List of people from Woodstock, New York
This is a list of notable people who are associated with the town of Woodstock, New York, United States. They may not have been born there or live there presently, or may be deceased.
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Musicians
- Daevid Allen – singer and guitarist of The Soft Machine and Gong
- John Ashton – producer and guitarist for The Psychedelic Furs
- The Band members: Rick Danko, Levon Helm, Garth Hudson, Richard Manuel, and Robbie Robertson – the five shared a house together, where they recorded The Basement Tapes (with Bob Dylan) and wrote several songs for Music from Big Pink. The house, dubbed "Big Pink" is in neighboring Saugerties, though Danko, Manuel, Hudson and Helm all eventually moved to Woodstock. Danko and Helm are both buried in the Woodstock Cemetery on Rock City Road.
- Cyro Baptista – Brazilian-born percussionist
- Richard Bell – keyboardist
- Karl Berger – jazz educator, vibraphonist, founder Creative Music Studio
- Carla Bley – jazz composer, pianist, organist and bandleader[W 1]
- David Bowie – songwriter, musician, actor, fashion icon[W 2]
- Harvey Brooks - Bassist, Producer, Songwriter, composer
- Gabriel Butterfield – blues musician/drummer; son of the late Paul Butterfield
- Paul Butterfield – blues musician
- Johnny Cash – country singer, guitarist, songwriter, composer - Cash was from Arkansas!!!!
- Cindy Cashdollar – dobro, five-time Grammy Award winner
- Jimmy Cobb – jazz drummer
- Imani Coppola – singer, songwriter, musician (early 2000s)[W 3]
- Henry Cowell – composer [W 4]
- Marshall Crenshaw – musician, songwriter, resident from 1987–2004 [W 5]
- Karen Dalton – singer
- Kal David – blues musician
- Jack DeJohnette – jazz drummer [W 6]
- Robbie Dupree – singer-songwriter [W 7]
- Bob Dylan – singer-songwriter, lived in Woodstock 1965–1972; had his infamous motorcycle accident in Bearsville in 1966[W 8]
- Joey Eppard – Kingston, New York born singer, songwriter, guitarist, bassist; best known for his Kingston Rock band, 3 [W 9]
- Michael Esposito – lead guitarist with the Blues Magoos (Mercury Records 1960s)[W 10]
- Donald Fagen – co-founder Steely Dan[W 11]
- Jackson C. Frank – folk singer
- Matt Flynn – drummer for the band Maroon 5
- Jackson C. Frank – singer-songwriter
- Paul Green – founder of the Paul Green School of Rock Music (now School of Rock)
- Jeff Greene - Singer-Songwriter-Guitarist,Aurora Records.
- John Hall – musician, co-founder of Orleans
- Jimi Hendrix – guitarist, singer, songwriter
- John Herald – bluegrass singer, songwriter Greenbriar Boys [W 12]
- Darryl Jenifer – Bad Brains Bass
- Bill Keith – banjo player, composer; developed melodic or Keith style banjo picking[W 13]
- Steve Knight – keyboardist for Mountain
- Tony Levin – bassist
- Frank Luther – bassist
- John Martyn – singer-songwriter[W 14]
- John Medeski – keyboardist and composer for Medeski, Martin & Wood
- Pat Metheny – Grammy Award-winning guitarist
- Elizabeth Mitchell – singer, composer, guitarist for indie band Ida [W 15]
- Thelonious Monk – jazz musician
- Tim Moore – singer-songwriter
- Van Morrison – singer-songwriter
- Fred Neil – singer-songwriter
- Carl Newman aka A.C. Newman – lead singer, guitarist, songwriter of The New Pornographers
- David "Fathead" Newman – jazz musician
- Pauline Oliveros – pioneering accordionist and composer
- Graham Parker – singer-songwriter
- David Peel – member of The Lower East Side Band
- Kate Pierson – singer, songwriter, The B-52's
- John Platania – guitarist Van Morrison
- Vasant Rai – sarod player, composer
- Bonnie Raitt – singer-songwriter
- Tom Rapp – singer-songwriter, leader of the band Pearls Before Swine
- Billy Riker – guitarist, bassist and keyboard player, best known for Kingston Rock band, 3
- Mick Ronson – guitarist, producer arranger with David Bowie
- Todd Rundgren – singer-songwriter
- Ed Sanders – poet, founder of Fugs band
- Carlos Santana – guitarist
- Peter Schickele – composer, best known for music he wrote as P.D.Q. Bach
- Max Schneider – Rags, Nickelodeon's How To Rock; singer and songwriter
- John Sebastian – singer, a founder of The Lovin' Spoonful
- Ravi Shankar – sitar player, composer
- Robert Starer – pianist and composer
- Keith Strickland – composer,guitarist and founding member of The B-52s
- Libby Titus – singer, songwriter
- Michael Todd – bassist for Coheed and Cambria[W 2]
- Artie Traum – award-winning guitarist, producer and songwriter
- Happy Traum – folk musician
- David Van Tieghem – composer, percussionist
- Gene Ween – a founding member of the band Ween[1]
- Jim Weider – telecaster guitarist, member of The Band
- Eric Weissberg – banjo player, best known for theme from movie Deliverance
- Gary Windo – saxophonist
- Yehudi Wyner – composer, musical director of The Turnau Opera
- Rachael Yamagata – singer-songwriter; wrote the album Elephants...Teeth Sinking Into Heart during a nine-month period in Woodstock
Artists
- Isaac Abrams – painter, sculptor[2][3]
- Alexander Archipenko – sculptor
- George Ault – painter
- Milton Avery – painter
- George Bellows – painter
- Arnold Blanch – painter [W 16]
- James Brooks – painter
- Edward Leigh Chase – painter
- Frank Swift Chase – painter
- Bruce Currie – painter[4]
- Andrew Michael Dasburg – painter
- Julio de Diego – painter, jeweler[5]
- Richard Diebenkorn – painter
- Michael Fellerman - sculptor
- Harvey Fite – sculptor
- Mary Frank – painter
- Milton Glaser – graphic designer (creator of the ‘I Love New York’ logo)
- Marion Greenwood – painter, muralist[6]
- Philip Guston – painter
- Sam Henderson – cartoonist
- Robert Henri – painter
- Eva Hesse – sculptor
- Susan Horner – graphic designer, magazine art director
- Richard Humann – conceptual artist
- Joel Iskowitz – Master Designer, United States Mint
- Sy Kattelson – photographer
- Yasuo Kuniyoshi – painter, sculptor
- Jacques Kupfermann – painter
- Ronnie Landfield – painter
- Elliot Landy – photographer
- Doris Lee – painter
- Eugene Ludins – painter and art teacher
- Ethel Magafan – painter
- Norm Magnusson – painter, sculptor, photographer, political artist
- Georges Malkine – painter
- Fletcher Martin – painter
- Paul McMahon – conceptual artist, musician[7]
- Paul Meltsner – painter
- Jenny Nelson – painter
- Pia Oste-Alexander – painter[8]
- Lyn Ott – painter
- Anton Refregier – painter
- Randall Schmit – painter
- Eugene Speicher – painter
- Bradley Walker Tomlin – painter
- Rob Wade - graphic designer/painter
Writers
- Shalom Auslander – author
- Larry Beinhart – author of American Hero, which was adapted for the political-parody film Wag the Dog
- Heywood Hale Broun – author and TV commentator
- Hob Broun – author[9]
- Joseph Campbell – author, mythologist
- Jeff Cohen – media critic
- Hart Crane – poet
- Robert Duncan – poet
- Alf Evers – historian and author
- Gail Godwin – author
- Carey Harrison – novelist, dramatist
- Paul Hoffman – science author and TV host
- Barney Hoskyns – author and music journalist
- Howard Koch – screenwriter who wrote 1938 radio drama The War of the Worlds and won Academy Award for Casablanca
- Sean Lahman – historian and sportswriter
- Henry Morton Robinson – novelist
- David Robison – author
- Ed Sanders – author and publisher
- Ruth Simpson – author and lesbian/feminist activist
- Anita Miller Smith – historian, painter and herbalist
- Clark Strand – non-fiction spiritual writer
- Theodore Sturgeon – science-fiction author
- Robert Thurman – Buddhist scholar, author; father of actress Uma Thurman
- Eli Waldron – short story writer, novelist, poet, journalist, artist
- Walter Weyl – leader of the Progressive movement
Film directors
- Leon Gast – director of When We Were Kings[W 17]
- David McDonald – writer and director of the films Woodstock Can't Get There From Here and Woodstock Revisited
- Sarah Pirozek – director of Free Tibet
Actors and theater people
- Marianne Appel (1913-1988), artist
- Gaston Bell (1877-1963) – stage and silent screen actor; retired to Woodstock; first director the Woodstock Community Players[10]
- Jennifer Connelly (1970 - ) – Oscar-winning actress, lived in Woodstock for several years during her childhood
- Brad Dourif (1950 - ) – Oscar-nominated actor, lived in Woodstock in the 1970s and 80s
- Ethan Hawke (1970 - ) – Oscar-nominated actor, lived just outside Woodstock with then-wife Uma Thurman[11]
- Piper Laurie (1932 - ) – Oscar-nominated actress, lived in Woodstock in the 1970s
- Lee Marvin (1924-1987) – Oscar-winning actor, lived in Woodstock periodically throughout his life
- Sylvia Miles (1932 - ) – Oscar-nominated actress
- Estelle Parsons (1927 - ) – Oscar-winning actress, appeared in summer stock productions in Woodstock during the 1960s
- Max Schneider (1992 - ) – actor, singer, songwriter
- Uma Thurman (1970 - ) – Oscar-nominated actress, lived in Woodstock during her childhood; daughter of resident Robert Thurman;[W 2] returned with former husband Ethan Hawke[11]
Others
- Betty Ballantine and Ian Ballantine - founders of Bantam Books and Ballantine Books; after the 1970s, were independent publishers; said to have started the paperback book industry in America
- John Burroughs - naturalist
- Josephine McKim Chalmers - swimmer, medalist in 1928 and 1932 Summer Olympics; actress; sister-in law of artist Philip Guston
- George Cowan - recording and mixing engineer
- John Dewey - educator, a founder of the philosophical school of Pragmatism
- Albert Grossman - manager, producer and founder of Bearsville Records; his studio has attracted hundreds of musicians to record in Woodstock[W 2]
- Steven Hager - chief editor, High Times magazine
- Phil Jackson - NBA basketball coach and player, general manager of New York Knicks
- Philippe Petit - funambulist, known for walking a tightrope between the World Trade Center twin towers
- John Steup - co-founder and Vice President of CD Baby 1998–2006
- Kathleen de Vere Taylor - suffragist and stockbroker
- David Bowie during the Heathen Tour
- Bob Dylan at the Azkena Rock Festival in 2010
- Jimi Hendrix on Dutch television
- Thelonious Monk at Minton's Playhouse, 1947
- Andrew Dasburg during the 1940s
- Lyn Ott in his Woodstock studio in 1964
- Cary Harrison in 2006
- Jennifer Aniston at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2008
- Chevy Chase at the Academy Awards, 1990
- Uma Thurman at a Cannes press conference in 2001
References
- References for notability
- ↑ "Coming Clean With Gene Ween: Ween's Former Frontman Talks Sobriety and Miley Cyrus". newsweek.com. 2014-05-14. Retrieved 2014-05-14.
- ↑ McCormick, Carlo. "DREAM WEAVER". artnet.com.
- ↑ Murphy, Meghan. "Economic slump hits local artists". Times Herald-Record.
- ↑ "Woodstock Artist Bruce Currie". Catskill Mountain Foundation.
- ↑ "Exhibition of modern hand made jewelery opens at museum of modern art". The Museum of Modern Art.
- ↑ "Keith Sheridan Fine Prints – Marion Greenwood". Retrieved February 3, 2012.
- ↑ "PAUL MCMAHON: REALLY UNDERSTAND THE REAL REALITY". LA Record.
- ↑ "ART REVIEWS; Gems, Indoors And Out". The New York Times. July 27, 2003.
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in Authors list (help) - ↑ Kakutani, Michiko (August 7, 1985). "BOOKS OF THE TIMES". The New York Times.
- ↑ Community Players Formed at Woodstock - Kingston Daily Freeman (Kingston, New York) Wednesday, November 06, 1935; pg. 7
- 1 2 "Press Stories." The Rural Connection
- References establishing association with Woodstock
- ↑ Michel, Karen. "A Traditional Jazz Christmas, An Unlikely Source". NPR. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
- 1 2 3 4 Lee, Denny (February 27, 2004). "HAVENS; Woodstock Rocks On, but the Beat Is Quieter". New York Times. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
- ↑ "List of Famous Musicians maintained by the Woodstock Chamber of Commerce". Woodstock Chamber of Commerce.
- ↑ "THE PHILHARMONIA TRIO" (PDF). Retrieved April 15, 2011.
- ↑ Landers, Rick. "Marshall Crenshaw Interview: Hollywood Rock and Roller". Guitar International. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
- ↑ Kohlhasse, Bill (June 15, 1990). "DeJohnette & Co. He's Outdone Himself by Teaming Up With Hancock, Metheny and Holland". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 17, 2011.
- ↑ Spears, Steve. "'Steal Away' crooner Robbie Dupree performs in Largo Aug. 28". St Petersburg Times. Retrieved April 17, 2011.
- ↑ Heylin, Bob Dylan: Behind the Shades Revisited, pp. 267.
- ↑ Barry, John W (September 9, 2005). "Secret's out 'bout 3". The Poughkeepsie Journal. Retrieved April 17, 2011.
- ↑ Tomcho, Sandy. "Music briefs: Esposito benefit, "The Face of Breast Cancer," Ronan Tynan". Times Herald Record. Retrieved April 17, 2011.
- ↑ Noik, Sherry. "Welcome back to Woodstock". Retrieved July 15, 2011.
- ↑ Rockwell, John (May 19, 1978). "Music: John Herald". New York Times. Retrieved July 15, 2011.
- ↑ Revikn, Andrew C (July 16, 1995). "Dueling Banjos on a Grand Scale: Rival Festivals". New York Times. Retrieved October 31, 2011.
- ↑ "John's Diary 1960s and 1970s". Retrieved October 31, 2011.
- ↑ Atikson, Brian T. "Making music is family affair for Elizabeth Mitchell". Retrieved October 31, 2011.
- ↑ http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/searchimages/images/item_1975.htm
- ↑ Staff. "Woodstock resident Leon Gast wins Sundance award". Daily Freeman (Kingston). Retrieved July 15, 2011.
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