Bloom - People Bearing Surname Bloom

People Bearing Surname Bloom

  • Adam Bloom (born 1971), English comedian
  • Allan Bloom (1930–1992), American philosopher and author
  • Alan Bloom (plantsman) (1906–2005), English nurseryman
  • Andy Bloom (born 1973), American Olympic shot putter
  • Benjamin Bloom (1913–1999), American educator
  • Bill Bloom American songwriter and musician (born 1948)
  • Bobby Bloom (1945–1974), American singer songwriter best known as one hit wonder for "Montego Bay" in 1970
  • Claire Bloom (born 1931), British actor
  • David Bloom (1963–2003), NBC journalist
  • Davis Bloome, fictional character in the TV series Smallville
  • Harold Bloom (born 1930), American literary critic
  • Harry Bloom (1913–1981), South African novelist and activist
  • Howard Bloom (born 1943), American author
  • Jeremy Bloom (born 1982), American athlete
  • John Bloom (businessman) (born 1931), British entrepreneur
  • Leopold Bloom, fictional character in James Joyce's Ulysses
  • Lily Bloom, French actress
  • Luka Bloom (born 1955), Irish musician
  • Matt Bloom (born 1972), American wrestler
  • Molly Bloom, fictional character in James Joyce's Ulysses
  • Moses Bloom (1833–1893), Jewish American politician, former mayor of Iowa City
  • Orlando Bloom (born 1977), English actor
  • Rube Bloom (1902–1976), American composer
  • Steve Bloom (born 1953), Photographer
  • Ursula Bloom (1892–1984), English writer
  • Verna Bloom (born 1939), American actress, best known for role in Animal House

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Famous quotes containing the words people, bearing and/or bloom:

    The wit makes fun of other persons; the satirist makes fun of the world; the humorist makes fun of himself, but in so doing, he identifies himself with people—that is, people everywhere, not for the purpose of taking them apart, but simply revealing their true nature.
    James Thurber (1894–1961)

    It is almost impossible to be a doctor and an honest man, but it is obscenely impossible to be a psychiatrist without at the same time bearing the stamp of the most incontestable madness: that of being unable to resist that old atavistic reflex of the mass of humanity, which makes any man of science who is absorbed by this mass a kind of natural and inborn enemy of all genius.
    Antonin Artaud (1896–1948)

    But pleasures are like poppies spread,
    You seize the flow’r, its bloom is shed;
    Or like the snow falls in the river,
    A moment white—then melts for ever;
    Robert Burns (1759–1796)