Famous Canadians
Canada is a country of many great achievers, including some who are
internationally famous.  However, since Canada has a small population
and is sometimes overlooked, not everyone realises that these achievers
are Canadians!
Inspired by this, I have compiled a list of famous Canadians.  To make
the list people have to
(a) have lived a significant portion of their life in Canada; and
(b) be sufficiently famous that a significant
percentage of people in at least one country besides Canada have heard
of them or their work.
Here, then, is the list (in alphabetical order).  
I welcome comments, corrections, and
suggestions for additions; please e-mail me.
-- Jeffrey Rosenthal
-  Scott Abbott and Chris Haney (inventors of game "Trivial Pursuit")
 
 
-  Bianca Andreescu (tennis player; 2019 US Open champion)
 
 
-  Dan Aykroyd (movie actor; Elwood of "The Blues Brothers")
 
 
-  Bryan Adams (musician and songwriter; Grammy award winner; writer of international hit "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You")
 
 
-  Pamela Anderson (actress on "Baywatch")
 
 
-  Paul Anka (singer and songwriter; writer of song "My Way")
 
 
-  Louise Arbour (Chief Prosecutor, International Criminal Tribunal, The Hague)
 
 
-  Arcade Fire (rock band; won 2011 Grammy for album of the year)
 
 
-  Margaret Atwood (writer; author of "The Handmaid's Tale")
 
 
-  Donovan Bailey (sprinter; 100m Olympic Gold Medalist, 1996)
 
 
-  Bachman-Turner Overdrive (BTO) (rock group; writers of songs "You Ain't Seen Nuthin' Yet" and "Takin' Care of Business")
 
 
-  Jim Balsillie and Mike Lazaridis (co-founders of RIM, developer of Blackberry smartphone)
 
 
-  The Band (rock group; performed extensively with Bob Dylan)
 
 
-  Frederick Banting and Charles Best (discoverers of diabetes drug insulin, 1921)
 
 
-  Barenaked Ladies (rock group; writers of song "If I Had a Million Dollars")
 
 
-  Samantha Bee (late-night U.S. television host)
 
 
-  Alexander Graham Bell (inventor of the telephone in Canada, though he lived more in Scotland and the U.S.)
 
 
-  Norman Bethune ("Bai Qiu En") (medical doctor; hero in Chinese civil war)
 
 
-  Justin Bieber (teen international singing sensation)
 
 
-  Roberta Bondar (space shuttle astronaut)
 
 
-  Paul Brandt (country singer; CMA 2005 Global Artist of the Year)
 
 
-  Norman Breakey (inventor of the paint roller)
 
 
-  Kurt Browning (figure skater; four-time world champion)
 
 
-  Michael Bublé (pop/jazz singer; won 2007 Grammy award)
 
 
-  Genevieve Bujold (movie actress; 1969 Academy Award nominee)
 
 
-  Raymond Burr (actor; star of "Perry Mason" television show)
 
 
-  James Cameron (director of movie "The Titanic")
 
 
-  John Candy (comedic actor; police officer Burton Mercer in "The Blues Brothers")
 
 
-  Jim Carrey (actor; star of such movies as "Ace Ventura: Pet Detective")
 
 
-  Kim Cattrall (actress; co-star of "Sex and the City" -- lived in Canada from three months old to 16 years old)
 
 
-  Michael Cera (film and television actor)
 
 
-  Robert Charlebois (French-language singer and songwriter)
 
 
-  John de Chastelain (general; overseer of IRA disarmament)
 
 
-  Hayden Christensen (actor; Anakin Skywalker in the later "Star Wars" movies)
 
 
-  Cirque de Soleil (acrobatic circus performers)
 
 
-  Leonard Cohen (poet, singer, and songwriter)
 
 
-  Holly Cole (jazz singer; especially popular in Japan)
 
 
-  Douglas Coupland (writer; author of "Generation X")
 
 
-  H.S.M. Coxeter (world-renowned mathematician; developer of Coxeter groups)
 
 
-  David Cronenberg (movie director; Cannes Jury Prize winner, 1996)
 
 
-  Robertson Davies (author; writer of "Fifth Business")
 
 
-  Romeo Dallaire (general; commander of Rwanda international peacekeeping mission)
 
 
-  Celine Dion (ballad singer; many huge hits including "Where Does My Heart Beat Now")
 
 
-  The Dionne Quintuplets (first ever surviving quintuplets)
 
 
-  Dennis Doherty (musician; founding member of "The Mamas & The Papas")
 
 
-  Xavier Dolan (filmmaker; two-time winner of Palme d'Or at Cannes)
 
 
-  James Doohan (actor; Scotty of "Star Trek")
 
 
-  Drake (Grammy-winning hip-hop artist)
 
 
-  Atom Egoyan (movie director; 1998 Academy Award nominee)
 
 
-  Percy Faith (composer and bandleader; initiator of "easy listening" genre)
 
 
-  J.C. Fields (mathematician; initiator of the Fields Medal)
 
 
-  Sandford Fleming (creator of Universal Standard Time, 1879; knighted in 1897)
 
 
-  Michael J. Fox (television and movie actor; star of "Family Ties" and "Back to the Future")
 
 
-  Northrop Frye (ledendary literary critic)
 
 
-  David Foster (music producer of Whitney Houston, Barbara Streisand, The Corrs, etc.)
 
 
-  Nelly Furtado (singer and songwriter)
 
 
-  Yousuf Karsh (portrait photographer of Bogart, Einstein, Eisenhower, Hemingway, Kennedy, Churchill, ...)
 
 
-  John Kenneth Galbraith (economist; advisor to many U.S. presidents)
 
 
-  Marc Garneau (space shuttle astronaut)
 
 
-  Frank Gehry (architect; designed e.g. the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain)
 
 
-  William Gibson (science fiction author; inventor of "cyberpunk" genre)
 
 
-  Malcolm Gladwell (writer and journalist; author of "The Tipping Point")
 
 
-  James Gosling (creator of the Java computer language)
 
 
-  Ryan Gosling (Hollywood actor; star of "Crazy Stupid Love")
 
 
-  Glenn Gould (leading classical piano player)
 
 
-  Lorne Greene (actor; star of television show "Bonanza")
 
 
-  Nancy Greene (skier; 1968 Olympic gold medalist)
 
 
-  Wayne Gretzky (hockey superstar)
 
 
-  Paul Gross (actor; played Mountie Benton Fraser on "Due South")
 
 
-  Group of Seven (early twentieth century painters)
 
 
-  The Guess Who (rock band; writers of song "American Woman")
 
 
-  Chris Hadfield (astronaut; commander of the International Space Station)
 
 
-  Monty Hall (host of television show "Let's Make a Deal")
 
 
-  Paul Haggis (Academy Award-winning director of "Crash")
 
 
-  Phil Hartman (comedian on Saturday Night Live)
 
 
-  Keith Hastings 
(inventor of Metropolis-Hastings computer algorithm)
 
 
-  Douglas Henning (magician, and advocate of Transcendental Meditation)
 
 
-  Jack Hopps (inventor of the first artificial pacemaker in 1951)
 
 
-  Gordie Howe (hockey superstar)
 
 
-  IMAX Corporation (group of Canadians that invented the IMAX
movie format, 1970)
 
 
-  Kenneth Iverson (creator of the APL computer language)
 
 
-  Peter Jennings (ABC television news host)
 
 
-  Norman Jewison (movie director; winner of 1999 Special Academy Award)
 
 
-  Ben Johnson (former world-class sprinter)
 
 
-  Lynn Johnston (creator of "For Better or For Worse" comic strip)
 
 
-  Brian Kernighan (co-creator of the C computer language)
 
 
-  Margot Kidder (actress; Lois Lane of "Superman" movies)
 
 
-  W.P. Kinsella (author of novel "Shoeless Joe", later made into the movie "Field of Dreams")
 
 
-  K'naan (musician; writer of World Cup anthem "Wavin' Flag")
 
 
-  Diana Krall (best-selling jazz singer)
 
 
-  Guy LaFleur (hockey superstar)
 
 
-  k.d. lang (rock/country singer and songwriter)
 
 
-  Daniel Lanois (musician and producer of Bob Dylan, U2, etc.)
 
 
-  Avril Lavigne (rock singer and songwriter)
 
 
-  Stephen Leacock (comedic writer)
 
 
-  Mario Lemieux (hockey superstar)
 
 
-  Eugene and Dan Levy (actors; Emmy-winning co-creators of Schitt's Creek)
 
 
-  Gordon Lightfoot (folk singer and songwriter)
 
 
-  Art Linkletter (TV personality; co-host of "Kids Say the Darndest Things")
 
 
-  Rich Little (voice impressionist)
 
 
-  Guy Lombardo (big-band leader; 1929-62 performer of "Auld Lang Syne" in New York on New Year's Eve)
 
 
-  Lewis MacKenzie (general; commander of Sarajevo international peacekeeping mission)
 
 
-  Steve MacLean (space station astronaut)
 
 
-  Robert MacNeil (U.S. television news commentator; co-creator of The MacNeil/Lehrer Report)
 
 
-  Howie Mandel (comedic actor; host of "Deal or No Deal")
 
 
-  Raymond Massey (movie actor; portrayed Abraham Lincoln)
 
 
-  Rachel McAdams (movie actor; Regina of "Mean Girls")
 
 
-  Eric McCormack (actor; played "Will" on TV show "Will & Grace")
 
 
-  Leslie McFarlane (author of the original Hardy Boys mystery books)
 
 
-  Loreena McKennitt (celtic-style musician)
 
 
-  Sarah McLachlan (rock singer and songwriter; Lilith Fair organiser)
 
 
-  Marshall McLuhan (communication theorist)
 
 
-  David McTaggart and Paul Watson (co-founders of Greenpeace)
 
 
-  Deepa Mehta (Academy Award-nominated director of "Water")
 
 
-  Men Without Hats (rock group; performers of international top-ten song "The Safety Dance")
 
 
-  Mike Myers (comedic actor; writer and star of "Wayne's World" and "Austin Powers")
 
 
-  Lorne Michaels (creator and producer of "Saturday Night Live")
 
 
-  Joni Mitchell (folk singer and songwriter)
 
 
-  Lucy Maud Montgomery (author of "Anne of Green Gables")
 
 
-  Rick Moranis (comedic actor; co-star of movie "Ghost Busters")
 
 
-  Alanis Morissette (rock singer and songwriter; won 7 Grammy awards)
 
 
-  Carrie-Anne Moss (actress; Trinity in "The Matrix" movies)
 
 
-  Farley Mowat (author and conservationist; writer of "Never Cry Wolf")
 
 
-  Alice Munro (short-story writer, won Nobel Prize for Literature in 2013)
 
 
-  Anne Murray (pop singer of e.g. mega-hit "You Needed Me")
 
 
-  James Naismith (inventor of basketball, 1892)
 
 
-  Steve Nash (NBA basketball star and two-time MVP)
 
 
-  Daniel Nestor (tennis player; two-time Wimbledon doubles champion)
 
 
-  Nickelback (rock band; eleventh best-selling in U.S. in 2000s)
 
 
-  Leslie Nielsen (comedic movie actor; starred in "Airplane" and "Naked Gun" series)
 
 
-  Sandra Oh (actress; Dr. Cristina Yang on "Grey's Anatomy")
 
 
-  Michael Ondaatje (author of "The English Patient", later made into a movie)
 
 
-  Bobby Orr (hockey superstar)
 
 
-  Elliot Page (formerly Ellen Page) (movie actor; 2008 Academy Award nominee)
 
 
-  Julie Payette (space shuttle astronaut)
 
 
-  Lester Pearson (originator of U.N. Peacekeeping Forces; winner of 1957 Nobel Peace Prize)
 
 
-  Matthew Perry (actor; Chandler of T.V. show "Friends")
 
 
-  Russell Peters (stand-up comedian)
 
 
-  Oscar Peterson (legendary jazz piano player; won 7 Grammy awards)
 
 
-  Mary Pickford (early movie actor)
 
 
-  Christopher Plummer (actor; co-star of movie "The Sound of Music")
 
 
-  John Polanyi (chemist; winner of 1986 Nobel Prize)
 
 
-  Sarah Polley (Oscar-winning director, screenwriter and actor)
 
 
-  Jason Priestly (television actor on "90210")
 
 
-  Raffi (children's music performer)
 
 
-  James Randi, a.k.a. "The Amazing Randi" (magician and skeptic)
 
 
-  Keanu Reeves (movie actor; star of "The Matrix")
 
 
-  Ryan Reynolds (movie actor; star of "The Proposal" and "Green Lantern")
 
 
-  Mordecai Richler (author; writer of "The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz")
 
 
-  Maurice "Rocket" Richard (hockey superstar)
 
 
-  Peter Lymburner Robertson (inventor of the square screwdriver)
 
 
-  Seth Rogen (Hollywood actor)
 
 
-  Stan Rogers (folk singer and songwriter)
 
 
-  Mark Rowswell ("Da Shan") (TV host and comedy star in China)
 
 
-  Greg Rusedski (professional tennis player; later played for Britain)
 
 
-  Rush (progressive rock / heavy metal group; received "Living Legend Award" from London's Classic Rock)
 
 
-  Morley Safer (reporter/correspondent for CBS News and 60 Minutes)
 
 
-  Buffy Sainte-Marie (Oscar-winning singer/songwriter)
 
 
-  Robert J. Sawyer (science fiction author; Nebula and Hugo Award winner)
 
 
-  Myron Scholes (economist; winner of 1997 Nobel prize)
 
 
-  Paul Shaffer (band leader on David Letterman's "Late Night" television show)
 
 
-  William Shatner (actor; Captain Kirk of "Star Trek")
 
 
-  Domee Shi (Oscar-winning director of animated films)
 
 
-  Martin Short (comedic movie actor)
 
 
-  Joe Shuster (creator of "Superman" character, 1938)
 
 
-  Jay Silverheels [b. Harold Jay Smith] (actor; played "Tonto" on The Lone Ranger)
 
 
-  Hank Snow (country singer; released mega-hit "I'm Movin' On" in 1950)
 
 
-  Andrew Michael Spence (economist; winner of 2001 Nobel Prize)
 
 
-  Elvis Stojko (figure skater)
 
 
-  Donald and Kiefer Sutherland (father & son acting stars)
 
 
-  Alan Thicke (TV actor, host, and theme song writer)
 
 
-  Alex Trebek (host of television show "Jeopardy")
 
 
-  Pierre Trudeau (politician and statesman)
 
 
-  Shania Twain (country singer and songwriter)
 
 
-  Nia Vardalos (writer and star of movie "My Big Fat Greek Wedding")
 
 
-  Gilles Vigneault (French-language singer and songwriter)
 
 
-  Gilles and Jacques Villeneuve (father & son champion racecar drivers)
 
 
-  Roch Voisine (French-language rock singer)
 
 
-  Al Waxman (actor; Lt. Bert Samuels of "Cagney and Lacey")
 
 
-  Johnny Wayne and Frank Shuster (comedy duo; Ed Sullivan's most frequent recurring guests)
 
 
-  The Weeknd (award-winning singer and songwriter)
 
 
-  Mike Weir (golf champion)
 
 
-  Neil Young (singer, musician, and songwriter)
 
 
-  Robert Young (co-founder of Red Hat linux company)
 
 
-  Mortimer Zuckerman (publisher/owner of New York Daily News)
See also other related lists
here,
here,
here,
here,
here,
here,
here,
and here.
-- Jeffrey Rosenthal
(contact me)