Jim Backus was a film and TV actor known for his roles in Rebel Without a Cause and Gilligan’s Island, as well as being the voice of Mr. Magoo.
Anthony Burgess was an English novelist and composer best known for his novel A Clockwork Orange, which became a popular 1971 Stanley Kubrik film.
U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles made major contributions to U.S. foreign policy during the Cold War.
Barney Ewell was one of the leading sprinters of the 1940s, and won three medals at the 1948 Olympics.
For close to a decade, actress Karen Grassle was known to TV audiences as pioneer mother, Caroline Ingalls, on the hit show, Little House on the Prairie.
With her late-night talk show, Chelsea Lately, Chelsea Handler became one of the most-watched women in comedy.
George Harrison was lead guitarist of The Beatles as well as a singer-songwriter on many of their most memorable tracks.
Justin Jeffre is a member of the popular 1990s boy band 98 Degrees, whose albums have reached gold and multi-platinum status.
Nicholas Leeson is best known for trading the Barings out of existence by hiding losses for years.
The youngest of the Marx Brothers, Zeppo Marx was the handsomest sibling, but often underappreciated as the straight man and young romantic lead. He left the famous comedic team to become a millionaire inventor.
Sun Myung Moon was founder and leader of the Unification Church, a religious movement whose followers were labeled "Moonies."
Charles Cotesworth Pinckney was an American Revolutionary War veteran, South Carolina legislator and two-time presidential candidate.
Sally Jesse Raphael is an American talk show host best known for TV’s Sally Jesse Raphael and her trademark red glasses.
A leading Impressionist painter, Pierre-Auguste Renoir was one of the most famous artists of the early twentieth century.