This is an incomplete list of notable people from Adelaide.
Arts and music
Prominent intellectuals, writers, artists, bands, and musicians to hail from Adelaide include:
Actors
- Dame Judith Anderson AC DBE - Rebecca, And Then There Were None; Tony and Emmy Award winner
 - Elspeth Ballantyne - Prisoner
 - Holly Brisley - Home and Away
 - Sam Clark - Neighbours
 - Kate Fischer - Sirens
 - Sir Robert Helpmann CBE - Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
 - Nicholas Hope - Bad Boy Bubby
 - Dichen Lachman - Neighbours, Dollhouse
 - Anthony LaPaglia - Without a Trace
 - Jonathan LaPaglia - Seven Days, The District
 - Glenn McMillan - Wonderland, Power Rangers Ninja Storm
 - Ben Oxenbould - Hey Dad..!
 - Teresa Palmer - December Boys, I Am Number Four
 - Lois Ramsey - Road to Nhill, Home and Away
 - Xavier Samuel - The Twilight Saga: Eclipse
 - Hugh Sheridan - Packed to the Rafters
 - Sarah Snook - Succession; Golden Globe winner
 - Sonia Todd - McLeod's Daughters
 - Melanie Vallejo - Winners and Losers, Power Rangers Mystic Force
 - Samara Weaving
 - John Noble - Fringe
 
Comedians
- Anthony "Lehmo" Lehmann - comedian
 - Richard Marsland
 - Shaun Micallef
 - Greig Pickhaver AM - aka "H.G. Nelson"
 - Roy Rene - aka "Mo McCackie"
 - Frank Woodley
 
Film directors
Humanities
- Graeme Hugo - demographer and Federation Fellow (2002)
 - J. J. C. Smart - philosopher
 - Hugh Stretton - historian and sociologist
 - Peter Sutton - anthropologist
 - Ghil'ad Zuckermann - linguist and revivalist
 - Wesley Wildman - philosopher, theologian, ethicist
 
Journalists
- Annabel Crabb - political writer and commentator
 - Brady Haran OAM - independent video journalist and Internet personality
 - Jenni Hogan - TV reporter and host, Emmy Award winner
 - Christian Kerr - political commentator and journalist
 - David Koch - financial journalist and former presenter of Sunrise
 - Bruce McAvaney OAM - sports broadcaster
 - Hamish McLachlan - television sports commentator for the Seven Network
 - David Penberthy - editor-in-chief of the Australian newspaper The Daily Telegraph
 
Musicians and bands
- Allday
 - The Angels
 - At Sunset
 - The Beards
 - Tkay Maidza
 - Atlas Genius
 - The Audreys
 - Jimmy Barnes
 - Beeb Birtles
 - Bit By Bats
 - David Campbell
 - Wes Carr
 - Julian Cochran
 - Cold Chisel
 - Beccy Cole
 - Michael Crafter
 - Delta (hip hop artist)
 - Fraternity
 - Funkoars
 - Peter Furler
 - Dave Graney
 - Angie Hart
 - Hilltop Hoods
 - The Hot Lies
 - I Killed the Prom Queen
 - Jim Keays
 - Paul Kelly
 - Rachael Leahcar
 - Lowrider
 - The Mark of Cain
 - The Masters Apprentices
 - Reece Mastin
 - Sarah McLeod
 - Sia
 - Sister Janet Mead
 - Orianthi Panagaris
 - Redgum
 - Aleesha Rome
 - Guy Sebastian
 - Glenn Shorrock
 - Benjamin Speed
 - The Superjesus
 - Rudy Nikkerud
 - Swanee
 - Michelle Tumes
 - The Twilights
 - Universum
 - Virgin Black
 - Wolf & Cub
 
Visual artists
- James Ashton - painter and arts educator
 - Dorrit Black - modernist printmaker and painter
 - Michal Dutkiewicz - comic book artist and illustrator, three-time winner of the Stanley Award
 - Robert Hannaford AM - portrait artist, three-time winner of the People's Choice Award of the Archibald Prize
 - Barbara Hanrahan - artist, printmaker and writer
 - Sir Hans Heysen OBE - landscape painter, nine-time winner of the Wynne Prize
 - Nora Heysen AM - portrait artist, first female winner of the Archibald Prize
 - Ondrej Mares - sculptor and furniture maker
 - Joseph Stanislaus Ostoja-Kotkowski AM - painting, photography, film-making, theatre design, fabric design, murals, kinetic and static sculpture, stained glass, vitreous enamel murals, op-collages, computer graphics, and laser art
 - Geoffrey Proud - portrait and landscape painter, sculptor, winner of the 1990 Archibald Prize, winner of the 1975 Sulman Prize
 - Jeffrey Smart AO - precisionist landscape painter
 - Susan Dorothea White - painter, sculptor and printmaker
 
Writers
- Malcolm Afford - playwright and novelist
 - Guy Boothby - novelist and travel writer
 - James Bradley - novelist and critic
 - Brian Castro - novelist
 - Nancy Cato - author
 - J M Coetzee - novelist and essayist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature
 - Aidan Coleman - poet
 - David Conyers - science fiction author
 - Geoffrey Dutton AO - poet, author and historian, winner of the Grace Leven Prize for Poetry
 - Max Fatchen AM - journalist and children's author
 - Mem Fox AM - educator and children's author
 - Peter Goldsworthy AM - novelist, poet and scriptwriter, winner of the Helpmann Award
 - Christine Harris - children's and young adult author
 - Max Harris AO - poet, critic and columnist
 - Vernon Knowles - fantasy author
 - Kym Lardner - children's author, illustrator, and storyteller
 - Caleb Lewis - playwright
 - DBC Pierre - novelist, winner of the Man Booker Prize
 - Gillian Rubinstein - children's author and playwright
 - Bel Schenk - poet
 - Tony Shillitoe - fantasy author
 - Tim Sinclair - poet and novelist
 - Hugh Stretton - historian and sociologist
 - Anne Summers - feminist writer and editor
 - Colin Thiele AC - children's author and educator, winner of the Dromkeen medal
 - David Thorne - humorist and satirist
 - Russel Ward - historian and author of The Australian Legend
 - Sean Williams - science fiction author
 - Ben Winch - novelist
 - Nan Witcomb - poet
 - Laetitia Withall - poet, author and suffragette
 
Business and media
- Rick Allert AO - accountant, company director and chairperson
 - Balfours family - bakery founders
 - Barr Smith family - businessmen and philanthropists
 - Matt Barrie - entrepreneur, CEO Freelancer Limited
 - Shaun Bonétt - property developer, entrepreneur and philanthropist
 - Cooper family - brewery founders
 - Thomas Elder GCMG - pastoralist, politician and philanthropist
 - Gerard family - founders of Clipsal
 - Edward Hayward Kt - owner and manager of John Martins
 - Sir Sidney Kidman - pastoralist, entrepreneur and landowner
 - Matthew and Zbigniew Michalewicz - entrepreneurs and co-founders of SolveIT Software
 - Rupert Murdoch AC - media mogul, chairperson and CEO of News Corporation
 - Mary Penfold - winemaker
 - John Spalvins - managing director of Adelaide Steamship Company
 - Robert Stigwood - impresario, entertainment entrepreneur and film producer
 - Michael Tunn - radio announcer and program director
 - Gary Turner - producer, record company owner and founder of LearnToPlayMusic.com
 
Law and politics
- Julie Bishop - Minister for Foreign Affairs and the Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party of Australia
 - Sir John Langdon BonythonKCMG - member of the first Australian parliament
 - Sir John Lavington Bonython - Mayor and Lord Mayor of Adelaide
 - Michael Bradley - mayor of Sarnia, Ontario, Canada
 - James Crawford - Legal academic and Judge of the International Court of Justice (2014)
 - Mario Despoja - leader of the Croatian community in Australia
 - Natasha Stott Despoja AM - senator and leader of the Australian Democrats
 - Alexander Downer AC - Foreign Affairs Minister and Leader of the Opposition
 - Alexander Downer, Sr.KBE - member of the House of Representatives and High Commissioner to London
 - John Downer KCMG KC - twice Premier of South Australia
 - John Finnis - Professor of Law at University College, Oxford
 - Julia Gillard - Prime Minister and leader of the Australian Labor Party
 - Janine Haines - senator and leader of the Australian Democrats
 - Sir Charles Kingston - Premier of South Australia and Minister for Trade and Customs in the first Commonwealth parliament
 - Dame Roma Mitchell AC DBE CVO - Australia's first female QC, first female judge, and first female Governor
 - Christopher Pyne - Minister for Defence
 - Catherine Helen Spence - suffragist, electoral reformer, prohibitionist, and first female political candidate in Australia
 - Ian WilsonAM - member of the Australian House of Representatives and Minister for Aboriginal Affairs
 - Sir Keith WilsonCBE - senator and member of the Australian House of Representatives
 - List of mayors and lord mayors of Adelaide
 - List of premiers of South Australia
 - Category: Federal politicians from South Australia
 
Science
World-renowned Adelaide scientists include:
- Len Beadell OAM BEM - surveyor, roadbuilder and explorer; asteroid 3161 Beadell is named after him
 - William Henry Bragg OM KBE PRS - physicist, chemist and mathematician, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics
 - William Lawrence Bragg CH OBE MC FRS - physicist and crystallographer, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics and youngest Nobel Laureate
 - Rodney Brooks - roboticist, director of the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and founding member of the iRobot corporation
 - Baron Howard Florey OM FRS FRCP - pharmacologist and pathologist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
 - Basil Stuart Hetzel AC - medical researcher who made a major contribution to combating iodine deficiency
 - Cecil Madigan - geologist and meteorologist, member of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition
 - Sir Douglas Mawson OBE FRS FAA - geologist and explorer, leader of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition
 - Sir Mark Oliphant AC KBE FRS FAA - nuclear physicist, winner of the Hughes Medal and the Faraday Medal
 - Reg Sprigg AO - geologist and conservationist
 - George Szekeres FAA AM - mathematician, after whom the George Szekeres Medal is named.
 - Terence Tao FRS FAA - mathematician, winner of the Fields Medal
 - Andy Thomas AO - aerospace engineer and NASA astronaut
 - David Unaipon - inventor and writer, commemorated on the Australian fifty-dollar note
 - Robin Warren AC - pathologist and researcher, winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine
 - Sir Hubert Wilkins - Antarctic aviation pioneer, Arctic explorer, ornithologist and geographer
 
Sport
Internationally and nationally recognised sports people from Adelaide include:
Aerobatics
- Chris Sperou - thirteen-time National Aerobatics Champion,[1] and five-time participant in the FAI World Aerobatic Championships
 
Archery
Australian rules football
- Nathan Buckley - captained the Collingwood Football Club, winner of the Brownlow Medal
 - Adam Cooney - player for the Western Bulldogs and the Essendon Football Club, winner of the Brownlow Medal
 - Matthew Pavlich - captained the Fremantle Football Club
 - Adelaide Football Club players
 - Port Adelaide Football Club players
 
Basketball
- Mark Bradtke - played one season in the NBA for the Philadelphia 76ers, played in the NBL for the Adelaide 36ers, Melbourne Tigers and Brisbane Bullets; three-time NBL Championship winner and 2002 NBL Most Valuable Player; NBL's all-time leading rebounder; played for the Australian Boomers in four Olympic Games and two World Championships
 - Lindsay Gaze - played for the Australian Boomers in three Olympics and coached the team in four Olympics; two-time NBL Championship winning coach, three-time NBL Coach of the Year; member of the Australian Basketball Hall of Fame, FIBA Hall of Fame and the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
 - Joe Ingles - plays for the Milwaukee Bucks in the NBA. He also represents the Australian Boomers.
 - Ben Madgen - plays in the NBL for the Sydney Kings
 - Brett Maher - played in the NBL for the Adelaide 36ers, captained the team to three Championships, played in three Olympic Games for the Australian Boomers
 - Mike McKay - played in the NBL for the West Adelaide Bearcats, Adelaide 36ers, Brisbane Bullets, Canberra Cannons and Wollongong Hawks; won the 1985 Rookie of the Year and 1986 NBL championship with the 36ers; played for the Australian Boomers at the 1992 Summer Olympics
 - Brad Newley - plays in Spain for CB Gran Canaria, drafted to the NBA by the Houston Rockets; has played for the Australian Boomers in the Olympic Games, World Championships and Commonwealth Games
 - Erin Phillips - plays in the WNBA for the Phoenix Mercury, played for the Connecticut Sun, won a championship with the Indiana Fever, played in the WNBL for the Adelaide Lightning, Olympic silver medalist and FIBA gold medalist with the Australian Opals
 - Luke Schenscher - 7'1" (216 cm) tall Centre, played in the NBA for the Chicago Bulls and the Portland Trail Blazers; plays in the NBL for the Adelaide 36ers; played in the East Asian Games for the Australian Boomers in 2001 while still in high school; member of the 2003–04 NCAA All-Final Four Team
 - Phil Smyth AM - played in the NBL for the St Kilda Saints, Canberra Cannons, Adelaide 36ers and Sydney Kings; won three championships as a player at Canberra and coached the 36ers to three Championship wins; played for the Australian Boomers in four Olympic Games and five World Championships; captained the Boomers from 1983-1995
 
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu
- Craig Jones 2x ADCC silver medalist (2019 - 2022)
 
Cricket
- Greg Blewett - played for the Australian national cricket team
 - Sir Donald Bradman AC - captained Australia, all-time highest Test batting average of any player with 99.94 (Note: Bradman was born in Cootamundra, New South Wales in 1908 and moved to Adelaide in 1934)
 - Greg Chappell MBE - captained Australia
 - Ian Chappell - captained Australia
 - Trevor Chappell - played for Australia
 - Albert Gillespie - played first-class cricket in England
 - Jason Gillespie - played for Australia
 - George Goodfellow - played first-class cricket in England
 - Clem Hill - captained Australia
 - David Hookes - played for Australia
 - Barry Jarman OAM - captained Australia
 - Arthur G. Jenkins - first South Australian to umpire a cricket Test match
 - Darren Lehmann - played for Australia; current (2015) coach of the Australian team
 - Wayne Phillips - played for Australia
 - Vic Richardson OBE - captained Australia; won Magarey Medal (Australian Rules Football) and represented Australia in Baseball; grandfather of Ian, Greg and Trevor Chappell
 - Shaun Tait - plays for Australia
 
Cycling
- Alex Edmondson - Commonwealth Games Team pursuit champion, World individual pursuit champion 2014
 - Annette Edmondson - Commonwealth Games gold medalist 2014, Olympic bronze medalist in the omnium 2012
 - Matthew Glaetzer - Olympic gold, silver and bronze medalist for the Australian Cyclist team since 2009
 - Alexandra Manly - professional cyclist at Orica-AIS
 - Stephanie Morton - Commonwealth Games Individual Sprint Champion 2014
 - Stuart O'Grady OAM - Olympic gold medalist in the Men's Madison, silver and bronze medalist in the 4000m Team Pursuit, bronze medalist in the Points Race, and four-time second-place finisher in the Tour de France
 - Michael Turtur OAM - Olympic gold medalist in the Team Pursuit, and Race Director of the Tour Down Under
 - Kimberley Wells - two-time national criterium champion, and current professional cyclist.
 - Sam Willoughby - Olympic silver medalist in the men's BMX and UCI BMX world champion
 
Darts
- Barry Atkinson - professional darts player
 - Rob Modra - two-time Geelong Open Darts Championships
 
Golf
- Geoff Ogilvy - U.S. Open winner and three-time World Golf Championships winner
 - Adam Scott - U.S. Masters winner and World number one
 
Kickboxing
- Frank Giorgi - two-time Australian champion and world Super Middleweight champion
 - Paul Slowinski - four-time Muay Thai world champion
 
Motor sports
- John Boulger - two-time Australian Speedway Champion, nine-time South Australian Champion, captained Australia to win the Speedway World Team Cup
 - Jeremy Burgess - MotoGP engineer, helped Wayne Gardner, Mick Doohan and Valentino Rossi to 12 World Championships
 - Garrie Cooper - founder of Elfin Sports Cars, Australian 1½ Litre Champion, Australian Sports Car Champion and Singapore Grand Prix winner
 - Daniel Falzon - two-time Australian Superbike Champion
 - Steve Martin - Superbike World Championship veteran and World Endurance Champion
 - Billy McConnell - competes in the British Supersport Championship
 - Nick Percat - V8 Supercar driver, Australian Formula Ford Champion and Bathurst 1000 winner
 - Vern Schuppan - Formula One driver, 24 Hours of Le Mans winner and Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year
 - Johnnie Walker - Australian Drivers' Champion and Australian Grand Prix winner
 - Jack Young - two-time Speedway World Champion and nine-time South Australian Champion
 
Professional wrestling
- Rhea Ripley - signed to the WWE, current 2023 Women’s Royal Rumble winner; former 1/2 of the WWE Women's Tag Team Champions; former Raw Women's Champion former NXT Women's Champion & former NXT UK Women's Champion (as well as being the inaugural champion for the latter).
 
Soccer
- Dianne Alagich - played in the Women's United Soccer Association for the San Jose CyberRays, played for the Matildas
 - John Aloisi - played in La Liga, Premier League and Serie A, played for the Socceroos at the FIFA World Cup
 - Diana Hall - played for the Matildas
 - Charlotte Grant - plays for the Matildas[2]
 - Awer Mabil - plays for FC Midtjylland
 - Alex Tobin - captained the Socceroos
 - Aurelio Vidmar - captained the Socceroos
 - Tony Vidmar - played for the Socceroos
 - Adelaide United FC players
 
Sport aerobics
- Kylie Halliday - placed second at the Aerobic Gymnastics World Championships
 
Swimming
- Kyle Chalmers - 2016 Summer Olympics gold medalist in the 100m freestyle
 - Emily Seebohm - 2012 Summer Olympics gold medalist in the 4 × 100 metre freestyle relay and 2008 Summer Olympics gold medalist in the 4 × 100 metre medley relay
 
Tennis
- Darren Cahill - Australian Open doubles finalist, US Open singles semi-finalist
 - Lleyton Hewitt - U.S. Open and Wimbledon winner and World number one
 - Alicia Molik - Australian Open and French Open doubles winner, reached World top ten singles ranking
 - Mark Woodforde OAM - two-time Australian Open, one-time French Open, six-time Wimbledon, and three-time French Open doubles winner; Olympic gold and silver medalist; World number one
 - Thanasi Kokkinakis
 
Trampoline gymnastics
- Blake Gaudry - 2012 Summer Olympics competitor, Australian Gymnastics Championships Winner
 
Volleyball
- Kerri Pottharst OAM (born 1965) - Olympic gold and bronze medalist in beach volleyball
 - Tania Gooley-Humphry (born 1973) - beach volleyball and indoor volleyball player
 - Andrew Schacht (born 1973) - beach volleyball player
 - Tamsin Hinchley (born 1980) - volleyball player
 - Becchara Palmer (born 1988) - beach volleyball player
 
Other
- Garry Gordon Cooper - retired airline captain, ex RAAF pilot
 - Gladys Elphick - Australian Aboriginal active in Aboriginal affairs
 - David Hicks - former Guantanamo Bay inmate, falsely convicted of 'providing material support to terrorism'
 
See also
References
- ↑ Bowman, Matt (20 November 1999). "Veteran pilot still pushing the sky's limits". The Advertiser. p. 28.
 - ↑ "Matildas' Charlotte Grant hailed for true Aussie grit". The West Australian. 12 April 2023. Retrieved 21 June 2023.
 
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