The school has a hall of fame listing many notable alumni. They include: •
Paul Auster (born 1947, class of 1965), PEN Literary Award-winning author •
Tom Auth (born 1968, class of 1986),
rower who competed at the
1996 Summer Olympics and the
2000 Summer Olympics •
Julie Brill (born 1959, class of 1977), Commissioner of the
Federal Trade Commission from 2010 to 2016 •
Mark Bryant (born 1965, class of 1984), former
NBA basketball player •
Hazel Clark (born 1977, class of 1995), three time US Olympic runner and seven-time national champion •
Peter S. Connor (1932–1966, class of 1950), Marine posthumously awarded the
Medal of Honor •
Matthew Cooper (born 1963, class of 1980), reporter for
Time magazine; Political Editor for Time.com •
Peter Eisenman (born 1932), architect; one of the earliest practitioners of
deconstructivism in American architecture •
Linda Gottlieb (class of 1956), producer of
Dirty Dancing •
Amalya Kearse (born 1937, class of 1955), judge; first female African American partner in a Wall Street law firm; first female
United States Court of Appeals judge •
David Masur (born 1962, class of 1980), retired
soccer midfielder who played in the
Major Indoor Soccer League,
American Professional Soccer League and
USISL, and is head coach of the
St. John's Red Storm men's soccer team •
Ibtihaj Muhammad (born 1985, class of 2003), sabre fencer, author and Olympic medalist, who competed at the
2016 Summer Olympics, where she became the first American woman to compete in the Olympics in
hijab •
Rotimi (born 1988, class of 2006), actor and singer •
Roy Scheider (1932–2008, class of 1950), actor most widely known for his leading roles in
Jaws and
The French Connection (for which he was nominated for an
Academy Award) •
Andrew Shue (born 1967, class of 1985), actor best known for his leading role on the television series
Melrose Place, who produced and appeared in the 2007 film
Gracie •
SZA (born Solana Imani Rowe) (born 1989, class of 2008),
Academy Award-nominated and
Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter •
Robert Verdi (born 1968, class of 1986), television personality •
Judith Viorst (born 1931), poet and children's book author •
C. K. Williams (1936–2015, class of 1954),
Pulitzer Prize- and
National Book Award-winning poet •
Teresa Wright (1918–2005, class of 1938),
Academy Award-winning actress whose films include
Mrs. Miniver,
Shadow of a Doubt, and
The Pride of the Yankees •
Myrth York (born 1946, class of 1964), politician •
Amy Arnsten (born 1954, class of 1972),
neuroscientist at
Yale Medical School and an elected member of the
National Academy of Medicine; discovered how stress impairs higher brain functions and developed
guanfacine (Intuniv) for the treatment of
prefrontal cortex cognitive disorders •
Shan K. Bagby (born 1967, class of 1985),
U.S. Army brigadier general and the 28th Chief of the Army Dental Corps •
Olivia Baker (born 1996),
middle-distance runner who specializes in the
800 meters •
Dan Baum (1956–2020, class of 1974), journalist and writer •
Ken Bloom,
particle physicist who was captain of the school's physics team •
Joshua Braff (born 1967), novelist •
Marc Brown (born 1969, class of 1987), basketball coach and retired professional player; head basketball coach at
New Jersey City University •
Bisa Butler (born 1973, class of 1991),
fiber artist known for her quilted portraits and designs celebrating black life •
Patricia Charache (1929–2015, class of 1948), physician specializing in infectious disease and microbiology •
Claude Coleman Jr. (born 1974), musician who is the drummer of the alternative rock band
Ween •
Paul R. Ehrlich (1932–2026, class of 1949),
entomologist, professor of population studies; author of
The Population Bomb •
Roy Eisenhardt (born 1939), lawyer and former president of the
Oakland Athletics •
Mike Enoch (born 1977, class of 1995), White Nationalist blogger and podcaster, founder of The Right Stuff Radio •
Bruce Feirstein (born 1956), screenwriter and journalist best known for his screenplays for the
James Bond films
GoldenEye,
Tomorrow Never Dies and
The World Is Not Enough, and his best-selling humor books, including ''
Real Men Don't Eat Quiche'' •
Fred Feldman (born 1941, class of 1959), philosopher who specializes in
ethical theory •
David Ferry (1924–2023), poet and translator who won the
National Book Award for Poetry in 2012 •
Donna Fiducia (born 1956, class of 1975), radio DJ and TV news reader •
Christian Fuscarino (born ), community organizer;
LGBT activist; Executive Director of
Garden State Equality •
Kai Greene (born 1993), soccer player for
Rio Grande Valley FC Toros in the
United Soccer League •
Hikaru Wakeel Hayakawa (born 2001, class of 2019), climate justice activist, known for his role as
UNESCO and
WHO Youth Advisor and
Executive Director of Climate Cardinals •
Buzzy Hellring (died 1971, class of 1970), key developer of
Ultimate; killed in an auto accident his first year at
Princeton University •
Andrew Jacobs, journalist for
The New York Times; documentary film director and producer •
James Kaplan (born 1951, class of 1969), author of
Two Guys from Verona •
Peter W. Kaplan (1954–2013, class of 1972), editor of
The New York Observer •
Joe Kinney (born , class of 1984),
college baseball coach and former
outfielder; head coach of the
Lafayette Leopards baseball team •
Robert Kirsch (born 1966), state court judge from
New Jersey who is a nominee to serve as a
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the District of New Jersey •
Jessica Kirson (born 1969), stand-up comedian and producer •
Eileen Kraus (1938–2017), business executive who broke the
glass ceiling to become the first woman to run a major bank in
Connecticut •
Frank Langella (born 1938, class of 1955), actor •
David Levin (1948–2017),
balloonist; only person to have completed the "triple crown" by winning the World Gas Balloon Championship, the
World Hot Air Ballooning Championships and the
Gordon Bennett Cup •
Mark Leyner (born 1956), postmodernist author •
Selah Marley (born 1998), model •
Leyla McCalla (born 1985), musician •
Richard Meier (born 1934, class of 1952), architect whose work includes his design of the
Getty Center •
Grace Mirabella (1929–2021), former editor-in-chief of
Vogue magazine; founder of
Mirabella magazine •
Yosh Nijman (born 1995),
American football offensive tackle for the
Green Bay Packers of the
National Football League •
Ellen Pao (born 1970, class of 1987), former CEO of
Reddit •
Ahmad Khan Rahami (born 1988), suspect in the September 2016 New York and New Jersey bombings; later transferred to
Edison High School •
Eugene G. Rochow (1909–2002, class of 1927),
inorganic chemist who worked on
organosilicon chemistry •
Mark Rudd (born 1947, class of 1965), activist who led student war protests at CHS and later at
Columbia University; help founded
The Weathermen •
Ralph Sazio (1922–2008, class of 1941), former football player, assistant coach, head coach general manager and team president of the
Hamilton Tiger-Cats; inducted into the
Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1998 as a builder •
Robert Sheckley (1928–2005, class of 1946),
Hugo and
Nebula-nominated science fiction writer •
Pauline Gibling Schindler (1893–1977), Los Angeles arts figure •
Cortlandt V. R. Schuyler (1900–1993, class of 1918),
United States Army four-star general •
Peter Shapiro (1952–2024), financial services executive and former politician who was the youngest person ever elected to the
New Jersey General Assembly and went on to serve as
Essex County Executive •
Joel Silver (born 1952, class of 1970), producer of films such as
Lethal Weapon 4 and
The Matrix; invented
Ultimate in 1968 •
Angela Yee (born 1976, class of 1993), radio personality •
Strauss Zelnick (born 1957), businessman and lawyer who is the former chairman of media conglomerate
CBS Corporation ==In popular culture==