List of people from Whittier, California
The following is a list of people who were born in or lived in the city of Whittier, California
Entertainment
- Gary Allan (born Gary Allan Herzberg), country music artist, graduated La Serna High School
- Antagonist, metal band signed to Prosthetic Records
- Andrea Barber, actress (Full House)
- Caprice Bourret, supermodel
- Cold War Kids, indie rock band
- Pete Dee Davison, musician (The Adicts)
- Joy Enriquez, singer, actress (7th Heaven)
- Dana Ferguson, actress and younger sister of Stacy Ferguson
- Staff Fieldhouse, musician
- Funeral Party, punk/rock band
- William Garwood, actor and director of early silent films in the 1910s
- David Hidalgo, musician (Los Lobos)
- Kathy Hilton, actress, socialite, mother of Paris and Nicky Hilton
- Gabriel Iglesias, comedian and actor
- Vic "the Brick" Jacobs, radio personality
- Adrienne Janic, co-host of Overhaulin', model, and Fanta Girl
- Mark Kostabi, composer and artist
- Paul Kostabi, artist, musician, and producer
- John Alan Lasseter, Academy Award–winning animator and Chief Creative Officer at Pixar and Walt Disney Animation Studios
- Roger Lodge, actor (host of Blind Date)
- Long Gone John, founder of Sympathy for the Record Industry
- Alex Lopez, drummer for Suicide Silence, signed to Century Media Records
- Martika, singer
- Tim Minear, screenwriter, director
- Roger Mobley, child actor, moved to Whittier in 1957
- Lorna Patterson, actress
- Merle Pertile, Playboy Playmate, January 1962
- Vaneza Leza Pitynski, actress (The Brothers Garcia)
- Popoff, hip hop artist
- Chuck Prophet, musician (solo artist and founder of the band Green On Red)
- Ron Shelton, director, screenwriter (Bull Durham, White Men Can't Jump, Tin Cup)
- Eric Stoltz, actor (Memphis Belle, Jerry Maguire, Pulp Fiction)
- Geoff Stults, actor (7th Heaven)
- Lauren Tewes, actress (The Love Boat)
- George Thatcher, trombonist[1]
- Tom Waits, actor, singer-songwriter
- Tina Yothers, actress (Family Ties)
- Michael Sweet musician, Christian rock band (Stryper)
- Robert Sweet musician, Christian rock band (Stryper)
- Oz Fox musician, Christian rock band (Stryper)
Arts and literature
- Horace Bristol, photographer, Life Magazine
- Roberto Chavez, fashion and fine art photographer (member of the Whittier Cultural Arts Commission)
- Firoozeh Dumas, author
- Christine Dzidrums, author
- M.F.K. Fisher, author
- Dave Freeman, author
- Mark Kostabi, painter, left Whittier to be discovered in New York
- Paul Kostabi, artist, musician, and producer
- Carol Lay, artist
- Thom Mayne, Pritzker Prize-winning architect
- Craig McCracken, animator
- Tim Miller, performance artist (member of the NEA Four)
- Cherríe Moraga, poet, essayist, playwright
- Joe Ranft - animator, storyboard artist
- Nicole Stansbury, author
- Diane Wakoski, poet
- X-8, artist, publisher
Government
- George Allen, United States Senator (Virginia)
- Louis Caldera, United States Secretary of the Army
- Ronald B. Cameron, Congressman[2]
- Raymond F. Chandler, Sergeant Major of the Army, first enlisted commandant of United States Army Sergeants Major Academy
- James Ferguson, Air Force General
- Jacob F. Gerkens - first chief of the LAPD
- Gabriel Green, write-in presidential candidate
- Lou Henry Hoover, wife of Herbert Hoover and First Lady of the United States
- Gary Miller, Republican U.S. Representative for California's 31st congressional district. Miller grew up in Whittier.[3]
- Pat Nixon, First Lady, wife of President Richard Nixon
- Richard Nixon, 37th President of the United States, played football at Whittier High School and Whittier College
- Pío Pico, last Mexican governor of Alta California
- Anthony Rendon, assemblyman representing California's 63rd State Assembly district
Sports
- Shirley Babashoff, Olympic gold medalist swimmer
- Chet Brewer, Negro League baseball player
- George Buehler, football player
- Mitchell Callahan, hockey player
- Chuck Cary, baseball player
- Bob Chandler, football player
- Dave Dalby, football player, center, Oakland Raiders, R.I.P.[4]
- Oscar de la Hoya, Olympic and professional boxing champion
- Andy Etchebarren, baseball player (last man to bat against Sandy Koufax)
- Vince Evans, football quarterback
- Arturo Frias, boxing champion
- Michael Garciaparra, baseball player
- Nomar Garciaparra, baseball player[5]
- Greg Hancock, speedway champion
- Payton Jordan, coach of 1968 U.S. Olympic track and field
- Mark Kotsay, baseball player
- Dan Owens, football player
- Jamie Quirk, baseball player
- Ante Razov, soccer player
- Anthony Reyes, baseball player
- Kim Rhode, Olympic gold medalist, (double trap and skeet shooter)
- Mark Sanchez, football quarterback, Philadelphia Eagles
- Adam Snyder, football player, San Francisco 49ers
- Jenny Topping, Olympic gold medalist, softball
- Jim Zorn, football quarterback, coach Washington Redskins
- Eddie Zosky, baseball player
- [ Joshua Helsdon]],
Miscellaneous
- Milo Burcham, aviator, test pilot
- Tricia Nixon Cox - daughter of President Nixon
- Francis A. and Hannah Nixon, parents of President Nixon
- William Patterson, Convair executive vice president, Atlas missile engineer
- John Quijada, linguist, constructed language expert
- Nadya Suleman, mother of the Suleman octuplets (born January 26, 2009)
- Kerry Thornley, founder of Discordianism
References
- ↑ "GEORGE THATCHER". trombone-usa.com. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
- ↑ "CAMERON, Ronald Brooks, (1927 - 2006)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved November 18, 2012.
- ↑ Barone, Michael; McCutcheon, Chuck (2013). 2014 Almanac of American Politics. The University of Chicago Press.
- ↑ "Dave Dalby Obituary". Legacy.com via Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
- ↑ "Nomar Garciaparra". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved November 18, 2012.
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