Births | ||
|---|---|---|
| * 1984 | Scarlett Johansson | American film actress. |
| * 1971 | Alon Mizrahi | Israeli football player. |
| * 1970 | Stel Pavlou | British author and screenwriter. |
| * 1968 | Rasmus Lerdorf | Danish-Greenlandic programmer and the author of the first version of the PHP web programming language. |
| * 1958 | Jamie Lee Curtis | Two time Golden Globe-winning, and Emmy Award-nominated American film actress and a successful writer of books for children. |
| * 1949 | Chip Berlet | American political writer. |
| * 1944 | Lucio Russo | Italian physicist, mathematician and historian of science. |
| * 1940 | Terry Gilliam | American-born British writer, filmmaker, animator, actor and member of the Monty Python comedy troupe. |
| * 1921 | Jacob (Rodney Dangerfield) Cohen | Born Jacob Cohen, was an American comedian and actor. |
| * 1921 | Rodney (born Jacob Cohen) Dangerfield | Born Jacob Cohen, was an American comedian and actor. |
| * 1917 | Andrew Huxley | British Nobel Prize-winning biologist. |
| * 1899 | Hoagy Carmichael | American composer, pianist, singer, actor, and bandleader. |
| * 1891 | Edward Berays | Austrian-born American publicist, sometimes called "the father of public relations". |
| * 1890 | Charles de Gaulle | In France commonly referred to as le gιnιral de Gaulle, was a French military leader and statesman. |
| * 1881 | Ismail Enver | Known to Europeans during his political career as Enver Pasha or Enver Bey, was a Turkish military officer and a leader of the Young Turk revolution. |
| * 1869 | Andre Gide | French author and winner of the Nobel Prize in literature in 1947. |
| * 1868 | John Nance Garner | Representative from Texas, the thirty-second Vice President of the United States and the forty-forth Speaker of the United States House of Representatives. |
| * 1857 | George Gissing | British novelist. |
| * 1819 | George Eliot | English novelist and poet, more well-known by her pen name George Eliot, who also for a time used Marian and Mary Anne as variant spellings of her name. |
| * 1800 | Linn Boyd | Prominent U S politician of the 1840s and 1850s, and served as Speaker of the United States House of Representatives from 1851 to 1855. |
Deaths | ||
| 2000 | Emil Zatopek | Czech long-distance runner best known for winning three gold medals at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki. |
| 1994 | Viola Spolin | Considered the mother of the improvisational theater movement in the United States. |
| 1993 | Anthony Burgess | English writer whose novels include the Malayan trilogy, A Clockwork Orange, the Enderby cycle, Nothing Like The Sun, Earthly Powers and The Kingdom Of The Wicked. |
| 1988 | Luis Barragan | Considered the most important Mexican architect of the 20th century. |
| 1988 | Erich Fried | Austrian poet, essayist and translator. |
| 1983 | Leonard Wibberley | Prolific Irish author, best known for his comic novels about the imaginary country Grand Fenwick, particularly The Mouse That Roared. |
| 1980 | Mae West | American actress and playwright, most commonly known as "Mae" West. |
| 1963 | John F. Kennedy | 35th President of the United States, a brother of Robert F Kennedy and Ted Kennedy, and the first husband of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. |
| 1963 | C. S. Lewis | Irish author, scholar of medieval literature, and Christian apologist. |
| 1963 | Aldous Huxley | British author, most famous for his novel Brave New World. |
| 1944 | Arthur Stanley Eddington | Plumian Professor of Astronomy at the University of Cambridge. |
| 1943 | Lorenz Hart | American lyricist, famous for his work with Richard Rodgers. |
| 1916 | Jack London | American author. |
| 1876 | Edwin Ransford | English singer and composer. |
| 1694 | John Tillotson | Archbishop of Canterbury (16911694). |
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