List of people from Memphis, Tennessee
This is a list of notable people who were born in, residents of, or otherwise closely associated with Memphis, Tennessee.
This list is in alphabetical order by last name.
A
- Johnny Ace (1929–1954)[1] — rhythm and blues singer
 - Mo Alexander (born 1970) — comedian
 - Heather Armstrong (1975–2023) — author and blogger, Dooce.com
 - Kristin Armstrong (born 1973) — professional road bicycle racer and three-time Olympic gold medalist
 - George Awsumb (1880–1959) — Norwegian-American architect
 - Gwen Robinson Awsumb (1915–2003) — first woman elected to Memphis City Council
 - Estelle Axton (1918–2004) — co-founder of Stax Records
 
B


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- Julien Baker (born 1995) — singer, songwriter, and guitarist
 - Michael A. Baker (born 1953) — astronaut
 - Adrian Banks (born 1986) — American-Israeli basketball player
 - The Bar-Kays (formed in 1966) — musicians
 - Lloyd Barbee (1925–2002) — Wisconsin legislator and civil rights activist
 - Charles Barr (1903–1926) — serial killer known as “The Petting Party Bandit”
 - Marion Barry (1936–2014) — mayor of Washington, D.C.
 - Charles Bartliff (1886–1962) — soccer player and 1904 Olympian[2]
 - Daren Bates (born 1990) — NFL player
 - Kathy Bates (born 1948) — Academy Award-winning actress
 - Kenneth Lawrence Beaudoin (1913–1995) — poet
 - Michael Beck (born 1949) — actor, best known for The Warriors and Xanadu
 - Reginald Becton (born 1991) — basketball player who currently plays for Yokohama B-Corsairs of the B. League
 - William Bedford (born 1963) — basketball player
 - Diane Meredith Belcher (born 1960) — concert organist, teacher, and church musician
 - Chris Bell (1951–1978) — musician
 - William Bell (born 1939) — singer
 - Charles T. Bernard (1927–2015) — businessman and Arkansas politician, died in Memphis in 2015
 - Big Scarr (2000–2022) — rapper
 - Big Star (formed in 1971) — rock band
 - Big30 — rapper
 - Greg Bird — Major League Baseball first baseman
 - Blac Youngsta (born 1990) — rapper; born Samuel Marquez Benson
 - Tarik Black (born 1991) — basketball player
 - James Blackwood (1919–2002) — gospel singer, founding member of quartet the Blackwood Brothers
 - Bobby "Blue" Bland (1930–2013) — musician
 - BlocBoy JB — rapper
 - Elizabeth Bolden (1890–2006) — oldest person in the world during most of 2006
 - Charles Boyce (born 1949) — syndicated cartoonist
 - Cory Branan (born 1974) — singer/songwriter
 - Craig Brewer (born 1971) — film director
 - Ben Browder (born 1962) — actor, best known for Farscape and Stargate SG-1
 - Dave Brown (born 1946) — TV meteorologist, professional wrestling announcer
 - Joe Brown (born 1947) — politician
 - Isaac Bruce (born 1972) — former NFL player
 - Matt Brucker (born 2004) — soccer player[3]
 - Antonio Burks (born 1980) — former basketball player
 - Dorsey Burnette (1932–1979) — rockabilly pioneer, singer-songwriter
 - Johnny Burnette (1934–1964) — rockabilly pioneer, singer-songwriter
 - Leonard Burton (born 1964) — NFL player
 - Mike Butler (1946–2018) — basketball player
 - Derrick Byars (born 1984) — basketball player
 - Latasha Byears (born 1973) — basketball player
 
C


- Herman Cain (1945–2020) — businessman, talk show host, and candidate for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination
 - Tyrone Calico (born 1980) — NFL player for the Tennessee Titans
 - Dixie Carter (1939–2010) — actress known for Designing Women and Desperate Housewives
 - Lorenzo Carter (born 1995) — linebacker for the Atlanta Falcons
 - Bob Caruthers (1864–1911) — Major League Baseball player[4]
 - Kellye Cash (born 1965) — Miss America 1987
 - Rosanne Cash (born 1955) — singer-songwriter
 - Cy Casper (1912–1968) — NFL player for the Green Bay Packers, St. Louis Gunners, and Pittsburgh Pirates
 - Dave Catching (born 1961) — musician
 - Alex Chilton (1950–2010) — musician
 - NLE Choppa — rapper
 - Robert Reed Church Sr. (1839–1912) — entrepreneur and philanthropist
 - Mary Church Terrell — civil and women's rights activist
 - Ian Clark (born 1991) — basketball player
 - Philip Claypool — musician
 - Jack Clement — singer-songwriter, and record and film producer
 - Antonius Cleveland (born 1994) — basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League
 - Lashundra Trenyce Cobbin (born 1980) — American Idol contestant
 - Steve Cohen (born 1949) — politician
 - Olivia Cole (1942–2018) — actress
 - George Coleman (born 1935) — musician
 - Barron Collier (1873–1939) — businessman
 - Jazzie Collins (1958–2013) — African American trans woman activist and community organizer
 - John Cooper (born 1975) — musician, Skillet
 - Zack Cozart — baseball shortstop and third baseman for the Cincinnati Reds and Los Angeles Angels
 - Hank Crawford (1934–2009) — musician
 - Steve Cropper (born 1941) — musician, Booker T. and the M.G.'s and The Blues Brothers
 - Edward H. Crump (1874–1954) — political boss and U.S. Representative
 - Randy Culpepper (born 1989) — basketball player
 
D


- Chastity Daniels (born 1978) — musician
 - Janette Davis (1916–2005) — singer
 - Rick Dees (born 1950) — radio personality
 - Nancy Denson — mayor of Athens, Georgia
 - Duke Deuce — rapper
 - Eric Jerome Dickey (1961–2021) — author
 - Jim Dickinson (1941–2009) — musician; producer
 - Peter C. Doherty (born 1940) — Nobel laureate; scientist at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
 - Shannen Doherty (1971–2024) — actress known for Beverly Hills, 90210
 - Young Dolph (1985–2021) — rapper (grew up in Memphis)
 - Johnny Dowd (born 1948) — musician
 - Drumma Boy (born 1983) — hip hop music producer
 - William B. Dunavant (1932–2021) — businessman, CEO of Dunavant Enterprises
 - Donald "Duck" Dunn (1941–2012) — musician in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
 
E
- Johanna Edwards (born 1978) — author
 - William Eggleston (born 1939) — photographer
 - Egypt Central (2002–2014) — band
 - Eightball & MJG (established in 1991) — musicians
 
F

- Charlie Feathers — rockabilly musician, died here in 1998
 - Ben Ferguson — nationally syndicated talk radio host
 - Paul Finebaum — television and radio sports-talk host
 - Finesse2tymes — rapper
 - Marjorie Finlay — opera singer and television personality
 - Veronica Finn — pop singer of now-disbanded group Innosense
 - Ric Flair — professional wrestler (adopted at six weeks; raised in Minnesota)
 - Rey Flemings — music commissioner
 - Avron Fogelman — former owner of Kansas City Royals and various Memphis-based sports teams; namesake of southeastern leg of Interstate 240
 - Shelby Foote — author
 - George L. Forbes — Cleveland City Council President, President of the Cleveland NAACP
 - Clementine Ford — actress
 - Harold Ford Jr. — politician
 - Jacob Ford — NFL player, Tennessee Titans
 - Abe Fortas — politician and U.S. Supreme Court justice
 - Cary Fowler — agriculturalist, established the Svalbard Global Seed Vault
 - Morgan Jon Fox — film director
 - Aretha Franklin (1942–2018) — singer in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
 - Frayser Boy — Academy Award-winning rapper
 - Nelson Frazier Jr. — wrestler
 - Morgan Freeman — Academy Award-winning actor
 - Judy Freudberg — writer
 - John Fry — music producer, engineer, founder of Ardent Studios
 
G


- David Galloway — novelist, international art curator, journalist and academic
 - Gangsta Boo (1979–2023) — rapper
 - TM Garret — author, producer, filmmaker, radio personality, activist
 - The Gentrys — 1960s rock band with Larry Raspberry and Larry Wall
 - Cassietta George — gospel singer and composer
 - David Gest — event and concert producer
 - Lee Giles — academic and computer scientist
 - Key Glock — rapper
 - GloRilla — rapper
 - Ginnifer Goodwin — actress
 - Robert Gordon — filmmaker and writer
 - Clare Grant — actress
 - Al Green — singer, musician in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
 - Larkin Grimm — folk singer
 - Logan Guleff — MasterChef Junior Season 2 winner
 - Gyft — rapper signed to E1 Music, known for his single "They Just Don't Know"
 
H


- Lucy Hale — singer and actress
 - Richard Halliburton — explorer and author
 - George Hamilton — Golden Globe Award-winning actor
 - W.C. Handy — musician
 - Anne Haney — actress
 - Rebecca Hanover — (B.A. English/creative writing 2001), television writer, winner of Daytime Emmy Award for Guiding Light
 - Anfernee "Penny" Hardaway — former NBA player, NCAA Basketball coach
 - Lee Harris – mayor of Shelby County and member of the Tennessee General Assembly[5]
 - E. Hunter Harrison — CEO of Canadian Pacific Railway
 - Jimmy Hart — singer, pro wrestling personality
 - Lori Harvey — model
 - Jon Hassell — musician
 - Isaac Hayes — actor and Academy Award-winning musician
 - Samuel Henderson — former slave and Catholic convert
 - Austin Hollins (born 1991) — basketball player for Maccabi Tel Aviv of the Israeli Basketball Premier League
 - Olivia Holt — singer and actress
 - John Lee Hooker — blues musician
 - Benjamin L. Hooks — civil rights activist and executive director of the NAACP
 - Julia Britton Hooks — musician and civil rights activist
 - Howlin' Wolf — blues musician in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
 - Lewis C. Hudson — brigadier general in the Marine Corps, Navy Cross recipient
 - John Hulse — college professor
 - Andy Hummel — musician
 - Alberta Hunter — singer
 
I
- iLoveMemphis (real name Richard Colbert) — rapper
 - Ingram Hill — band
 
J

- Al Jackson Jr. — musician
 - Quinton "Rampage" Jackson — mixed martial arts fighter
 - Raji Jallepalli — Indian-born chef and restaurateur
 - Antonio D. James (born 1985) — filmmaker; producer
 - Jimi Jamison — singer, songwriter
 - Roland Janes — musician; producer
 - Josh Jasper — All-American college football placekicker
 - John Wayles Jefferson — mixed-race grandson of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, colonel in the Union Army, cotton broker in Memphis after the Civil War
 - Michael Jeter — actor
 - Ashley Jones — actress
 - Booker T. Jones — musician
 - Leslie Jones — actress known for Saturday Night Live and Ghostbusters
 - Mary Harris "Mother" Jones — prominent labor and community organizer
 - Mary Jane Richardson Jones — abolitionist and activist
 - Rich Jones (born 1946) — basketball player
 - Shaw Jones (born 1969) — actor
 - Juicy J — rapper
 - Rob Jungklas — musician
 
K

- K. Michelle — musician
 - Florence Kahn — early Ibsen actress and wife of Max Beerbohm
 - The Kat — professional wrestler
 - Makky Kaylor — professional songwriter, recording artist, entertainer, and radio personality
 - Tay Keith — record producer
 - George "Machine Gun" Kelly — Great Depression-era bank robber and kidnapper
 - Larry Kenon — basketball player, led Memphis State to 1973 NCAA title game
 - Carlton W. Kent — Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps
 - Key Glock — rapper, cousin to Young Dolph
 - Albert King — blues musician
 - B.B. King — blues musician, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
 - Betty Klepper — scientist
 - Francis M. Kneeland — early African American physician who located her practice on Beale Street[6]
 
L
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- Snooky Lanson — singer and television personality
 - Chuck Lanza — NFL player
 - Brian Lawler — professional wrestler
 - Jerry Lawler — professional wrestler
 - Arthur Lee (1945–2006) — singer-songwriter
 - Fannie Lewis — Cleveland Ohio's longest serving councilwoman
 - Furry Lewis — blues musician
 - Jerry Lee Lewis — musician in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
 - Eddie Lightfoot — minstrel dancer
 - Alan Lightman — novelist and physicist
 - Lil Wyte — rapper
 - Booker Little — musician
 - Charles Lloyd — musician
 - London on da Track — record producer
 - Lord T & Eloise — musicians
 - Andre Lott — football player
 - Matt Lucas — singer-songwriter, drummer
 - Jimmie Lunceford — musician
 - Herb Lusk — NFL player and clergyman
 
M

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- Jim Mabry — Arkansas Razorbacks football All-American
 - Bill Madlock (born 1951) — Major League Baseball player
 - Terry Manning — music producer, photographer
 - The Mar-Keys — musicians
 - Nick Marable — freestyle wrestler who competed for USA's national team[7]
 - Wink Martindale — radio and television personality
 - Ryan Masson — actor
 - Tim McCarver — professional baseball player and broadcaster
 - Hilton McConnico — designer and artist
 - Kenneth D. McKellar — long-serving U.S. senator
 - The Memphis Horns — musicians
 - Matthew Melton — musician
 - Memphis Minnie — blues singer
 - Memphis Slim — musician
 - Shaun Micheel — professional golfer
 - Cary Middlecoff — professional golfer, Masters and U.S. Open champion
 - Ryan Miller — professional hockey player
 - Lola Mitchell — musician
 - Willie Mitchell — musician and music producer
 - Chips Moman — music producer
 - Moneybagg Yo (born 1991) — rapper
 - Sputnik Monroe — professional wrestler
 - Lecrae Moore — musician and music executive
 - Scotty Moore — guitarist
 - Allen B. Morgan Jr. — businessman, founded Morgan Keegan
 - Haley Morris-Cafiero — photographer[8]
 - Wendy Moten — singer
 - Steven J. Mulroy — district attorney general, law professor
 - David W. Mullins Jr. — former vice chairman of the Federal Reserve
 - Charlie Musselwhite — blues musician
 - Zach Myers — lead guitarist for rock band Shinedown
 
N
- Elise Neal (born 1966) — actress
 - Hal Needham (1931–2013) — stuntman, film director, actor and writer
 - Pat and Gina Neely — celebrity chefs on Food Network
 - Johnny Neumann (1950–2019) — basketball player and coach
 - Phineas Newborn Jr. (1931–1989) — jazz musician
 - Nights Like These — Victory Records metalcore band
 - Avande Arsone - (Born 2009) - rapper and producer [9]
 
O
- Michael Oher — NFL player, subject of The Blind Side
 - Roy Orbison — singer
 
P
- Woody Paige (born 1946) — sportswriter, panelist on ESPN's Around the Horn
 - Hermes Pan (1909–1990) — dancer and choreographer
 - Cindy Parlow Cone (born 1978) — athlete
 - Chris Parnell (born 1967) — actor, known for Saturday Night Live
 - Gilbert E. Patterson (1939–2007) — bishop of Church of God in Christ
 - DJ Paul — rapper
 - Ann Peebles (born 1947) — singer
 - Paul Penczner (1916–2010) — Hungarian-born artist
 - Art Pennington (1923–2017) — all-star negro league baseball player
 - Carl Perkins (1932–1998) — musician
 - Luther Perkins (1928–1968) — musician
 - Elliot Perry (born 1969) — professional basketball player
 - Dewey Phillips (1926–1968) — early rock 'n' roll disc jockey
 - Sam Phillips (1923–2003) — founder of Sun Records
 - Marguerite Piazza (1920–2012) — opera singer
 - Danny Pittman (born 1958) — athlete
 - David Porter (born 1941) — musician
 - Elvis Presley (1935–1977) — singer and actor
 - Lisa Marie Presley (1968–2023) — singer-songwriter; child of singer and actor Elvis Presley
 - Project Pat (born 1973) — rapper
 - Tommy Prothro (1920–1995) — football coach, UCLA and Los Angeles Rams
 - Missi Pyle (born 1972) — actress and singer
 
Q
- Lisa Quinn (born 1967) — actress, author, designer
 
R
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- Michael Ramirez (born 1961) — Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist
 - Jay Reatard (1980–2010) — musician
 - Otis Redding — musician in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
 - Kennedy J. Reed (1944–2023) — theoretical atomic physicist
 - Brent Renaud (1971–2011) — journalist and writer
 - Charlie Rich — Grammy Award-winning musician
 - Austin Riley — MLB player
 - Loren Roberts — professional golfer
 - Russell Roberts — economist
 - Claire Robinson — television host, author and cook
 - Kali Rocha (born 1971) — actress
 - Arabella Page Rodman — civic leader
 - Adrian Rogers — former pastor of Bellevue Baptist Church and president of the Southern Baptist Convention
 - Dalton Rushing (born 2001) — MLB player
 - Joe Russell — former world backgammon champion
 - Lance Russell — pro wrestling announcer
 
S
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- Saliva — musical group
 - Sam and Dave (Sam Moore and David Prater) — musicians in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
 - Sam the Sham — musician, leader of Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs
 - William Sanderson — actor known for Newhart and Blade Runner
 - J. Peter Sartain — archbishop of Seattle
 - Clarence Saunders — founder of the world's first self-service supermarket, Piggly Wiggly
 - Jerry Schilling — associate of Elvis Presley, The Beach Boys
 - Dan Schneider — actor
 - Josey Scott — musician
 - Will Shade — musician
 - Gwen Shamblin — author and founder of the Weigh Down Workshop and Remnant Fellowship Church
 - Paul Shanklin — personality on Rush Limbaugh's radio program
 - Cybill Shepherd — actress known for Moonlighting and Cybill
 - Pooh Shiesty (born 1999) — rapper
 - George Sherrill — MLB player
 - Lee Shippey — journalist
 - Hampton Sides — author
 - McKinley Singleton — NBA player, New York Knicks
 - Arthur Smith — head coach of the Atlanta Falcons
 - Bingo Smith (born 1946) — basketball player
 - Fred Smith — founder and chairman of FedEx
 - Lane Smith — actor known for My Cousin Vinny and The Final Days
 - George W. Snedecor (1881–1974) — mathematician and statistician
 - Bobby Sowell — musician
 - Speech (born 1968) — rapper
 - Ben Spies (born 1984) — motorcycle road racer
 - Marvin Stamm — musician
 - Kay Starr — singer
 - Ricky Stenhouse Jr. — NASCAR driver
 - Jody Stephens — musician
 - Andrew Stevens — actor and producer
 - Stella Stevens — Golden Globe Award-winning actress
 - Jim Stewart — record producer and co-founder of Stax Records
 - Frank Stokes — blues musician
 - Jarnell Stokes (born 1994) — basketball player
 - Tyler Stone (born 1991) — basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League
 - Lewis Ossie Swingler — editor of Memphis World, editor and publisher of Tri-State Defender
 
T

- Gary Talley — musician and singer of The Box Tops
 - Cliff Taylor — football player
 - Raymond Taylor — catcher in Negro league baseball
 - Lloyd Thaxton — television personality
 - Adonis Thomas (born 1993) — basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League
 - Carla Thomas — musician and daughter of Rufus Thomas
 - Danny Thomas — entertainer, actor and founder of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
 - Marvell Thomas — keyboardist
 - Rufus Thomas — musician
 - Vaneese Thomas — musician
 - Fred Thompson — actor and U.S. Senator (alumnus of the University of Memphis)
 - Harry Thompson — football player
 - Linda Thompson — songwriter and actress
 - Three 6 Mafia — Academy Award-winning rap musicians
 - Justin Timberlake — Grammy Award-winning musician, actor and record producer
 - Don Trip — rapper
 - Leigh Anne Tuohy — businesswoman and interior designer
 - Ike Turner — Grammy Award-winning musician
 
V
- Guillaume de Van (1906–1949) — Franco–American musicologist
 - Marcia Van Dresser (1877–1937) — operatic soprano, recitalist and actress
 - Andrew VanWyngarden — musician of psychedelic rock group MGMT
 - Alexey Vermeulen (born 1994) — cyclist
 
W



- Barbara Jo Walker (1926–2000), Miss America 1947
 - Sam Walton — football player
 - Teddy Walton — composer, producer, writer and DJ
 - Garrett Wang — actor
 - Anita Ward — singer and schoolteacher; 1979 number one Billboard Hot 100 single "Ring My Bell"
 - Thomas Waterson — police officer who captured Machine Gun Kelly in a Memphis raid in 1933
 - Luke J. Weathers (1920–2011) — former U.S. Army Air Force officer and member of Tuskegee Airmen[10]
 - Ida B. Wells — civil rights advocate and women's rights advocate
 - Junior Wells — musician
 - David West — baseball player
 - Red West — actor
 - Kirk Whalum — musician
 - Maurice White — musician, lead singer of Earth, Wind & Fire
 - Reggie White — NFL player; began his career with the Memphis Showboats of the USFL
 - Bobby Whitlock — musician, keyboardist in Derek and the Dominos
 - Snootie Wild — rapper
 - John Shelton Wilder — politician
 - Elliot Williams — NBA player
 - LaNell Williams — physicist and virologist
 - Louis Williams — NBA player
 - Tennessee Williams — playwright
 - Kemmons Wilson — businessman, founder of Holiday Inn
 - Mike Wilson — NBA player
 - Jesse Winchester — singer-songwriter
 - Francis Winkler — NFL player
 - Ernest Withers — photojournalist
 - Lorenzen Wright — NBA player
 
Y
- Roy Yeager — musician
 - Yo Gotti (born 1981) — rapper; born Mario Mims
 - Paul Young — mayor
 - Thaddeus Young — NBA player (grew up in Memphis)
 - Young Dolph (1985–2021) — rapper/philanthropist; born: Adolph Robert Thornton Jr.
 
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to People of Memphis, Tennessee.
- ^ Johnny Ace Retrieved 28 November 2022
 - ^ "Charles Bartliff". Olympedia. Retrieved February 14, 2025.
 - ^ "Matt Brucker". High Point Panthers. Retrieved February 14, 2025.
 - ^ Reichler, Joseph L., ed. (1979) [1969]. The Baseball Encyclopedia (4th ed.). New York: Macmillan Publishing. ISBN 0-02-578970-8.
 - ^ Alley, Richard J. (October 25, 2012). "Harris' Legal Career Leans On Desire to Help Community". The Daily News. Retrieved July 20, 2025.
 - ^ Lowry, Joe (September 26, 2018). "Dr. Francis Kneeland – Forgotten Hero". Our Memphis History. Archived from the original on February 23, 2020. Retrieved February 23, 2020.
 - ^ Nick Marable - Team USA. Retrieved November 9, 2020.
 - ^ Clark, Kym (April 26, 2013). "Photographer's social experiment gains exposure". WXIX-TV. Retrieved November 20, 2014.
 - ^ https://bnd.link/avandearsone
 - ^ "Tuskegee Airmen Pilot Roster". CAF Rise Above. CAF Rise Above. Retrieved August 11, 2020.
 






