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This is a listing of notable people who were born in, or have lived in, Tucson, Arizona. For people whose only connection with the city is attending the University of Arizona, see: List of University of Arizona people. Coaches of University of Arizona athletic teams should not be included either.
Athletics
edit- George Arias – professional baseball player
- Dave Baldwin – major league baseball player, writer, artist[1]
- Michael Bates – athlete
- Stanley Berryhill – NFL player
- Chad Beyer – professional cyclist[2]
- Craig Bjornson – baseball coach
- Alex Bowman – NASCAR driver
- Bryce Cotton – professional basketball player
- Dominick Cruz – mixed martial artist
- Lum Davenport - baseball player
- Ike Davis – professional baseball player
- Chris Duncan – baseball player
- Shelley Duncan – baseball player
- Sean Elliott – professional basketball player
- Cole Ford – professional football player
- Jim Grabb – former professional tennis player ranked world # 1 in doubles
- J. J. Hardy – baseball player
- Ron Hassey – baseball player[1]
- Gary Hayes – professional football player
- Alex Kellner – born in Tucson, baseball player[1]
- Walt Kellner – born in Tucson, baseball player[1]
- Mike Kellogg – professional football player
- Ian Kinsler (born 1982), Israeli-American Major League Baseball 4x All Star second baseman
- Chris Knierim – pairs figure skater
- Hank Leiber – professional baseball pitcher[3]
- Eddie Leon – born in Tucson, baseball player[1]
- Lafayette Lever – professional basketball player, attended Pueblo High School[4]
- Caitlin Leverenz – Olympic swimmer, born in Tucson, attended Sahuaro High School
- Pete McCaffrey – basketball player
- Roger McCluskey – National Sprint Car Hall of Fame racer
- Alice Greenough Orr – rodeo star, originally from Montana
- Tom Pagnozzi – professional baseball pitcher
- Allen Pitts – professional Canadian Football League player
- Bijan Robinson - Running back for the Atlanta Falcons, 8th overall pick in the 2023 NFL draft
- Sam Sacksen – 2008 Beijing Olympic modern pentathlete[5]
- Anthony Shumaker – baseball player
- Michael Smith – NFL running back
- Brad Steinke – Emmy award-winning sportscaster[6]
- Kerri Strug – Olympic gold-medalist gymnast
- Donny Toia – soccer player[7]
- Alex Verdugo — Baseball outfielder for Boston Red Sox, attended Sahuaro High School
- Roman Bravo Young – freestyle and folkstyle wrestler, two-time NCAA champion for Penn State University
- Win Young – Olympic medalist in diving[8]
Business
edit- Leopoldo Carrillo – Mexican-American entrepreneur, early founder of Tucson
- Arturo Moreno – entrepreneur, owner of Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
- Jeff Rein – chairman and chief executive officer of Walgreens
- Margaret Sanger – Planned Parenthood founder
- Robert Sarver – entrepreneur, principal owner of Phoenix Suns
- Robert Stewart – co-founder of GMA Network
Law and order
edit- Clay Pell – lawyer
- Eugene O'Dunne – jurist on the Supreme Bench of Baltimore
Literature
edit- Edward Abbey – author
- Sue Alexander – children's author[9]
- Jon Anderson – poet
- Byrd Baylor – essayist and children's author
- Michael Blake – author
- Charles Bowden – author
- Ray Bradbury – author
- Erskine Caldwell – playwright
- Max Cannon – author and creator of the comic strip Red Meat
- Mitch Cullin – author
- Charles G. Finney – author
- Frances Gillmor, folklorist, scholar and novelist
- Andrew Greeley – author, scholar and Roman Catholic priest
- Brenda Hillman - poet, translator
- Barbara Kingsolver – novelist
- Joseph Wood Krutch – author
- Todd Miller – journalist
- Tom Miller – travel writer
- Gary Paul Nabhan — author and ethnobotanist
- Adam Rex – children's writer and illustrator
- Stacey Richter – author
- Richard Shelton – poet, author
- Richard Siken - poet, painter, filmmaker
- Leslie Marmon Silko – author
- Susan Sontag – author, critic and public intellectual[10]
- Luci Tapahonso – poet laureate of the Navajo Nation
- David Foster Wallace – author
- Peter Wild – poet, author and professor of English at the University of Arizona
- Ofelia Zepeda – poet laureate of Tucson, author
- Tom Zoellner – nonfiction author
Movies, television, and media
edit- Tommy Shannon – Musician Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble
- Rex Allen – actor, musician
- Hailey Baldwin – model
- Mika Boorem – actress
- Lynn Borden – actress and 1957 Miss Arizona
- Roy Brown – actor
- Brooke Burke – model, TV host
- Aaron Chang – photographer
- Kaylee DeFer – actress
- Barbara Eden – actress
- Pablo Francisco – stand-up comedian
- Savannah Guthrie – television personality
- Dan Hicks – sportscaster
- Michael Horse – actor, jeweler, painter[10]
- Pat Hughes – baseball announcer
- Dominic Janes – actor[10]
- Cord Jefferson - screenwriter, director, journalist
- Ben Patrick Johnson – journalist, model, voice-over artist
- Brad Johnson – actor, former Marlboro Man[11]
- Daniel Kennedy – actor
- Gavin MacIntosh – child/teen actor, model
- Taryn Manning – actress[11]
- George Meyer – Simpsons producer and writer
- Clare McNulty – actress
- Bentley Mitchum – actor
- Noel Neill – actress
- Sierra Teller Ornelas – filmmaker and screenwriter
- Larry Pine – actor[11]
- Timothy Reckart – Oscar-nominated filmmaker
- Garry Shandling – comedian and actor[10]
- W. Eugene Smith – photographer
- Frederick Sommer – photographer[10]
- Martin Spanjers – actor
- Sally Todd – model, actress
- Janet Varney – actress
- Kate Walsh – actress[10]
- Lou Waters – newscaster
- Nick Young – actor[12]
- Parker Young – model, actor
Music, arts
edit- Panteha Abareshi – multidisciplinary visual artist
- Madeline Heineman Berger – music and arts promoter
- Duane Bryers – painter, illustrator and sculptor
- Joey Burns – musician
- Joseph Byrd – musician
- Luis Coronel – singer, musician
- John Convertino – musician
- James Pringle Cook – Western landscape painter
- Jason DeCorse – musician, member of Greyhound Soul[13]
- Ted DeGrazia – artist
- John Denver – singer, musician
- Daniel Martin Diaz – artist and musician
- Maynard Dixon – artist
- Duane Eddy – musician, member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
- Howe Gelb – musician
- Greg Ginn – musician, founder of Black Flag and SST Records
- Lalo Guerrero – father of Chicano music
- Cord Jefferson - writer and film director
- Ulysses Kay – composer
- Katie Lee – folk singer, writer, photographer
- Dan Levenson – old-time musician[14]
- Bob Log III – musician
- Linda McCartney - photographer, musician
- Arizona Muse – model
- Dennis F. Parker – musician, recording engineer
- Raymond Pettibon – artist
- Signe Pierce (born 1988) – multidisciplinary artist
- Rainer Ptacek – composer, musician
- Linda Ronstadt – singer, member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
- Ivan and Jane Rosenquist - art gallerists
- Barry Sadler – singer-songwriter
- Pat The Bunny Schneeweis – folk-punk artist
- Sara Tea - musician and DJ
- Mark Wystrach – musician
Politics
edit- Dean Burch – Republican National Committee chairman, 1964–1965; chairman, FCC[15]
- J. W. Buchanan - Arizona state senator, member of the Arizona House of Representatives
- James B. Burkholder – peace activist and retired U.S. Army officer
- Richard Carmona – U.S. Surgeon General
- Tony Carrillo – Arizona state legislator
- James N. Corbett – former Mayor of Tucson
- Dennis DeConcini – U.S. Senator
- Gabby Giffords – former U.S. Representative
- Raul Grijalva – U.S. Representative
- Alma Hernandez - Member of the Arizona House of Representatives
- Don Hummel – politician, former Tucson mayor, businessman
- Mark Kelly – U.S. Senator, former astronaut
- Laura Loomer – far-right political activist and white nationalist
- Kyrsten Sinema – U.S. Senator
- Robert C. Strong – U.S. diplomat
- Mark Udall – U.S. Senator from Colorado, former member of the House
- Mo Udall – Congressman
- Stewart Udall – politician, U.S. Secretary of Interior
- Tom Udall – U.S. Senator from New Mexico
Science and medicine
edit- David Arnett – astronomer
- Bart Bok – astronomer
- Frank Borman – astronaut, orbited the Moon on Apollo 8
- A. E. Douglass – astronomer, dendrochronologist
- Tom Gehrels – planetary scientist
- Emil Haury – archaeologist
- Rashad Khalifa – biochemist and founder of United Submitters International
- Gerard Kuiper – planetary scientist
- William Rathje – archaeologist, Garbage Project director
- Peter M. Rhee – physician
- Elizabeth Roemer – astronomer
- Peter Smith – scientist, principal investigator of Phoenix Project
- Andrew Weil – doctor who promotes integrative medicine
- Wieslaw Z. Wisniewski – astronomer
Military
edit- Thad Allen – U.S. Coast Guard admiral
- Frank L. Culin Jr. – United States Army major general
- José de Urrea – Mexican general
Crime
edit- Robert John Bardo – convicted murderer and stalker of actress and model, Rebecca Schaeffer
- Terri Cruz (1927-2017), American community organizer
- Jared Lee Loughner – convicted mass murderer who perpetrated the 2011 Tucson shooting
- Joseph Bonanno – mobster
- Stephen Paddock – mass shooter who perpetrated the 2017 Las Vegas shooting
- Charles Schmid – killer
Religion
edit- William M. Branham – minister
- Eusebio Kino – pioneer missionary and explorer
Miscellaneous
edit- María Urquides – educator, "Mother of Bilingual Education"
References
edit- ^ a b c d e Reichler, Joseph L., ed. (1979) [1969]. The Baseball Encyclopedia (4th ed.). New York: Macmillan Publishing. ISBN 0-02-578970-8.
- ^ "Chad Beyer Bio". Chad Beyer. Archived from the original on March 2, 2014. Retrieved September 4, 2014.
- ^ "Hank Leiber". Baseball-Reference.com. Archived from the original on July 5, 2014. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
- ^ "basketball-reference.com". basketball-reference.com. Retrieved April 9, 2015.
- ^ "Sam Sacksen". April 25, 2012. Archived from the original on April 25, 2012. Retrieved January 20, 2024.
- ^ "Alumnus, a Booth, & 8 Emmys" (PDF). Southern Utah University. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 12, 2013. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
- ^ "He's back: FC Tucson signs club legend, MLS veteran Donny Toia for rest of season". Arizona Daily Star. July 22, 2023. Retrieved December 22, 2024.
- ^ "Win Young". Sports-Reference.com. Archived from the original on February 2, 2014. Retrieved September 4, 2014.
- ^ Frischer, Rita Berman (March 1, 2009). "Sue Alexander". Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f "List of Famous People from Arizona". The Free Resource. Archived from the original on June 5, 2012. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
- ^ a b c "Famous People from Arizona". ThingsToDo.com. Archived from the original on July 2, 2014. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
- ^ "San Diego's Spielberg? Q&A With Director Brian Butler Near Sci-Fi Film Premiere". Times of San Diego. Archived from the original on August 10, 2020. Retrieved July 24, 2020.
- ^ Ventre, Sarah (September 27, 2007). "Greyhound Soul". Phoenix New Times. Archived from the original on October 20, 2012. Retrieved September 15, 2014.
- ^ Steinberg, David (January 2, 2009) "Old-time Musician Keeps Flame Burning: Levenson is Part Performer, Part Teacher and Part Historian", ProQuest 324446439 Albuquerque Journal. Retrieved April 18, 2024. (subscription required)
- ^ Pace, Eric (August 5, 1991). "Dean Burch, Presidential Adviser And F.C.C. Chairman, Dies at 63". The New York Times. Archived from the original on May 26, 2013. Retrieved September 6, 2014.