People who were born in, residents of, or otherwise closely associated with Millburn include: •
Jabri Abdur-Rahim (born 2002),
college basketball player for the
Providence Friars •
J. Stewart Baker (1893–1966), banker who served as the first president of
Chase Manhattan Bank •
Sean Baker (born 1971),
Palme d'Or winning,
Oscar nominated film director •
Craig Balsam, entertainment industry entrepreneur,
Tony Award-winning theatrical producer and film producer •
Michael Lewis Becker (born 1940), advertising executive •
Lee Bickmore (1908–1986), chairman of the board and CEO of
Nabisco •
Ruben Bolling (
pseudonym for Ken Fisher, born ),
cartoonist and the author of
Tom the Dancing Bug •
Prince Lorenzo Borghese (born 1973), star of the 9th season of
The Bachelor •
Courtney Brosnan (born 1995), professional soccer player who plays as a
goalkeeper for
Everton F.C. Women of the
Women's Super League and the
Republic of Ireland •
Scott Brunner (born 1957), former professional quarterback for the
New York Giants •
Andrew Catalon (born 1980), sportscaster who has announced
NFL on CBS,
PGA Tour on CBS,
College Basketball on CBS and
NCAA March Madness •
Bill Chinnock (1947–2007), singer-songwriter and guitarist who was part of the Asbury Park music scene with Bruce Springsteen in the late 1960s •
Buzzy Cohen (born 1985), recording music industry executive and trivia enthusiast best known for his association with the
game show Jeopardy! •
Ralph Cicerone (1943–2016),
atmospheric scientist and administrator, who served as president of the
National Academy of Sciences •
Richard Coogan (1914–2014), actor best known for playing the lead role in
Captain Video and His Video Rangers •
Leon Cooperman (born 1943), businessman, investor and philanthropist who is chairman and CEO of Omega Advisors •
Freeman Craw (1917–2017),
typeface designer •
Joseph P. Day (1874–1944), early land auctioneer and real-estate broker •
Ina Drew, former Chief Investment Officer at
JP Morgan Chase who resigned following the
2012 JPMorgan Chase trading loss that resulted in billions in losses to the bank •
Barry Eisler (born 1964), novelist •
Pablo Eisenberg (1932–2022), scholar, social justice advocate and former tennis player •
Max Eisenbud (born 1972), sports agent specializing in tennis •
Daniel Errico, children's book author and children's media content creator who is the creator and executive producer of Hulu's kids TV series
The Bravest Knight •
John Ferolito, the founder and current owner of
Arizona Beverage Company •
James C. Fletcher (1919–1991), 4th and 7th
Administrator of NASA •
William R. Forstchen (born 1950), author •
Martin S. Fox (1924–2020), publisher who served as President of the
Jewish Telegraphic Agency •
Theodosia Garrison (1874–1944), poet who published frequently in popular magazines from the 1890s into the 1920s •
Max Greyserman (born 1995),
professional golfer on the
PGA Tour •
Grace Hartigan (1922–2008),
Abstract Expressionist painter and a significant member of the
New York School of the 1950s and 1960s •
Anne Hathaway (born 1982), actress •
Herbert G. Hopwood (1898–1966), Commander in chief of the
United States Pacific Fleet from 1958 to 1960 •
Ariel Horn (born ), novelist and teacher •
Dara Horn (born 1977), novelist and professor of literature •
Marty Horn (born 1963), former professional
football player who was a
quarterback for one season with the
Philadelphia Eagles •
Mia Sinclair Jenness (born 2005), actress •
Elliott Kalan (born 1981), head writer for
The Daily Show •
Peter Kellogg (born 1942), director of the
Wall Street investment firm
Spear, Leeds & Kellogg, which was sold to
Goldman Sachs in 2000 for $5.5 billion •
Joe Kernen (born 1956),
CNBC news anchor and host of
Squawk Box •
Irwin I. Kimmelman (1930–2014), politician who served in both houses of the
New Jersey Legislature and served as the
Attorney General of New Jersey from 1982–1986 •
Eileen Kraus (1938–2017), business executive who broke the
glass ceiling to become the first woman to run a major bank in
Connecticut •
Igor Larionov (born 1960), center who played for the
New Jersey Devils •
Conor Leslie (born 1991), actress •
David Levithan (born 1972),
young adult fiction author and editor •
Robert D. Lilley (1912–1986), businessman who served as the president of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company (
AT&T) from 1972 to 1976 •
Betty Liu (born 1973), Bloomberg TV anchor •
Monroe Jay Lustbader (1931–1996), politician who served in the
New Jersey General Assembly from 1992 until his death, where he represented the
21st Legislative District •
Gus Mager (1878–1956), painter, illustrator and cartoonist •
Billy McFarland (born 1991), entrepreneur and founder of the
Fyre Festival •
John C. McGinley (born 1959), actor •
Robert Mulcahy (1932–2022), athletic director at
Rutgers University •
Maureen Ogden (1928–2022), seven-term member of the
New Jersey General Assembly who served as Mayor of Millburn from 1979 to 1981 •
C. Milford Orben (1898–1975), politician who served five terms in the
New Jersey General Assembly •
Laura Overdeck, education reformer, author and philanthropist •
Julie Parsonnet, infectious disease expert •
Sondra Perl, Professor
Emerita of
English at
Lehman College and director of the Ph.D. in
Composition and Rhetoric at the
Graduate Center of the City University of New York •
Belva Plain (1915–2010), author •
Mary Reckford (born 1992),
rower who competed in the
women's lightweight double sculls event at the
2020 Summer Olympics •
Brian Rolston (born 1973), professional hockey player •
Alex Rosenberg (born 1991), basketball player who plays for
Hapoel Afula B.C. of the
Israeli National League •
Peter Rost (born 1959), author, speaker, expert witness and drug industry whistleblower •
Bess Rous, actress •
Annie Russell (1864–1936), British-American theatrical actress •
Camille Sabie (1902–1998), athlete who represented the United States at the
1922 Women's World Games, winning gold medals in the 110 yd hurdles and
standing long jump and a bronze medal in the conventional
long jump •
James Solomon (born 1983/84), politician who is the
mayor-elect of
Jersey City, New Jersey •
Laura Sydell (born 1961), former senior technology reporter for
Public Radio International's
Marketplace, and a regular reporter on for
National Public Radio's
All Things Considered,
Morning Edition and
Weekend Edition •
Patti Stanger (born 1961), matchmaker •
Janet Sorg Stoltzfus, (1931–2004), educator, who established the Ta'iz Cooperative School, the first non-religious school in North Yemen •
Lisa Taddeo (born 1980), author and journalist known for her book
Three Women •
Carl Van Duyne (1946–1983),
sailor who competed in the
Finn event at the
1968 Summer Olympics •
Peter Van Sant (born 1953), reporter on
48 Hours •
Arthur T. Vanderbilt (1888–1957), judge and judicial reformer who served as
Chief Justice of the
New Jersey Supreme Court from 1948 to 1957 •
James Wallwork (1930–2024), politician who served in both houses of the
New Jersey Legislature •
Wang Yung-ching (1917–2008), former CEO and co-founder of
Formosa Plastics Group •
Thomas Watson Jr. (1914–1993), second President of
IBM and
United States Ambassador to the Soviet Union •
Joel Weingarten, former member of the
New Jersey General Assembly •
Zygi Wilf (born 1950), owner of the
Minnesota Vikings •
Rachel Zoe (born 1971), fashion stylist •
Alan Zweibel (born 1950), television producer and writer == References ==