Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Jutta
Jutta Speidel
Jutta Speidel is a German actress.
Jutta Ditfurth
Jutta Gerta Armgard von Ditfurth is a German sociologist, writer, and radical ecologist politician. Being born into the noble house of Ditfurth, members of which had been noble ministeriales invested with hereditary administrative titles and offices in various regions of today's Saxony-Anhalt and Lower Saxony and elsewhere in the Holy Roman Empire, a daughter of the German physician and science journalist Hoimar von Ditfurth and a sister of the historian Christian von Ditfurth, in 1978 she attempted to have her name legally changed to remove the nobiliary particle "von" and to become the plainer Jutta Ditfurth, but was refused the change by the authorities. She is nonetheless known throughout Germany by her adopted non-noble name, which she prefers.
Jutta Allmendinger
Jutta Allmendinger is a German sociologist. She is the President of the WZB Berlin Social Science Center and a Professor of Educational Sociology and Labor Market Research at Humboldt University. She is also a Senior Fellow at the Center for European Studies at Harvard University.
Jutta Müller
Jutta Müller is a German former figure skater and one of the most successful figure skating coaches worldwide.
Jutta Hoffmann
Jutta Hoffmann is a German actress. She has appeared in over 40 films and television shows since 1961.
Jutta Leerdam
Jutta Leerdam es una deportista neerlandesa que compite en patinaje de velocidad sobre hielo.
Jutta Wachowiak
Jutta Wachowiak is a German actress. She has appeared in more than 60 films and television shows since 1962. She starred in the 1986 film So Many Dreams, which was entered into the 37th Berlin International Film Festival.
Jutta Weinhold
Jutta Weinhold is a German rock singer.
Jutta Stöck
Jutta Stock fue una atleta alemana especializada en la prueba de 4 × 100 m, en la que consiguió ser subcampeona europea en 1969.
Jutta Fleck
Jutta Fleck is an attempted escapee and former political prisoner of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany. She is known as "The Woman from Checkpoint Charlie". Following a failed attempt to escape from the German Democratic Republic (GDR) with her daughters in August 1982, she was imprisoned in Hoheneck Women's Prison and, after being deported to the Federal Republic of Germany, spent four years protesting for her daughters' release from East Germany.