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*[[James Earl Jones]], (BFA 1955), actor, the voice of "[[Darth Vader]]" in the ''[[Star Wars]]'' movies, winner of two [[Tony Awards]]
*[[James Earl Jones]], (BFA 1955), actor, the voice of "[[Darth Vader]]" in the ''[[Star Wars]]'' movies, winner of two [[Tony Awards]]
*[[Tusshar Kapoor]], actor in Indian cinema
*[[Tusshar Kapoor]], actor in Indian cinema
*[[Andrew Keenan-Bolger]], known for his role in the national tour of [[The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee]] as well as for his video blog, "Andrew's Blog"
*[[Celia Keenan-Bolger]] Broadway actress who originated the role of Olive Ostrovsky in [[The 25th Annual Putnam Country Spelling Bee]]. She also starred as [[Eponine]] in the revival of [[Les Miserables (musical)|Les Miserables]]
*[[Nancy Kovack]] (b. [[March 11]] [[1935]], [[Flint, Michigan]]) is an [[United States|American]] [[actress]]. She attended the [[University of Michigan]] at age 15 and graduated by 19. At the age of 20 she had won eight beauty titles. She has appeared on a number of TV episodes, including ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series|Star Trek]]'', ''[[Bewitched]]'', ''[[Batman (TV series)|Batman]]'', ''[[Perry Mason (TV series)|Perry Mason]]'', ''[[The Man from U.N.C.L.E.]]'', and ''[[Burke's Law]]''. In [[1969]] she was nominated for an [[Emmy]] for an appearance on ''[[Mannix]]''. She also had parts in ''[[Strangers When We Meet (film)|Strangers When We Meet]]'' ([[1960]]), ''[[Diary of a Madman (film)|Diary of a Madman]]'' ([[1963]]) with [[Vincent Price]], ''[[The Outlaws Is Coming]]'' ([[1965]]) with [[The Three Stooges]], ''[[Sylvia (1965 film)|Sylvia]]'' ([[1965]]), ''[[Tarzan and the Valley of Gold]]'' ([[1966]]), and ''[[Frankie and Johnny (1966 film)|Frankie and Johnny]]'' ([[1966]]).
*[[Nancy Kovack]] (b. [[March 11]] [[1935]], [[Flint, Michigan]]) is an [[United States|American]] [[actress]]. She attended the [[University of Michigan]] at age 15 and graduated by 19. At the age of 20 she had won eight beauty titles. She has appeared on a number of TV episodes, including ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series|Star Trek]]'', ''[[Bewitched]]'', ''[[Batman (TV series)|Batman]]'', ''[[Perry Mason (TV series)|Perry Mason]]'', ''[[The Man from U.N.C.L.E.]]'', and ''[[Burke's Law]]''. In [[1969]] she was nominated for an [[Emmy]] for an appearance on ''[[Mannix]]''. She also had parts in ''[[Strangers When We Meet (film)|Strangers When We Meet]]'' ([[1960]]), ''[[Diary of a Madman (film)|Diary of a Madman]]'' ([[1963]]) with [[Vincent Price]], ''[[The Outlaws Is Coming]]'' ([[1965]]) with [[The Three Stooges]], ''[[Sylvia (1965 film)|Sylvia]]'' ([[1965]]), ''[[Tarzan and the Valley of Gold]]'' ([[1966]]), and ''[[Frankie and Johnny (1966 film)|Frankie and Johnny]]'' ([[1966]]).
*[[Christine Lahti]], (BFA 1972), actress, winner of the [[Academy Awards|Academy Award]], an [[Emmy]], and two [[Golden Globe]] awards.
*[[Christine Lahti]], (BFA 1972), actress, winner of the [[Academy Awards|Academy Award]], an [[Emmy]], and two [[Golden Globe]] awards.
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*[[Jennifer Laura Thompson]], (BFA), [[Tony Award]]-nominated actress
*[[Jennifer Laura Thompson]], (BFA), [[Tony Award]]-nominated actress
*[[Kapila Vatsyayan]] (M.A.), Indian arts scholar, founder/director of [[Indira Kalakendra]].
*[[Kapila Vatsyayan]] (M.A.), Indian arts scholar, founder/director of [[Indira Kalakendra]].
*The cast and creators of YouTube sensation, [[A Very Potter Musical]]


===Directors/producers/screenwriters===
===Directors/producers/screenwriters===

Revision as of 03:09, 16 August 2009

The parent article is at List of University of Michigan alumni
Academic unit key
Symbol Academic unit

ARCH Taubman College
BUS Ross School of Business
COE College of Engineering
DENT School of Dentistry
GFSPP Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy
HHRS Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies
LAW Law School
LSA College of LS&A
MED Medical School
MUSIC School of Music, Theatre and Dance
PHARM School of Pharmacy
SED School of Education
SNRE School of Natural Resources
SOAD School of Art & Design
SOI School of Information
SON School of Nursing
SOK School of Kinesiology
SOSW School of Social Work
SPH School of Public Health
MDNG Matriculated, did not graduate

This is a list of arts-related alumni from the University of Michigan.

Belles lettres

  • Daniel Aaron (BA 1933) “…may be the most eminent living critic of American literature and culture.” He is the author of many articles and books, including, Men of Good Hope: A Story of American Progressives, The Unwritten War: Writers of the Civil War and, with Richard Hofstadter and William Miller, The Structure of American History, all books that have appeared in numerous editions.
  • Max Apple, (BA 1963). Author of: The Oranging of America (1976, short stories), Zip: A Novel of the Left and the Right (1978, novel), Three Stories (1983, short stories), Free Agents (1984, novel), The Propheteers: A Novel (1987, novel), Roommates: My Grandfather's Story (1994, biography, of Apple's grandfather)
  • Robert Arthur, Jr., (BA 1930), writer, novelist, editor. Created the juvenile "The Three Investigators" mystery series and worked on the anthology TV series "Alfred Hitchcock Presents".
  • Erik Barmack, (B.A. 1995), born 1973, author of the novel, "The Virgin" and the non-fiction book, "Why Fantasy Football Matters"
  • Sven Birkerts, (A.B. 1973), Essayist and author of The Gutenberg Elegies
  • John Ciardi (M.A. 1939), Pulitzer Prize winning Poet Blue Skies.
  • Mary Gaitskill, Bad Behavior (1988), Two Girls, Fat and Thin (1991), Because They Wanted To (1997) (stories), Veronica (2005).
  • Josh Greenfeld, novelist, playwright, screenwriter and author of A Child Called Noah trilogy.
  • Judith Guest, 1959, wrote Ordinary People.
  • Aaron Hamburger (B.A. 1995) (born 1973) is an American writer best known for his short story collection The View from Stalin's Head (2004) and novel Faith for Beginners (2005). The View from Stalin's Head was awarded the Rome Prize by the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the American Academy in Rome. His next book, Faith for Beginners, is a novel about a dysfunctional family vacation in Jerusalem, and was nominated for a Lambda Literary Award.
  • Robert Hayden, (MA 1944), Professor of Poetry 1969-1980.
  • James Avery Hopwood, (AB 1905), playwright, established the U-M Hopwood Awards (won by Arthur Miller and Lawrence Kasdan, q.v.)
  • Jane Kenyon, (B.A 1970, M.A. 1972), poet and wife of former Michigan Professor Donald Hall, U.S. Poet Laureate.
  • Elizabeth Kostova, (M.F.A. 2004), writer. Her first novel, The Historian, was published in 2005, and has become a best-seller.
  • David Levering Lewis (MDNG) is an American historian and two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography, for part one and part two of his biography of W.E.B. Du Bois (in 1994 and 2001, respectively). He is the first author to win two Pulitzer Prizes for biography for back-to-back volumes. When the family moved to Atlanta, Georgia, Lewis attended Booker T. Washington High School until his early admission on scholarship to Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1956. Lewis briefly attended the University of Michigan Law School, then transferred to Columbia University where he earned his M.A. in history in 1959. MacArthur Foundation award winner.
  • Janet Malcolm, 1955, was a writer for The New Yorker and wrote In the Freud Archives.
  • Thomas McGuane (MDNG), novelist
  • Arthur Miller, (AB 1938), playwright, Pulitzer Prize- and Tony Award-winning author of Death of a Salesman and The Crucible, and erstwhile husband of Marilyn Monroe
  • Howard Moss, won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for Selected Poems in 1971.
  • Patrick O'Keeffe, (MFA), winner of the Chamberlain Award for Creative Writing for Above the Bar. (administered by the Hopwood Program) and instructor in the University of Michigan's Sweetland Writing Center has won the 2006 Story Prize, the richest U.S. prize for short fiction, for The Hill Road, a collection of four novellas set in a fictional Irish farming village. O'Keeffe's writing has been compared to the Irish short-story and novel writer William Trevor. Mr. O'Keeffe received the 2006 Whiting Writers Award at a ceremony Oct. 25 at The Morgan Library & Museum in New York City
  • Frank O’Hara, (M.A. 1951). Author of: A City Winter and Other Poems,Oranges: 12 pastorals, Second Avenue, Odes, Lunch Poems. Love Poems.
  • Susan Olasky, (AB 1975), author.
  • Susan Orlean, (AB 1976), wrote The Orchid Thief. The book was made into the movie Adaptation.
  • Marge Piercy, (AB 1957), wrote Braided Lives and Fly Away Home. Hopwood Program award winner.
  • Theodore Roethke, (A.B. 1929) Poet and winner of the 1954 Pulitzer Prize for his collection The Waking
  • Ari Roth playwright and Artistid Director of Theater J
  • Allen Seager, author, Amos Berry and A Frieze of Girls
  • Betty Smith, (1921-22, 1927, 1931), author of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
  • James Tobin, (1978, MA 1979, PhD 1986), wrote To Conquer the Air, Ernie Pyle's War, and Great Projects.
  • David Tucker (BA) Journalist and poet Tucker studied poetry with Donald Hall and Robert Hayden at the University of Michigan. In 2005, Tucker’s first volume of poetry, Late for Work, won a Bakeless Literary Prize from Middlebury College Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference. According to the publisher, Houghton Mifflin, “‘Late for Work’ follows reporters jostling for headlines, evoking the gritty glamour of the newsroom in wry, poignant poems.” Tucker has worked for 28 years at leading newspapers and is a member of the New Jersey Star-Ledger team that won the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for breaking news.
  • Ronald Wallace
  • Nancy Willard(BA, Ph.D).In 1982, she received the Newbery Medal for A Visit to William Blake's Inn.
  • Edmund White, (AB 1962), wrote for Vanity Fair and The New Yorker.
  • Stewart Edward White,(Ph.D., 1895; M.A., 1903). Author

Art, architecture, design

Arts and entertainment

Literature and graphic arts

  • Robert Asprin, (MDNG: 1964-1965). Science-fiction and fantasy author.
  • Dean Bakopoulos, 1997, novelist, Please Don't Come Back From the Moon
  • Don Blum, (BA 1994) drummer in the band The Von Bondies
  • Neal Gabler, (LAW: JD), as a student at the University of Michigan in the late 1960s, he filed so often for the Michigan Daily that, at its 50th anniversary, he was cited as having produced more column inches than anyone else in the paper's history. Author: An Empire of Their Own: How the Jews Invented Hollywood was published in 1989; Winchell: Gossip, Power, and the Culture of Celebrity (1994); Life the Movie: How Entertainment Conquered Reality (1998); Walt Disney: Triumph of the American Imagination (2006).
  • Frank Bunker Gilbreth Jr., 1933, wrote Cheaper by the Dozen.
  • Cathy Guisewite, (BA 1972), author, creator of Cathy comic strip
  • Jon Hein, (BA 1989), creator of the popular Jump the Shark website.
  • Ross Macdonald, (MA 1942, PhD 1952), wrote the Lew Archer Mystery Series
  • Brad Meltzer, (BA 1992), author of several popular novels and creator of TV series Jack and Bobby.
  • William Shawn, (MDNG: 1925-1927) The New Yorker editor from 1952-1987
  • Ben Tausig, (BA 2002), noted crossword puzzle constructor. Mr. Tausig constructs a weekly crossword aimed at younger solvers which appears in the Village Voice, Chicago Reader, Detroit Metro Times, Washington City Paper, San Francisco Bay Guardian, and many other alternative weeklies. He has published freelance work in the New York Times, New York Sun, Los Angeles Times, and Found magazine.
  • Chris Van Allsburg, (BA 1972), author and illustrator, best known for Jumanji and The Polar Express. Both books were made into films, with Jumanji starring Robin Williams, and Polar Express starring Tom Hanks
  • Sam Viviano, (A.B. 1975). Art Director and sometime cover illustrator for MAD magazine.


Music


Talent Management

  • Peter Benedek, (A.B. 1970). Co-founder and senior partner of United Talent Agency (UTA), a literary and talent agency which represents, inter alia, Jim Carrey, Johnny Depp, Harrison Ford, Ben Stiller and Jack Black.
  • Jacques Espinasse, (BUS: BBA 1965, MBA 1966), CFO of Vivendi Universal, owner of Universal Studios and Universal Music Group.
  • George Finkel, (BA 1958), TV Sports Producer for NBC Sports 1971-1990. Won 3 Emmy awards.
  • Dan Glickman, (BA 1966), President and CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America, Inc.
  • Robert E. Nederlander (A.B., 1955; LAW: J.D., 1958), a limited partner in the New York Yankee Partnership, president and director of Nederlander Organization, Inc., and president of Nederlander Television and Film Production. A former U-M regent.
  • Robert Nederlander, Jr. (BS 1985; LAW: JD 1989) President & CEO Nederlander Worldwide Entertainment, which is focused on new business development for the family’s Nederlander “brand”.
  • Robert Roth (BUS: MBA 1979) - Executive Vice President and CFO of HBO.


Theatre

Directors/producers/screenwriters

  • John Briley, (BA 1951, MA 1952), was a screenwriter/novelist of “Gandhi.”
  • Herbert Brodkin, (BA 1924), was a TV producer for The Defenders, Playhouse 90, Sakharov, Skokie and Holocaust.
  • Forman Brown (BA 1922) Forman's Yale Puppeteers, which he established upon graduating from University of Michigan, opened a puppet theatre in Los Angeles in the 1920s which attracted celebrity attention and support from some of Hollywood's biggest names, i.e. Greta Garbo, Marie Dressler, and Douglas Fairbanks, as well as other notable figures including Albert Einstein.
  • Hal Cooper, (BA 1946), was a TV producer/director for “Maude,” “Dick Van Dyke Show,” “Mayberry RFD,” “That Girl,” “I Dream of Jeannie” and “Empty Nest.”
  • Valentine Davies, (BA 1927), was a screenwriter for “Miracle on 34th Street.”
  • Jonathan Glickman, (BA 1991), President of Spyglass Entertainment and producer of Rush Hour (film) series.
  • Gary Hardwick, (BA 1982), is a novelist and filmmaker of “Deliver Us From Eva.” Hardwick wrote the screenplay and directed the romantic comedy, which starred LL Cool J.
  • Adam Herz, writer and producer of American Pie
  • Max Hodge, (BA 1939), was a TV writer for “Wild, Wild West,” “Mission Impossible,” “Marcus Welby” and “The Waltons.”
  • Lawrence Kasdan, (BA 1970, MA 1972), studied creative writing and won four Hopwood Awards. Best known for his work on the Star Wars films, The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi, and on Raiders of the Lost Ark.
  • David Levien, (BA 1989), co-wrote and co-directed “The Knockaround Guys,” a movie about the sons of New York gangsters. Levien also co-wrote the poker movie “Rounders,” which starred Matt Damon.
  • Marian Mercer played role of Nancy Beebe on It's a Living; Tony 1968 for Promises, Promises; Empty Nest Ursula Dietz (1992-94); It's a Living Nancy Beebe (1980-89); St. Elsewhere Eve Leighton (1983-86); Out on a Limb (4-Sep-1992) ; Murder in Three Acts (30-Sep-1986) ;Nine to Five (19-Dec-1980) ; Oh, God! Book II (3-Oct-1980) ; John and Mary (14-Dec-1969)
  • David Newman, (BA 1958, MA 1959), was a screenwriter for Superman I, II, III, Bonnie & Clyde, What's Up Doc? and Still of the Night.
  • Leslie Newman, (BA 1958), was a screenwriter for Superman.
  • Jeff Marx, (BA 1993), is a composer and lyricist of musicals. He is best known for creating the Broadway musical Avenue Q with collaborator Robert Lopez. Together, they wrote the show’s 21 songs.
  • David Murray, (BA 1990), had his film Livermore shown nationwide on the PBS series “Independent Lens.”
  • Dudley Nichols, (MDNG: 1914-1917), was a screenwriter for For Whom the Bell Tolls, Stagecoach, the Oscar winning The Informer, and Bringing up Baby
  • Jack O'Brien, (AB 1961, MA 1962), is a Broadway producer of "The Full Monty" and "Hairspray," for which he won a Tony in 2003. He also was the producer of "His Girl Friday" in London for the National Theatre of Great Britain.
  • Scott Petersen, (BA 1992), filmed a documentary called “Scrabylon,” set primarily at the 2001 World Scrabble Championships in Las Vegas.
  • John Rich, (BA 1948, MA 1949), was a producer for Maude, That Girl, Mayberry RFD, and MacGyver
  • Todd Samovitz, (BA 1989), is co-author of the screenplay “Wonderland”
  • Jeffrey Seller, (BA 1986), is a Broadway producer and three-time Tony Award winner for Best Musical ("Rent" in 1996, "Avenue Q" in 2004, and "In the Heights" in 2008).
  • Robert Shaye (BUS: BBA 1960) - Founder and Co-Chairman, New Line Cinema. Produced The Lord of the Rings trilogy.
  • Chris Smith, (MA 2000), co-produced the Antwone Fisher movie.
  • Roger L. Stevens, (MDNG: 1928-1930, HLLD 1964), was a stage producer for West Side Story, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, A Man for All Seasons and Annie.
  • Benj Pasek and Justin Paul (BFAs 2006) - American musical theatre writing team.

Fiction/non-fiction

  • Arthur Bahr, (BA 1969), Wrote Certifiably Insane, nominated for and Edgar Allan Poe Award for best new Author in 1999
  • Philip Breitmeyer, (AB 1947), wrote Lightening Ridge! Further Adventures of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.
  • Jennifer Coburn, (AB 1988), wrote The Wife of Reilly,Reinventing Mona, "Tales From the Crib" and "The Queen Gene".
  • KC Frederick, (AB 1956, MA 1958, PhD 1963), wrote Accomplices.
  • Underwood Dudley is a native of New York City. He received Ph.D. degree from the University of Michigan. Is known for his popular writing about crank mathematics.
  • Elizabeth Ehrlich, wrote Miriam's Kitchen.
  • Terry Gamble (AB 1977), wrote The Water Dancers, a novel set in northern Michigan.
  • Frank B. Gilbreth Jr., (AB 1933), wrote Cheaper by the Dozen.
  • Thomas Grace, Jr., (AB 1984 , M.ARCH'86), is a best-selling author of the adventure thrillers Spyder Web, Quantum Web, Twisted Web, Bird of Prey and Cause of Death.
  • Ann Hagedorn, (MALS 1975), wrote Beyond the River: The Untold Story of the Heroes of the Underground Railroad.
  • Steve Hamilton, (AB 1983), wrote Blood is the Sky, an Alex McKnight mystery set in Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
  • Hervie Haufler, (AB 1941), is the author of Codebreakers' Victory: How the Allied Cryptographers Won World War II.
  • Joyce Henry, (AB 1948), is the author of Beat the Bard: What's Your Shakespeare IQ?
  • Ross Macdonald, (MA 1942, PhD 1952), wrote the Lew Archer Mystery Series.
  • Brad Meltzer, (AB 1992), has written The Zero Game, The Tenth Justice, Dead Even, The First Counsel and The Millionaires.
  • Walter Miller, (MA 1844), was a Classics scholar and the first to translate the Ilad into English in the native dactylic hexameter.
  • Davi Napoleon, (AB 1966, AM 1968), wrote Chelsea on the Edge: The Adventures of an American Theater.
  • Preeta Samarasan (MFA 2006), wrote Evening is the Whole Day.
  • Ellen Slezak, (AB 1980), wrote Last Year's Jesus: A Novella and Nine Stories.
  • Gilbert Snider, (MD 1975, Mdres 1981), wrote the medical thriller entitled Brain Warp.
  • Richard Stewart, (AB 1952, MD 1955, Mdres 1961, MPHIH 1962), wrote Leper Priest of Moloka'i: The Father Damien Story.
  • Robert Traver, (AB 1928), wrote Anatomy of a Murder.
  • Juliet Winters Carpenter, BA, MA 1976), Award Winning Translator of Japanese, Numerous Books

See also

References