List of Mills College people
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following is a partial list of notable Mills College alumnae. It includes alumnae, professors, and others associated with Mills College.
- Janus Adams - journalist and talk show host[1]
- Laurie Anderson - performance artist and musician[2]
- John Bischoff - musician[3]
- Kevin Blechdom - musician[4]
- Renel Brooks-Moon - voice of the San Francisco Giants, first black baseball announcer[5]
- Trisha Brown - choreographer[5]
- Dave Brubeck - musician and composer[5]
- Teresa Blankmeyer Burke - philosopher and bioethicist[5]
- Alice Sudduth Byerly (1855–1904) - temperance activist[6]
- Peggie Castle - actress[7]
- Sharon Cheslow - musician and artist
- King Lan Chew - dancer
- Maya Chinchilla - poet
- Katherine Choy - ceramicist[8]
- Marika Cifor - professor at University of Washington Information School
- Martha Fuller Clark - New Hampshire state senator
- Sofia Coppola - director[9]
- Elizabeth Crow (1968, B.A.) - editor and journalist[10]
- Eunice Prieto Damron - ceramic artist
- Olivia de Havilland - actress[11]
- Vaughn De Leath
- Paul DeMarinis - artist, musician, composer
- Rosanna Castrillo Diaz - artist
- March Fong Eu - politician[5]
- Claire Falkenstein - sculptor, painter, print-maker and jewelry designer known for her large-scale abstract metal and glass sculptures
- Molissa Fenley - modern dancer[5]
- Jim Ferguson - guitarist and composer
- Guillermo Galindo - composer, sound artist
- Noah Georgeson - musician and producer
- Leah Gerber - professor of Conservation Science at Arizona State University[12]
- Helen Gilbert - artist[13]
- April Catherine Glaspie - diplomat, United States Ambassador to Iraq during the Gulf War[5]
- Ben Goldberg - composer and clarinetist
- Michelle Cruz Gonzalez - musician, author
- Beate Sirota Gordon - contributing author, as staff to Douglas MacArthur, of Japanese Constitution[5]
- Peter Gordon - composer
- Ariel Gore - author[5]
- Guðmundur Steinn Gunnarsson - composer
- Holly Herndon - composer, musician, and sound artist[14]
- Barbara Higbie - musician and composer[15]
- Claire Giannini Hoffman - first woman to serve on the boards of Bank of America and Sears, Roebuck & Company
- Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner - Marshallese poet and climate change activist[16]
- Snatam Kaur - musician and activist
- Bevin Kelley - musician
- Nia King - art activist, multimedia journalist, podcaster, public speaker, and zine maker
- Ron Kuivila - musician and sound artist
- Michael Land - head of LucasArts sound department
- Dorianne Laux - award-winning poet
- Barbara Lee - U.S. representative from California's 12th congressional district[5]
- May Lee - CNN correspondent[11]
- Phil Lesh - Grateful Dead bassist[11]
- Cheena Marie Lo - poet
- Charmian London - second wife and biographer of Jack London
- Jeffrey Luck Lucas - musician and composer
- Megan March - musician, visual artist
- Micheline Aharonian Marcom - novelist[17]
- Jerry Martin - composer
- Miya Masaoka - musician and composer
- Billie June McCaskill - botanist[18]
- Siobhon McManus - teacher and activist
- Stacey Milbern - disability rights activist
- Constance Money - actress
- Elizabeth Murray - painter and MacArthur Fellow[5]
- Emma Kaili Metcalf Beckley Nakuina - writer
- Dasha Nekrasova - actress
- Amy X. Neuburg - musician and composer[11]
- Joanna Newsom - musician
- Margaret Nielsen - New Zealand pianist and piano teacher
- Margaret Saunders Ott - pianist and music educator
- Diana L. Paxson - author
- Maggi Payne - composer and musician[19]
- Daniella Pineda
- Dan Plonsey - saxophonist
- Johanna Poethig – visual, public and performance artist
- Dixy Lee Ray - governor of Washington and chair of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission[5]
- Dana Reason - composer and musician
- Steve Reich - composer[5]
- Marc Anthony Richardson - novelist[20]
- Gino Robair - composer and percussionist
- Manuel Rocha Iturbide - composer and sound artist
- Ana Roxanne - musician and singer
- Ananya Roy - professor of urban studies at UC Berkeley[21]
- Ann Sandifur - composer
- Mia Satya (aka Mia Tu Mutch) - community organizer and activist[22]
- Lateefah Simon - U.S. representative from California's 12th congressional district
- Beate Sirota - helped write the Japanese constitution
- Irma Tam Soong - historian
- Morton Subotnick - composer
- Michèle Taylor - U.S. ambassador to the UN Human Rights Council
- Grace Vamos - composer and cellist
- Dana Vespoli - pornographic actress[23]
- Candace Vogler - philosopher
- Katharine Mulky Warne - composer
- Gordon Watson - pianist[11]
- William Winant - percussionist
- Betty Ann Wong - composer
- Hsiung-Zee Wong - composer and musician[11]
- Jade Snow Wong - author and artist[5]
- Connie Young Yu - author, historian, and lecturer[11]