•
Alan Frank Guttmacher ('15) – obstetrician/gynecologist, served as President of
Planned Parenthood. •
Julius Westheimer ('29) – financial advisor, television, and radio personality. •
Robert Austrian ('33) – developer of the pneumonia vaccine. •
Jane Frank ('37) (Jane Schenthal Frank) – painter, sculptor, mixed media artist, and textile artist (as a child, her name was Jane Babette Schenthal). •
Jeffrey Alfred Legum ('59) – President and CEO of The Park Circle Motor Company. •
Martha Clarke ('62) – theater director and choreographer,
MacArthur Award recipient. •
Edward Witten ('68) – mathematical physicist and one of the leading researchers in
string theory. •
Steve Krulevitz ('69) – professional tennis player, was ranked No. 42 in the world and a member of the
Israeli Davis Cup team. •
Amy Berman Jackson ('72) –
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the District of Columbia. •
Tom Rothman ('72) – Chairman of
Sony Pictures Entertainment's Motion Picture Group. •
Walt Handelsman ('75) –
Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist (1997 and 2007). •
Penny Johnson Jerald ('78) – actress, appeared in Fox television show
24 as the president's wife, Sherry Palmer. •
Benjamin Nathans ('79) - historian who won the 2025
Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction •
Lydia Kay Griggsby ('86) – Judge of the United States
Court of Federal Claims and formerly Chief Counsel for Private and Information Policy for the
Senate Judiciary Committee. •
Josh Tyrangiel ('90) – Executive Vice President,
Vice Media/
HBO. •
Matthew Porterfield ('95) – independent filmmaker;
Hamilton (2006),
Putty Hill (2011), and
I Used to Be Darker (2013). • Josh Dibb ('96) a.k.a.
Deakin, David Portner ('97) a.k.a.
Avey Tare, and Brian Weitz ('97) a.k.a.
Geologist – members of the experimental music group
Animal Collective. •
Amanda Lipitz ('98) –
Tony Award-winning
Broadway producer; director and producer of award-winning documentary
STEP. • Guy Blakeslee ('99) a.k.a.
Entrance – musician currently signed to
Tee Pee Records. •
Adam Gidwitz ('00) –
New York Times bestselling children's book author of
A Tale Dark & Grimm (Dutton Penguin, 2010) and
Newbery Honoree for
The Inquisitor’s Tale (Dutton Penguin, 2016). •
Annie Karni ('00) – journalist,
White House Correspondent for the
New York Times. • Chris Keating ('00) and Anand Wilder ('00) – members of the experimental music group
Yeasayer. •
Matthew Weiner – creator of the
AMC television drama
Mad Men. •
Ben Jacobs ('02) – journalist, political reporter for
The Guardian. == See also ==