List of Famous people named Jean-jacques
Jean-Jacques Kantorow
Jean-Jacques Kantorow is a French violinist and conductor.
Jean-Jacques Béchio
Jean-Jacques Béchio was an Ivorian politician. A member of the Attie ethnic group, he came from the student trade union milieu where he started his career.
Jean-Jacques Acquevillo
Jean-Jacques Acquevillo is a French handball player, playing for USAM Nîmes Gard.
Jean-Jacques Bridey
Jean-Jacques Bridey is a French politician representing La République En Marche!, formerly a member of the Socialist Party. He was elected to the French National Assembly on 18 June 2017, representing the department of Val-de-Marne.
Jean-Jacques Viton
Jean-Jacques Viton was a French poet.
Jean-Jacques Guyon
Jean-Jacques Guyon was a French equestrian and Olympic champion from Paris. He won an individual gold medal in eventing at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City.
Jean-Jacques Burnel
Jean-Jacques "JJ" Burnel is a Franco-English musician, producer and songwriter, best known as the bass guitarist with the English rock band the Stranglers.
Jean-Jacques Muyembe-Tamfum
Jean-Jacques Muyembe is a Congolese microbiologist. He is the general director of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Institut National pour la Recherche Biomedicale (INRB). He was part of team at the Yambuku Catholic Mission Hospital that investigated the first Ebola outbreak, and was part of the effort that discovered Ebola as a new disease, although his exact role is still subject to controversy. In 2016, he led the research that designed, along with other researchers at the INRB and the National Institute of Health Vaccine Research Center in the US, one of the most promising treatment for Ebola, mAb114. The treatment was successfully experimented during recent outbreaks in the DRC, on the express decision of the then DRC Minister of Health, Dr Oly Ilunga, despite a prior negative advice from the World Health Organization.
Jean-Jacques Keller
Jean-Jacques Keller (1635–1700) and his brother Jean-Balthazar Keller (1638–1702) were Swiss gunfounders from Zürich, in the service of France.
Jean-Jacques Bernard
Jean-Jacques Bernard was a French playwright and the chief representative of what became known as l’école du silence or, as some critics called it, the art of the unexpressed, in which the dialogue does not express the characters’ real attitudes. In Martine (1922), perhaps the best example of his work, emotions are implied in gestures, facial expressions, fragments of speech and silence. He was active from 1912 to 1939.