LIST OF NOTABLE BRIGHTON AND HOVE INHABITANTS


This is a list of notable inhabitants of the city of Brighton and Hove in England. This includes the once separate towns of Brighton and Hove.
Note that in the case of persons still living, they may not ''currently'' live within the area of the city, but have done so at some time.
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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Contents
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
V
W
See also

A



Harrison Ainsworth, lived in Kemp Town. Wrote the novel "Ovingdean Grange" 1860

Chesney Allen, comedian, one of Flanagan and Allen, born in Brighton in 1893

Richard Attenborough, broadcaster and film-maker (Gandhi), brother of David Attenborough

Michael "Atters" Attree, satirist and comedy writer

B



★ John Baine, known as Attilla the stockbroker, poet, singer and campaigner

Zoe Ball broadcaster, daughter of Johnny Ball

Aubrey Beardsley, fin-de-siecle artist, born in Brighton 1872; for some time lived at Lower Rock Gardens, Kemptown

Pete Bennett, winner of TV Show Big Brother

Patrick Bergin, actor in films including ''Sleeping with the Enemy'' and ''Patriot Games''

Björk, Icelandic musician

William Black, novelist lived at 1 Paston Place from 1879 until his death in 1898

Cate Blanchett, Australian actress

Arthur Bliss, composer, most famously the score for Things to Come

Edward Booth, naturalist and taxidermist, lived in Brighton and founded its Booth Museum

Raymond Briggs, artist and writer of Fungus the Bogeyman, taught at ''Brighton Art College''

★ The members of British Sea Power, an indie rock band (Yan, Noble, Hamilton and Woody)

Dora Bryan, comic actress (whose ''Clarges'' hotel in Kemptown was used in Carry On films)

David Bull, TV Doctor and Conservative Candidate for the next UK General Election

Julie Burchill, journalist; founder of Modern Review

Sir Edward Burne-Jones, Pre-Raphaelite artist; resident 1880-98

Charles Busby, Regency architect, prolific in Brighton

C



George Canning, (1770–1827), British politician and Prime Minister; resident April to August, 1827)

Marie-Antoine Carême, chef to the Prince Regent, inventor of chef's toque (hat)

Deryck Carver, first Protestant martyr; c. 1554

Nick Cave, Australian musician, writer, and film maker

Shaun Charman, ex-drummer of band The Wedding Present

Peter Chrisp, children's writer

Sir Winston Churchill, journalist and politician; attended a school run by the "Misses Thompson" in Hove

Dave Clarke, world famous techno disc-jockey

Julian Clary, comedian, formerly the Joan Collins fan club

Steve Coogan, comedian, well-known as Alan Partridge

Norman Cook musician formerly of band The Housemartins, and subsequently known as DJ Fatboy Slim (Portslade)

Gaz Coombes, lead singer of band Supergrass, once lived in the town

Simon Cowell, Sony BMG executive, born in Brighton

Luke Cresswell (of musical performers ''Stomp'')

Aleister Crowley, author, died in a nursing home in Hastings, along the coast from Brighton, in December 1947; ashes scattered at Devil's Dyke

James Crump (1812-92), founder of St. Aubyn's School (named after the Hove street in which he lived)

D



Alfred Darling, pioneer film equipment manufacturer

Roger Dean, artist, famous for prog-rock album covers

Graham Duff television writer and actor famous for BBC Three TV series ideal

E



Nick Van Eede, lead singer, Cutting Crew

G.H.Elliot , music hall, singer and comedian, buried in Rottingdean church yard

Revd. Richard Enraght, religious controversialist, Curate of St Paul’s Brighton 1867-1871, and Curate in Charge of St Andrew Church Portslade 1871-1874

Chris Eubank, ex-boxer, who holds the purchased (not awarded nor inherited) Title of "Lord of the Manor of Brighton"

George Everest, surveyor after whom the mountain was named, buried in Hove

F



Michael Fabricant MP, born in Brighton in 1950; educated at the Brighton and Hove Grammar School

Simon Fanshawe, broadcaster, writer, and comedian

Tommy Farr, boxer, "The Tonypandy Terror", ran a pub in Brighton after retirement

Maria Fitzherbert, illegitimate wife of George IV (the marriage of a Catholic to a member of the British Royal Family was illegal)

William Friese-Greene, cinematographic pioneer, subject of the film ''The Magic Box''

G



★ George, Prince of Wales, Prince Regent, and later King George IV of the United Kingdom

Eric Gill, typographer, engraver, sculptor, born in Brighton 1882

Harvey Goldsmith, rock promoter

Nat Gonella , singer and trumpeter, Lived in Saltdean

Graham Greene, writer (worked in but did not live in Brighton)

Martha Gunn, famous dipper and friend of the Prince Regent

Sally Gunnell, athlete, olympic 400m hurdles champion in 1992

H



Eamon Hamilton, of the band Brakes and formerly of British Sea Power

Harry Harrison, science-fiction writer

Phil Hartnoll, of band Orbital

Tony Hawks, comedian, author and philanthropist

Den Hegarty, of bands Darts and Rocky Sharpe and the Razors/Replays.

James Herbert, horror author of The Rats and The Fog

Rowland Hill, postal reformer

Steve Hillier of band Dubstar (Hove)

Georg Hólm, bassist of Sigur Rós

Nicholas van Hoogstraten, multimillionaire and property tycoon

J



Edward James, poet and art collector, who lent many famous Surrealist works to Brighton Museum in the 1950s and 1960s

Jean-Jacques Jordane, Parisian singer and restaurateur responsible for the highly unusual venue, The Laughing Onion in Kemptown

K



Philip King, playwright; wrote the farce See How They Run.

Rudyard Kipling, author; lived in Rottingdean between 1897 and 1903

Prince Peter Alexeevich Kropotkin, anarchist; resident 1912-17

L



David Land, theatre producer

Vivien Leigh, actress, Scarlet O'Hara in ''Gone with the Wind''

Reg Leopold , BBC violinist, lived in Saltdean

Ken Livingstone, politician; currently Mayor of London

Hugh Lloyd , actor and comedian, lived in Rottingdean

Jane Longhurst, killed by Graham Coutts; the Jane Longhurst Trust was set up to campaign for the criminalisation of what the Government labelled "extreme pornography", a move opposed by Backlash

Ida Lupino, actress and film-maker, c. 1914 - c. 1949, daughter of Stanley Lupino

Des Lynam, broadcaster

M



Sake Deen Mahomed, introduced the Turkish bath to Britain

Gideon Mantell, doctor, palaeontologist, discoveror of dinosaurs (Iguanodon), lived and worked in Brighton in the 1830s

Edward Marshall-Hall, criminal barrister famous for Edwardian theatrics in court

Susan Maughan singer, hit record 'Bobbys Girl' lived in Rottingdean

Pete McCarthy actor and writer.

Paul McCartney, musician, and his ex-wife Heather Mills, designer (Hove)

Joe McGann, actor; star of The Upper Hand.

Bob Meek, journalist

Neil Megson AKA Genesis P-Orridge

Sara Mendes da Costa, the British Telecom speaking clock

Max Miller, comedian, "the Cheeky Chappie", born in Brighton in 1894, lived there most of his life

Juan, Count of Montizón, the Carlist claimant to the throne of Spain and Legitimist claimant to the throne of France — lived in Hove c.1870s-1887, where he died; funeral mass held in Hove's Sacred Heart Church

Gary Moore musician, guitarist with Thin Lizzy amongst others as well as solo

N



Napoleon III, Emperor of the French came to Brighton after being deposed by the Third Republic in 1870, he was nephew of Emperor Napoleon I

Dame Anna Neagle, actress; lived at Lewes Crescent, Kemptown

Annie Nightingale, BBC TV and Radio presenter and sometime Brighton night-club owner

Nick Cave, Australian singer/songwiter lives in Hove.

O



Lord Olivier (Sir Laurence Olivier) & Joan Plowright; lived at Royal Crescent, Kemptown 1960-78

Steve Ovett, Olympic runner, 800 metres gold medalist in 1980, born and brought up in Brighton

P



Chris Paling, novelist

Patsy Palmer, former ''EastEnders'' actress

Charles Stewart Parnell, Irish politician, died in Brighton

David Pearce, philosopher

David James Pettifor, former lead singer of local Brighton band Future Stairway, traveller and writer, born in Brighton in 1968

Karen Pickering, swimmer, former 200 metres freestyle champion

Tim Pope, film director and video maker

Margaret Pracy, Town crier appointed by the Lord of the Manor (Chris Eubank) and not to be confused with the City Council appointee of the same title

Samuel Preston, lead singer of the band The Ordinary Boys, married to Celebrity Big Brother winner, Chantelle Houghton

Katie Price, model (also known as Jordan), married to Peter Andre

Partho Sen-Gupta, film director and scriptwriter (resident since Oct 2006)

Luke Pritchard, lead singer of The Kooks

Q



Roger Quilter, composer, born in Hove in 1877.

R



Robert Rankin, author

Terence Rattigan, playwright, author of The Browning Version and The Winslow Boy

Rita Ray, onetime singer with the Darts, latterly radio presenter and DJ

Dame Flora Robson, actress, 1960 until her death in 1984, famous as Elizabeth I

Arnold Ruge, German philosopher and political writer, lived in exile in Brighton from 1850 to his death in 1880

S



Victoria Sackville-West, had two houses in Sussex Square, Kemp Town conjoined by Sir Edwin Lutyens, who also built her another at Roedean

Sir Albert Abdullah David Sassoon, British Indian philanthropist and merchant, 1st Baronet

Sir Edward Albert Sassoon, businessman and politician, MP for Hythe, whose mausoleum became the ''Hanbury Arms'', 2nd Baronet

Paul Scofield, actor, lived in Brighton as a child and went to school there

Captain Sensible, punk musician with The Damned

George Albert Smith, pioneering early cinematographer lived and built a studio in Hove

Jimmy Somerville, musician formerly of band The Communards

Herbert Spencer, philosopher and political theorist

Victor Spinetti , actor, film, stage TV, lived in Kemp Town.

Dusty Springfield, singer, had home in Wilbury Road, Hove

Jacquie Storey, singer, dancer, choreographer, brought up in Hove

T



Maui Taylor, Filipino actress, big in the Philippines

Jack Tripp, English pantomime dame, died 2005

Lynne Truss, writer

Keith Tyson, artist and Turner Prize winner in 2002, studied Critical Fine Art Practice at Brighton University's Grand Parade campus

V



David Van Day, singer

Ralph Vaughan-Williams, composer, went to school in Rottingdean

Magnus Volk, electrical engineer and inventor

W



Wildman Whitehouse, surgeon and destroyer of the first transatlantic telegraph cable

Rachel Whiteread, artist and Turner Prize winner in 1993

Herbert Wilcox, film producer

Amon Wilds and his son Amon Henry Wilds, both Regency architects, prolific in Brighton

Mark Williams, member of The Fast Show team and actor in the Harry Potter films

James Williamson (film pioneer), cinema pioneer had a chemist's shop in Church Road, Hove before building a studio in Cambridge Grove

John Wisden, cricketer, founded ''Wisden Cricketers' Almanack

See also


List of Brighton and Hove buses named after famous people

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