
A unit of thirteen Connecticut College students pose in their worker's uniforms in 1917. During World War I, they worked as farmerettes
This is a list of notable alumni of Connecticut College.
Literature and poetry
- Michael Collier ('76): Poet Laureate of Maryland, 2001–2004; Director of The Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, Middlebury College
 - Dobby Gibson ('93): poet
 - Aracelis Girmay ('99): poet
 - Cecelia Holland ('65): novelist
 - Gayl Jones ('72): novelist, poet, playwright
 - William Lychack ('88): novelist
 - Luanne Rice ('77): novelist
 
Authors and writers
- Sloane Crosley ('00): best-selling author; essayist; publicist with Vintage Books
 - David Grann ('89): journalist and best-selling and staff writer at The New Yorker
 - Joshua Green ('94): senior national correspondent at Bloomberg Businessweek and a weekly columnist for the Boston Globe
 - Jazmine Hughes ('12): writer and editor; currently a story editor at The New York Times Magazine
 - Nan Kempner ('52): socialite, contributing editor of Vogue
 - Elizabeth Peer ('57): journalist; first female foreign bureau chief at Newsweek
 - A. B. Stoddard ('89): journalist, political commentator, associate editor of The Hill
 
Academia
- Edward Burger ('85): professor of mathematics, Williams College
 - Martha Chen: lecturer in public policy, Harvard Kennedy School
 - Cynthia Enloe ('60): research professor of international relations and women's studies, Clark University
 - Haden Guest ('93): Director of the Harvard Film Archive, and lecturer at Harvard University
 - David Haussler ('75): professor at University of California, Santa Cruz, member of National Academy of Sciences and American Academy of Arts and Sciences
 - Mark Samuels Lasner: Senior Research Fellow at the University of Delaware
 - Shelley Taylor ('68): social psychologist, pioneer in health psychology, winner of Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from APA
 - Roxanne Johnson: Chemist working at United States Environmental Protection Agency
 - Ellen Vitetta ('64): Director, Cancer Immunobiology Center, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center National Acad. Sciences; Institute of Medicine; American Acad. Arts and Sciences
 
Design, art, and art history
- Agnes Gund: philanthropist, art patron and collector, advocate for arts education
 - Christine Y. Kim: associate curator of contemporary art at Los Angeles County Museum of Art; former associate curator at the Studio Museum in Harlem[1]
 - Peter Som ('93): fashion designer, winner of the 2002 Ecco Domani Fashion Foundation prize[2]
 - Marcia Tucker: first female curator of the Whitney Museum; founding director of the New Museum of Contemporary Art
 
Television and radio
- H. Jon Benjamin: actor, comedian and writer best known for his voice-over roles
 - Molly Cheek ('73): It's Garry Shandling's Show
 - Lee Eisenberg ('99): writer and producer for The Office and the film Year One
 - Chris Gifford (writer) ('81): Co-creator of the Peabody Award-winning children's series "Dora the Explorer"
 - Scott Lowell: actor, Queer as Folk
 - Leland Orser ('82): actor
 - Christof Putzel ('01): award-winning journalist and correspondent for Al Jazeera America
 - Joan Rivers: actress, comedian; attended CC briefly, then transferred to Barnard College
 - Susan Saint James: actress, Kate & Allie; attended CC, did not graduate
 - Sam Seder: writer, actor, political commentator, radio host on Air America
 - Alec Sulkin ('95) and Wellesley Wild ('94): writers and executive producers on Family Guy, The Orville and the 85th Academy Awards
 
Film, theater and dance
- Ted Chapin ('72): President and executive director, Rodgers and Hammerstein Organization
 - Charles Chun ('90): actor who has appeared in television shows such as Criminal Minds, Scrubs, Everybody Loves Raymond, Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide and How I Met Your Mother
 - Chrystelle Trump Bond: dancer, choreographer, author, and dance historian
 - David Dorfman (MFA '81): Professor of Dance, chair of Dance Department, choreographer of modern dance
 - Sean Fine ('96): winner of Academy Award for Best Documentary (Short Subject) for Inocente; director of Academy Award-nominated feature documentary War/Dance
 - Jeffrey Finn ('92): Broadway producer, nominated for 2005 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play for On Golden Pond
 - Judy Irving ('68): Emmy Award and Sundance-winning filmmaker
 - Raja Feather Kelly ('09): American dancer and choreographer and serves as the artistic director of the New Brooklyn Theatre
 - Leland Orser ('82) Actor and director known for Taken, Taken 2 and Se7en
 - Estelle Parsons ('49): stage, film, and television actor; winner of 1967 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for Bonnie and Clyde
 - Kevin Wade ('76): screenwriter, Working Girl, Meet Joe Black
 
National Theater Institute alumni (accredited by Connecticut College)
- Greg Allen
 - Emily Bergl
 - Adam Bock (The Receptionist)
 - Gordon Clapp (NYPD Blue)
 - Jack Coleman (Heroes)
 - Rachel Dratch (SNL)
 - Chris Elliott (SNL)
 - Paul Hodes
 - Kristina Klebe
 - John Krasinski (The Office)
 - Jeremy Piven (Grosse Point Blank, PCU)
 - Michael Portnoy
 - Sam Robards
 - Kate Robin (Six Feet Under)
 - Mark Teschner
 
Music
- Sean Greenhalgh ('01): member of indie rock band Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
 - Robbie Guertin ('02): member of indie rock band Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
 - Vance Gilbert ('79): singer-songwriter, folk musician
 - Chris Harford: singer, songwriter
 - Alec Ounsworth ('00): member of indie rock band Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
 - Lee Sargent ('00): member of indie rock band Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
 - Tyler Sargent ('00): member of indie rock band Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
 - Henrik Takkenberg ('90): musician, songwriter, producer
 
Government, law and public policy
- Debo Adegbile ('91): lawyer in private practice who also serves as a Commissioner for the United States Civil Rights Commission
 - Esther Batchelder (1919): nutritionist, home economist, head of Food and Nutrition division of the US Department of Agriculture
 - Dorcas Hardy ('68): Commissioner of the Social Security Administration
 - Helen Lehman Buttenwieser ('27): lawyer, member of Lehman family
 - Nina F. Elgo ('84): Judge of the Connecticut Appellate Court
 - Marie L. Garibaldi ('56): Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of New Jersey
 - Catherine Gregg: philanthropist and First Lady of New Hampshire (1953–1955)[3]
 - Mary Ann Handley: Connecticut State Senator
 - Joanne Head: New Hampshire State Representative
 - Bruce Hoffman ('76): Corporate Chair in Counterterrorism and Counterinsurgency, Director of the RAND Corporation's Washington Office, professor at Georgetown University
 - Jay Hooper ('16): Vermont State Representative
 - Joan R. Kemler ('47): the first woman to serve as Connecticut State Treasurer (1986–87)[4][5]
 - Suzi Oppenheimer ('56): New York State Senator
 - Erik Raven ('96), United States Under Secretary of the Navy
 - Sean Spicer ('93): 30th White House Press Secretary
 - Jay Stamper ('95): Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate from South Carolina
 - Susan Thomases ('65): attorney, presidential adviser
 - Patricia McGowan Wald ('48): U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia judge; member of International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia; member of the Iraq Intelligence Commission
 - Kimba Wood ('66): federal judge, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York
 
Business
- Tim Armstrong ('93): CEO of America Online (AOL); former Google Inc. Vice President, Advertising Sales
 - Ethan Brown (?): CEO of Beyond Meat
 - Alice Rogoff: former wife of David Rubenstein
 
Athletics
- Anita DeFrantz ('74): former Vice President of the International Olympic Committee, member of bronze medal U.S. women's eight-oared shell, 1976 Montreal Summer Olympics
 - Jim Gabarra ('82): Olympic soccer player
 - Jeff Idelson ('86): current director of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
 - AJ Marcucci ('21): Professional soccer player for New York Red Bulls
 - Jan Merrill ('79): Olympic long-distance runner
 - Rand Pecknold ('90): current head coach of the Quinnipiac University Men's Ice Hockey team
 - Tim Young ('92): Olympic silver medalist in quadruple sculling
 
Other notable people associated with Connecticut College
- Blanche Boyd: Professor of English and Writing
 - Pauline Hamilton Dederer, Professor of Biology
 - Edward Harkness: Conn College benefactor, Standard Oil heir and advocate of the Harkness Table method
 - Barkley Hendricks: Professor of Art
 - Carl Kimmons ('73): African American US Navy officer; first person to rise through the Navy's ranks from mess attendant to commissioned officer
 - Lillian Rosanoff Lieber: mathematician and author
 - William Meredith: winner of the Pulitzer Prize for poetry, and Professor of English at the college, 1955-1983
 - William Wuyke: former Venezuelan Olympian; strength and conditioning coach
 
Presidents
- Frederick Henry Sykes: President, 1913-1917
 - Benjamin T. Marshall: President, 1917-1928
 - Katherine Blunt: President, 1929-1943, 1945-1946
 - Dorothy Schafer: President, 1943-1945
 - Rosemary Park: President, 1947-1962
 - Charles E. Shain: President, 1962-1974
 - Oakes Ames: President, 1974-1988
 - Claire L. Gaudiani: President, 1988-2001
 - David K. Lewis: Interim President, 2001
 - Norman Fainstein: President, 2001-2006
 - Leo Higdon: President, 2006-2013
 - Katherine Bergeron: President, 2014 - 2023
 
References
- ↑ Abrams, Amy (6 June 2012). "Christine Y. Kim". Art in America. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
 - ↑ "Ecco Domani Liquid Style". Archived from the original on 2008-06-18. Retrieved 2008-09-13.
 - ↑ "Catherine Gregg, 96; part of political family". Boston Globe. Associated Press. 2014-08-04. Retrieved 2014-08-28.
 - ↑ "Death Notice: Joan R. Kemler". The Hartford Courant. 2020-08-14. Retrieved 2021-03-25.
 - ↑ "Cheerful Givers: Contributors to '53-54 Alumnae Fund Campaign". Connecticut College Alumnae News. 1954. Retrieved 2021-03-25.
 
External links
- "Notable Alumni." Connecticut College
 
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