List of Venezuelan Americans

This is a list of notable Venezuelan Americans, including both original immigrants who obtained American citizenship and their American descendants.

To be included in this list, the person must have a Wikipedia article showing they are Venezuelan Americans or must have references showing they are Venezuelan Americans and are notable.

List

Architects and builders

Entrepreneurs and business people

Artists and designers

  • Julio Aguilera – Venezuelan-American painter and sculptor born in Caracas
  • Devendra Banhart – Venezuelan American singer-songwriter and visual artist
  • Jorge Blanco – Venezuelan artist who created the comic strip The Castaway/El Náufrago, which became an overnight success
  • Nicolas Felizola – fashion designer
  • Rodner Figueroa – TV host, fashion designer and philanthropist
  • Nina Fuentes, a.k.a. Nina Dotti – Venezuelan art collector, curator, philanthropist, business woman and art dealer
  • Marisol Escobar – Venezuelan-American sculptor born in Paris
  • Carolina Herrera – fashion designer. Also Founder and CEO of New York-based CH Carolina Herrera
  • Tina Ramirez – dancer and choreographer, best known as the Founder and Artistic Director of Ballet Hispanico
  • Angel Sanchez – fashion designer
  • Nick Verreos – American fashion designer, fashion commentator and former Project Runway contestant
  • Jhonen Vasquez – American comic book writer, cartoonist, and music video director
  • Patricia van Dalen – Venezuelan visual artist based in Miami (Florida)
  • Ron van Dongen – photographer

Comedians

  • Julio Gassete – Venezuelan-born TV former comedian of Bienvenidos TV show. He lives currently in Miami, Florida
  • Joanna Hausmann – comedian youtuber
  • Erika De la Vega – Venezuelan stand up comedy actress and fashion model
  • George Harris – Venezuelan-born comediant and Internet personality
  • Nelly Pujols – Venezuelan-born comediant

Films and TV

Models

Musicians

Sports

Journalists, TV hosts and anchors

  • Luis Alfredo Alvarez – TV host ESPN Latin America
  • Fernando Alvarez – TV host ESPN Latin America
  • Mariana Atencio – journalist and news personality working for MSNBC and NBC News. The Huffington Post called her "Our Latina Christiane Amanpour"
  • José Aristimuño – journalist, press sub secretary of Democratic Party
  • Eleonora Bruzual – writer and journalist. She contributes to El Nacional and El Nuevo Herald. Conduct a daily radio segment called "Trinchera" on Radio Mambí of Miami (Florida).
  • Carlos López Bustamante – journalist spent part of his life in US, where he died in Chicago
  • Nelson Bustamante – Venezuelan-born TV host and writer
  • Chiquinquirá Delgado – Venezuelan TV host, model, and actress of Univision network in the United States
  • George Duran – Venezuelan-born restaurateur, TV personality, TV producer, and published author
  • Lorena Garcia – Venezuelan-born restaurateur, philanthropist, TV personality, TV producer, and published author
  • Raúl González – TV host and actor. In Venezuela, he hosted a kids' TV show Supercrópolis. He became one of the hosts on TV show Despierta América of Univisión television network
  • Eva Golinger – attorney, RT Network TV host and editor of the Correo del Orinoco International
  • Alejandra Oraa – Venezuelan television anchor currently working for CNN en Español
  • Reinaldo Herrera – former director of Vanity Fair magazine
  • Elizabeth Pérez – Cuban-Venezuelan Emmy – winning television journalist and presenter working for CNN en Español
  • Rafael Poleo – Venezuelan journalist and politician
  • Beatrice Rangel – Venezuelan politician analyst
  • Carolina Sandoval – journalist, broadcaster, writer, TV presenter, and actress
  • Daniel Sarcos – Venezuelan TV host, model, and actor of Telemundo network in the United States
  • James Tahhan – Venezuelan-born restaurateur known as "Chef James", TV personality, TV producer, and published author
  • Patricia Zavala – Venezuelan TV host and model. She hosts E! Entertainment Television's Coffee Break

Military

Politics

  • Luigi Boria – Venezuelan-born mayor of Doral, Florida
  • Peter Camejo – (1939–2008) an American activist and politician. He was of Venezuelan descent.[7]
  • Cipriano Castro – President of Venezuela. Expatriated by Juan Vicente Gomez regime in 1908, spent the rest of his life in exile, mostly in Puerto Rico, where he died in 1928
  • Daniel de Leon – Venezuelan American union labor dirigent in New York.
  • Diogenes Escalante – former ambassador of Venezuela in Washington. Spent his last twenty years in USA.
  • Philip Giordano – former Republican mayor of Waterbury, Connecticut, and a convicted sex offender. He was born in Caracas, Venezuela, to Italian parents and his family moved to the United States when he was two years old
  • P. Michael McKinley – American diplomat and the United States Ambassador to Afghanistan
  • Irene Sáez – Venezuelan politician and beauty queen who was crowned Miss Universe 1981
  • Al Santos (mayor) – Mayor of Kearny, New Jersey, and a Democrat, born in Venezuela

Science

Economists

Writers

Activists

  • Mery Godigna Collet – Venezuelan artist, writer, philanthropist and environmental living in Austin, Texas
  • Thor Halvorssen Mendoza – Venezuelan human rights advocate and film producer
  • Nancy Navarro – social activist. In 2010, President Obama appointed her to the Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
  • Victor Pineda (activist) – social development scholar and disability rights advocate
  • Luis Posada Carriles – Cuban-born Venezuelan naturalized former CIA agent. Anticastrist activist
  • Jeanmarie Simpson – American peace activist and theatre artist. His father is Venezuelan.[8][9]
  • Sylvia Rivera – American bisexual transgender activist and trans woman

Others

  • Tanya Capriles Brillembourg – art collector and philanthropist
  • Federico A. Moreno – lawyer and Chief Judge of United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida
  • Diego RuizLeague of Legends player based in Los Angeles

See also

References

  1. Muther, Christopher. "'SNL' star Armisen drums up a career in comedy", Boston Globe, January 30, 2004 (fee required for full article)
  2. Karni, Annie (2010-12-02). "Painting the Town Fred | New York Post". NYPOST.com. Archived from the original on 2013-07-18. Retrieved 2012-05-30.
  3. AP Photo (2012-01-05). "Photo from AP Photo - Fred Armisen, Hildegardt Gemer News, photos, topics, and quotes". 1click.indiatimes.com. Retrieved 2012-05-30.
  4. "Fred Armisen: Biography," TV Guide, accessdate=2009-11-10.
  5. Press office. Maria Conchita Alonso Endorses John McCain Archived 2008-12-01 at the Wayback Machine. JohnMcCain.com, October 31, 2008.
  6. "Fernando Michelena, photograph by Theodore C. Marceau". Libraries: Digital Collections. University of Louisville. Retrieved April 13, 2010.
  7. "Ancestry of Peter Camejo". Wargs.com. Retrieved 2011-01-01.
  8. "Jeanmarie Simpson". A Single Woman the Movie. 1959-11-20. Retrieved 2017-03-18.
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