The alumni of Bryanston School are known as Old Bryanstonians or OBs.
Bryanston School is a co-educational independent school for both day and boarding pupils in Blandford, north Dorset, England, near the village of Bryanston.
Notable OBs
- Adrian Heath (1920–1992), painter
 - Amy Studt (born 1986), singer
 - Angus John Mackintosh Stewart (1936-1998), author of Sandel
 - Anne Marie Morris (born 1957), politician
 - Ben Fogle (born 1973), television presenter, adventurer
 - Carolyn Fairbairn (born 1961), director-general of the Confederation of British Industry
 - Cerys Matthews (born 1969), singer-songwriter
 - Charles Handley-Read (1916-1971), architectural critic
 - Chris Beckett (born 1955), science fiction author
 - Clive Barda OBE (born 1945), photographer[1]
 - Clive Seale (born 1955), sociologist
 - David Campbell Bannerman (born 1960), Conservative MEP
 - David Lipsey, Baron Lipsey, (born 1948) politician, journalist, Labour life peer
 - Drummond Matthews (1931–1997), geologist and marine geophysicist
 - Eliot Paulina Sumner (born 1990), singer
 - Ella Marchment (born 1992), opera and theatre director
 - Emilia Fox (born 1974), actress
 - Freddie Fox (born 1989), actor
 - Frederick Sanger (1918–2013), biochemist; the fourth person to become a double Nobel Laureate
 - Geoffrey Hoyle (born 1942), science fiction writer (son of Fred Hoyle)
 - Giselle Norman (born 2001), fashion model
 - Greg Hersov (born 1956), theatre director
 - HRH Princess Haya of Jordan (born 1974), daughter of King Hussein I of Jordan
 - Henry Pyrgos (born 1989), rugby player for Glasgow and captain for Scotland
 - Humphrey Kay (1923–2009), pathologist and haematologist
 - Huw Bennett (born 1983), rugby player for Ospreys and Wales
 - Iain Tuckett, pioneer in urban regeneration
 - Jago Cooper (born 1977), archaeologist
 - James Scott (born 1941), filmmaker
 - Jasper Conran (born 1959), fashion designer
 - Jasper Morrison (born 1959), designer
 - John Eliot Gardiner (born 1943), conductor
 - John Nissen (born 1942), founder of Cloudworld
 - Jonathan Bowen (born 1956), computer scientist
 - Jonathan Gathorne-Hardy (1933-2019), author
 - Julian Vereker (1945–2000), electronic engineer
 - Justin Urquhart Stewart (born 1955), investment manager[2]
 - Kevin Crossley-Holland (born 1941), children's author and poet
 - Kwame Anthony Appiah (born 1954), philosopher and novelist
 - Lara Cazalet (born 1971), actress
 - Lucian Freud (1922-2011), painter
 - Mark Scott (1923–2013), rower who competed in the 1948 Summer Olympics
 - Sir Mark Elder CBE (born 1947), conductor
 - Martin Checksfield (1939-2002), first-class cricketer
 - Max Irons (born 1985), actor
 - Michael Yates (1919–2001), stage and television designer and executive
 - Myles Burnyeat (1939-2019), classicist and philosopher
 - Nicholas Logsdail (born 1945), art dealer
 - Nicholas Phillips, Baron Phillips of Worth Matravers (born 1938), Master of the Rolls, 2000–2005, and Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales from 2005-2008
 - Nick Meers (born 1955), landscape photographer
 - Nick Willing (born 1961), filmmaker
 - Nigel Barker (born 1972), fashion photographer, judge on America's Next Top Model
 - Ollie Devoto (born 1993), rugby player for Bath and Exeter
 - Paul Thompson (born 1959), Rector of the Royal College of Art
 - Phil de Glanville (born 1968), rugby player for Bath and England, 38 caps, captain of England
 - Philip Trevelyan (born 1943), film director
 - Prince Alastair of Connaught (1914–1943), member of the British Royal Family
 - Quinlan Terry (born 1937), architect
 - Richard Bawden (born 1936), painter, printmaker
 - Robert Saxton (born 1953), composer
 - Robert Baden-Powell, 3rd Baron Baden-Powell (1936-2019) grandson of Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell (1857-1941)
 - Roger Hammond (1936–2012), actor
 - Saira Shah (born 1964), journalist and documentary filmmaker
 - Sebastian Conran (born 1956), designer
 - Simon Napier-Bell (born 1939), pop group manager, writer and journalist
 - Sir Francis Ferris QC (1932–2018), High Court Judge
 - Sir Howard Hodgkin (1932-2017), painter
 - Sir Terence Conran (1931-2020), designer, restaurateur and retailer
 - Sir Tony Durant (1928-2016), politician
 - Tahir Shah (born 1966), writer and television presenter
 - William Herbert, 18th Earl of Pembroke politician and aristocrat
 
References
- ↑ Anon. (5 January 2004). "Artists and photographers". thetimes.co.uk. The Times. Retrieved 29 August 2016.
 - ↑ Slade, Darren (16 October 2018). "Justin Urquhart-Stewart gives views on Brexit". Bournemouth Echo.
 
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