Births | ||
|---|---|---|
| * 1991 | Bonnie Wright | English actress and model, perhaps best known for her role in the Harry Potter films as Ginny Weasley. |
| * 1981 | Joseph Gordon-Levitt | American actor. |
| * 1981 | Joseph Gordon Levitt | American actor. |
| * 1981 | Paris Hilton | Heiress to the Hilton Hotel fortune, as well as her father's real estate fortune. |
| * 1972 | Billie Joe Armstrong | Lead singer and guitarist of Green Day. |
| * 1971 | Denise Richards | American film actress. |
| * 1963 | Michael Jordan | Retired professional basketball player who played 11 season for the Chicago Bulls of the National Basketball Association and 2 seasons for the Washington Wizards. |
| * 1963 | Larry the Cable Guy | Better known by the stage name Larry the Cable Guy, is an American stand-up comedian and actor. |
| * 1962 | Sarah Wollaston | British politician who has been the Member of Parliament for Totnes for the Conservative party since 2010. |
| * 1957 | Loreena McKennitt | Canadian composer, songwriter, singer, harpist and pianist. |
| * 1954 | Rene Russo | American film actress, musician and former model. |
| * 1954 | Bill Sali | Former United States Representative from Idaho's 1st congressional district. |
| * 1950 | Abd al-Bari Atwan | Editor-in chief of the London-based Arabic newspaper Al-Quds Al-Arabi. |
| * 1949 | Dennis Green | Former American football head coach. |
| * 1948 | Jose Jose | Mexican singer. |
| * 1942 | Huey P. Newton | Co-founder and leader of the Black Panther Party for Self Defense, an African-American radical organization that began in October 1966 in Oakland, California. |
| * 1936 | Jim Brown | Retired American professional football player who has also made his mark as an actor and social activist. |
| * 1929 | Alejandro Jodorowsky | Actor, playwright, director, producer, composer, mime, comic book writer and psychotherapist. |
| * 1929 | Chaim Potok | American author and rabbi. |
| * 1904 | Hans Morgenthau | One of the leading twentieth-century figures in the study of international politics. |
| * 1904 | Luis A. Ferre | Puerto Rican engineer, industrialist, politician, philanthropist, and a patron of the arts. |
| * 1903 | Sadegh Hedayat | Iran's foremost modern writer of prose fiction and short stories. |
| * 1890 | Ronald Fisher | Evolutionary biologist, geneticist and statistician. |
| * 1888 | Ronald Knox | English theologian, priest and crime writer. |
| * 1888 | Otto Stern | German physicist and Nobel laureate in physics. |
| * 1882 | J. Allen Boone | Author of several books about nonverbal communication with animals in the 1940s and '50s. |
| * 1876 | Frank Rutter | British art art critic, curator and activist. |
| * 1874 | Thomas J. Watson | President of International Business Machines, who oversaw that company's growth into an international force from the 1920s to the 1950s. |
| * 1864 | Andrew Paterson | Famous Australian bush poet and author. |
| * 1862 | Edward German | English musician and composer, best remembered for his extensive output of incidental music for the stage and as a successor to Arthur Sullivan in the field of English comic opera. |
| * 1797 | Henry E. Steinway | Born Heinrich Engelhard Steinweg, was a German-American piano manufacturer and the founder of the highly regarded piano company Steinway & Sons. |
Deaths | ||
| † 2010 | Kathryn Grayson | American actress and operatic soprano singer. |
| † 2001 | Richard Wurmbrand | Romanian evangelical Christian minister, author, and educator who spent a total of fourteen years imprisoned in Romania, as well as the founder of Voice of the Martyrs. |
| † 2001 | Khalid Abdul Muhammad | Born Harold Moore Jr, was a leading figure in the Black Nationalist movement throughout the 1990s and early 2000s. |
| † 1998 | Marie-Louise Von Franz | Daughter of an Austrian baron, was a Swiss Jungian psychologist and scholar who was born in Munich, Germany. |
| † 1986 | Jiddu Krishnamurti | Philosopher, public speaker, and writer, on psychological, sociological, and spiritual subjects. |
| † 1984 | Jesse Stuart | American writer known for his poems, short stories, and novels about rural Southern Appalachia. |
| † 1982 | Thelonious Monk | Jazz pianist and composer. |
| † 1980 | Graham Sutherland | English artist, who focused on the inherent strangeness of natural forms, and abstracting them, sometimes giving his work a surrealist appearance. |
| † 1966 | Hans Hofmann | One of the older abstract expressionist painters working in New York. |
| † 1955 | L. P. Jacks | Usually cited as L P Jacks, was an English educator, philosopher, and Unitarian minister who rose to prominence in the period from World War I to World War II. |
| † 1934 | Siegbert Tarrasch | Leading chess player. |
| † 1913 | Joaquin Miller | Pen name of the American poet, essayist and fabulist Cincinnatus Heine Miller. |
| † 1909 | Geronimo | Chiricahua Apache leader; usually known as Geronimo. |
| † 1884 | Charles Stuart Calverley | English poet. |
| † 1876 | Horace Bushnell | American Congregational clergyman and theologian. |
| † 1856 | Heinrich Heine | Journalist, an essayist, and one of the most significant German romantic poets. |
| † 1827 | Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi | Swiss educational reformer. |
| † 1796 | James Macpherson | Scottish poet and literary hoaxer. |
| † 1673 | Moliere | French theatre writer, director and actor, one of the masters of comic satire. |
| † 1600 | Giordano Bruno | Italian philosopher, astronomer, satirist, occultist, mystic, and martyr, who was burned at the stake as a heretic; born Filippo Bruno, in Nola, Italy, he often called himself Il Nolano. |
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