List of Famous people who are 94
Anne Carrère
Anne de Leseleuc, née Anne-Marie Briois, was a French actress, writer, and historian.
Lee Spetner
Dr Lee M. Spetner is an American and Israeli creationist author, mechanical engineer, applied biophysicist, and physicist, known best for his disagreements with the modern synthesis. In spite of his opposition to neo-Darwinism, Spetner accepts a form of non-random evolution outlined in his 1996 book "Not By Chance! Shattering the Modern Theory of Evolution".
Cecilia Mangini
Cecilia Mangini was an Italian film director, considered the first female documentary filmmaker in Italy.
Chuck Hicks
Charles Dallas Hicks was an American actor and stuntman. During World War II, Hicks served in the U.S. Merchant Marine and later in the Navy. While in the Navy, he was the boxing champ of the United States Fifth Fleet. He also attended Loyola Marymount University, where he played football and boxed, and later inducted into the school's Athletes Hall of Fame. He also played semi-pro football for the Eagle Rock Athletic Club.
Eberhard Kulenkampff
Eberhard Kulenkampff was a German-Namibian architect, city planner and artist. He was a director of the Senate of Bremen from 1974 to 1987.
Jean Dinh Van
Elizabeth Hoffman
Elizabeth Hoffman is an American character actress. She is best known for her regular role as Beatrice Reed Ventnor, Swoosie Kurtz', Sela Ward's, Patricia Kalember's and Julianne Phillips' characters' mother, on the NBC drama series Sisters (1991–1996).
Georges Blaness
Toshio Masuda
Toshio Masuda is a Japanese film director. He developed a reputation as a consistent box office hit-maker. Over the course of five decades, 16 of his films made the yearly top ten lists at the Japanese box office—a second place record in the industry. Between 1958 and 1968 he directed 52 films for the Nikkatsu Company. He was their top director of action films and worked with the company's top stars, including Yujiro Ishihara with whom he made 25 films. After the breakdown of the studio system, he moved on to a succession of big-budget movies including the American-Japanese co-production Tora! Tora! Tora! (1970) and the science fiction epic Catastrophe 1999: The Prophecies of Nostradamus (1974). He worked on such anime productions as the Space Battleship Yamato series. His corporate drama Company Funeral (1989) earned him a Japanese Academy Award nomination and wins at the Blue Ribbon Awards and Mainichi Film Awards. In Japan, his films are well remembered by fans and called genre landmarks by critics. He remains little known abroad save for rare exceptions of his post-Nikkatsu work such as Tora! Tora! Tora!. However, a number of his films were screened in a 2005 Nikkatsu Action Cinema retrospective in Italy and a few have since made their way to the United States. In 2009, he helped produce Space Battleship Yamato: Resurrection.