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University of California Los Angeles 1999 Alumni Ba in Studio Art

Notable alumni and students of the University of California, Berkeley, Us, in the areas of arts and media. Alumni who likewise served as faculty are listed in bold font, with degree and year. Notable faculty members are listed at List of University of California, Berkeley faculty.

Architecture [edit]

  • Ruth Bancroft – studied architecture for three years, graduating with a teaching certification in 1932; created the Ruth Bancroft Garden in Walnut Creek, California and is known for her extensive drove of plants and her xeric mural design
  • Albert Barokas – Architect (BA 1966)
  • Kofi Bonner – earned a Master of City Planning and a Master of Architecture; known for the heading the redevelopment of the metropolis of Emeryville, California; director of economic evolution; interim city manager for Oakland, California
  • Jonathan Browning – interior designer
  • Hans Hollein, M. Curvation. 1960 – architect, awarded the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 1985
  • Julia Morgan, B.S. 1894 – builder, designed the Hearst Castle for newspaper businessman William Randolph Hearst
  • Eric Owen Moss, M. Arch. 1968 – architect, famous for his contributions in theory and practice in contemporary architecture
  • Vladimir Ossipoff, B.A. 1931 – Russian federation-born "primary of modern Hawaiian compages"
  • Sigrid Lorenzen Rupp, graduated 1966 – German-built-in architect in Silicon Valley
  • Kathryn McCamant – credited with coining the English language term "cohousing" and introducing the cohousing model to Northward America.
  • Kenneth Tsang – Hong Kong actor who graduated equally an builder
  • Takeo Uesugi – landscape architect, designer of Japanese gardens throughout the globe
  • Peter Walker, B.S. 1955 – landscape architect, commissions include the Earth Merchandise Middle Memorial and the Sony Middle in Berlin
  • Bernard Zimmerman – modernist architect and longtime educator at the Cal Poly Pomona College of Environmental Pattern
  • Ella Lillian Wall Van Leer – Architect, artist and women'due south rights activist. Likewise known as the First Lady of Georgia Tech

Books [edit]

  • Amir Aczel, B.A. 1975, M.Southward. 1976 – popular mathematics author, writer of the bestseller[1] [2] Fermat'south Last Theorem: Unlocking the Hole-and-corner of an Ancient Mathematical Problem, one-time professor of history at Bentley College, Guggenheim Fellow in 2004
  • Robert Baer (attended) – former CIA case officer, author of the memoir See No Evil (2003), which served as the basis of the motion-picture show Syriana (2005). George Clooney's University Award-winning performance is loosely based on Baer
  • Mischa Berlinski, B.A. 1998 – novelist, writer of Fieldwork (2007)
  • Kate Braverman, B.A. 1971 – poet, novelist; writer of Lithium for Medea and Palm Latitudes
  • David Brock, B.A. 1985 – political author (The Existent Anita Colina [1993], Blinded by the Right [2002], The Republican Noise Machine [2004])
  • Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, B.A. 1973, B.A. 1975, M.A. 1977, M.F.A. 1978 – multimedia artist; author of Dictee (1982)
  • Jeff Chang, B.A. 1989 – hip-hop announcer and political activist; author of Can't Finish, Won't Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation (2005) (American Book Honor)
  • James Chapman, B.A. 1978 – novelist
  • Beverly Cleary, B.A. 1938 – author of books for children and young adults
  • Sara Davidson, 1962 – author
  • Lucille Lang Day, B.A. 1971, G.A. 1973, Ph.D. 1979 - poet and author
  • Tiffanie DeBartolo, B.A. 1992 – writer of God-Shaped Hole and How To Impale A Rock Star, and author/director of Dream for an Insomniac
  • Philip K. Dick (attended) – science fiction author whose stories were made into the movies Blade Runner, Total Think, Minority Report, Paycheck, Screamers and A Scanner Darkly
  • Joan Didion, B.A. 1956 – author, author of Slouching Towards Bethlehem (1968), The White Album (1979), and The Twelvemonth of Magical Thinking (2005)
  • Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni. Ph.D. 1984, author, writer of Mistress of Spices (1997), Sister of My Centre (1999) and The Palace of Illusions (2008).
  • Amy Mason Doan, B.A. 1993 - novelist. Author of Lady Sunshine (2021), Summer Hours (2019), and The Summer List (2018)
  • Robert Dunn, B.A. 1972 – novelist, publisher, musician. Author of Meet the Annas (2007) and Pink Cadillac (2002)
  • Karen Joy Fowler, B.A. 1972 – writer, writer of The Jane Austen Volume Club (2004) (afterward made into a movie of the same name starring Maria Bello, Emily Blunt, and Kathy Baker)
  • Jackson Gregory, B.L. 1906 – pop author of western and detective novels; many of his works were turned into movies betwixt 1916 and 1944.
  • Barbara Guest, B.A. 1943 – sole female member of the modernist New York School of poets; awarded the Frost Medal for Lifetime Achievement by the Poetry Society of America (1999)
  • Christopher Kasparek, 1966 – writer, translator
  • Agnes Newton Keith, author/memoirist of 7 books well-nigh British North Borneo, today Sabah, Malaysia earlier and during the Japanese Occupation of the 1940s; one volume Three Came Home was made into the Hollywood movie of the aforementioned name starring Claudette Colbert playing Keith
  • Maxine Hong Kingston, B.A. 1962 – author, Senior Lecturer, recipient of 1997 National Humanities Medal awarded by President of the United States Nib Clinton
  • Harry Lawton, B.A. 1949 – novelist, writer of Willie Boy: A Desert Manhunt (1960), afterwards made into a moving-picture show, Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here, starring Robert Redford
  • Jack London (attended 1896–1897) – novelist best known for The Call of the Wild, White Fang, and The Body of water-Wolf; Martin Eden provides a fictional account of his fourth dimension at Cal
  • Bryan Malessa, B.A. 1999 – novelist, author of The Flight (2007) and The War Room (2011).
  • Daniel Marcus, Ph.D. Mechanical Technology – Science Fiction author
  • Greil Marcus, B.A. 1967, M.A. 1968 – cultural and music critic; author of Mystery Train (1975) and Lipstick Traces (1989)
  • Terry McMillan, B.A. 1986 – author of Waiting to Exhale [1992] (later fabricated into a film of the same name starring Whitney Houston) and How Stella Got Her Groove Dorsum [1996] (later made into a pic of the same proper name starring Angela Bassett)
  • Dhan Gopal Mukerji – starting time successful Indian man of letters in the U.Due south.
  • Frank Norris (attended 1890–1894) – novelist; author of McTeague (1899), which became the basis for the classic 1924 silent picture show Greed
  • Viet Thanh Nguyen, B.A., Ph.D. 1997 - awarded Pulitzer Prize for the novel "The Sympathizer"
  • Parker Palmer, Ph.D. 1970 – writer, author of The Courage to Teach (1997), Let Your Life Speak (2000), and A Subconscious Wholeness (2004)
  • Mary Pipher, B.A. 1969 – author, skillful on culture and mental health; author of Reviving Ophelia: Saving the Selves of Adolescent Girls, which was a best seller for over three years;[3] author of the New York Times best seller[4] The Shelter of Each Other: Rebuilding Our Families to Enrich Our Lives
  • John V. Robinson, B.A. 1995 – lensman and folklorist, 2006 Guggenheim Fellow, author of several books, including Spanning the Strait: Building the Alfred Zampa Memorial Bridge [5] (2004)
  • Anneli Rufus, B.A. 1981 – announcer and author of many books, including Party of Ane: The Loner's Manifesto [6]
  • Shawna Yang Ryan, B.A. 1998 – novelist, author of Water Ghosts (2009), Green Island (2016), professor at University of Hawaii, Manoa
  • Louis Sachar, B.A. 1976 – author, Holes (1998), Sideways Stories From Wayside School series
  • Mona Simpson, B.A. 1979 – novelist (Anywhere Simply Here, afterward fabricated into a film of the same name starring Susan Sarandon and Natalie Portman), Guggenheim Fellow, professor at Bard College; biological sister of Steve Jobs (co-founder of Apple tree Computer)
  • Rebecca Solnit, M. Jour. 1984 – author, cultural historian, and activist; books include Wanderlust: A History of Walking (2000) and River of Shadows: Eadweard Muybridge and the Technological Wild West (2003)
  • Irving Stone, B.A. 1923 – novelist, Animalism for Life[1934] (later made into an University Award-winning moving picture of the same name starring Kirk Douglas as Vincent van Gogh) and The Agony and the Ecstasy (1961; later made into a film of the same proper name starring Charlton Heston as Michelangelo)
  • Timothy Tau, B.S. 2004 - award-winning short story writer
  • Steven Fifty. Thompson, B.A. – novelist, author of The Wild Bluish: The Novel of the U.S. Air Force
  • William T. Vollmann, (attended) – novelist
  • Shawn Wong, B.A. 1971 – novelist, author of American Knees (1995; made into the motion-picture show Americanese, released in 2009)
  • Yang Mu, Ph.D. 1971 - poet, essayist, translator of English poetry into Chinese, first Taiwanese winner of Cikada Prize and Newman Prize for Chinese Literature, Professor Emeritus of Comparative Literature at University of Washington, writer of Militarist of the Mind
  • Charles Yu, B.A. 1997 - renown scientific discipline-fiction writer and writer on TV shows such as ''Westworld and Here and Now

Comic strips [edit]

  • Scott Adams, M.B.A. 1986 – creator of Dilbert [7]
  • Rube Goldberg, B.South. 1904 – cartoonist and namesake of Rube Goldberg machines, winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1948[8](also listed in Pulitzer Prizes section)
  • Stephan Pastis, B.A. 1989 – creator of Pearls Before Swine [nine]
  • Matt Richtel, B.A. 1989 – co-writer of the comic strip Rudy Park under the pen name "Theron Heir";[x] winner of the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting,[11] (also listed in Pulitzer Prizes section)
  • Betty Swords, – cartoonist
  • Adrian Tomine, B.A. 1996 – comic creative person, Optic Nerve; regular illustrator for The New Yorker and other magazines

Art [edit]

  • Ai Weiwei – artist
  • Bruce Ariss, B.A.1934 – painter, muralist, writer, illustrator, editor besides as theater and gear up designer, amateur playwright and histrion, and overall icon on the Monterey Peninsula
  • Natalia Anciso, M.A. 2015 – visual and installation artist and educator[12]
  • John Baldessari – conceptual artist
  • Melanie Cervantes, B.A. 2004 – artist, printmaker, and activist[thirteen]
  • Enrique Chagoya, MFA 1987 – artist, printmaker, and professor at Stanford University[fourteen]
  • Davi Cheng – visual artist
  • Vittoria Chierici – artist
  • Robert Colescott, B.A. 1949, M.A. 1952 – creative person, educator, and first African American painter to accept a solo exhibit at the Venice Biennale[15]
  • Warrington Colescott, B.A. 1942, 1000.A. 1947 – creative person, educator, and professor emeritus at University of Wisconsin–Madison[xvi]
  • Jay DeFeo, B.A. 1950 – painter
  • Claire Falkenstein, B.A. 1930 – sculptor, painter, print-maker and jewelry designer known for her large-calibration abstruse metal and glass sculptures.
  • Joseph Goldyne, B.A. – printmaker, painter[17] [18]
  • Ester Hernandez, B.A. 1976 – visual artist[xix]
  • Gilah Yelin Hirsch – multi-disciplinary artist
  • Tom Holland – abstract artist
  • Arthur Johnsen, B.A. 1974 – painter, especially of Hawaiiana
  • Richard Keyes, M.A. Painting, 1958 – professor emeritus at Long Beach Metropolis College, after a xxx-yr career there education life drawing and painting
  • Thomas Kinkade, B.A. – painter
  • Taro Masushio, B.A. – artist, writer
  • Malaquías Montoya, B.A 1969 – artist and professor emeritus at UC Davis[twenty]
  • Hushidar Mortezaie – collagist and fashion designer[21]
  • Carole Doyle Pare, M.A 1964 – artist
  • Favianna Rodriguez (attended) – creative person, printmaker, and activist[22]
  • Lanette Scheeline graduated 1932 – wallpaper and textile designer[23]
  • Sarah Seager, B.A. 1982 – artist
  • Nancy Selvin, BFA 1969; MA, Ceramics, 1970 – sculptor[24]

Music [edit]

  • Gregory Abbott – composer and musician; sang "Shake You Down", which reached No. ane on 1986 Billboard nautical chart
  • Thüring Bräm, M.A. – composer
  • Suzanne Ciani, Thousand.A. 1970 – composer
  • Les Claypool – bassist and singer of Primus
  • Stewart Copeland – drummer of The Police
  • Henry Cowell (attended 1914) – composer
  • Marié Digby (attended) – singer-songwriter
  • Adam Duritz (attended) – lead singer of Counting Crows
  • Jewlia Eisenberg, B.A. 1998 – musician, co-founder of Charming Hostess
  • John Fahey (attended, afterward transferred to UCLA) – guitarist, founder of Takoma Records
  • Liz Harris, B.A. 2002[25] – singer-songwriter, Grouper
  • Davey Havok (attended) – lead vocalizer of AFI
  • Susanna Hoffs, B.A. 1980 – lead singer of The Bangles
  • Rob Hotchkiss, B.A. 1983 – Grammy winner, guitarist, founding fellow member of Train
  • Robert Hurwitz – C.E.O. of Nonesuch Records
  • Ivan Ilić, B.A. 2001 – American pianist of Serbian descent based in Paris
  • Andrew Imbrie, Yard.A. 1947 – composer
  • Steve Jablonsky – film composer whose works include the scores to Michael Bay's Transformers films, Battleship, and Lonely Survivor
  • Stephan Jenkins, B.A. 1987 – atomic number 82 singer and songwriter of Tertiary Eye Blind
  • Michael Kang – multi-instrumentalist for the jam band The Cord Cheese Incident
  • Jonathan Kramer, Ph.D. 1969 – composer
  • Phil Lesh (attended) – bass guitarist of the Grateful Dead
  • Jimmy Lopez, Ph.D. 2012 – classical music composer
  • Vladimir Lyubovny known as DJ Vlad, disc jockey
  • Laura Mam, B.A. Anthropology 2009 - Cambodian vocalist-songwriter
  • Ed Masuga, B.A. 2002 – vocalist, musician, and songwriter
  • Raymond Pepperell - guitarist for Expressionless Kennedys
  • Jade Puget, B.A. 1996 – guitarist of AFI
  • Malvina Reynolds, Ph.D. 1938 (also B.A., M.A.) – folk/blues singer-songwriter
  • Terry Riley, M.A. 1961 – composer
  • Ralph Saenz, Ph.D., aka Michael Starr – pb singer of Steel Panther[26]
  • Shing02 – clandestine Japanese hip hop creative person; achieved mainstream notoriety in the United states primarily for his contributions to the Shinichiro Watanabe anime series Samurai Champloo
  • Matt Wallace, B.A. 1982 - producer, composer
  • LaMonte Young, (attended) – composer
  • Charlie Yin, B.A. 2012 - Electronic music producer that performs nether the name Giraffage

Newspapers and magazines [edit]

  • Joan Acocella, B.A. 1966 – dance critic, The New Yorker
  • John Battelle, B.A. 1987, M.Jour. 1992 – co-founder of Wired magazine[27]
  • Rod Beaton, an American journalist and media executive with United Press International[28] [29]
  • Darrin Bell, B.A. 1997 - 2018 Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning
  • Susan Berman, Yard.B.A. 1969 – author (Easy Street, Lady Las Vegas), newspaper reporter, magazine author (New York)
  • Sandra Blakeslee, B.A. 1965 – science writer and correspondent for The New York Times
  • Max Boot, B.A. 1992 – bourgeois columnist and author
  • Nina Fallenbaum, B.A. 2000 – food and agriculture editor of Hyphen mag, writer, and activist
  • Pauline Esther Friedman, (attended, grade of 1938) – aka Abigail Van Buren ("Dear Abby")
  • Michelle Goldberg, Yard.Southward. - book author and writer for The New York Times and The Nation magazine
  • Paul Khlebnikov, B.A. 1984 – investigative journalist, first editor of Forbes in Russia and author of controversial book "Godfather of the Kremlin: Boris Berezovsky and the Looting of Russian federation"
  • Joseph W. Knowland, B.A. 1953 – onetime publisher of the Oakland Tribune (1974–1977)
  • William F. Knowland, B.A. 1929 – owner, editor and publisher of the Oakland Tribune (1966–1974)
  • Wendy Lesser, M.A. 1977, Ph.D. 1982 – cultural critic; founding editor of The Threepenny Review
  • Zuzana Licko, B.A. 1984 – co-founder of Emigre magazine and type foundry
  • Steve Linde (born 1960) - newspaperman
  • T. Christian Miller, B.A. 1992 – founding employee, ProPublica; writer at the Los Angeles Times
  • Maureen Orth, B.A. 1964 – writer and writer for Vanity Fair magazine
  • Susan F. Rasky, B.A. 1974 – former reporter for The New York Times, journalism teacher at UC Berkeley, recipient of the George Polk Award[30] [31]
  • Jennifer Rubin, B.A., J.D. - journalist, columnist, Washington Postal service
  • Max Scherr, M.A. - journalist, founder and publisher of the Berkeley Barb
  • Hugo Schwyzer – author, speaker and former instructor of history and gender studies[32]
  • Lincoln Steffens – one of the most famous practitioners of the muckraking journalistic style
  • Steven L. Thompson, B.A. – journalist, columnist at Cycle World
  • Adrian Tomine, B.A. 1996 – comic artist, Optic Nervus; regular illustrator for The New Yorker and other magazines
  • Rudy VanderLans, B.A. 1984 – co-founder of Emigre magazine and blazon foundry
  • Jann Wenner (attended) – founder of Rolling Stone mag[33]
  • DeWitt Wallace - founder and editor-in-main of Reader's Assimilate

Non-fictional dissemination [edit]

  • Margot Adler, B.A. 1968 – NPR contributor, host of NPR's Justice Talking [34]
  • Robert Bazell, B.A. 1967 – NBC News ' Principal Science and Health Correspondent[35]
  • Roxy Bernstein, 1996 – California Gold Bears sports announcer
  • Jeffrey Chocolate-brown, B.A. – Senior Contributor on the PBS news program The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer [36]
  • Peter Chernin, B.A. 1974 – president of News Corporation and CEO of the Flim-flam Group[37]--
  • Corey Flintoff, B.A. 1970 – NPR Strange Desk-bound Correspondent and former host of NPR's All Things Considered [38]
  • Greg Gutfeld, B.A. 1987 – blogger and host of the late nighttime talk show, Red Middle w/ Greg Gutfeld on the Fox News Aqueduct[39]
  • Brianna Keilar, B.A. 2001 – graduated with Phi Beta Kappa in Mass Communication and Psychology; old MTV correspondent; currently a CNN contributor[twoscore]
  • Richard Lui, B.A. Rhetoric – journalist and news anchor for MSNBC; previously a news ballast for five years at CNN Worldwide
  • Renée Montagne, B.A. 1973 – co-host of NPR's Morning Edition [41]
  • Kent Ninomiya, B.A. 1988 – Tv set news ballast (KSTP-TV), reporter, executive[42]
  • Suchin Pak, B.A. 1997 – MTV correspondent[43]
  • Troy Roberts, B.A. 1984 – CBS News correspondent[44]
  • Michael Vicious, Ph.D. 1978 – conservative radio talk prove host, Savage Nation [45]
  • Steve Somers, B.A. 1965 – WFAN overnight host
  • Michele Tafoya, B.A. 1988 – sports goggle box reporter for ABC Sports and ESPN[46]
  • Nicolle Wallace, B.A. - one-time White House Communications Manager, book author and news program host for MSNBC
  • Morgan Webb, B.A. 2000 – co-host of X-Play on G4
  • Gwendolyn Wright, M.Arch. 1974, Ph.D. 1978 – co-host of popular PBS TV series History Detectives; professor of architecture, history, and art history at Columbia Academy; Guggenheim Fellow (2004–05)

Film, television, video games and theatre [edit]

  • Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, B.A. 2008 - role player, best known for portraying David Kane / Blackness Manta in the DC Extended Universe superhero motion-picture show Aquaman (2018) and Cal Abar in the HBO limited series Watchmen (2019)
  • Margaret Armen, B.A - tv script writer, including three episodes of the original Star Trek series
  • George Azar, B.A. 1981 – printing lensman and documentary filmmaker, specialising in Centre Eastward coverage
  • David Lee (lensman), B.A. 2004 – manner and celebrity photographer
  • Bill Bixby (attended) – director, role player (The Incredible Blob)
  • Amir Blumenfeld, B.A. 2005 – writer, comedian, histrion and TV host
  • Guy Branum, B.A. 1998 – head writer of X-Play
  • Golden Brooks, B.A. 1994 – picture and television actress
  • John Cheng, B.A. 1996 – producer Horrible Bosses, Mirror Mirror, Horrible Bosses ii, Barely Lethal
  • John Cho, B.A. 1996 – actor (American Pie, Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle, Star Trek, Better Luck Tomorrow)
  • Rupert Clague – motion picture manager
  • Jeff Cohen, B.S. 1996 – former actor (Chunk in The Goonies), currently amusement lawyer
  • Michael Colleary, B.A. English 1982 - screenwriter and producer (Confront/Off, Firehouse Dog, Professionals)
  • Brett Dalton, B.A. 2005 – player (Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.)
  • Zubin Damania, aka ZDoggMD, B.S. 1994 – internet celebrity, hospitalist physician
  • Ronald Davidson, B.A. 1921 – screenwriter, director, and producer from 1937 to 1966
  • Roxann Dawson, B.A. 1980 – actress (B'Elanna Torres on the television series Star Trek: Voyager), director, author, playwright
  • Camille de Casabianca, M.A. Political Science 1980 – screenwriter, managing director and novelist
  • Ralph Edwards, B.A. 1935 – national television host and producer
  • Syd Field, B.A. 1960 – author of the "bible of scriptwriters" [47]
  • Carl Franklin, B.A. 1971 – film director (One False Move [1992], Devil in a Blueish Dress [1995], High Crimes [2002], Out of Fourth dimension [2003])
  • Barbara Garson, B.A. 1964 - American playwright, author and social activist, best known for the play MacBird!
  • Peter Gethers (attended 1970–1972) – screenwriter and author of bestselling Norton the cat trilogy
  • Amos Gitai, Ph.D. (Architecture) 1986 – Israeli film managing director (Field Diary [1982], Eden [2001], Gratis Zone [2005])
  • Mark Goodson, B.A. 1937 – television producer who specialized in game shows
  • Karen Grassle, B.A. 1965 – extra, best known for her role as Caroline Ingalls (the mother) on the Piffling Business firm on the Prairie television serial
  • Harry Hamlin (transferred to Yale University) – actor, Disharmonism of the Titans, L.A. Law
  • Hannah Hart, B.A. (English literature and Japanese Language) 2009 – YouTube content creator and host of My Drunk Kitchen, actress in Camp Takota
  • Edith Caput, B.A. 1919 - University Laurels-winning costume designer
  • Andrew R. Heinze, Chiliad.A. 1980, Ph.D. 1987 – playwright and historian
  • Amy Hennig, B.A. – video game manager (Uncharted trilogy) and writer [48]
  • Barbara Holecek - documentary filmmaker
  • William Hung (attended) – contestant on American Idol
  • Idil Ibrahim – director and producer; founder of Zeila Films
  • Chris Innis, B.A. (Film) 1988 – film editor, American Gothic, The Hurt Locker, G.I. Jane (Associate Editor)
  • Robbie Jones, (Class of 2000) – histrion (One Tree Loma)
  • Ashley Judd, currently doing PhD – actress (Ruddy in Paradise, Divergent)
  • Stacy Keach, B.A. 1963 – actor who portrayed Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer in several films and received a Golden Globe nomination for in 1984, narrator of documentaries from National Geographic and Nova
  • Adam Lamberg (Class of 2006) – actor (Lizzie McGuire)
  • Sanaa Lathan, B.A. 1992 – extra (Bract [1998], Something New [2006]; Tony Award nomination [2004], Raisin in the Sunday)
  • Quentin Lee, B.A. 1992 – Asian-American pic manager (Shopping for Fangs [1997], Drift [2001], Ethan Mao [2004])
  • Young Jean Lee, B.A. 1996, Ph.D. candidate 2000–2005 – OBIE Award-winning playwright and director of experimental theater
  • Volition Yun Lee, B.A. 1993, actor (The Wolverine)
  • Christopher Maclaine, B.A. 1946, filmmaker and poet[49]
  • Johnny Manahan, B.A. 1969 – Filipino moving-picture show and television director, writer, and actor; caput executive of the training and management subsidiary of ABS-CBN Corporation, Star Magic[50]
  • Joshua Marston, B.A. 1990 – film director (Maria Total of Grace [2004])
  • Quinn Martin, B.A. 1949 – television set producer (The Fugitive, The Streets of San Francisco)
  • Jerry Mathers, B.A. 1974 – player (Leave it to Beaver)
  • Errol Morris (attended 1973–1975) – documentary picture show director (The Thin Blue Line [1988], Fog of War [2003])
  • Barry Nelson, B.A. 1941 - phase and screen thespian who was the first to portray James Bail in a television set adaptation of Casino Royale
  • Shirin Neshat, B.A. 1979, Yard.F.A. 1982 – Iranian-American filmmaker, video artist, and photographer; 1999 Venice Biennale First Prize Winner
  • Sammy Obeid, degree in business and mathematics – stand-up comedian who has appeared on America's Got Talent and Conan
  • Paula Patton (transferred to University of Southern California) – extra, Mission: Incommunicable – Ghost Protocol and Precious
  • David Peoples, BA English – screenwriter (the Ridley Scott pic Bract Runner and the Terry Gilliam film 12 Monkeys), nominated for the Academy Accolade for Best Screenplay for the Clint Eastwood moving-picture show Unforgiven (which did win the Academy Accolade for Best Pic); collaborator with Jon Else on the Academy Award-winning documentary Who Are the DeBolts? And Where Did They Get 19 Kids? and the Academy Award nominated documentary The Day After Trinity [51]
  • Gregory Peck, B.A. 1939 – role player, Academy Honour winner and Golden Globe winner (To Kill a Mockingbird, Gentleman'due south Agreement, Roman Holiday, The Yearling, Twelve O'Clock High)
  • Chris Pine, B.A. 2002 – actor (Star Trek, Wonder Adult female, Hell or High Water, The Princess Diaries 2, Smokin' Aces)
  • Ed Quinn, B.A. 1991, History – histrion (Eureka, ii Broke Girls)
  • Loren L. Ryder, 1924 – audio engineer; winner of five Academy Awards
  • Atsushi Sakahara MBA 2000 - Palme d'Or 2001(Acquaintance Producer) and IDA curt listed(Director/Producer)
  • James Schamus, B.A. 1982, Chiliad.A. 1987, Ph.D. 2003 – screenwriter and picture producer
  • Elizabeth Sher, B.A. 1964, M.A. 1967 – documentary and short filmmaker and artist
  • Brett Simon, Yard.F.A. 2002, Ph.D. 2003 – director, Bump-off of a High School President
  • Ryan Simpkins (attended) – extra (The House, Brigsby Carry)
  • Randi Mayem Singer, B.A. 1979 – writer and producer, Mrs. Doubtfire, Jack and Jill
  • Brenda Vocal, B.A. 2009 – actress and model, (The Suite Life of Zack & Cody, The Suite Life on Deck)
  • Gloria Stuart, studied philosophy and drama (enrolled 1928–1930);[52] extra and artist, known for her roles in The Invisible Man (1933) and Titanic (1997)
  • Timothy Tau, B.S. 2004 - filmmaker and screenwriter
  • George Takei, (transferred to UCLA), actor, Star Trek, Star Trek: The Original Serial
  • Brian Tee, B.A. 1999 – player
  • Nancy Tellem, B.A. 1975 – president of CBS Paramount Tv set Network Entertainment Grouping
  • Sophie Treadwell, B.Litt. 1906 – playwright, of virtually famously Machinal, and journalist
  • Scott Trimble, B.A. 1999 – location scout and location manager (Transformers, Star Trek, Fe Man 2)
  • Morgan Webb, B.A. 2001 – host of X-Play
  • Audrey Wells, B.A. 1981 – screenwriter (The Truth Nearly Cats & Dogs [1996]) and managing director (Under the Tuscan Sunday [2003])
  • Haskell Wexler (attended) – cinematographer, 2-fourth dimension University Award winner, and five-time nominee (Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Leap for Glory and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest)[53]
  • Timothy Wheeler, manager, producer, cinematographer
  • Aaron Woolfolk, B.A. 1992 – moving-picture show director, screenwriter, The Harimaya Bridge
  • Charles Yu, B.Due south. 1997 - screenwriter & Television writer of shows such as Westworld, Here and Now, Lodge 49, Legion, Sorry for Your Loss and Dream Corp, LLC

See as well [edit]

  • List of University of California, Berkeley faculty
  • UC Berkeley School of Law

References [edit]

  1. ^ Dorothy Clark (2005-12-14). "A suspenseful tale of Descartes's secrets". Boston Globe.
  2. ^ "Bestsellers : from Washington". New Scientist. 1997-01-25. "Information supplied by Reiters, Washington, D.C. for science bestsellers first published in hardback or paperback in the United states within the by 12 months."
  3. ^ Donna Greene (1998-03-01). "Q&A/Mary T. Alfinito; Early Treatment Tin can Aid a Troubled Kid". The New York Times.
  4. ^ "PAPERBACK BEST SELLERS: June 15, 1997". The New York Times. 1997-06-15.
  5. ^ Spanning the Strait: Building the Alfred Zampa Memorial Bridge
  6. ^ Party of 1: The Loner's Manifesto
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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_University_of_California,_Berkeley_alumni_in_arts_and_media