – football coach at Penn State in College Football Hall of Fame
- Angela Paton (1930–2016) – theatre, TV and film actress
- Jayson Paul (born 1984) – professional wrestler
- Dickey Pearce (1836–1908) – MLB player
- Nelson Peltz (born 1942) – billionaire businessman and investor
- Rosie Perez (born 1964) – actress and choreographer (Bushwick and later Clinton Hill)[99]
- Rhea Perlman (born 1948) – actress[32]
- Harold Perrineau (born 1963) – actor
- Lip Pike – home run champion baseball player
- Michael Pitt (born 1981) – actor and musician
- Stacey Plaskett (born 1966) – politician and attorney[100]
- Suzanne Pleshette (1937–2008) – actress (Brooklyn Heights)
- Robert Pollack (born 1940) – professor of biological sciences
- Mark F. Pomerantz (born 1951) – attorney, prosecutor
- Martin Pope (1918–2022) – physical chemist
- Charles Millard Pratt (1855–1935) – oil industrialist and philanthropist
- Frederic B. Pratt (1865–1945) – president of Brooklyn's Pratt Institute (1893–1937)
- George Dupont Pratt (1869–1935) – conservationist and philanthropist
- Harold Pratt (1877–1939) – oil industrialist
- Herbert L. Pratt (1871–1945) – oil industrialist
- John Pratt (1873–1927) – lawyer, philanthropist, music impresario and financier
- Marianne Preger-Simon (born 1929) – dancer, choreographer, writer, and psychotherapist
- DJ Premier (born 1966) – hip-hop disc jockey, producer, co-founder and member of hip-hop duo Gang Starr[101]
- Priscilla Presley (born 1945) – businesswoman, actress[15]
- Sean Price (1972–2015) – rapper (Brownsville)
R
edit- Eddie Rabbitt (1941–1998) – singer-songwriter
- Marky Ramone (born 1956) – drummer of the punk band The Ramones
- Anthony Ramos (born 1991) – actor, singer-songwriter (Bushwick)
- Florence Ravenel (1896–1975) – actress; born in Minnesota, raised in Brooklyn[102][103]
- Lou Reed (1942–2013)[104] – singer-songwriter
- Paul Regina (1956–2006) – actor[105]
- Leah Remini (born 1970) – actress (Bensonhurst)
- Bebe Rexha (born 1989) – singer-songwriter and record producer
- Buddy Rich (1917–1987) – drummer and big-band leader
- Adam Richman – actor, host of reality-television series Man vs. Food
- Thomas Ridgway – U.S. Army officer and father of General Matthew Ridgway[106]
- Joan Rivers (1933–2014) – comedian[107]
- Phil Rizzuto (1917–2007) – Major League Baseball player and broadcaster
- Mary Fanton Roberts (1864–1956) – journalist, writer
- Jackie Robinson – Major League Baseball player and pioneer, Brooklyn Dodgers
- Chris Rock (born 1965) – actor and comedian (Bedford–Stuyvesant)
- Tony Rock (born 1974) – actor and comedian (Bedford–Stuyvesant)
- Steve Rogers (born 1920) – fictional superhero, federal official, intelligence operative, former soldier
- Mortimer Rogoff (1921–2008) – inventor and businessman
- Saul Rogovin (1923–1995) – Major League Baseball pitcher
- Mickey Rooney (1920–2014) – five-time Oscar-nominated actor
- Mike Rosen (born 1944) – radio talk show host and newspaper columnist
- Aaron "Rosy" Rosenberg (1912–1979) – two-time "All-American" college football player, and film and television producer
- Wayne Rosenthal (born 1965) – Major League Baseball pitcher and coach (Canarsie)
- Steve Ross (1927–1992) – chairman of Time Warner
- Mark Roth (born 1951) – bowler
- Rowdy Rebel (born 1991) – rapper from GS9 (East Flatbush)
- Ed Rubinoff (born 1935) – tennis player
- David Ruggerio (born 1962) – chef
- Chris Rush (born 1946) – stand-up comedian
- Brenda Russell (born 1949) – singer
- Sam Rutigliano (born 1933) – football coach[108]
- Carl Hancock Rux – writer, actor, and director[109] (Fort Greene)
- RZA (born 1969) – rapper
S
edit- Jonathan Safran Foer (born 1977) – novelist[110]
- Carl Sagan (1934–1996) – scientist, author, educator (Bensonhurst)
- Saigon (born 1977) – actor and rapper
- Stephanie Saland – ballet dancer and teacher
- Dmitri Salita (born 1982) – boxer
- Bernie Sanders[111] (born 1941) – Independent U.S. Senator from Vermont (Madison)
- Adam Sandler (born 1966) – actor and comedian[15]
- Evie Sands (born 1946) – singer-songwriter and musician
- Peter Sarsgaard (born 1971) – actor[112]
- Roger Schank (born 1946) – education reformer, artificial-intelligence expert
- Kenny Scharf (born 1958) – graffiti artist
- Ossie Schectman (1919–2013) – NBA basketball guard
- Thomas D. Schiano (born 1962) – organ-transplantation specialist
- Vincent Schiavelli (1948–2005) − actor, food writer
- Steve Schirripa (born 1957) – actor (Bensonhurst)
- Andre-Michel Schub (born 1952) – pianist (Midwood)
- Chuck Schumer (born 1950) – U.S. Senator from New York (Flatbush)[113]
- Gary Schwartz (born 1940) – art historian[114]
- Seymour Schwartzman (1930–2009) – opera singer and cantor[115]
- Chris Matthew Sciabarra (born 1960) – political theorist
- Raymond Scott (born Harry Warnow, 1908–1994) – composer, bandleader, pianist, electronic-music pioneer
- Neil Sedaka (born 1939) – singer-songwriter
- Alonzo Bertram See (1849–1941) – businessman[116]
- Erich Segal (1937–2010) – author, Academy Award-nominated screenwriter, and educator (Midwood)
- Jerry Seinfeld (born 1954) – actor and comedian (Borough Park)[117][118]
- Hubert Selby, Jr. (1928–2004) – author
- Cletus Seldin (born 1986) – boxer
- Phil Sellers (born 1953) – former NBA player
- Greg Serano (born 1974) – actor
- Shabazz the Disciple (born 1973) – rapper (Red Hook)
- Ruth Shafer (1912 –1972) – engineer
- Neal Shapiro (born 1945) – equestrian and Olympic medalist
- Judy Shapiro-Ikenberry (born 1942) – long-distance runner
- Francis Ethelbert Sharkey – fictional character played by Terry Becker in the 1964–68 ABC television series Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
- Judith Sheindlin (born 1942) – television personality, Judge Judy (Madison / Bedford–Stuyvesant)
- Allie Sherman (1923–2015) – NFL player and coach
- Art Sherman (born 1937) – horse trainer and jockey
- Bobby Shmurda (born 1994) – rapper from GS9 (East Flatbush)
- Michael Showalter (born 1970) – actor and comedian
- Shyne (born Jamal Michael Barrow; 1978), Belizean rapper and politician
- Gabourey Sidibe (born 1983) – actress (Bedford–Stuyvesant)[119]
- Bugsy Siegel (1906–1947) – gangster[120]
- Raymond Siller (born 1939) – television writer, political consultant
- Beverly Sills (1929–2007) – opera singer
- Dean Silvers – film director, film producer, screenwriter, and author (East Flatbush)
- Phil Silvers (1911–1985) – actor and comedian
- David Sive (1922–2014) – attorney, environmentalist, and professor of environmental law
- Skoob – half of rap duo Das EFX
- Justine Skye (born 1995) – singer-songwriter, dancer and model
- Smif-n-Wessun – hip-hop duo
- Jimmy Smits (born 1955) – actor[121]
- Pop Smoke (1999–2020) from Canarsie – rapper
- Ralph Snyderman (born 1940) – physician, scientist, administrator (Bensonhurst)
- Robert Solow (1924–2023) – economist; winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (Madison)
- Paul Sorvino (1939–2022) – actor[122]
- Carl Søyland (1894–1978) – editor-in-chief of Nordisk Tidende
- Paul Spatola – musician
- DJ Spinderella (born 1971) – DJ and rapper
- Barbara Stanwyck (1907–1990) – Oscar-winning actress[123]
- Peter Steele (1962–2010) – bassist and singer (Type O Negative, Carnivore) (Midwood)
- Gary Stephan (born 1942) – artist
- Lance Stephenson (born 1990) – basketball player
- Stuart Sternberg (born 1959) – owner of the Tampa Bay Rays
- Connie Stevens (born 1938) – actress and singer[124]
- Neil M. Stevenson (1930–2009) – Chief of Chaplains of the U.S. Navy
- Sticky Fingaz (born 1973), born Kirk Jones, member of the rap group Onyx
- Jerry Stiller (1927–2020) – actor, father of Ben Stiller
- David Stones (born 1988) – rapper
- Barbra Streisand (born 1942) – Oscar-winning actress, singer, director, political activist (Williamsburg)[15]
- Eric Stuart (born 1967) – voice actor, voice director, musician, singer and songwriter
- Ray Suarez (born 1957) – journalist (Bensonhurst)[125]
- Jason Sudeikis (born 1975) – actor and comedian (Clinton Hill)[126]
- Harold Syrett (1913–1984) – president of Brooklyn College
T
edit- Sid Tannenbaum (1925–1986) – professional basketball player
- Tazz (born 1967) – ring name of Peter Senerchia, former professional wrestler
- Sebastian Telfair (born 1985) – NBA player
- Roy M. Terry (1915–1988) – Chief of Chaplains of the U.S. Air Force
- Tanisha Thomas (born 1985) – reality television participant, television show host[127][128]
- Adrianne Tolsch (1938–2016) – comedian, writer and graphic artist[129]
- Marisa Tomei (born 1964) – Oscar-winning actress
- Joe Torre (born 1940) – Major League Baseball player, New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers manager, Hall of Fame[130] (Marine Park)
- Rachel Trachtenburg (born 1993) – actress, singer, musician (Bushwick)
- Kathy Troccoli (born 1955) – gospel singer
- Richard Tucker (1884–1942) – actor
- Mark Turenshine (1944–2016) – American-Israeli basketball player
- John Turturro (born 1957) – actor and director
- Nicholas Turturro (born 1962) – actor
- Mike Tyson (born 1966) – heavyweight boxing champion[131]
U
edit- Uncle Murda (born 1980) – gangster rapper (East New York)
- UTFO – 1980s rap group
V
edit- Lou Vairo (born 1945) – ice hockey coach and inductee into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame[132]
- Mary Crowell Van Benschoten (1840–1921), author, newspaper publisher, clubwoman
- Andrew VanWyngarden (born 1983) – member of MGMT
- Alan Veingrad (born 1963) – NFL player
- Guido Verbeck (1830–1898) – political advisor, educator, and missionary[133]
- Edward Vick (born 1944) – former CEO of Young & Rubicam[134]
- Idara Victor – actress
- Abe Vigoda – actor
- Tony Visconti (born 1944) – musician, producer
W
edit- Kaci Walfall (born 2004) – actress
- Eli Wallach (1915–2014) – actor
- Timothy Weah (born 2000) – soccer player
- Shatzi Weisberger (1930–2022) – nurse, activist, and death educator
- Mickey Welch (1859–1941) – MLB player
- Mae West (1893–1980) – actress, playwright, and comedian (Williamsburg/Greenpoint)
- Randy Weston (1926–2018) – pianist and composer
- Colson Whitehead (born 1969) – novelist and MacArthur Fellow
- Isaiah Whitehead (born 1995), basketball player for the Brooklyn Nets (NBA), now in the Israeli Basketball Premier League
- Walt Whitman (1819–1892) – poet, best known for Leaves of Grass; journalist and Brooklyn Eagle editor; essayist and humanist
- Whodini – 1980s rap group
- Olivia Wilde (born 1984) – actress (Clinton Hill)
- Michael K. Williams (1966–2021) – actor[135]
- Michelle Williams (born 1980) – actress[136]
- Jan Wilsgaard (1930–2016) – chief automotive designer, Volvo Cars, 1950–1990
- Robert Anton Wilson (1932–2007) – author
- Amelia Kempshall Wing (1837–1927) – author and philanthropist
- Shelley Winters (1920–2006) – Oscar-winning actress[137]
- Paula Wolfert (born 1938) – cookbook author, specialist in Mediterranean cuisines
- Wolfman Jack[138] (1938–1995) – 1970s disc jockey
- BD Wong (born 1960) – actor (Bedford Stuyvesant)[139]
- Lloyd R. Woodson (born 1966) – arrested in 2010 with military-grade weapons and a detailed map of the Fort Drum military installation
- Harold Wren (1921–2016) – dean of three law schools
Y
edit- Adam Yauch (1964–2012) – rapper, founding member of the Beastie Boys
- Janet Yellen (born 1946) – economist and U.S. secretary of the treasury[140]
- Henny Youngman (1906–1998) – comedian
Z
edit- Max Zaslofsky (1925–1985) – NBA guard/forward, one-time FT% leader, one-time points leader, All-Star, ABA coach[141]
- Zombie Juice (born 1990) – rapper (Flatbush)
- Shirley Zussman (1914–2021) – sex therapist
- Shlomo Zev Zweigenhaft (1915–2005) – rabbi
See also
editReferences
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