People who were born in, residents of, or otherwise closely associated with Paterson include: (
(B) denotes that the person was born in Paterson). •
Tom Acker (1930–2021), MLB pitcher who played for four seasons with the
Cincinnati Reds •
Jorge Acosta (born 1964), retired Colombian-born American soccer forward who earned 12 caps with the U.S. national team in 1991 and 1992 •
Jimmie Adams (1888–1933), silent-screen comedian and actor •
Mike Adams (born 1981), pro football player for the
Indianapolis Colts •
Adeva (born 1960),
house music and
R&B vocalist •
Nelson Algren (1909–1981), author best known for his novel
The Man with the Golden Arm •
Henry C. Allen (1872–1942), politician who represented
New Jersey's 6th congressional district in the
United States House of Representatives 1905–1907 •
Bruce Arians (born 1952), former head coach of the NFL's
Arizona Cardinals and
Tampa Bay Buccaneers •
Jillian Armenante (born 1968), television and film actress, known for playing the role of Donna Kozlowski on
Judging Amy (B) •
Gerald Ash (born 1942), electrical engineer at
Bell Labs, whose research focused on routing problems
(B) •
Sisto Averno (1925–2012), guard and linebacker who played in the NFL for the original
Baltimore Colts (1950), the
New York Yanks (1951),
Dallas Texans (1952) and the
Baltimore Colts (1953–1954) •
Vincent Baggetta (born 1944), actor best known for his title role in the 1978–79 television series,
The Eddie Capra Mysteries •
Samm Sinclair Baker (1909–1997), author/coauthor of many how-to and self-help books, most notably
The Complete Scarsdale Medical Diet which he coauthored with Dr.
Herman Tarnower (B) •
Nathan Barnert (1838–1927), businessman and politician; twice elected as the Mayor of Paterson •
Lawrence Barrett (1838–1891), leading actor of the 19th century •
Charles K. Barton (1886–1958), politician; served in the
New Jersey Senate 1943–1948
(B) •
Charles D. Beckwith (1838–1921), represented
New Jersey's 5th congressional district 1889–1891; mayor of Paterson 1885–1889 •
Candace Beinecke (born 1946/1947), Senior Partner of Hughes Hubbard & Reed, where in 1999 she became the first female head of a major New York firm •
Alexander Berzin (born 1944), Buddhist scholar, translator and teacher focusing on the Tibetan tradition •
Jeffrey Bewkes (born 1952), CEO, President, and chairman of the Board of
Time Warner •
Jacob Bigeleisen (1919–2010),
chemist who worked on the
Manhattan Project on techniques to extract
uranium-235 from uranium ore
(B) •
Chauncey Black (born 1968), singer with the vocal group
Blackstreet •
Glenn Borgmann (born 1950), former professional baseball
catcher who played in
Major League Baseball for the
Minnesota Twins and
Chicago White Sox (B) •
Jennie Bosschieter (1882–1900), woman who was raped and murdered, as an early victim of the date rape drug
chloral hydrate which caused her death •
Joseph Brain (born 1940), physiologist and environmental health researcher
(B) •
Bill Braun, auto racer •
Pete Bremy (born 1952), rock bass player best known for his associations with
Vanilla Fudge and
Cactus (B) •
Gaetano Bresci (1869–1901), weaver and anarchist, assassinated Italian king
Umberto I •
Johnny Briggs (born 1944), former Major League Baseball player •
Mark Brown (born 1980), NFL linebacker who played for the
New York Jets •
Edna Buchanan (born 1939), journalist and writer best known for her crime mystery novels •
Rubin "Hurricane" Carter (1937–2014), boxer whose triple murder conviction was later overturned, subject of the
Bob Dylan song "
Hurricane" and the movie
The Hurricane •
Federico Castelluccio (born 1964), Italian-born actor, most known for portraying
Furio Giunta on the
HBO series
The Sopranos •
Frank Catania (born 1941), politician who served in the
New Jersey General Assembly from the
35th Legislative District 1990–1994
(B) •
Ersilia Cavedagni (1862–?), Italian-American
anarcha-feminist activist, writer, and editor •
Joe Clark (1938–2020), educator and former principal of
Eastside High School, depicted by
Morgan Freeman in the movie
Lean on Me •
Stockton B. Colt (1863–1937), architect (B) •
Lou Costello (1906–1959), comedian, actor and producer and part of the comedy duo
Abbott and Costello (He made frequent references to the town in his films.)
(B) •
Pat Costello (1902–1990), actor, producer,
stunt double and the brother of Lou Costello, who was the executive producer for
The Abbott and Costello Show (B) •
Ernestina Cravello (1880–1942),
Italian-American anarcha-feminist activist during the late 19th and early 20th centuries •
Sunda Croonquist, comic and actress •
Victor Cruz (born 1986), wide receiver for the NFL Super Bowl championship team, the
New York Giants •
Joe Cunningham (1931–2021), former MLB
first baseman and
outfielder who played for the
St. Louis Cardinals,
Chicago White Sox and
Washington Senators (B) •
Joan Wadleigh Curran (born 1950), visual artist, painter and printmaker
(B) •
Frank Davenport (1912–1995), politician; Sheriff of Passaic County and served one term in the New Jersey Senate
(B) •
Anthony Davis (born 1951), pianist and composer
(B) •
Richard W. DeKorte (1936–1979), politician; member of the
New Jersey General Assembly (B) •
Andrew Derrom (1817–1892), military officer, inventor, civil engineer, and industrialist •
Bob DeVos (born 1946),
jazz guitarist (B) •
William L. Dill (1874–1952), jurist who served on the
New Jersey Court of Errors and Appeals; politician; Democratic nominee for
Governor of New Jersey in 1928 and 1934 •
Larry Doby (1923–2003),
Hall of Fame Major League Baseball player and manager who broke the
color barrier in the
American League •
Eric Downing (born 1978), NFL player •
Henry Drucker (1942–2002), political scientist and university fund-raiser
(B) •
Jacqueline Dubrovich (born 1994), Olympic
foil fencer (B) •
Lou Duva (1922–2017),
boxing trainer, manager, and promoter, member of the
International Boxing Hall Of Fame •
Randy Edelman (born 1947), film and TV score composer
(B) •
Barry Edelstein (born 1965), theatre director, author, and educator; artistic director of the
Old Globe Theatre in San Diego, California
(B) •
W. Cary Edwards (1944–2010), politician;
Attorney General of New Jersey 1986–1989
(B) •
Eddie Einhorn (1936–2016), television executive, part-owner of the
Chicago White Sox •
Derrick Etienne (born 1996), professional soccer player for the
New York Red Bulls •
William W. Evans Jr. (1921–1999), politician who served as Mayor of
Wyckoff and in the New Jersey General Assembly; candidate for the Republican nomination for president in 1968
(B) •
George Feifer (1934–2019), journalist, novelist, and historian, known for his autobiographical novels chronicling life in the Soviet Union
(B) •
Laurie Fendrich (born 1948), artist, writer and educator best known for her geometric abstract paintings
(B) •
John A. Ferraro (1946–2010), actor, academic, stage director, and television director •
Helene Fortunoff (1933–2021), businessperson who headed
Fortunoff (B) •
J. John Fox (–1999), judge known for his central role in the founding of the
University of Massachusetts Medical School (B) •
Sidney Geist (1914–2005), artist who was known for his sculpture and his art criticism
(B) •
Abe Gelbart (1911–1994), mathematician, founding dean of the Belfer Graduate School of Science at
Yeshiva University, namesake of the International Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences at
Bar-Ilan University in
Ramat Gan, Israel •
Allen Ginsberg (1926–1997), writer and
Beat Generation poet •
Teresa Giudice (born 1972), reality show participant on
The Real Housewives of New Jersey •
Abraham Godwin (1724–1777), captain of Marines
USS Lady Washington in 1776 •
Abraham Godwin (1763–1835), member of the New Jersey General Assembly 1802–1806 •
Percy Goetschius (1853–1943), teacher of the theory of
musical composition (B) •
Shotsie Gorman (born 1951), tattoo artist, painter, sculptor and poet
(B) •
Bill Haast (1910–2011), snake and venom specialist, director of Miami Serpentarium Laboratories
(B) •
Alen Hadzic (born 1991), former
épée fencer, banned for life for sexual misconduct
(B) •
Thomas Hagan (born 1941), one of the men convicted for the assassination of
Malcolm X •
Joseph Haj, actor, eighth artistic director of the
Guthrie Theater •
Alexander Hamilton (1755/57–1804), first
United States Secretary of the Treasury; helped found the
Society for the Establishment of Useful Manufactures (S.U.M.) that helped establish Paterson around the Great Falls •
Keith Hamilton (born 1971), NFL defensive tackle who spent his entire 12-season career with the New York Giants •
Larry Hand (born 1940),
defensive end and
defensive tackle who played in the
National Football League (NFL) for the
Detroit Lions 1965–1977
(B) •
The Happenings, pop music group created in the 1960s •
Donald Hayden (1937–2014), politician who served in the
New Jersey General Assembly from the
35th Legislative District from 1994 to 1996, and on the Paterson city council
(B) •
Gerald Hayes (born 1980), linebacker for the
Arizona Cardinals •
Jon Herington (born 1954), guitarist, singer-songwriter, record producer, and session musician
(B) •
Ureli Corelli Hill (1802–1875), music conductor and founder of the
New York Symphony Orchestra •
Garret A. Hobart (1844–1899), Speaker of the New Jersey General Assembly, President of the New Jersey Senate and the 24th Vice President of the United States, serving under President William McKinley •
Kendall Holt (born 1981),
light welterweight boxer who held the WBO junior welterweight championship 2008–09 •
Michael Hossack (1946–2012), drummer, member of the
Doobie Brothers •
William Hughes (1872–1918), lawyer and politician who represented
New Jersey's sixth congressional district (from 1903 to 1905 and 1907 to 1912) and served as United States Senator from New Jersey (from 1913 to 1918) •
Michael Jace (born 1962), actor who appeared in
The Shield •
Ameer Jackson (born 1994), American professional basketball player
(B) •
Charlie Jamieson (1893–1969), Major League Baseball player •
Henry Janowitz (1915–2008), professor emeritus of
Gastroenterology at the
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, known for his contributions into
inflammatory bowel diseases
(B) •
Morris Janowitz (1919–1988), sociologist and professor who made major contributions to sociological theory, the study of prejudice, urban issues and patriotism
(B) •
Charles Samuel Joelson (1916–1999), lawyer and politician who served on the Paterson City Council and as the Representative for
New Jersey's 8th congressional district 1961–1969 •
Devhonte Johnson,
Brazilian jiu-jitsu competitor and coach
(B) •
Jemal Johnson (born 1985), former professional soccer player, most known for his spell with English
League One side
MK Dons (B) •
Maxine Jones (born 1966), singer, member of
En Vogue •
Ron Cephas Jones (born 1957), actor known for
This is Us,
Mr. Robot and
Across The Universe •
Just Blaze (born 1978),
hip hop music producer •
Alfred E. Kahn (1917–2010), economist and deregulation advocate •
Alvin Kass (1935–2025), rabbi who was the chief chaplain of the
New York City Police Department (B) •
Carla A. Katz (born 1959), labor leader who served as president of Local 1034 of the
Communications Workers of America 1999–2008 •
Joseph Keller (1923–2016), mathematician who specialized in
applied mathematics (B) •
King Kelly (1857–1894), Major League Baseball player and member of the Baseball Hall of Fame •
Bernard Kerik (born 1955), former
New York City Police Commissioner •
Joseph Kipley (1848–1904),
Superintendent of the
Chicago Police Department 1897–1901
(B) •
Gabriel Kolko (1932–2014), historian, author
(B) •
Garret Kramer, author and performance coach
(B) •
Vincent R. Kramer (1918–2001),
United States Marine Corps colonel who was a
guerrilla warfare expert and was awarded the
Navy Cross during the
Korean War (B) •
Peter Kreeft (born 1937), philosopher at
Boston College and
The King's College and author of numerous popular books of
Christian philosophy,
theology, and
apologetics (B) •
Sally Kornbluth (born 1960),
cell biologist and academic administrator, serving as the 18th
president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (B) •
Jim Lampley (born 1960),
professional basketball center who played for the
Philadelphia 76ers during the 1986–87 season •
Sue Ane Langdon (born 1936), actress
(B) •
Frank Lautenberg (1924–2013), politician who represented New Jersey in the
United States Senate (B) •
Jaynee LaVecchia (born 1954), Justice who has served on the
New Jersey Supreme Court since 2000
(B) •
John L. Leal (1858–1914), physician and water utility sanitary adviser; responsible for the installation of the first drinking water chlorine disinfection system in the United States •
Walt Levinsky (1929–1999), big band and orchestral player, composer, arranger, and bandleader •
Son Lewis (born 1951), blues singer and guitarist
(B) •
John LoCascio (born 1991), defenseman for the
Rochester Rattlers in
Major League Lacrosse •
David P. Long (born 1975), academic administrator, professor and Roman Catholic
canonist (B) •
Adrienne Mancia (1927–2022), curator best known for her work with the
Museum of Modern Art and the
Brooklyn Academy of Music •
Don Martin (1931–2000), cartoonist for
Mad magazine •
Edward L. Masry (1932–2005), attorney whose firm was behind the case featured in
Erin Brockovich (B) •
Frank Mattiace (born 1961), former professional
football nose tackle and coach
(B) •
Markis McDuffie (born 1997), professional basketball player for
Napoli Basket of the Italian
Lega Basket Serie A •
Thomas McEwan Jr. (1854–1926), represented
New Jersey's 7th congressional district from 1895 to 1899 •
Edward McNamara (1884–1944), Broadway and Hollywood actor who was discovered while working as a police officer in Paterson
(B) •
Verna Mersereau (1896–1935), dancer and actress who performed on stage and screen
(B) •
George Middleton (1880–1967), playwright
(B) •
Gemar Mills, author and speaker, who was the youngest ever principal of
Malcolm X Shabazz High School when he took the job at age 27 •
Susan Misner (born 1971), actress who has appeared on films and television, including roles in
One Life to Live,
The Bronx Is Burning,
Rescue Me and
Chicago •
Joe Mooney (1911–1975), jazz and pop accordionist, organist, and vocalist, who went blind at the age of 10 •
Paul H. Mussen (1922–2000),
developmental psychologist who described stages of child psychological development
(B) •
Greg Olsen (born 1985), former
tight end for the
Carolina Panthers,
Chicago Bears, and
Seattle Seahawks (B) •
Kenny Parker (born 1946), former
American football defensive back who played in the NFL for the
New York Giants (B) •
Vincent N. Parrillo, professor of sociology at
William Paterson University •
Patricia Peardon (1923/24-1993), actress who originated the title role in the Broadway play
Junior Miss (B) •
Simon Perchik (1923–2022), poet •
Joseph D. Pistone (born 1939), FBI agent and author who infiltrated the
Bonanno crime family, as described in the film
Donnie Brasco •
Robert Pitofsky (1929–2018), lawyer and politician who was the chairman of the
Federal Trade Commission from 1995 to 2001
(B) •
Bucky Pizzarelli (1926–2020), jazz guitarist •
John Pizzarelli (born 1960), jazz guitarist and singer •
Martin Pizzarelli (born 1963), jazz double-bassist •
David Prater (1937–1988), of the soul duo
Sam & Dave •
Amos H. Radcliffe (1870–1950), Mayor of Paterson, New Jersey, 1916–1919; represented
New Jersey's 7th congressional district 1919–1923 •
Prince Randian (1871–1934),
sideshow performer •
Zoogz Rift (1953–2011), musician, painter and professional wrestling personality
(B) •
Lori L. Robinson,
United States Army major general serving as the 80th Commandant of the
United States Military Academy •
Sarah-Nicole Robles (born 1991), actress and voice actress, best known for providing the voice of
Luz Noceda in the
Disney Channel animated series
The Owl House •
George Rochberg (1918–2005), classical composer
(B) •
Frederick Reines (1918–1998), Nobel Prize-winning physicist who co-discovered the
neutrino •
Frankie Ruiz (1958–1998),
salsa music singer
(B) •
John Ryle (1817–1887), industrialist and capitalist; known as the "father of the United States silk industry", starting the first silk mill in 1839 •
Mary Danforth Ryle (1833–1904), philanthropist who donated millions to various city institutions, notably the Danforth Memorial Library •
Kathryn Salfelder (born 1987), classical composer
(B) •
Nicholas Samra (born 1944),
eparch of the
Melkite Catholic Eparchy of Newton in the United States, elected in 2011
(B) •
Kathryn Scola (1891–1982) screenwriter known for the pre-code film
Baby Face (1933), and the adaptation of the
Dashiell Hammett novel
The Glass Key (1935). •
Dave Scott (born 1953), former
American football offensive lineman who played in the NFL for the
Atlanta Falcons •
Louis Scott (1889–1954), gold medal winner at the
1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm •
Omar Sheika (born 1977), former
professional boxer and multiple time
super middleweight world title challenger •
Marcel Shipp (born 1978), running back for the
Arizona Cardinals •
Rocco Silano (born 1962), magician and author •
Dave Sime (1936–2016), Olympic medal-winning
sprinter •
Jack Wilkinson Smith (1873–1949), painter
(B) •
John Spencer (1946–2005), actor, best known for his role as
Leo McGarry, the
White House Chief of Staff on the television drama
The West Wing •
John A. Spizziri (born 1934), politician who served in the New Jersey General Assembly from 1972 to 1978
(B) •
Bill Stern (1926 –2021), botanist
(B) •
Sol Stetin (1910–2005), labor union leader •
Lewis Atterbury Stimson (1844–1917), surgeon who was the first to perform a public operation in the United States using
Joseph Lister's antiseptic technique
(B) •
J. Michael Straczynski (born 1954), science-fiction writer, creator and writer for
Babylon 5 (B) •
Jesse Talbot (1805–1879)
Hudson River School painter, Associate Member of the
National Academy of Design, and friend to
Walt Whitman. Talbot lived in Paterson in the late 1840s and painted some of his major works there •
Kazbek Tambi (born 1961),
Seton Hall University women's soccer team head coach and retired U.S. soccer midfielder; member of the
U.S. Olympic soccer team at the
1984 Summer Olympics; spent two seasons in the
North American Soccer League, four in the
Major Indoor Soccer League and one in the
American Soccer League; former
United States U-17 women's soccer team coach •
Albert Tangora (1903–1978), holder of the speed record for typing on a manual typewriter •
Joe Taub (1929–2017), businessman who joined his brother
Henry Taub and
Frank Lautenberg in building the payroll company
Automatic Data Processing; later was part of an investment group that acquired the
New Jersey Nets (B) •
Tim Thomas (born 1977), NBA basketball player •
Dante Tomaselli (born 1969), horror film screenwriter, director, and composer
(B) •
Robert Torricelli (born 1951), politician, former representative of New Jersey in the United States Senate and United States House of Representatives
(B) •
Sammy Turner (born 1932), singer who was popular in the late 1950s
(B) •
Gregory Van Maanen (born 1947), artist •
Ed Van Put (1936–2024), fisherman, author and conservationist
(B) •
Elizabeth Vargas (born 1962),
ABC news anchor
(B) •
Bruce Vilanch (born 1948), six-time
Emmy Award-winning comedy writer, actor and songwriter •
"Uncle" Floyd Vivino (born 1951), comic and star of
Uncle Floyd Show, the longest-running broadcast and cable TV show in New Jersey; appeared in film
Good Morning, Vietnam •
Jerry Vivino (born 1954), musician
(B) •
Jimmy Vivino (born 1955), musician, guitarist, member of
The Max Weinberg 7 •
Fetty Wap (born 1991), rapper and singer •
William Wadsworth Evans (1887–1972), politician who served in the
New Jersey General Assembly from 1919 to 1924
(B) •
Carter Warren (born 1999),
American football offensive tackle who played for the
New York Jets •
Darryl Watkins (born 1984), professional basketball player who played collegiately at
Syracuse •
Patrick Warburton (born 1964), actor, best known for his roles in
Seinfeld and
Family Guy (B) •
Bernie Wayne (1919–1993), composer best known for "
Blue Velvet" •
Joseph Weber (1919–2000), physicist who gave the earliest public lecture on the principles behind the
laser and the
maser and developed
Weber bars, the first
gravitational wave detectors
(B) •
Carl Weinrich (1904–1991), classical organist known for his recitals and recordings of
Baroque organ music
(B) •
Bert Wheeler (1895–1968), of the comedy duo
Wheeler & Woolsey •
Alice White (1904–1983), film actress •
K'Waun Williams (born 1991),
cornerback who has played in the NFK for the
San Francisco 49ers and
Denver Broncos •
William Carlos Williams (1883–1963), important modern 20th-century poet; author of the poem "
Paterson" •
C. Mortimer Wiske (1853–1934), conductor and organist for several churches in Paterson, and the longtime director of the Paterson Music Festival •
Michael Wolff (b. 1953), journalist and author •
Donald R. Yennie (1924–1993).
theoretical physicist (B) •
Jerry Zaks (born 1946), stage and television director and actor •
Giuseppe Zangara (1900–1933), assassin of Chicago mayor
Anton Cermak, though President-elect
Franklin D. Roosevelt may have been his intended target •
Herb Zarrow (1925–2008), magician who created the
Zarrow shuffle (B) •
Paul Zukerberg (born 1957), lawyer, activist and politician
(B) == See also ==