List of Jewish American entertainers
Appearance
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This is a list of notable Jewish American entertainers. For other Jewish Americans, see Lists of Jewish Americans.
Actors (film and TV) & artists
organized by birth decade
2000s
- Odessa Adlon (born 2000), actress
- Asher Angel (born 2002), actor and singer[1]
- Julia Lester (born 2000), actress (High School Musical: The Musical: The Series)[2]
- David Mazouz (born 2001), actor[3]
- Joshua Rush (born 2001), actor (Andi Mack)[4]
- Noah Schnapp (born 2004), actor (Stranger Things)[5]
- Aidan Gallagher (born 2003), actor (The Umbrella Academy)
- Bhad Bhabie (born 2003), singer (Italian from her mother side and Jewish from her father side)
1990s
- Daniel Benzali (born 1946), actor, singer
- Mac Miller (1992–2018), American rapper, singer-songwriter, and record producer
- Madison Beer (born 1999), singer
- Doja Cat (1995), American rapper, singer-songwriter
- Sofia Black-D'Elia (born 1991), actress[6]
- Ben Levi Ross (born 1998), actor
- Jonah Bobo (born 1997), film actor (Around the Bend, Zathura)[7]
- Ben Platt (born 1993), Broadway star, actor, singer and songwriter (Dear Evan Hansen, The Politician)
- Dawn M. Bennett (born 1992), Filipino-American voice actress[8][9]
- Cameron Boyce (1999–2019), actor[10][11] (Jessie)
- Max Burkholder (born 1997), actor[12]
- Timothée Chalamet (born 1995), actor[13]
- Emory Cohen (born 1990), actor[14]
- Flora Cross (born 1993), film actress (Bee Season)[15]
- Spencer Daniels (born 1992), actor[16]
- Zoey Deutch (born 1994), actress[17]
- Ansel Elgort (born 1994), actor (Jewish father)[18]
- Beanie Feldstein (born 1993), actress (Lady Bird, Booksmart)[19]
- Julia Garner (born 1994), actress[20]
- Zachary Gordon (born 1998), film actor (Diary of a Wimpy Kid)[21]
- Alexander Gould (born 1994), film/TV actor (Finding Nemo)[22]
- Teo Halm (born 1999), actor[23]
- Carter Jenkins (born 1991), film/TV actor[24][25]
- Hunter King (born 1993), actress, (The Young and the Restless)
- Kira Kosarin (born 1997), actress (The Thundermans)
- Lauv (born 1994), singer-songwriter, record producer
- Logan Lerman (born 1992), film/TV actor (Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief)[26][27]
- Jonathan Lipnicki (born 1990), film actor (Jerry Maguire, Like Mike)[28]
- James Maslow (born 1990), actor/singer[29]
- Blake Michael (born 1996), actor
- Ezra Miller (born 1992), film actor[30]
- Ian Nelson (born 1995), actor[31]
- Nicola Peltz (born 1994), actress[32]
- Ryan Potter (born 1995), actor[33]
- Charlie Puth (born 1991), singer-songwriter
- Nathalia Ramos (born 1992), Spanish-born American actress (Bratz: The Movie)[34]
- Sarah Ramos (born 1991), TV actress (American Dreams)[35]
- Ben Rosenfield (born c. 1992/93), actor[36]
- Odeya Rush (born 1997), Israeli-born American[37]
- Daryl Sabara (born 1992), actor (Spy Kids, Keeping Up with the Steins, Halloween)[38][39]
- Halston Sage (born 1993), actress[40]
- Larry Saperstein (born 1998), actor (High School Musical: The Musical: The Series)[41]
- Eden Sher (born 1991), actress, The Middle TV series
- Troye Sivan (born 1995), singer, actor
- Adiel Stein (born 1991), film actor (Stolen Summer)[42]
- Hailee Steinfeld (born 1996), actor (True Grit, Ender's Game, Pitch Perfect 2); singer of "Love Myself" (Jewish father)
- Zoe Weizenbaum (born 1991), film actress (Memoirs of a Geisha)[43]
- Nat Wolff (born 1994), actor/musician (Jewish father)[44]
1980s
- Dianna Agron (born 1986), actress and singer
- Jonathan Ahdout (born 1989), actor (House of Sand and Fog, 24)[45]
- Jack Antonoff (born 1984), Singer/songwriter/record producer (Member of the bands FUN, Bleachers & Steel Train)[46]
- Skylar Astin (born Skylar Astin Lipstein; 1987), actor and singer
- Justin Baldoni (born 1984), actor (Everwood)[47]
- David "Lil Dicky" Andrew Burd (born 1988), rapper and comedian[48]
- Rachel Bloom (born 1987), actress, singer and comedy writer (Crazy Ex-Girlfriend)[49]
- Alison Brie (born 1982), actress (Community, The LEGO Movie and GLOW)[50]
- Amanda Bynes (born 1986), film actress and former show host on Nickelodeon (She's the Man)[51]
- Lizzy Caplan (born 1982), film/TV actress (Mean Girls, Cloverfield)[52]
- Greg Cipes (born 1980), actor, entertainer, singer-songwriter, and professional surfer
- Chanel West Coast (born 1988), TV personality, rapper, singer
- Lauren Cohan (born 1982), film/television actress (Supernatural)[53]
- Matt Cohen (born 1982), film/TV actor[54]
- Alexa Davalos (born 1982), actress[55]
- John Francis Daley (born 1985), actor/director (Freaks and Geeks)[56]
- Kat Dennings (born 1986), film/TV actress[57][58]
- Daveed Diggs (born 1982), actor, rapper
- Drake (musician) (born 1986), rapper/musician
- Lena Dunham (born 1986), actress/writer/director (Girls)[46]
- Zac Efron (born 1987), film/TV actor (Efron's paternal grandfather was Jewish, and Efron has referred to himself as Jewish)[59]
- Alden Ehrenreich (born 1989), actor[60]
- Jesse Eisenberg (born 1983), film actor (The Squid and the Whale)[61]
- Ben Foster (born 1980), actor[62]
- Jon Foster (born 1984), film/TV actor (Stay Alive)[62]
- Shayna Fox (born 1984), voice actress[63]
- Dave Franco (born 1985), actor[64]
- Seth Gabel (born 1981), American actor[65]
- Andrew Garfield (born 1983), British and American actor[66]
- Rafi Gavron (born 1989), British and American actor[67]
- Gideon Glick (born 1988), actor[68]
- Joseph Gordon-Levitt (born 1981), film/TV actor[69][70]
- Max Greenfield (born 1980), film/TV actor[71]
- Jake Gyllenhaal (born 1980), film actor (Brokeback Mountain)[72]
- Armie Hammer (born 1986), actor (has identified himself as "half Jewish")[73]
- Erin Heatherton (born 1989), model and actress[74]
- Simon Helberg (born 1980), TV actor and comedian (The Big Bang Theory)
- Jonah Hill (born 1983), film actor[75]
- Scarlett Johansson (born 1984), film actress (Jewish mother)[76][77]
- Ariana Jollee (born 1982), pornographic actress and pornographic film director[citation needed]
- Jeremy Jordan (born 1984), stage/musical film/television actor (Jewish mother)[78]
- Avriel Kaplan (born 1989), musician/songwriter (vocal bassist of a cappella group Pentatonix, founder of musical group Avriel & the Sequoias)
- Jonathan Keltz (born 1988), Canadian and American actor[79]
- Ethan Klein (born 1985), internet personality
- Zoe Kravitz (born 1988), actress, model and singer
- Mila Kunis (born 1983), TV actress (That '70s Show, Family Guy)[80]
- Adam Lamberg (born 1984), actor (Lizzie McGuire)[81]
- Adam Lambert (born 1982), singer and runner-up on American Idol
- Shia LaBeouf (born 1986), TV/film actor (Even Stevens, Holes, Disturbia, Transformers)[82][83]
- Samm Levine (born 1982), film/TV actor[84]
- Margarita Levieva (born 1980), actress and professional gymnast
- Alex D. Linz (born 1989), actor (Home Alone 3, Max Keeble's Big Move)[85][86]
- Lauren London (born 1984), actress (ATL)
- Jessica Manley (born 1985), actress (Anne Frank: The Whole Story)
- Eli Marienthal (born 1986), film actor (Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen)[87]
- Scott Mechlowicz (born 1981), film actor (EuroTrip, Mean Creek)[88]
- Sara Paxton (born 1988), actress (Darcy's Wild Life, Aquamarine)[89][90][91]
- Josh Peck (born 1986), actor (Drake & Josh)[92]
- Ashley Peldon (born 1984), film/TV actress[93]
- Courtney Peldon (born 1981), film/TV actress[94]
- Alisan Porter (born 1981), film and stage actress and singer[95]
- Natalie Portman (born 1981), Israeli-born film actor (V for Vendetta)[96]
- Laura Prepon (born 1980), film/TV actress (That '70s Show)[97][98]
- Nikki Reed (born 1988), film actress/screenwriter (Thirteen)[99][100]
- Emmy Rossum (born 1986), actress, singer-songwriter
- Daniela Ruah (born 1983), Portuguese-American actress
- Ben Schwartz (born 1981), actor, writer, comedian
- Jason Schwartzman (born 1980), actor and member of the band Phantom Planet
- Jason Segel (born 1980), film/TV actor[101]
- Jamie-Lynn Sigler (born 1981), film/TV actress and singer (The Sopranos)[102][103]
- Jenny Slate (born 1982), actress/comedian[104]
- Jussie Smollett (born 1982), actor (Empire)
- Jurnee Smollett-Bell (born 1986), actress (True Blood)
- Marla Sokoloff (born 1980), film/TV actress (Big Day)[105]
- Shoshannah Stern (born 1980), TV actress[106][107]
- Lauren Storm (born 1987), TV actress (Flight 29 Down)[108][109]
- Khleo Thomas (born 1989), film actor (Holes)[110]
- Ashley Tisdale (born 1985), actress and singer (High School Musical)[111]
- Michelle Trachtenberg (born 1985), film/TV actress[112]
- Joseph Trohman (born 1984), musician (Fall Out Boy)
- Raviv (Ricky) Ullman (born 1986), Israeli-born actor, teen idol (Phil of the Future)[113]
- Anneliese van der Pol (born 1984), Dutch/American actress (That's So Raven)[114]
- Mara Wilson (born 1987), film actress (Matilda)[115]
- James Wolk (born 1985), actor[116]
- Evan Rachel Wood (born 1987), film actress (Thirteen, The Upside of Anger)[99][100][117]
- Anton Yelchin (1989–2016), Russian-born film/TV actor[118][119]
- Joey Zimmerman (born 1986), film/TV actor (Halloweentown)[120]
1970s
- Dave Annable (born 1979), actor[121][122]
- Shiri Appleby (born 1978), Israeli/American film/TV actress (Roswell)[123]
- David Arquette (born 1971), film actor[124][125]
- Eric Balfour (born 1977), actor[126]
- Elizabeth Banks (born 1974), film actress (Invincible)[127][128]
- Justin Bartha (born 1978), film actor (National Treasure, The Hangover)[129]
- Amber Benson (born 1977), actress (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)[130]
- Elizabeth Berkley (born 1972), TV, film, and stage actress[131]
- Jon Bernthal (born 1976), actor[132]
- Mayim Bialik (born 1975), actress (Blossom)[133]
- Michael Ian Black (born Michael Ian Schwartz, 1971), actor, comedian and comedy writer[134]
- Selma Blair (born Selma Bleitner, 1972), film actress, raised w/ Jewish day school (Cruel Intentions)[135]
- Alex Borstein (born 1971), actress, writer, and comedian[136]
- Caprice Bourret (born 1971), fashion model and actress, often known by her first name[137]
- Zach Braff (born 1975), film/TV actor, director, screenwriter, and producer (Scrubs, Garden State)[138]
- Tamara Braun (born 1971), soap opera actress[139]
- Adam Brody (born 1979), actor (The O.C.)[140]
- Adrien Brody (born 1973), film actor (The Pianist)[141][142]
- Sarah Brown (born 1975), actress[143]
- Brooke Burke (born 1971), TV personality and model[144][145]
- Scott Caan (born 1976), film actor, son of James Caan[146]
- Josh Charles (born 1971), stage, film, and TV actor[147]
- Emmanuelle Chriqui (born 1977), film/TV actress[148]
- Jennifer Connelly (born 1970), film and TV actress (Requiem for a Dream)[149]
- Eric Dane (born 1972), actor[150]
- Erin Daniels (born Erin Cohen, 1973), actress[151][152]
- Brad Delson (born 1977), guitarist for the band Linkin Park
- Dustin Diamond (1977–2021), actor (Saved by the Bell)[153]
- Oded Fehr (born 1970), Israeli/American actor (The Mummy)[154]
- Corey Feldman (born 1971), film actor, 1980s teen idol[155]
- James Franco (born 1978), film actor (James Dean, Spider-Man)[156][157]
- Soleil Moon Frye (born 1976), actress and director (Punky Brewster)[158]
- Sarah Michelle Gellar (born 1977), actress, writer, director, filmmaker, comedian, singer (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)[159]
- Goapele (born 1977), singer-songwriter
- Elon Gold (born 1970), comedian, TV actor, writer, and producer[160]
- Ginnifer Goodwin (born 1978), film/TV actress (Big Love)[161]
- Seth Green (born 1974), actor, writer, and TV producer[162][163]
- Bryan Greenberg (born 1978), film/TV actor (Prime)[164]
- Maggie Gyllenhaal (born 1977), Golden Globe-nominated actress[152][165]
- Corey Haim (1971–2010), Canadian-born film actor[166]
- Chelsea Handler (born 1975), actress/comedian[167]
- Alyson Hannigan (born 1974), actress (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Date Movie)[168]
- Danielle Harris (born 1977), actress[169]
- Samantha Harris (born Samantha Harris Shapiro, 1973), actress and TV presenter[170]
- Cole Hauser (born 1975), film actor[171][172]
- Jason Hervey (born 1972), actor (The Wonder Years)
- Kate Hudson (born 1979), film actress (Almost Famous, How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days)[173]
- Oliver Hudson (born 1976), film/TV actor[62]
- Rashida Jones (born 1976), actress, writer, model, and musician (The Office)[174]
- Chris Kattan (born 1970), comedian (Saturday Night Live)[72]
- Joel Kinnaman (born 1979), Swedish and American actor (Jewish mother)[175]
- Nick Kroll (born 1978), Comedian/Actor[176]
- Alla Korot (born 1970), Ukrainian-born actress[177]
- Lisa Kushell (born 1971), comedic actress (MADtv, co-host of Dinner and a Movie)[178]
- David Krumholtz (born 1978), actor (NUMB3RS)[179]
- Adam Levine (born 1979), musician (Maroon 5)[180]
- Jenny Lewis (born 1976), musician and former child actress[181]
- Michael Lucas (born 1972), Russian-born porn star[182]
- Jamie Luner (born 1971), actress (Melrose Place)[183]
- Natasha Lyonne (born Natasha Braunstein, 1979), film/TV actress (American Pie)[184]
- Gabriel Macht (born 1972), film actor[185]
- Matisyahu (born Matthew Paul Miller, 1979), singer and rapper
- Idina Menzel (born 1971), actress, singer and songwriter[186]
- Marisol Nichols (born 1973), actress (Jewish biological father)[187]
- Gwyneth Paltrow (born 1972), actress and singer[188][189][190]
- Adam Pascal (born 1970), actor (Rent)[191]
- Amanda Peet (born 1972), film actress[192][193]
- Joaquin Phoenix (born Joaquin Bottom, 1974), film actor (Walk the Line)[194][195][196][197]
- Rain Phoenix (born Rain Bottom, 1973), actress/musician[194][195]
- River Phoenix (born River Bottom, 1970–1993), film actor[194][195]
- Summer Phoenix (born 1978), actress and model[194][195]
- Pink (born Alecia Moore, 1979), singer and actress[198]
- Dave Portnoy (born 1977), founder of (Barstool Sports)
- Josh Radnor (born 1976), actor (How I Met Your Mother)[123]
- Leah Remini (born 1970), actress (The King of Queens)[199]
- Simon Rex (born 1974), actor and model[200]
- Michael Rosenbaum (born 1972), film/TV actor (Smallvile)[201]
- Tracee Ellis Ross (born Tracee Joy Silberstein, 1972), actress, daughter of singer Diana Ross[202]
- Eli Roth (born 1972), film actor, director, producer and writer[203]
- Maya Rudolph (born 1972), actress/comedian (Saturday Night Live)[128]
- Winona Ryder (born Winona Horowitz, 1971), film actress[204][205]
- Antonio Sabato Jr. (born 1972), actor and model
- Sarah Saltzberg (born 1976), Broadway theater actress[206]
- Andy Samberg (born David Andrew Samberg, 1978), comedian; part of group The Lonely Island; Saturday Night Live
- Fred Savage (born 1976), actor and TV director (Wonder Years)[207][208]
- Miriam Shor (born 1971), film/TV actress (Big Day)[209]
- Sarah Silverman (born 1970), stand-up comedian, actress, and writer[210]
- David Moscow (born 1974), actor (Jewish from his father side)
- Alicia Silverstone (born 1976), actress and former fashion model (Clueless, Batman and Robin)[211][212]
- Ione Skye (born Ione Skye Leitch, 1971), English-born actress[213]
- Lindsay Sloane (born Lindsay Sloane Leikin, 1977), actress[214][215]
- Bahar Soomekh (born 1975), Iranian-born actress (Crash)[216][217]
- Tori Spelling (born 1973), actress (Beverly Hills 90210)[218][219]
- Jordana Spiro (born 1977), TV actress (My Boys)[220]
- Corey Stoll (born 1976), actor[221]
- Matt Stone (born 1971), animator, film director, screenwriter, actor, voice actor, and co-creator of South Park[222]
- Danny Strong (born 1974), film/TV actor[223]
- Jonathan Togo (born 1977), actor (CSI: Miami, Mystic River)[224]
- Mageina Tovah (born Mageina Tovah Begtrup, 1979), actress[225]
- Kevin Weisman (born 1970), film/TV actor[226]
- Jennifer Westfeldt (born 1971), actress and writer (Kissing Jessica Stein)[227]
- Marissa Jaret Winokur (born 1973), film, TV, and stage actress (Hairspray stage version)[228]
- Noah Wyle (born 1971), film/TV actor[229]
- Nikki Ziering (born Natalie Schiele, 1971), model and actress[230]
- Jason Zimbler (born 1977), actor (Clarissa Explains It All)
- Ethan Zohn (born 1973), Survivor: Africa winner and actor[231]
- Arianne Zuker (born Arianne Zuckerman, 1974), soap opera actress[232]
1960s
- Tony Goldwyn (born 1960), actor (paternal grandfather was Jewish)
- Paula Abdul (born 1962), singer-songwriter, record producer, actress, dancer, and choreographer[233]
- Lenny Kravitz (born 1964), singer-songwriter
- Steven Adler (born 1965), musician, songwriter, drummer (Guns N' Roses)
- Patricia Arquette (born 1968), Golden Globe-nominated actress[234][235]
- Hank Azaria (born 1964), film/TV actor, director, comedian, and voice artist[236]
- David Alan Basche (born 1968), actor[237]
- Randall Batinkoff (born 1968), film/TV actor (For Keeps?)[238]
- Mary Kay Bergman (1961–1999), voice actress (South Park)[239]
- Troy Beyer (born 1964), film director, screenwriter, and actress[149]
- Craig Bierko (born 1964), film/TV actor (Cinderella Man)[240]
- Jack Black (born 1969), film actor and musician[241][242]
- Lisa Bonet (born 1967), film/TV actress (The Cosby Show)[243]
- Matthew Broderick (born 1962), film and stage actor (Ferris Bueller's Day Off, The Producers)[244]
- Gabrielle Carteris (born 1961), actress (Beverly Hills 90210)[245]
- Max Casella (born 1967), actor (Doogie Howser)
- Scott Cohen (born 1964), film/TV actor[246]
- Mindy Cohn (born 1966), TV actress (The Facts of Life)[215]
- David Cross (born 1964), actor/comedian[247]
- Dean Devlin (born 1962), former actor, now producer and screenwriter[248]
- Don Diamont (born Donald Feinberg, 1961), soap opera actor (The Young and the Restless)[249]
- Robert Downey Jr. (born 1965), actor and musician (Iron Man)[250][251]
- David Duchovny (born 1960), film/TV actor (The X-Files)[252][253]
- Lisa Edelstein (born 1967), actress (House)[254]
- Jon Favreau (born 1966), actor/director[255][256]
- Dan Futterman (born 1967), actor and screenwriter[257]
- Jeff Garlin (born 1962), comic actor (Curb Your Enthusiasm)[258]
- Brad Garrett (born Bradley Harold Gerstenfeld, 1960), actor and comedian[259]
- Gina Gershon (born 1962), film actress[260]
- Jami Gertz (born 1965), film/TV actress[261]
- Melissa Gilbert (born 1964), former child actress, two terms as president of Screen Actors Guild[262]
- Judy Gold (born 1962), stand-up comedian and actress[263]
- Bill Goldberg (born 1966), former wrestler; wrestled for both World Championship Wrestling (WCW) and World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), film/TV actor[264]
- Jennifer Grey (born 1960), actress and dancer (Dirty Dancing)[265]
- Arye Gross (born 1960), film/TV actor[266]
- Greg Grunberg (born 1966), film/TV actor (Heroes)[267]
- Annabelle Gurwitch (born 1961), comedic actress, hostess of TBS's Dinner and a Movie[268]
- Jessica Hecht (born 1965), film/stage actress[269]
- Monica Horan (born 1963), TV actress (Everybody Loves Raymond)[270]
- Helen Hunt (born 1963), actress
- Sean Kanan (born Sean Perelman, 1966), soap opera actor (General Hospital)[271]
- Lesli Kay (born Lesli Pushkin, 1965), actress (As the World Turns); had first individual girl's bat mitzvah in West Virginia
- Heather Paige Kent (born 1969), TV actress[272]
- Marc Kudisch (born 1966), stage actor[273]
- Lisa Kudrow (born 1963), actress (Friends)[274]
- Juliet Landau (born 1965), actress (Ed Wood), daughter of Martin Landau and Barbara Bain[275]
- John Lehr (born 1967), actor/comedian (10 Items or Less)[220][276]
- Jennifer Jason Leigh (born Jennifer Lee Morrow, 1962), Hollywood film actress (Fast Times at Ridgemont High)[28]
- Julia Louis-Dreyfus (born 1961), actress (Seinfeld)[277]
- Joshua Malina (born 1966), film and stage actor[278]
- Camryn Manheim (born 1961), actress (The Practice)[279]
- Cindy Margolis (born 1965), actress/model; in 2000 Guinness Book of World Records as the "most downloaded" person in 1999[237]
- Julianna Margulies (born 1966), film/TV actress (ER)[280]
- Marc Maron (born 1963), comedian, film/TV actor
- Brett Marx (born 1964), actor (The Bad News Bears); great nephew of the Marx Brothers
- Marlee Matlin (born 1965), actress (Children of a Lesser God)[281]
- Debra Messing (born 1968), actress (Will & Grace)[282]
- Dina Meyer (born 1968), film/TV actress (Saw films)[283]
- Ari Meyers (born 1969), actress (Kate & Allie)[284]
- Rob Morrow (born 1962), actor (Northern Exposure, Numb3rs)[285]
- Sarah Jessica Parker (born 1965), Golden Globe, Emmy-winning actress[286][287]
- Sean Penn (born 1960), film actor (Mystic River, Milk)[288]
- Jeremy Piven (born 1965), actor (Entourage)[289]
- Rain Pryor (born 1969), actress and comedian, daughter of Richard Pryor[290]
- Ted Raimi (born 1965), actor, brother of Spider-Man director Sam Raimi[127]
- Adam Rich (born 1968), child actor (Eight is Enough)
- Paul Rudd (born 1969), actor and screenwriter[291][292]
- Adam Sandler (born 1966), actor, stand-up comedian, screenwriter, producer, and musician[293][294]
- Rob Schneider (born 1963), actor, comedian, and screenwriter[295]
- Bitty Schram (born 1968), Golden Globe-nominated actress[296]
- Liev Schreiber (born 1967), Tony Award-winning actor[297]
- Scott Schwartz (born 1968), child actor (A Christmas Story and The Toy)
- David Schwimmer (born 1966), Emmy-nominated actor and director (Friends)[298]
- Sam Seder (born 1966), actor, comedian, writer, producer, director[299]
- Kyra Sedgwick (born 1965), Emmy-nominated actress[300]
- Ally Sheedy (born 1962), screen and stage actress ("Brat Pack" films The Breakfast Club and St. Elmo's Fire)[301]
- Jonathan Silverman (born 1966), film/TV actor[302]
- Helen Slater (born 1963), film actress and singer-songwriter (title role in Supergirl)[303]
- Rena Sofer (born 1968), actress[304]
- Jon Stewart (born Jonathan Stuart Leibowitz, 1962), stand-up comedian, actor, author; host, head writer, and producer of The Daily Show[305]
- Ben Stiller (born 1965), Emmy Award-winning comedian, actor, and film director[294][306]
- Lars Ulrich (born 1963), Danish-born Metallica drummer[307]
- Michael Vartan (born 1968), French-born film/TV actor (Monster-in-Law)[308]
- Steven Weber (born 1961), film/TV actor (Wings)[309]
- Scott Wolf (born 1968), actor (Party of Five)[310]
- Ian Ziering (born 1964), actor (Beverly Hills 90210)[170][311]
1950s
- Caroline Aaron (born 1957), actress and producer[312]
- Jason Alexander (born Jay Greenspan, 1959), actor, comedian, writer, director[313]
- Adam Arkin (born 1956), film, TV, and stage actor[314]
- Rosanna Arquette (born 1959), actress, film director, and film producer[315]
- Ellen Barkin (born 1954), actress[71]
- Roseanne Barr (born 1952), actress, comedian, writer and television producer[citation needed]
- Robin Beck (born 1954), singer-songwriter, record producer[316]
- Robby Benson (born Robin David Segal, 1956), actor, former teen idol[317]
- Mike Binder (born 1958), screenwriter, film director, and actor[318]
- Kate Capshaw (born 1953), actress (Indiana Jones)[319]
- Jamie Lee Curtis (born 1958), Golden Globe-winning film actress, writer of books for children[320]
- Fran Drescher (born 1957), actor, producer, writer, comedian[321]
- Danny Elfman (born 1953), musician, composer[322]
- Wayne Federman (born 1959), comedian, actor, author (Maravich)[323]
- Tovah Feldshuh (born 1952), actress, singer, and playwright[324]
- Harvey Fierstein (born 1954), actor, author, and singer[325]
- Deb Filler (born 1954), actress, comic, singer and writer[326]
- Carrie Fisher (1956–2016), film actress, novelist (Star Wars)[327]
- Al Franken (born 1951), comedian, actor, author, radio host, and U.S. Senator[328]
- Jeff Goldblum (born 1952), film actor[329]
- Steve Guttenberg (born 1958), actor[330]
- Mary Hart (born 1950), actress and TV personality (Entertainment Tonight)[331]
- Amy Irving (born 1953), actress[332]
- David Lee Roth (born 1954), singer/musician
- Paul Stanley (born 1952), guitarist for KISS
- Toni Kalem (born 1956), film/TV actress, screenwriter, and director[333]
- Carol Kane (born 1952), actress[334]
- Julie Kavner (born 1950), film/TV actress (voice of Marge on The Simpsons)[335]
- Richard Kind (born 1956), actor[336]
- John Landis (born 1950), actor, director, writer, and producer[337]
- Carol Leifer (born 1956), comedian and actress[338]
- Joan Lunden (born Joan Blunden, 1950), broadcaster (Good Morning America)[339]
- Melanie Mayron (born 1952), actress and director (Thirtysomething)[340]
- Larry Miller (born 1953), stand-up comedian, actor[341]
- Don Most (born 1953), actor (Happy Days)[342]
- Judd Nelson (born 1959), actor and screenwriter (The Breakfast Club, Billionaire Boys Club)
- Bebe Neuwirth (born 1958), theater, TV, and film actress[186]
- Laraine Newman (born 1952), comedian and actress[343]
- Ken Olin (born 1954), actor, director and producer[344]
- Mandy Patinkin (born 1952), actor of stage and screen, and singer/interpreter of Yiddish songs[345]
- Lorna Patterson (born 1956), film, stage and TV actress[346]
- Scott Patterson (born 1958), actor (Gilmore Girls)[347]
- David Paymer (born 1954), character actor[348]
- Ron Perlman (born 1950), film/TV actor (Hellboy)[349]
- Kevin Pollak (born 1957), actor, impressionist, and comedian[350]
- Paul Reiser (born 1957), actor, author, and stand-up comedian (Mad About You)[351]
- Paul Reubens (born Paul Rubenfeld, 1952), aka Peewee Herman
- Alan Rosenberg (born 1950), actor, 24th president of the Screen Actors Guild[352]
- Katey Sagal (born 1954), actress, singer, and writer (Married... with Children)[353]
- Bob Saget (1956–2022), actor, stand-up comedian, and game show host[354]
- Richard Schiff (born 1955), actor (The West Wing)[355]
- Steven Seagal (born 1952), actor, screenwriter, producer, martial artist, and musician
- Jerry Seinfeld (born 1954), comedian, actor, and writer[298]
- Jane Seymour (born Joyce Frankenberg, 1951), English-born film/TV actress[356]
- Wendie Jo Sperber (1958–2005), TV/movie actress[357]
- Howard Stern (born 1954), radio/TV personality, media mogul, humorist, actor, and author[72]
- Stephen Tobolowsky (born 1951), actor[358]
- Robert Trebor (born Robert Schenkman, 1953), actor (Hercules, Xena)[359]
- Debra Winger (born 1955), actress[360]
- Leslie Hoffman (born 1955), actress-stuntwoman
- Mare Winningham (born 1959), film/TV actress[361]
1940s
- Bob Balaban (born 1945), actor and director[362]
- Richard Belzer (born 1944), stand-up comedian, writer, and actor[298]
- Lewis Black (born 1948), stand-up comedian and actor
- Albert Brooks (born Albert Lawrence Einstein, 1947–), stand-up comedian, director, screenwriter, actor[363]
- James Caan (born 1940), film, stage, and TV actor (The Godfather)[364]
- Nell Carter (1948–2003), singer and film, stage, and TV actress[365]
- Peter Coyote (born Rachmil Pinchus Ben Mosha Cohon, 1941–), actor and author[366]
- Gene Simmons (born 1949), guitarist for KISS
- Larry David (born 1947), Emmy-winning writer, director, comedian, actor, producer, co-creator of Seinfeld, and creator of Curb Your Enthusiasm[367]
- Richard Dreyfuss (born 1947), actor (The Goodbye Girl)[368]
- Bob Dylan (born Robert Allen Zimmerman, 1941), singer-songwriter, author, musician, and poet, also appeared in several films[369]
- Bob Einstein (1942–2019), writer and comedian known as Super Dave
- Richard Elfman (born 1949), film director, writer, and actor[370]
- Donald Fagen (born 1948), musician, singer-songwriter, cultural critic, author, columnist, writer, and co-founder of the famous jazz-rock duo Steely Dan[371]
- Harrison Ford (born 1942), actor[183][196]
- Bonnie Franklin (1944–2013), actress[372]
- Art Garfunkel (born 1941), singer and songwriter
- Paul Michael Glaser (born 1943), actor (Starsky & Hutch)[373]
- Scott Glenn (born 1941), actor[374]
- Christopher Guest (born 1948), comedian, screenwriter, composer, musician, film director, actor, and Spinal Tap member[375][376]
- Goldie Hawn (born 1945), film actress, director, and producer[377]
- Dan Hedaya (born 1940), character actor[378]
- Sandy Helberg (born 1949), actor
- Barbara Hershey (born Barbara Lynn Herzstein, 1948), actress[62]
- Ricky Jay (born Richard Jay Potash, 1946–2018), professional sleight-of-hand artist, actor, and author
- Billy Joel (born 1949), singer-songwriter, and musician
- Madeline Kahn (1942–1999), actress of film, TV, and theater[379]
- Gabe Kaplan (born 1945), actor, comedian, and professional poker player[380]
- Andy Kaufman (1949–1984), comedian; devout Jewish parents[381]
- Judy Kaye (born 1948), singer and actress[382]
- Lainie Kazan (born Lanie Levine, 1940), actress and singer[383]
- Robert Klein (born 1942), stand-up comedian and occasional actor[384]
- Kevin Kline (born 1947), stage and film actor[61]
- Richard Kline (born 1944), actor and TV director[385]
- Sherry Lansing (born 1944), former CEO of Paramount Studios and actress[386]
- Michael Lembeck (born 1948), actor and director[346]
- Richard Lewis (born 1947), comedian and actor[387]
- Judith Light (born 1949), actress (Who's the Boss?)
- Peggy Lipton (born 1947), TV actress and socialite (The Mod Squad)[388]
- Stephen Macht (born 1942), actor[389]
- Richard Masur (born 1948), actor[372]
- Bette Midler (born 1945), singer, actress, and comedian[390][391]
- Olivia Newton-John (1948–2022), singer, actor, author, environmental activist, cancer activist, four time Grammy winner. Mother Irene Born, Jewish. Maternal grandfather Max Born, Nobel Prize winning Physicist
- David Proval (born 1942), actor (The Sopranos)[392]
- Gilda Radner (1946–1989), comedian and actress (Saturday Night Live)[393]
- Harold Ramis (1944–2014), director, actor, writer, and producer
- Lou Reed (1942–2013), musician, singer-and songwriter
- Rob Reiner (born 1947), actor, director, producer, writer[394]
- Peter Riegert (born 1947), film/TV actor[395]
- Jill St. John (born 1940), actress[396]
- Garry Shandling (1949–2016), comedian and actor[397]
- Wallace Shawn (born 1943), actor and writer[398]
- Harry Shearer (born 1943), actor, comedian, writer, and radio host[399][400]
- Paul Simon (born 1941), singer-songwriter
- Brent Spiner (born 1949), actor (Star Trek: The Next Generation)[401]
- Sylvester Stallone (born 1946), film actor, director, producer, and screenwriter (Rocky), maternally Jewish
- Barbra Streisand (born 1942), two-time Academy Award-winning singer and actress[402][403]
- Jeffrey Tambor (born 1944), film/TV actor (Hellboy, Arrested Development)[404]
- Jessica Walter (1941–2021), film/TV actress (Arrested Development)[405]
- Zoë Wanamaker (born 1949), American-born English actress[406][407]
- Lesley Ann Warren (born 1946), stage, film, and TV actress[408]
- Anson Williams (born Anson William Heimlick, 1949), actor (Happy Days)[342]
- Henry Winkler (born 1945), actor, director, producer, and author (Happy Days)[342]
1930s
- Woody Allen (born Allan Stewart Konigsberg, 1935), film director, writer, actor, and stand-up comedian[409]
- Alan Arkin (born 1934), film actor, director[410]
- Barbara Barrie (born 1931), actress and author of children's books[335]
- Richard Benjamin (born 1938), actor and film director[402]
- Dyan Cannon (born Samille Diane Friesen, 1937), film/TV actress, editor, producer, and director[411]
- Eddie Carmel (1936–1972), entertainer known as "The Jewish Giant"[412]
- Jerry Douglas (born Gerald Rubenstein, 1932–2021), TV actress (The Young and the Restless)[413]
- Elliott Gould (born Elliot Goldstein, 1938), film/TV actor[414]
- Andre Gregory (born 1934), actor-writer-director, known for My Dinner with Andre
- Charles Grodin (1935–2021), actor and cable talk show host[415]
- Judd Hirsch (born 1935), actor (Taxi, NUMB3RS)[339]
- Dustin Hoffman (born 1937), two-time-Oscar-winning actor[416]
- Tony Jay (1933–2006), English/American actor[417]
- Harvey Keitel (born 1939), actor[418]
- Larry King (1933-2021), television host
- Walter Koenig (born 1936), actor, writer, teacher, and director (appeared in original Star Trek)[419]
- Yaphet Kotto (1939–2021), African-American actor; son of Cameroonian Crown Prince (role in Alien)[420]
- Michael Landon (born Eugene Maurice Orowitz, 1936–1991), actor, producer, and director[421]
- Louise Lasser (born 1939), stage/film/TV actress (Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman)[422][423]
- Piper Laurie (born Rosetta Jacobs, 1932–), actress[424]
- Linda Lavin (born 1937), stage, film, and TV actress[425]
- Steve Lawrence (born Sidney Liebowitz, 1935–), singer and actor (The Carol Burnett Show)
- Shari Lewis (born Sonia Phyllis Hurwitz, 1933–1998), ventriloquist, puppeteer, and children's TV show host[426]
- Hal Linden (born Harold Lipshitz, 1931), actor and TV director (Barney Miller)[427]
- Tina Louise (born 1934), model, singer, and film/TV actress[428]
- Jackie Mason (born Yacov Moshe Maza, 1928–2021), stand-up comedian/actor[429][430]
- Paul Mazursky (1930–2014), film director and actor[431]
- Shelley Morrison (1936-2019) American actress to Jewish-Sephardic parents.[432]
- Barry Newman (born 1938), actor[433]
- Leonard Nimoy (1931–2015), film director, actor; played Spock on Star Trek[434]
- Suzanne Pleshette (1937–2008), actress (The Bob Newhart Show)
- Ron Rifkin (born 1939), actor, director[344]
- Joan Rivers (born Joan Alexandra Molinsky Sanger Rosenberg, 1933–2014), comedian, actress, talk show host[435][436]
- George Segal (1934–2021), film and stage actor[402]
- Susan Strasberg (1938–1999), actress (In Praise of Older Women)
- Dame Elizabeth Taylor (1932–2011), Oscar-winning English/American film actress and sex symbol[437][438][439]
- Gene Wilder (born Jerome Silberman, 1933–2016), actor and comedian[440]
1920s
- Marty Allen (1922–2018), stand-up comedian and actor
- Ed Ames (born Edmund Dantes Urick, 1927), singer and actor[441]
- Beatrice Arthur (born Bernice Frankel, 1922–2009), actress[442]
- Ed Asner (1929–2021), actor[443]
- Lauren Bacall (born Betty Joan Perske, 1924–2014), film and stage actress[444]
- Julian Beck (1925–1985), actor, director, poet, and painter[445]
- Shelley Berman (1926–2017), comedian, writer, teacher, and actor[446]
- Herschel Bernardi (1923–1986), film, Broadway, and TV actor[447]
- Theodore Bikel (1924–2015), character actor, folk singer, and musician[448]
- Larry Blyden (1925–1975), actor[449]
- Tom Bosley (1927–2010), film/TV actor (Happy Days)[450]
- Mel Brooks (born Melvin Kaminsky, 1926), director, writer, actor, and stand-up comedian[451]
- Lenny Bruce (born Leonard Schneider, 1925–1966), stand-up comedian, writer, social critic, satirist[452]
- Susan Cabot (1927–1986), actress[453]
- Sid Caesar (1922–2014), comic actor and writer[454]
- Robert Clary (born Robert Max Widerman, 1926–2022), French-born actor, published author, and lecturer[455]
- Tony Curtis (born Bernard Schwartz, 1925–2010), film actor[456]
- Rodney Dangerfield (born Jacob Cohen, 1921–2004), comedian and actor[457]
- Sammy Davis Jr. (1925–1990) (converted to Judaism), entertainer, member of the "Rat Pack"[438][458]
- Peter Falk (1927–2011), actor[459]
- Fyvush Finkel (1922–2016), actor[460]
- Eddie Fisher (1928–2010), singer; father of Carrie Fisher
- Lee Grant (born Lyova Haskell Rosenthal, 1927), theater, film, and TV actress, and film director[402]
- Buddy Hackett (born Leonard Hacker, 1924–2003), stand-up comedian, writer, actor, and producer[461]
- Monty Hall (born Monte Halperin, 1921–2017), Canadian-born actor, singer, and sportscaster (Let's Make a Deal)[462]
- Estelle Harris (born Estelle Nussbaum, 1928–2022), actress (Seinfeld)[298]
- Laurence Harvey (born Zvi Mosheh Skikne, 1928–1973), Lithuanian-born actor; British and American films
- Steven Hill (born Solomon Krakovsky, 1922–2016), film/TV actor[463]
- Judy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, 1921–1965), actress, singer[464][465]
- Werner Klemperer (1920–2000), comedic actor[466]
- Jack Klugman (1922–2012), actor
- Harvey Korman (1927–2008), actor[467]
- Martin Landau (1928–2017), film/TV actor
- Al Lewis (born Albert Meister, 1920–2006), actor (Grandpa Munster)
- Jerry Lewis (born Joseph Levitch, 1926–2017), comedian, actor, and charity fund-raising telethons[458]
- Bill Macy (1922–2019), actor[468]
- Ross Martin (born Martin Rosenblatt, 1920–1981), Polish-born (Jewish family) film/TV actor (Wild Wild West)
- Walter Matthau (1920–2000), actor[469]
- Anne Meara (1929–2015), comedian and actress, partner and wife of Jerry Stiller[470][471]
- Marilyn Monroe (1926–1962), actress, singer, and model, converted to Judaism.[438]
- Vic Morrow (1929–1982), actor[472][473]
- Jerry Paris (1925–1986), actor and Emmy-winning director (The Dick Van Dyke Show)
- Charlotte Rae (1926–2018), actress (The Facts of Life)
- Tony Randall (born Arthur Leonard Rosenberg, 1920–2004), comic actor[474]
- Carl Reiner (1922–2020), actor, film director, producer, writer, and comedian[475]
- Regina Resnik (1922-2013), opera singer and actress[476]
- Don Rickles (1926–2017), stand-up comedian, actor; pioneer of insult comedy[477]
- Fred Sadoff (1926–1994), actor in South Pacific[478]
- Mort Sahl (1927–2021), stand-up comedian and actor
- Rod Serling (1924–1975), screenwriter and actor (The Twilight Zone)[479]
- Simone Signoret (1921–1985), Academy Award-winning French actress[402]
- Jerry Stiller (1927–2020), comedian and actor[470][471]
- Mel Tormé (1925–1999), actor, musician, known as "The Velvet Fog", jazz singer and songwriter[480][481]
- Marilyn Tyler (1926–2017), opera singer
- Abe Vigoda (1921–2016), film/TV actor (The Godfather)
- Shelley Winters (born Shirley Schrift, 1920–2006), two-time Academy Award-winning actress[482][483]
1910s
- Mason Adams (1919–2005), character actor[484]
- Martin Balsam (1919–1996), actor; won an Academy Award for A Thousand Clowns
- John Banner (1910–1973), Austrian/American actor (Hogan's Heroes)[485]
- Red Buttons (born Aaron Chwatt, 1919–2006), Academy Award-winning comedian and actor[294][402][486]
- Jeff Chandler (born Ira Grossel, 1918-1961), film actor, singer and song writer ––
- Lee J. Cobb (born Leo Jacob, 1911–1976), Academy Award-nominated film actor[402]
- Kirk Douglas (born Issur Danielovitch, 1916–2020), actor (Spartacus)[487]
- John Garfield (born Jacob Garfinkle, 1913–1952), actor[488]
- Paulette Goddard (born Marion Levy, 1910–1990), Oscar-nominated film and theatre actress[489]
- Kitty Carlisle Hart (born Catherine Conn, 1910–2007), singer, actress, and spokeswoman for the arts[490]
- Danny Kaye (born David Daniel Kaminsky, 1911–1987), film actor, singer and comedian[491]
- Hedy Lamarr (born Hedwig Kiesler, 1914–2000), actress, invented early form of spread spectrum communications technology, a key to modern wireless communication
- Marc Lawrence (born Max Goldsmith, 1910–2005), character actor[492]
- Zero Mostel (born Samuel Mostel, 1915–1977), stage and film actor[493]
- Jan Murray (born Murray Janofsky, 1916–2006), stand-up comedian, actor[294][494]
- Luise Rainer (1910–2014), German-born American two-time Academy Award-winning film actress[495][496]
- Lillian Roth (born Lillian Rutstein, 1910–1980), singer and actress, performer on Broadway[497]
- Dinah Shore (born Frances Rose Shore, 1916–1994), singer and actress[498][499]
- Sylvia Sidney (born Sophia Kosow, 1910–1999), film actress[500][501]
- Phil Silvers (1911–1985), entertainer and comedy actor[502]
- Harold J. Stone (born Harold Hochstein, 1913–2005), film/TV character actor[503]
- Arnold Stang (1918–2009) American comic actor typically cast as a bespectacled but arrogant and loud-mouthed con artist[504]
- Mike Wallace (born Myron Wallace, 1918–2012), journalist, briefly acted during the 1940s[505]
- Eli Wallach (1915–2014), film, TV and stage actor[506]
- Sam Wanamaker (1919–1993), actor and director[507]
- Keenan Wynn (1916–1986), character actor[402]
1900s
- Stella Adler (1901–1992), actress and acting teacher[508]
- Jack Albertson (1907–1981), actor (Chico and the Man)
- Leon Askin (born Leon Aschkenasy, 1907–2005), Austrian American actor[509]
- Milton Berle (born Milton Berlinger, 1908–2002), comedian and actor; pioneered vaudeville and stand-up comedy art forms[510][511]
- Joe Besser (1907–1988), comedian (Three Stooges)[512]
- Mel Blanc (1908–1989), voice actor and comedian, "The Man of a Thousand Voices", created voices of Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Tweety Bird, Wile E. Coyote, Barney Rubble[513]
- Ben Blue (born Benjamin Bernstein, 1901–1975), Canadian American actor and comedian[402]
- Howard Da Silva (born Howard Silverblatt, 1909–1986), film actor[402]
- Melvyn Douglas (born Melvyn Hesselberg, 1901–1981), actor, won all three of the entertainment industry's highest awards (two Oscars, a Tony, and an Emmy)[514][515]
- Larry Fine (born Louis Feinberg, 1902–1975), comedian and actor (Three Stooges)[512]
- Joseph Green (1900–1996), Polish-American film actor and director[516]
- John Houseman (born Jacques Haussmann, 1902–1988), actor; won an Academy Award for The Paper Chase
- Curly Howard (born Jerome Horwitz, 1903–1952), one of the Three Stooges[512]
- Sam Levene (1905–1980), Russian/American stage and film actor[517]
- Peter Lorre (born László Löwenstein, 1904–1964), Austria-Hungary-born American stage and screen actor (M)[518]
- Zeppo Marx (1901–1979), member of the Marx Brothers[519]
- Sandy Meisner (1905–1997), actor and acting coach; developed acting methodology known as the "Meisner Technique"
- Ritz Brothers (Al, Jimmy, and Harry Ritz, 1901–1965, 1904–1985, 1907–1986 respectively), Jewish comedy team[402]
- Natalie Schafer (1900–1991), actress (Gilligan's Island)
- Lee Strasberg (born Israel Strassberg, 1901–1982), actor, director, and acting teacher in theater and film, who according to author Mel Gussow "revolutionized the art of acting"
1890s
- Jack Benny (born Benjamin Kubelsky, 1894–1974), comedian, vaudeville performer, and radio, TV, and film actor[520]
- Gertrude Berg (born Tilly Edelstein, 1899–1966), radio/TV actress[521]
- Fanny Brice (born Fania Borach, 1891–1951), comedian, singer, and entertainer[522]
- George Burns (born Nathan Birnbaum, 1896–1996), comedian and actor[523]
- Eddie Cantor (born Israel Iskowitz, 1892–1964), comedian, singer, actor, songwriter[524]
- Ricardo Cortez (born Jacob Krantz, 1899–1977), Austrian-born American silent film star, known as a "Latin lover" type[525]
- Anthony Frome, (born Abraham Feinberg, 1899–1986), singer, the "Poet Prince of the Air Waves".[526]
- Hermione Gingold (1897–1987), British-born actress[527]
- Moe Howard (born Moses Horwitz, 1897–1975), "leader" of the Three Stooges[512]
- Shemp Howard (born Samuel Horwitz, 1895–1955), member of the Three Stooges[512]
- Sam Jaffe (born Shalom Jaffe, 1891–1984), Academy Award-nominated film and stage actor[402]
- Irving Kaufman (born Isidore Kaufman, 1890–1976), singer, recording artist, and vaudeville performer[528]
- Francis Lederer (1899–2000), Czech-born American actor[529]
- Philip Loeb (1892–1955), stage, film, and TV actor[530]
- Paul Lukas (1895–1971), Hungarian American film actor[402]
- Groucho Marx (born Julius Marx, 1890–1977), comedian, working both with his siblings, the Marx Brothers, and on his own[519]
- Gummo Marx (born Milton Marx, 1893–1977), one of the Marx Brothers[519]
- Paul Muni (born Meshilem Meier Weisenfreund, 1895–1967), Austrian-born American Academy Award and Tony Award-winning actor[531]
- Carmel Myers (1899–1980), silent film actress[532]
- Molly Picon (born Małka Opiekun, 1898–1992), actor of stage, screen, and TV[533]
- Edward G. Robinson (born Emanuel Goldenberg, 1893–1973), stage and film actor[534]
- Mae West (born Mary Jane West, 1893–1980), actress, playwright, screenwriter, and sex symbol[535]
1880s
- Broncho Billy Anderson (born Maxwell Aronson, 1880–1971), actor, writer, director, and producer; first star of the Western film genre[536]
- Theda Bara (born Theodosia Goodman, 1885–1955), silent film actress; the first screen "vamp"[537]
- Douglas Fairbanks (born Douglas Ullman, 1883–1939), actor, screenwriter, director, and producer known for his silent films
- Al Jolson (born Asa Yoelson, 1886–1950), singer and actor[538]
- Chico Marx (born Leonard Marx, 1887–1961), one of the Marx Brothers[519]
- Harpo Marx (born Adolph Marx, 1888–1964), one of the Marx Brothers[519]
- Sophie Tucker (born Sonya Kalish, 1884–1966), actress, singer, and comedian[539]
- Erich von Stroheim (1885–1957), Austrian-born American filmmaker and actor[540]
- Louis Wolheim (1880–1931), character actor in silent films during the 1920s; also appeared on stage and in early sound films (All Quiet on the Western Front)
- Ed Wynn (born Isaiah Edwin Leopold, 1886–1966), comedian and actor[402]
Pre–1880s
- Alla Nazimova (born Miriam Leventon, 1879–1945), theater and film actress, scriptwriter, and producer[541]
- Boris Thomashefsky (1868–1939), Ukrainian-born American singer, actor, Yiddish theater icon[542]
- Jacob Pavlovitch Adler (1855–1926), Russian-born American actor, Yiddish theater[543]
- Adah Isaacs Menken (1835–1868), actress, dancer, painter, and poet; converted to Judaism upon marrying the first of her four husbands[544]
Comedians
- Dan Ahdoot, finalist Last Comic Standing, 2004[545]
- Dave Attell (born 1965), stand-up comedian; host of Insomniac with Dave Attell[546]
- Victor Borge (born Børge Rosenbaum, 1909–2000), humorist and concert pianist[547]
- Andrew Ginsburg (born 1979), comedian, actor, and three-time champion bodybuilder[548]
- Tom Lehrer (born 1928), satirist, musician[549]
- Ritz Brothers (Al Ritz, Jimmy Ritz, Harry Ritz), see "Actors"[402]
- Robert Schimmel (1950–2010), stand-up comedian;[550]
- Danny Sexbang (born 1979), member of musical-comedy duo Ninja Sex Party
- Jon Stewart (born Jonathan Stuart Leibowitz, 1962), stand-up comedian, actor, author; host, head writer, and producer of The Daily Show
- Eric Andre (born 1983), actor, host on the Eric Andre Show, absurdist comedian
- Marc Maron (born 1963), stand-up comedian, podcaster, writer, and actor
Film/television directors and producers
- J. J. Abrams (born 1966), screenwriter, director, film/TV producer[551]
- Woody Allen (born 1935), Oscar-winning screenwriter, director and actor[552]
- Eleanor Antin (born 1935), photographer, author, and artist working with video, film, performance, and drawing[553]
- Judd Apatow (born 1968), screenwriter, director, film/TV producer[554]
- Alan Arkin (born 1934), Academy Award-nominated film actor, director[294][402]
- Danny Arnold (1925–1995), actor/director[555]
- Darren Aronofsky (born 1969), film director, screenwriter and producer[276]
- Ralph Bakshi (born 1938), film director and animator[556]
- Noah Baumbach (born 1969), film screenwriter and director[557]
- Henry Bean (born 1945)[558]
- Richard Benjamin (born 1938), actor/film director[402]
- Curtis Bernhardt (1899–1981, Germany)[559]
- Mike Binder (born 1958), director, writer and actor in film and TV[560]
- Peter Bogdanovich (born 1939), film actor, writer and director[561]
- Zach Braff (born 1975), film/TV actor, director, screenwriter, and producer[562][563]
- John Brahm (1893–1982, Germany)[559]
- Albert Brooks (born 1947), film actor, writer and director[564]
- James L. Brooks (born 1940), TV and film writer, producer and director[565]
- Mel Brooks (born 1926), writer, director and actor of film, TV and stage[566]
- Richard Brooks (1912–1992), film director and producer[567]
- William Castle (1914–1977), film director and producer[568]
- Joel Coen (born 1954) and Ethan Coen (born 1957), Academy Award-winning film writers, directors, producers and editors[569]
- George Cukor (1899–1983), Academy Award-winning film director and producer[570]
- Michael Curtiz (1886–1962), Academy Award-winning film director[571]
- Jules Dassin (1911–2008), once blacklisted writer and director of film[572]
- Maya Deren (1917–1961), Film writer, director and actress[573]
- Cecil B. DeMille (1881–1959), Academy Award-winning film director and producer[574]
- Stanley Donen (1924–2019), film producer and director[575]
- Richard Donner (1930–2021), film director, producer and sometimes actor[576]
- Robert Downey Sr. (1935–2021), film writer and director[577]
- Samuel Fuller (1912–1997), film writer, director and actor[578]
- Keith Gordon (born 1961), film actor, director and writer[579]
- Lee Grant (born Lyova Haskell Rosenthal, 1927), theater, film, and TV actress, and film director[402]
- James Gray (born 1969), film writer and director[580]
- Joseph Green (1900–1996), Polish-American film director and actor[516]
- Bud Greenspan (1926–2010), director of documentaries on sports[581]
- Christopher Guest (born 1948), see "Actors" above[582][583]
- Todd Haynes (born 1961), film writer and director[584]
- Amy Heckerling (born 1954), film director[585]
- Marshall Herskovitz (born 1952), film producer and director[586]
- Arthur Hiller (1923–2016), film director and producer[587]
- Agnieszka Holland (born 1948 in Poland)[588]
- Nicole Holofcener (born 1960), writer and director in film[589]
- Henry Jaglom (born 1938), writer, director and actor in Independent film[590]
- Andrew Jarecki (born 1960), film director and producer, musician, and entrepreneur; brother of Eugene Jarecki and half-brother of Nicholas Jarecki[591]
- Eugene Jarecki (born 1964), film director, writer, and producer, and author; brother of Andrew Jarecki and half-brother of Nicholas Jarecki[591]
- Miranda July (born Miranda Jennifer Grossinger, 1974), Jewish father[592]
- Jeremy Paul Kagan (born 1945), film writer and director[593]
- Jake Kasdan (born 1975), film writer and director[594]
- Lawrence Kasdan (born 1949), film writer and director[595]
- Jeffrey Katzenberg (born 1950), film producer, director and co-founder of DreamWorks SKG[596]
- Philip Kaufman (born 1936), film director and screenwriter[597]
- Henry Koster (1905–1988), film director[598]
- Stanley Kramer (1913–2001), director[599]
- Stanley Kubrick (1928–1999)
- John Landis (born 1950), movie actor, director, writer, and producer[600]
- Fritz Lang (1890–1976, Austria, mother born Jewish)[559]
- Andy Lassner (born 1966), Colombian-American television producer[601][602]
- Norman Lear (born 1922), film and television director[603]
- Mervyn LeRoy (1900–1987), film director[604]
- Barry Levinson (born 1942), producer, writer and director of film and TV[605]
- Shawn Levy (born 1968), film producer and director[606]
- Albert Lewin (1894–1968), film writer, producer and director[607]
- Jerry Lewis (1926–2017), film actor, writer and director[608]
- Doug Liman (born 1965), film and TV producer and director[609]
- Jonathan Littman (born 1962/1963) television producer[610][611]
- Lynne Littman (born 1941), film and television director and producer[612]
- Ernst Lubitsch (1892–1947), film director originally from Germany[613]
- Michael Lucas (born 1972, USSR)[614]
- Sidney Lumet (1924–2011), film writer, producer and director[615]
- David Mamet (born 1947), writer and director of stage and screen[616]
- Michael Mann (born 1943), film director, screenwriter, producer[617]
- Elaine May (born 1932), film, TV and stage writer, director and actress[618]
- Paul Mazursky (1930–2014), see "Actors" above[619]
- Lewis Milestone (1895–1980), film director and producer[620]
- John Milius (born 1944)[621]
- Meredith Monk (born 1942), composer, performer, theater director, vocalist, filmmaker, and choreographer[622]
- Errol Morris (born 1948), documentary filmmaker[623]
- Mike Nichols (1931–2014), Emmy, Grammy, Tony and Academy Award-winning film and stage director[402]
- Leonard Nimoy (1931–2015), film director, actor, writer, singer, songwriter, poet, and photographer
- Ken Olin (born 1954), see "Actors" above[624]
- Marcel Ophüls (born 1927), documentary filmmaker, son of Max Ophüls[559][625]
- Max Ophüls (1902–1957, Germany), father of Marcel Ophüls[559][626]
- Frank Oz (born 1944), writer, actor and director of film and TV[627]
- Alan J. Pakula (1928–1998), film director and producer[628]
- Jerry Paris (1925–1986), Emmy-winning television director (The Dick Van Dyke Show, Happy Days)
- Larry Peerce (born 1930), film writer and director[629]
- Arthur Penn (1922–2010), film director and producer[630]
- Sydney Pollack (born 1934), film producer, director, actor and writer[631]
- Abraham Polonsky (1910–1999), film writer and director[632]
- Otto Preminger (1905–1986), film producer, director and actor[633]
- Bob Rafelson (born 1933), film writer-director[634]
- Irving Rapper (1898–1999), British-born film director[635]
- Brett Ratner (born 1969)[636]
- Ron Rifkin (born 1939), actor, director[624]
- Jay Roach (born 1957), film director, producer and screenwriter, converted to Judaism[637]
- Eli Roth (born 1972), film actor, director, producer and writer[638]
- Julian Schnabel (born 1951)[639]
- Steve Sekely (1899–1979), Hungarian-born film director[516]
- George Sidney (1916–2002), film director, known for MGM films[402]
- Joan Micklin Silver (1935–2020)[612]
- Bryan Singer (born 1965)[640]
- Curt Siodmak (1902–2000)[641]
- Robert Siodmak (1900–1973)[641]
- Barry Sonnenfeld, director[642]
- Steven Spielberg (born 1946)[643]
- Edgar Ulmer (1904–1972, Austria-Hungary)[559]
- Josef von Sternberg (1894, Austria–1969)[644]
- Erich von Stroheim (1885, Austria–1957)[645]
- Robin Washington (born 1956)[646]
- Claudia Weill (born 1947), film and theater director, educator, cinematographer[647]
- Billy Wilder (1906–2002)[559]
- William Wyler (1902, Germany–1981)[648]
- Fred Zinnemann (1907, Austria–1997)[559]
- David Zucker & Jerry Zucker (born 1950), parody directors, producers[649]
Models
- Brooke Burke, TV personality and model[650]
- Yael Markovich, Israeli/American model/beauty queen[651]
- Antonio Sabato Jr., model and actor
- Lindsey Vuolo, model and Playboy Playmate[652]
- Bar Refaeli, model
TV and radio presenters
- Don Francisco (Mario Kreutzberger), network TV host of Sabado Gigante, filmed in Miami
- Monty Hall (1924-2017), network TV host of Let's Make a Deal game show
- Mary Hart (born 1950), see "Actors" above[653]
- Daryn Kagan (born 1963), host of CNN Live Today[654]
- Larry King (1993–2021), network TV interviewer
- Matt Lauer, co-host on The Today Show
- Bernard Meltzer, network radio psychologist advising call-in listeners on variety of problems
- Al Michaels (born 1944)[655]
- Amy Wynn Pastor (born 1976), carpenter on Trading Spaces[656]
- Maury Povich (born 1939), network TV host analyzing relationship problems
- Sally Jessie Raphael (born 1935), network radio psychologist
- Joan Rivers (1933–2014), talk show host, stage actress/writer, comedian, and celebrity[436]
- Daniel Schorr (1916–2010), journalist who covered the world for more than 60 years, last as a senior news analyst for National Public Radio[657]
- Jerry Springer (born 1944), host of The Jerry Springer Show[658]
- Mike Wallace (1918–2012), journalist, 60 Minutes correspondent[659]
- Barbara Walters (born 1929), media personality, regular fixture on morning TV shows (Today and The View), evening news magazines (20/20), and on The ABC Evening News, as the first female evening news anchor[660]
- Dr. Ruth Westheimer (born 1928), better known as Dr. Ruth, German-American sex therapist, talk show host, author, professor, Holocaust survivor, and former Haganah sniper.
Producers and directors (theater)
Persons listed with a double asterisk (**) are producers who have won the Tony Award for Best Musical and/or the Tony Award for Best Play. Those listed with a triple asterisk (***) have won the Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical and/or Play. Those listed with a quadruple asterisk (****) have won the Tony Award for Best Actor or Best Actress in a Musical or Play.
- Herb Alpert, producer, and composer, songwriter, lead singer, and horn player with Tijuana Brass
- Boris Aronson, set designer, costume designer and lighting designer
- George Axelrod, producer and director
- Julian Beck and Judith Malina, founders of Living Theatre
- David Belasco, producer and director
- Michael Bennett, director & producer, choreographer, dancer **
- Rudolf Bing (1902–1997), opera impresario, General Manager of the Metropolitan Opera in New York from 1950 to 1972[661]
- Robert Brustein, producer, writer, director, critic, educator
- Abe Burrows, director ***
- Joseph Chaikin & Peter Feldman, founders of Open Theatre
- Paddy Chayefsky, director
- Heinrich Conried, theatre owner/operator and producer
- Norman Corwin, director
- Clive Davis, producer
- Cy Feuer, producer, director and theatre owner/operator **
- Ron Field, director ***
- David Geffen, producer **
- Leonard Goldberg, producer
- Arthur Hammerstein, producer and director (uncle of Oscar Hammerstein II)
- Oscar Hammerstein I, producer and theater director/operator (grandfather of Oscar Hammerstein II)
- Oscar Hammerstein II, producer and director
- Ben Hecht, idiosyncratic screenwriter, director, producer, playwright, and novelist; known as "the Shakespeare of Hollywood"
- Sidney Howard, producer and director
- George Jessel, see "Actors (Theater)" above
- Robert Kalfin, producer, director, writer **
- Mickey Katz, see "Actors (Theater)" above
- George S. Kaufman, producer, director, and theater owner/operator
- Michael Kidd, director and producer
- Alan King, see "Actors (Theater)" above
- James Lapine, director and librettist
- Norman Lear, creator, head screenwriter, and producer of taboo breaking sitcom All in the Family; also created Maude and The Jeffersons
- Ernest Lehman, producer
- Sam Levene, see "Actors (Theater)" above
- Lucille Lortel, Off-Broadway producer, Lucille Lortel Theatre named after her
- Sanford Meisner, founder of Neighbourhood Playhouse
- David Merrick, producer and director **
- Lorne Michaels, comedian, writer, director, producer, the sole creator, writer, director and producer of Saturday Night Live; also produced film and TV projects that spun off from it
- Arthur Miller, playwright
- Mitch Miller, producer
- Isaac Mizrahi (born 1961), fashion designer[662]
- Mike Nichols (1931–2014), Emmy, Grammy, Tony and Academy Award-winning film and stage director[402]
- Toby Orenstein, producer and founder of Toby's Dinner Theatre, Columbia Center for Theatrical Arts, and the Young Columbians
- Joseph Papp a.k.a. Joe Papp, founded the non-profit NYC Public Theater **
- Marc Platt, producer
- Harold Prince, director **, ***
- Elmer Rice, director and producer
- Jerome Robbins, producer and director ***
- Billy Rose, director, producer, and theater operator
- Morrie Ryskind, director
- Rebecca Schull, actress
- Shubert family, producers and theater owners **
- Anna Sokolow, director
- Steven Spielberg, film director, producer
- Lee Strasberg and Harold Clurman, co-founders of the Group Theatre
- Julie Taymor, director ***
- Bob Weinstein, producer, screenwriter
- Harvey Weinstein, producer
- Efrem Zimbalist Jr., see "Actors (Theater)" above
- David Zippel, director
Circus
- Paul Binder, co-founder, ringmaster and artistic director of the Big Apple Circus
- Abe Goldstein, regarded as "the Greatest Irish Cop Clown" in the business and worked for Ringling Bros. and other circuses
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