Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Yvette
Yvette Williams
Yvette Corlett, nombre de nacimiento Yvette Winifred Williams, fue la primera neozelandesa que consiguió una medalla de oro en unos Juegos Olímpicos ―en Helsinki 1952 en salto de longitud―; también es recordada por el récord mundial en la misma prueba conseguido en Gisborne en 1954 con una marca de 6.29 metros.
Yvette Lévy
Yvette Henriette Lévy is a French educator and survivor of the Holocaust. In July 1944, she was arrested by the Gestapo and was eventually sent to Auschwitz concentration camp. She survived and now educates youths about her experiences. Lévy is a Commander of the National Order of Merit and Officer of the Legion of Honour.
Yvette d'Entremont
Yvette d'Entremont, also known as SciBabe, is a public speaker, science blogger, and former analytical chemist. She has a background in forensics and toxicology. Her blog, SciBabe, is dedicated to "clearing up misinformation about science, food and nutrition." She also works to debunk falsehoods in alternative medicine, the anti-vaccination movement, and the anti-GMO movement.
Yvette Lebon
Yvette Lebon was a French actress.
Yvette Roudy
Yvette Roudy is a French politician. She served as a member of the National Assembly from 1986 to 1993, and from 1997 to 2002, representing Calvados. She was the Minister of Women's Rights from 1981 to 1986. She sponsored a law for equal pay in 1983.
Yvette Etiévant
Yvette Etiévant fue una actriz francesa. Protagonizó en la película de Yves Robert, War of the Buttons en 1962.
Yvette Clerk
Yvette Farnoux
Yvette Farnoux, was a French resistance fighter, and concentration camp survivor. On 15 March 1990, she was awarded the Grand Officer of the Legion of Honor, then the Grand Cross on 31 December 2008. She studied at the Lycée Molière. She worked at the unemployment office, of the Secours national. In the Resistance, she worked with Berty Albrecht; and succeeded her as national head of social services for the united movements of the Resistance. Arrested, she was deported on 29 April 1944, from the Drancy internment camp to Auschwitz, and then Ravensbrück.
Yvette Latham Baillieu
Yvette Alloo
Yvette Alloo was a Belgian Paralympic table tennis player. She was the first Belgian to win a gold medal at a Paralympic Games.