Lista de Personas Famosas nacidas en Melbourne
Fred Williams
Frederick Ronald (Fred) Williams fue un pintor y grabador australiano. Fue uno de los más importantes artistas de Australia, y unos de los mejores pintores de paisajes del siglo XX. Realizó más de setenta exhibiciones solo durante su carrera en Galerías de Australia, como también la exposición Fred Williams - Paisajes de un Continente en el Museo de Arte Moderno en Nueva York en 1977.
Solomon Lew
Solomon Lew is an Australian businessman. His principal commercial activities involve importing apparel, toys and other goods into Australia from China and investments, mainly in retail companies.
Frank Leslie Stillwell
Frank Leslie Stillwell OBE, was an Australian geologist, winner of the David Syme Research Prize awarded by the University of Melbourne in 1919 and the Clarke Medal awarded by the Royal Society of New South Wales in 1951.
Fred Whitlam
Harry Frederick Ernest "Fred" Whitlam was Australia's Crown Solicitor from 1936 to 1949, and a pioneer of international human rights law in Australia. He was the father of Prime Minister Gough Whitlam, and had a great influence on his son's values and interests.
Mae Dahlberg
Mae Dahlberg fue una artista de music hall y vodevil, así como actriz cinematográfica, cuya trayectoria incluye varias películas rodadas en Hollywood en la época del cine mudo.
Graeme Goodall
Graeme Goodall was an Australian recording engineer and record label owner who was a key figure in the early days of Jamaica's recording industry, constructing several of the Island's studios, co-founding Island Records, and operating other labels in the United Kingdom releasing Jamaican music.
Ronald Mulkearns
Ronald Austin Mulkearns was the bishop emeritus of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ballarat in Ballarat, Australia, a diocese in the ecclesiastical province of Melbourne. He resigned as bishop on 30 May 1997. The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse found that Mulkearns was "derelict in his duty".
Raymond Longford
Raymond Longford was a prolific Australian film director, writer, producer and actor during the silent era. Longford was a major director of the silent film era of the Australian cinema. He formed a production team with Lottie Lyell. His contributions to Australian cinema with his ongoing collaborations with Lyell, including The Sentimental Bloke (1919) and The Blue Mountains Mystery (1921), prompted the Australian Film Institute's AFI Raymond Longford Award, inducted in 1968, named in his honour.