•
Fritz Barzilauskas, NFL player •
Michael Bergin, one of first male supermodels, actor on TV's
Baywatch •
William F. Bolger,
United States Postmaster General 1978–1985 •
Amanda Boulier (born 1993), American professional ice hockey defenseman for the
Montreal Victoire, U18 World Champion (2011), two-time Isobel Cup champion •
Darren Brass, tattoo artist, reality show character, from
TLC hit show
Miami Ink •
William H. Bristol, inventor and manufacturer, born in Waterbury; invented "Bristolphone" to simultaneously record voices and other sounds with motion in moving pictures •
Abraham Bronson, minister •
Nixzmary Brown, murder victim •
John Caneira, former MLB player •
Hayden Carruth, poet •
Lucia Chase, dancer, actress, ballet director •
Joe Cipriano, television announcer (also known as Tom Collins on
WWCO in Waterbury) for
Deal or No Deal and
1 vs. 100 •
Deirdre Coleman-Imus, Waterbury-born actress; married radio personality
Don Imus in 1995 •
Scott Conant, chef, restaurateur, food personality, and cookbook author •
Roger Connor, player in Baseball Hall of Fame •
Bob Crane, actor, of ''Hogan's Heroes'' fame; born in Waterbury and worked at Connecticut radio stations before moving to California •
Justin Credible, professional wrestler •
Patrick DeLeon, former president of
American Psychological Association and former chief of staff for Senator
Daniel Inouye •
Andre "mrDEYO" Deyo, singer-songwriter, best known for writing "Jenny From The Block" for
Jennifer Lopez in 2002; graduated from John F. Kennedy High School •
Allie DiMeco, actress, best known for playing Rosalina on
The Naked Brothers Band on Nickelodeon •
Joe Diorio, jazz guitarist and theorist, author, teacher at
University of Southern California •
Red Donahue, pitcher for six different
MLB teams •
Damane Duckett, offensive tackle for NFL's
San Francisco 49ers; also played for
New York Giants and
Carolina Panthers •
Feodor Fedorenko, Nazi war criminal (born in Crimea, deported in 1984) •
Kevin Foster, athlete, actor and
Guinness World Record holder •
Robert Gallo, biomedical researcher, known for role in identifying Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) as infectious agent responsible for AIDS •
Mordechai Gifter, one of America's leading Torah scholars, served as rabbi of Waterbury's Jewish community 1941–1945 •
Philip Giordano, former mayor of Waterbury (R), stripped of power in 2001 after investigation revealed alleged sexual acts with a minor and other possible
pedophilia charges •
Robert D. Glass (1922–2001), first African-American justice of the
Connecticut Supreme Court (1987–1992) •
Ralph Goldstein (1913–1997), Olympic épée fencer •
Ryan Gomes, pro basketball player, attended Wilby High School •
Porter Goss, former director of
CIA •
Tony Hanson, UConn
Husky of Honor, attended Holy Cross High School •
George P. Harlamon, mayor 1968–1970; elected to Waterbury Hall of Fame 2003 •
Jahana Hayes, U.S. congresswoman, born in Waterbury •
David Hoadley, president of
Panama Railway •
Frank Hogan, former district attorney of
New York County •
Samuel Hopkins, American Congregationalist and theologian •
Julius Hotchkiss (1810–1878),
congressman and mayor of Waterbury •
Joan Joyce, All-American softball player; also excelled in basketball, bowling, and golf •
Leah Juliett (born 1997), LGBTQ+ activist, spoken word poet, nonprofit leader and philanthropist •
Fred Klobedanz, Major League Baseball pitcher •
Darren LaBonte, CIA officer and Army ranger killed in
Camp Chapman attack in 2009 •
Gerald Lamb (1924–2014), Waterbury alderman; Connecticut state treasurer (1963–1970) and the first African-American elected to that office in the US since the
Reconstruction era •
Annie Leibovitz, celebrated portrait photographer, born in Waterbury in 1949 •
Clare Leighton, artist and printmaker, buried in Waterbury in 1989 •
Baruch Levine, Jewish music singer-songwriter, and rebbi (teacher) in the Yeshiva Ketana of Waterbury •
Michael Mallory, professional basketball player •
Harold Marcuse, professor of German history at University of California Santa Barbara; grandson of
Herbert Marcuse •
Mercedes Martinez, professional wrestler •
Richard A. Mastracchio, NASA astronaut •
Ethel Maynard, first Black woman to serve in the
Arizona legislature •
Dylan McDermott, actor, star of television series
The Practice •
Winifred McDonald, schoolteacher, politician,
Secretary of the State of Connecticut (1949–1951) •
Michael J. McGivney, Catholic priest and founder of the
Knights of Columbus •
Bill Meek, football head coach,
Kansas State,
Houston,
Utah •
Two Moon Meridas, lived in Waterbury 1914 to 1933, claimed to be full-blooded
Pueblo Indian •
George Metesky (1903–1994), "Mad Bomber" who launched reign of terror in New York City in 1940s and 1950s •
John S. Monagan (1911–2005), mayor, congressman, biographer of
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. •
Johnny Moore (1902–1991), professional baseball player •
David Nolan, author and historian who attended Anderson School •
Neil O'Leary, mayor of Waterbury (2011–2023) •
Mario Pavone, jazz bassist, composer and bandleader •
Jimmy Piersall, professional baseball player and broadcaster •
Derek Poundstone, professional strongman athlete; won America's Strongest Man contest in 2007 •
Peter Pronovost, intensive care specialist at
Johns Hopkins Hospital, named by
TIME magazine in 2008 as one of the 100 most influential people in the world •
Mark Richards, member of United States House of Representatives and
seventh lieutenant governor of Vermont •
John G. Rowland, Waterbury native and former governor of Connecticut (R); resigned from office on July 1, 2004, after prolonged investigation for corruption •
Rosalind Russell, Academy Award-nominated and Tony-winning actress •
Tarah Lynne Schaeffer, actress, best known for playing Tarah on
Sesame Street •
Caswell Silver, geologist, president of Sundance Oil Company, established Caswell Silver Foundation at University of New Mexico •
Leon Silver, geologist who trained Apollo astronauts in lunar geology •
John Sirica, Watergate judge;
Time magazine's Man of the Year in 1973, born in Waterbury in 1904 •
Velvet Sky, wrestler, TNA Knockouts champion •
Richard V. Spencer, former
United States Secretary of Defense (2017–2019) •
Terry Tata,
Major League Baseball umpire 1973–1999; officiated four
World Series and three All-Star games during his career •
Thomas Tessier, writer of horror novels and short stories, born in Waterbury in 1947 •
Gene Tierney, actress; attended St. Margaret's School for Girls in Waterbury, but grew up in Brooklyn borough of New York City •
Robert H. Traurig, co-founder of
Greenberg Traurig, a law and lobbying firm •
Fay Vincent, 8th commissioner of Major League Baseball •
Dave Wallace, Major League Baseball pitcher, coach and general manager •
Krista Watterworth, interior designer, television presenter •
James H. Whiting (1843–1919), co-founder of
Flint Wagon Works ==In popular culture==