Arts and media •
George Alagiah, BBC newsreader •
Alastair Appleton, TV presenter •
Tomasz Schafernaker, BBC weather presenter •
Alfie Allen, actor •
Alec Utgoff, actor •
Guy Mankowski, author •
Anthony Minghella, film director (1954–2008). Oscar winner:
The English Patient, Oscar nominee:
The Talented Mr Ripley,
The Reader •
Guillaume Gallienne, actor, screenwriter and film director. Winner of two
Molière Awards and two
César Awards (2014) •
Garrick Palmer English painter and wood engraver •
Andy Cunningham puppeteer, writer and ventriloquist, OJ 1961–68 [d. 2017] •
Christopher Logue, English poet [d. 2011] •
Mike Hugg founding member of the 1960s group
Manfred Mann •
Colin Purbrook, internationally renowned jazz pianist, 'the Grand Vizier of parties', OJ 1948–54 [d. 1999] •
Erica Rutherford artist, filmmaker and writer •
Barry Perowne novelist, best known for continuing the
A. J. Raffles series, OJ 1916 (d. 1990)
Professions •
Ian Burnett, school captain 1975–6, called to the Bar in 1980, appointed to the High Court in 2008; promoted to the Court of Appeal in 2014; and from 2 October 2017, the
Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales 2017–2023 • Charles Gratwicke, honorary recorder of Chelmsford 2013 • Kevin Fitzgerald, head boy 1978, honoured for ‘services to British economic interests’ in the Queen's Birthday 2013 Honours List. Chief executive of the Copyright Licensing Agency • Ross Shimmon, former Secretary General, International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions •
Cuthbert Johnson, Abbot of
Quarr Abbey, d.2017 • Hedley Greentree, British architect. OJ 1949–1955. Designer of iconic Portsmouth landmarks, including the
Spinnaker Tower,
Gunwharf Quays re-development and the
Sails of the South (d.2017) • Brian Davis, former Chief executive, Nationwide Building Society • Michael Connor, HM Diplomatic Service, former British Ambassador, El Salvador •
Sean Hughes former MP, a British history teacher and Labour politician (d. 1990) •
Norman Cole, MP, entered Parliament in 1951 as Liberal and Conservative member for the South Division of Bedfordshire (d.1979) • Desmond Mulvany, British physician • James "Tommy" Oliver, research scientist, ichthyologist, hydrologist to the Royal Zoological Society, chairman, Old Johannians, 1927, Founder of the JH Oliver Prize for Science (d. 1962)
Sport • Jarod Leat, England under-18 rugby player, 5 Nations international 2016, London Wasps and u/18 flanker •
Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, football player for
Liverpool FC, England, and formerly
Arsenal F.C. Third youngest player to represent England in a major tournament. •
Christian Oxlade-Chamberlain, midfield footballer for
Notts County F.C. •
Lawrence Prittipaul, former Hampshire county cricketer and holder of the highest SJC 20-over batting total •
Darryl Powell former Premier League footballer, played international football for Jamaica, World Cup France 98, MD sports management company •
Matthew Scott (cricketer), former
Hampshire Cricket Board county cricket player • Tom Lovesey,
Mirror Junior World Champion 2005, youngest helm to represent team GBR in Mirror World Championships 2006 (with James Lovesey) •
Steve Foster, football player for
Portsmouth F.C.,
Brighton & Hove F.C.,
Aston Villa F.C., and England. •
Ron Newman (footballer) former association football player and coach. Member of the US
National Soccer Hall of Fame • David Pyle,
Observer Single-handed Trans-Atlantic Race 1968; yachtsman who sailed a
Drascombe on the longest journey undertaken in a small open sailing boat; author
Australia the Hard Way • Mike Tremlett,
America's Cup yachtsman, 1958 • John Rickard, Captain of English School Boys Cricket XI, Captain of Hampshire Schools Cricket XI; School Captain 1955 •
Richard Utley, former
Hampshire cricketer who made his
first-class debut in 1927
Academia •
Timothy C. Lethbridge, professor of computer science and software engineering at the
University of Ottawa. • William Swadling, Senior Law Fellow at
Brasenose College,
Oxford University and Professor of Law in the Oxford University Law Faculty. • Richard Brown, Professor of Neuropsychology and Clinical Neuroscience and Head of Department of Psychology
King's College London. • Stephen Nokes, former grammar school headmaster, founder member of the Grammar School Heads Association • Andy I.R Herries, Professor of Palaeoanthropology at
La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia. Prof Herries' team discovered the world's oldest
Homo erectus at
Drimolen Cave in South Africa • Anthony Cusens, emeritus professor of civil engineering,
University of Leeds Forces •
Michael Willcocks, former
Black Rod. Chief of Staff for the
Allied Command Europe Rapid Reaction Corps, Chief of Staff for the Land Component of the Peace
Implementation Force.
UK military representative to NATO and the
European Union from 2000 to 2001. •
Anthony Cleland Welch, UK-based former soldier, UN official, politician and academic, Deputy Chief of Staff of the 3rd (UK) Armoured Division, Deputy Chief of Staff (Land) during the first Gulf War • Michael Heath, Special Adviser, US Central Command, d.2007 • Arthur Webb, Chief Staff Officer to Fleet Commander, Flag Officer • Robert Cook, Signal Officer-in-Chief (Army), Director General, Federation of the Electronics Industry, Freeman of the City of London • Monty Carss • Hugh 'Peggy' O'Neill, RAF. Brother of: • Tony O'Neill, RAF, first British air attaché to the state of Israel (d. 2008) •
Jean E. François Demozay, Commandeur de la
legion d'honneur, compagnon de la liberation (1915–1945), OJ −1931 • Raymond Powell, Old Johannian vice-chairman, d. 2000 • Steve Wood, Director of Military Intelligence, India 1947 • Denis O'Flaherty, High Commission Canada (OJ 1933–1939) d.1980 • Francis Downer, HMS Monserrat •
Lieutenant-Colonel Paddy Doyle • William (Walter) Ritchie, Chairman, Old Johannians, 1922 and 1930 ==SJC associates==