Education

Many famous people went to Palmetto and other Miami-area schools. Did you know all these?

This story was updated on Feb. 25, 2022, when President Joe Biden announced Ketanji Brown Jackson as his pick for the U.S. Supreme Court.

Move over billionaire Jeff Bezos.

You may have founded Amazon and may be the richest person in the United States — and in space, apparently — according to Forbes’ 2021 list.

But Bezos, a Miami Palmetto Senior High Class of 1982 grad and Miami Herald Silver Knight winner for science that year, is not the famous Palmetto graduate in the news this week.

Ketanji Brown Jackson was announced on Feb. 25 as President Joe Biden’s nomination to replace retiring Justice Stephen Breyer on the Supreme Court. That’s a pretty powerful position that could help shape how the country governs itself for years to come.

Brown Jackson, 51, is a Class of 1988 Palmetto Senior High grad who grew up in suburban South Miami-Dade. She was a Miami Herald Silver Knight honorable mention recipient in the drama category when she was a high school senior.

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Brown Jackson currently serves on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. Her former Palmetto debate teammate told the Herald that Brown Jackson, a student body president at Palmetto, “was a star in the making. The only question was, was she going to be on the Supreme Court or was she going to be president of the United States?”

Ketanji Brown Jackson, nominated to be a U.S. Circuit Judge for the District of Columbia Circuit, testifies before a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on pending judicial nominations, April 28, 2021 on Capitol Hill in Washington. Jackson is a Class of 1988 Palmetto Senior High grad who grew up in suburban South Miami-Dade. She is one of the front-runners for a U.S. Supreme Court nomination.
Ketanji Brown Jackson, nominated to be a U.S. Circuit Judge for the District of Columbia Circuit, testifies before a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on pending judicial nominations, April 28, 2021 on Capitol Hill in Washington. Jackson is a Class of 1988 Palmetto Senior High grad who grew up in suburban South Miami-Dade. She is one of the front-runners for a U.S. Supreme Court nomination. Tom Williams AP

Brown Jackson’s Palmetto High history and accomplishments got us thinking: What other well-known South Florida achievers in areas like civics, business, entertainment and arts, community and science are Palmetto alumni? What about our other schools?

So we’ve come up with this list, in no particular order, which is not meant to be exhaustive. We can’t possibly include every school in Miami-Dade County and its notable alumni. Sports figures would require its own listing of the many athletic stars who came out of our schools. But it does help tell the tale that the South Florida school system sure can hold its own against any other in the country.

We’d love to hear from you, too, to help grow our list. Tell us about some of your favorite classmates who went on to achieve national or, in some cases, international renown.

Miami Palmetto Senior High

Amazon Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos  at the company’s novelties event on Sept. 25, 2019.
Amazon Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos at the company’s novelties event on Sept. 25, 2019. Andrej Sokolow TNS/Miami Herald file

In addition to Bezos and Brown Jackson, Palmetto boasts these high-profile alumni and many others.

Among them:

Astronaut Dominic Gorie.
Astronaut Dominic Gorie. Photo courtesy of NASA

NASA astronaut Dominic Lee Pudwill Gorie. His first mission in 1998, STS-91, was the final Shuttle-Mir docking mission and ended the joint U.S. and Russian Phase I Program. Gorie’s third mission was to the International Space Station and his final mission in 2008, also to the space station, saw Gorie’s crew complete 250 orbits of the Earth.

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Former Surgeon General, Vivek Murthy, speaks during the 59th annual Silver Knights awards ceremony at the James L. Knight Center in downtown Miami on Wednesday, May 17, 2017.
Former Surgeon General, Vivek Murthy, speaks during the 59th annual Silver Knights awards ceremony at the James L. Knight Center in downtown Miami on Wednesday, May 17, 2017. Bryan Cereijo

U.S. Surgeon general Vivek Murthy was a 16-year-old valedictorian at Palmetto and later inducted into the school’s alumni association Hall of Fame in October 2018.

The female sloth Penelopete, a sluggish tree-dweller from the tropical rain forest, holds onto the neck of Zoo Miami’s Ron Magill on September 22, 2021. Magill and Zoo Miami will both soon celebrate 40 years in Kendall. Spokesman, ambassador and animal expert Magill has been there since it opened.
The female sloth Penelopete, a sluggish tree-dweller from the tropical rain forest, holds onto the neck of Zoo Miami’s Ron Magill on September 22, 2021. Magill and Zoo Miami will both soon celebrate 40 years in Kendall. Spokesman, ambassador and animal expert Magill has been there since it opened. Al Diaz adiaz@miamiherald.com

Zoo Miami spokesman, wildlife expert and photographer Ron Magill was in the Class of 1977.

Attorney Albert E. Dotson Jr. speaks during a city council meeting at the Shirley M. Gibson City Hall in Miami Gardens on Wednesday, April 14, 2021.
Attorney Albert E. Dotson Jr. speaks during a city council meeting at the Shirley M. Gibson City Hall in Miami Gardens on Wednesday, April 14, 2021. MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiherald.com

Albert Dotson Jr., managing partner at the Miami law firm Bilzin Sumberg and chairman emeritus of 100 Black Men of America, graduated from Palmetto in 1978.

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Camila Cabello sings “First Man” at the Grammy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles on Jan. 26, 2020.
Camila Cabello sings “First Man” at the Grammy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles on Jan. 26, 2020. Matt Sayles AP

Pop star Camila Cabello went to Palmetto so she, too, was a Panther — but not for long. She left when she was in the ninth grade during the 2012-2013 school year. Cabello wanted to concentrate on her singing career after auditioning for TV’s “The X-Factor” and forming Fifth Harmony. Cabello got her high school diploma after home schooling.

Glenn Geffner was a Panther before he was a Miami Marlins radio announcer.

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Young adult novel writer Alexandra Flinn, whose best-sellers include “Breathing Underwater,” “Beastly” and “Beheld,” was in the Class of 1984.

Miami Senior High

The notable names who have called Miami Senior High their alma mater read like a who’s who of American life since it was established in 1903.

In this file photo from Sept. 17, 2004, U.S. Sen. Bob Graham teaches an Advanced Placement Government class at Miami Carol City Senior High School. His 400th workday was back at the school where he started his workdays in the 1970s.
In this file photo from Sept. 17, 2004, U.S. Sen. Bob Graham teaches an Advanced Placement Government class at Miami Carol City Senior High School. His 400th workday was back at the school where he started his workdays in the 1970s. Chuck Fadely Miami Herald file

Former Florida governor and U.S. senator Bob Graham went to Miami Senior from 1952 to 1955. Now 85, the origins of Graham’s political career must have begun at the school where he was student body president during his senior year. Graham was also the recipient of the Sigma Chi Award, Miami Senior’s highest honor at the time.

Many, like actors Desi Arnaz, who loved Miami Senior High before he loved Lucy, Veronica Lake and Christopher George, are long gone alumni. So is Ed Roberts, credited as the “father of the personal computer” for his invention in 1974.

And many sports legends in the National Football League and National Basketball Association also went to Miami Senior.

And the man who will now lead all Miami-Dade public schools, the newly-selected superintendent José Dotres, graduated from Miami Senior High.

Christopher Columbus High School

The private boys’ Catholic school in Westchester has graduated a host of big names over its 64 years.

In business alone, there are four current Fortune 500 CEOs who can call Columbus home:

Marcus Lemonis, the CEO of Camping World and star of CNBC’s “The Profit.”

Entrepreneur and TV personality Marcus Lemonis speaks to all students and staff at his alma mater,  Christopher Columbus High School, surprising everyone by announcing his donation of $10 million to build two centers and to cover $18,000 stipends for all staff and employees at the school in Miami, on Thursday, Dec. 9, 2021.
Entrepreneur and TV personality Marcus Lemonis speaks to all students and staff at his alma mater, Christopher Columbus High School, surprising everyone by announcing his donation of $10 million to build two centers and to cover $18,000 stipends for all staff and employees at the school in Miami, on Thursday, Dec. 9, 2021. Pedro Portal pportal@miamiherald.com

In December, Lemonis, 48, who graduated from Columbus in 1991, gave a surprise Christmas gift to his alma mater. He gave $18,000 checks to each Columbus employee — about $3.1 million worth to 145 teachers and 35 support staffers. Lemonis also contributed $7 million to build a college guidance center and a success center for students of disadvantaged backgrounds.

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Jose Mas, CEO of MasTec Inc.

Robert Sanchez, CEO of Ryder Systems Inc.

Carlos Rodriguez, CEO of ADP, a global technology company that provides human capital management solutions — like, perhaps, your paycheck?

“Columbus played a big part in my becoming a successful person and enhanced my success later on in life,” Rodriguez told the Miami Herald in 2015.

Columbus also has had two Florida Supreme Court justices in Raul G. Cantero, who served from 2002 to 2008 and who, according to Columbus, was the first Florida Supreme Court justice of Hispanic descent. Also, John Couriel, who is currently serving on the court.

United States Rep. Carlos Gimenez.
United States Rep. Carlos Gimenez. Miami Herald file

Carlos Gimenez, 68, is currently a member of the U.S. Congress and was mayor of Miami-Dade County from 2011 to 2020.

Raul Malo sings lead vocals with The Mavericks during the 2015 Rock the Ocean’s Tortuga Music Festival at Fort Lauderdale Beach Park on April 11, 2015.
Raul Malo sings lead vocals with The Mavericks during the 2015 Rock the Ocean’s Tortuga Music Festival at Fort Lauderdale Beach Park on April 11, 2015. MARSHA HALPER Miami Herald file

Entertainers who came out of Columbus include comedian Brian Regan and Raul Malo, lead singer of the made-in-Miami country music group, The Mavericks.

Our Lady of Lourdes Academy

International superstar Gloria Estefan with Jason Canela (Emilio Estefan) and Claudia Yanez (Gloria Estefan), the stars of “On Your Feet!” at Actors’ Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre.
International superstar Gloria Estefan with Jason Canela (Emilio Estefan) and Claudia Yanez (Gloria Estefan), the stars of “On Your Feet!” at Actors’ Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre. Alberto Romeu Actors' Playhouse

Columbus’ sister school, Lourdes, graduated Gloria Estefan in 1975. A decade later she put “Conga” in constant rotation with husband Emilio Estefan and Miami Sound Machine bandmates. The Estefans’ made-in-Miami musical lifestory, “On Your Feet!,” runs on the Actors’ Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre main stage on Feb. 9 through March 13.

Belen Jesuit Preparatory School

Miami’s Raul Esparza was nominated for a Tony Award for his acclaimed performance as Bobby in the Broadway revival of ‘Company’ in 2007.
Miami’s Raul Esparza was nominated for a Tony Award for his acclaimed performance as Bobby in the Broadway revival of ‘Company’ in 2007. PAUL KOLNIK AP

Belen was home to many students who went on to careers in politics, entertainment, academics and other endeavors.

Among them: Former Miami Mayor Manny Diaz, who is now serving as the chair of the Florida Democratic Party.

Sen. Miguel Díaz de la Portilla, who served on the Florida Senate from 2010 to 2016.

Rep. Carlos Curbello, who served on the Florida House of Representatives from 2015 to 2019.

Cesar Conde, chairman of the NBCUniversal News Group. The 1991 grad was previously chairman of of NBCUniversal Telemundo Enterprises and president of Univision’s networks division.

Xavier Briggs, a senior fellow of the Brookings Institution who also was a professor in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a President Bill Clinton appointed Briggs, a 1985 Belen grad, to a position as senior policy official at the US Department of Housing and Urban Development.

Stage and screen actor Raúl Esparza (Class of ‘88) who had roles on “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” and earned numerous Tony nominations that included Broadway’s “Taboo,” “Company,” “The Homecoming” and “Speed-the-Plow.”

South Florida TV personality and WPLG-Local 10 news anchor Louis Aguirre (Class of ‘84).

Miami Northwestern Senior High

In this file photo from 2017, Liberty City Northwestern High grad Barry Jenkins arrives at the Oscars in Los Angeles where “Moonlight” won Best Picture.
In this file photo from 2017, Liberty City Northwestern High grad Barry Jenkins arrives at the Oscars in Los Angeles where “Moonlight” won Best Picture. Richard Shotwell AP

Film director Barry Jenkins guided his labor of love film “Moonlight” that was set in his Liberty City hometown to an Oscar for Best Picture in 2016.

“People have been talking about how the visuals in ‘Moonlight’ are so bright and colorful and beautiful, and yet the story is so heavy. That’s how I think about growing up in Miami: Life was very heavy, but it was still a beautiful, inspiring place. And I fell back in love with Miami during the process of making this movie,” Jenkins told the Herald in 2017.

Florida Congresswoman Frederica Wilson is a Class of 1959 alum. “I feel a lot of pride in this school,” Wilson told the Miami Herald in 2015 when two dozen Miami Northwestern students who were enrolled in the 5,000 Role Models of Excellence mentorship program Wilson had founded traveled to the Obama White House.

Rapper Trina, born Katrina Taylor and raised in Liberty City, graduated from Miami Northwestern in 1992, and her rap career took off by the millennium. In addition to a number of albums, including “Da Baddest Bitch” in 2000 and “The One” in 2019, Trina co-hosted the “Trick and Trina Morning Show” on 99JAMZ until 2020.

After the release of “Nann,” Trina’s rap career catapulted, with the song hitting No. 3 on U.S. Hot Rap Tracks and No. 62 on U.S. Billboard Hot 100 list in ’99. More than two decades later, Trina has continued to collaborate with young artists and plans to release new music in the next year.
After the release of “Nann,” Trina’s rap career catapulted, with the song hitting No. 3 on U.S. Hot Rap Tracks and No. 62 on U.S. Billboard Hot 100 list in ’99. More than two decades later, Trina has continued to collaborate with young artists and plans to release new music in the next year. Rockstarr Music Group
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Trick Daddy performs during the RapCaviar Live Concert on Oct. 24, 2019 in Miami Beach, Fla.
Trick Daddy performs during the RapCaviar Live Concert on Oct. 24, 2019 in Miami Beach, Fla. John Parra/Miami Herald file

Rapper Trick Daddy, whose hit albums stretch back to “Based on a True Story” in 1997 and who co-starred with Trina on VH1’s “Love and Hip-Hop: Miami,” was also a Miami Northwestern alum.

Coral Gables Senior High

Astronaut Winston Scott is a Coral Gables Senior High School graduate.
Astronaut Winston Scott is a Coral Gables Senior High School graduate. Miami Herald file

Retired NASA astronaut Winston Scott of Coral Gables Senior High School was a specialist in spacewalks during his tenure with NASA from 1992 to 1999.

Scott took three spacewalks for a total of 19 hours and 26 minutes during his missions to assist in technical planning for the International Space Station and the Spartan satellite, according to NASA.

New age music pianist George Winston, whose early-’80s albums “Autumn,” “Winter Into Spring,” “December” and “Summer” were gold and platinum hits, graduated from Gables in 1967.

Other notable Gables alumni include body language, speech expert and producer Lillian Glass, who helped coach Dustin Hoffman for his role as a woman in the comedy classic “Tootsie.” Glass, who also went into the field of academia, was also a body language expert for the eighth season of ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars.”

Some deceased notables from Gables High include U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno (Class of 1956) and “WKRP in Cincinnati” creator Hugh Wilson.

New World School of the Arts

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New World School of the Arts grad and Miami filmmaker Billy Corben, whose credits include “Cocaine Cowboys,” “537 Votes,” “Screwball” and “The U.” He made his films in Miami Beach with producing partner Alfred Spellman, who went to North Miami Beach Senior High.
New World School of the Arts grad and Miami filmmaker Billy Corben, whose credits include “Cocaine Cowboys,” “537 Votes,” “Screwball” and “The U.” He made his films in Miami Beach with producing partner Alfred Spellman, who went to North Miami Beach Senior High. Photo provided to the Miami Herald

You would expect Miami’s New World School of the Arts to graduate a plethora of top talent. And New World has, including “Cocaine Cowboys” documentary director Billy Corben, who has a current documentary series on Netflix, “Cocaine Cowboys: The Kings of Miami.”

Tarell McCraney, the Oscar-winning screenwriter behind “Moonlight,” was in first grade when a Herald reporter first asked him about MLK’s legacy.
Tarell McCraney, the Oscar-winning screenwriter behind “Moonlight,” was in first grade when a Herald reporter first asked him about MLK’s legacy.

Playwright and actor Tarell Alvin McCraney from the Class of 1999 won the 2017 Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for “Moonlight.”

Lin-Manuel Miranda’s right-hand man in creating the music for “Hamilton” is Miami’s Alex Lacamoire, right. (Joan Marcus)
Lin-Manuel Miranda’s right-hand man in creating the music for “Hamilton” is Miami’s Alex Lacamoire, right. (Joan Marcus) Joan Marcus

Musical director and orchestrator Alex Lacamoire, a Kennedy Center Honor recipient in 2018, has received numerous Tony and Grammy awards for his work on shows including “Hamilton,” “In the Heights” and “Dear Evan Hansen.”

“My mom never said no if it was something musically related,” Lacamoire told the Miami Herald in 2016 of growing up amid music in South Florida. “I didn’t have people telling me I couldn’t.”

Mollye Asher was one of the producers who won the Oscar in 2021 for Best Picture winner “Nomadland.”

There is also Tony winner Katie Finneran currently co-starring in HBO’s “The Gilded Age” and “NCIS” actress Cote de Pablo and Emmy winning choreographer Mia Michaels.

Mia Michaels, in a 2015 file photo, won the Emmy award for outstanding choreography for “So You Think You Can Dance” and made her Broadway debut creating “Finding Neverland.”
Mia Michaels, in a 2015 file photo, won the Emmy award for outstanding choreography for “So You Think You Can Dance” and made her Broadway debut creating “Finding Neverland.” Lee Cherry


And jazz saxophonist Marcus Strickland even had the opportunity to play on a Grammy Awards telecast when he was 17 at New World in 1997. JazzTimes’ readers’ poll named Strickland its best new artist in 2006. As a band leader Strickland released his “People of the Sun” album for Blue Note in 2018.

In this March 2, 1997, file photo, Dion Tucker, then 17, Marcus Strickland, then 18, bass player Jason Mendelson, then 16, and Michael Rodriguez, then 17, were members of the New World School’s Jazz Ensemble that was part of that year’s Grammy Awards telecast.
In this March 2, 1997, file photo, Dion Tucker, then 17, Marcus Strickland, then 18, bass player Jason Mendelson, then 16, and Michael Rodriguez, then 17, were members of the New World School’s Jazz Ensemble that was part of that year’s Grammy Awards telecast. Patrick Farrell Miami Herald file

Miami Beach Senior High School

Fanita and Dr. Mario Presman, left, and their grandson, Brett Ratner, right, flank actor Mickey Rourke on Miami Beach in the 1990s.
Fanita and Dr. Mario Presman, left, and their grandson, Brett Ratner, right, flank actor Mickey Rourke on Miami Beach in the 1990s. Courtesy Brett Ratner

While New World keeps the entertainment talent coming, don’t overlook Miami Beach Senior High School. There’s an arts-rich list of well-known Beach High grads that have kept Americans entertained for generations.

Did you know that these bold-faced names were Hi-Tides?

TV journalist Barbara Walters was in the Class of 1947 before she made a number of subsequent Beach High star grads cry on television.

Also, actors Mickey Rourke (1971), Ellen Barkin (1972), Andy Garcia (1974), actress and author Annabelle Gurwitch (1980) and filmmaker Brett Ratner (1986).

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Session musician and Miami Beach Senior High grad Fernando Perdomo has produced tribute albums devoted to the music of Paul McCartney and Todd Rundgren, played for Jennifer Lopez and Paulina Rubio and also appeared in the music documentary, “Echo in the Canyon.”
Session musician and Miami Beach Senior High grad Fernando Perdomo has produced tribute albums devoted to the music of Paul McCartney and Todd Rundgren, played for Jennifer Lopez and Paulina Rubio and also appeared in the music documentary, “Echo in the Canyon.” Hector Gabino El Nuevo Herald file

How about singers and musicians including music producer Desmond Child (1972), rapper and New Times Miami columnist Luther Campbell (1979), Exposé singer Ann Curless (1982), rapper Tego Calderón (1990) and busy session musician and producer Fernando Perdomo (1998).

Lest you think Beach High is just a factory for the entertainment world, do note that the school turned out some business leaders, too.

Miami Dolphins Miami general manager Chris Grier, left, and Dolphins owner Stephen M. Ross before the start of an NFL football game against the Atlanta Falcons at Hard Rock Stadium on Sunday, Oct. 24, 2021, in Miami Gardens.
Miami Dolphins Miami general manager Chris Grier, left, and Dolphins owner Stephen M. Ross before the start of an NFL football game against the Atlanta Falcons at Hard Rock Stadium on Sunday, Oct. 24, 2021, in Miami Gardens. David Santiago dsantiago@miamiherald.com

Miami Dolphins and Hard Rock Stadium owner Stephen M. Ross, who made a lot of money in real estate, is a 1958 Hi-Tide grad.

The new film from Books & Books owner Mitchell Kaplan’s production company, “Let It Go,” opened in 2020.
The new film from Books & Books owner Mitchell Kaplan’s production company, “Let It Go,” opened in 2020. Miami Herald file

Miami Book Fair and Books & Books founder and film producer Mitchell Kaplan graduated in 1972.

And Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber graduated during the height of the disco era in 1978 several years before the Beach revival began post “Miami Vice.”

Miami Edison High School

Former Edison and Gulliver Prep basketball star Sylvia Fowles was the Miami Herald’s Athlete of the Year in 2004. Fowles, who would go on to star in college and the WNBA for over a decade, is still widely considered the best girls’ basketball player to ever come out of South Florida.
Former Edison and Gulliver Prep basketball star Sylvia Fowles was the Miami Herald’s Athlete of the Year in 2004. Fowles, who would go on to star in college and the WNBA for over a decade, is still widely considered the best girls’ basketball player to ever come out of South Florida. Noelle Theard Miami Herald file

Miami Edison’s roster of sports stars is legendary and includes former Miami Dolphin Nat Moore, former Detroit Lion Keith Ferguson and Minnesota Lynx basketball player Sylvia Fowles, who also went to Gulliver Prep and who was the Miami Herald’s Athlete of the Year for 2004.

In 2020, Fowles set a WNBA all-time rebounding record.

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Edison also helped put a man into space and several into political office, including former Rep. John Mica and the late Florida Congressman E. Clay Shaw and late Miami mayor of the 1950s, Randy Christmas.

Thomas Ken Mattingly II went to Miami Edison Senior High and became a NASA astronaut who flew to the moon.
Thomas Ken Mattingly II went to Miami Edison Senior High and became a NASA astronaut who flew to the moon. Photo courtesy of NASA

Thomas Kenneth Mattingly II of Miami Edison was an astronaut support crew member for Apollo 8 and 11. For Apollo 16 in 1972, Mattingly flew to the moon — one of 24 to have made the trek (though he did not walk on the moon), according to NASA.

North Miami Beach Senior High School

In 2012, South Florida author Brad Meltzer mugs with Sheila Spicer, the North Miami Beach Senior High English teacher he credits with inspiring him to become a writer.
In 2012, South Florida author Brad Meltzer mugs with Sheila Spicer, the North Miami Beach Senior High English teacher he credits with inspiring him to become a writer. Miami Herald File

“The Escape Artist” author Brad Meltzer graduated from NMB High in 1988 and to this day credits his English teacher Sheila Spicer for inspiring his career as a best-selling author.

“It was Ms. Spicer,” he told the Miami Herald in a 2018 interview. “She told me one day: ‘You can write.’ I told her, ‘Yeah, many people can write.’ But she persisted and made sure I understood she said I really could write.”

Meltzer made the news again last September when a Pennsylvania school board banned his anti-racism illustrated books “I am Rosa Parks” and “I am Martin Luther King, Jr.”

Sheryl Sandberg is a North Miami Beach High graduate.
Sheryl Sandberg is a North Miami Beach High graduate. Miami Herald file

Business exec and philanthropist Sheryl Sandberg is the chief operating officer of Meta Platforms. You know it as Facebook. Her schoolmates knew her as a Class of 1987 grad.

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Jane’s Addiction and Porno for Pyros’ rocker and Lollapalooza founder Perry Farrell was born in Queens, New York, but moved to North Miami Beach in his teens. Good enough to put North Miami Beach Senior in his schooling biography.

North Miami High

In this file photo from Feb. 21, 2005, Bill Conti conducts the orchestra heard at the 77th Academy Awards. Conti, a North Miami High graduate, won an Oscar in 1983 for his score for “The Right Stuff” and is famed for his “Rocky” music in 1976.
In this file photo from Feb. 21, 2005, Bill Conti conducts the orchestra heard at the 77th Academy Awards. Conti, a North Miami High graduate, won an Oscar in 1983 for his score for “The Right Stuff” and is famed for his “Rocky” music in 1976. KEVORK DJANSEZIAN AP

Bill Conti, the Oscar-winning composer who wrote the music for the “Rocky” and “Karate Kid’’ films and the James Bond movie, “For Your Eyes Only,” won the Herald’s Silver Knight in music in 1959 when he was a North Miami High senior.

Michelle Bernstein es copropietaria del restaurante Sweet Liberty, en Miami Beach, y el restaurante Café La Trova, en La Pequeña Habana, junto con su esposo, el también chef David Martínez.
Michelle Bernstein es copropietaria del restaurante Sweet Liberty, en Miami Beach, y el restaurante Café La Trova, en La Pequeña Habana, junto con su esposo, el también chef David Martínez. Courtesy Michelle Bernstein

Chef and restaurateur Michelle Bernstein, a James Beard Foundation Award winner, is a North Miami grad. So is CNN Worldwide President Jeff Zucker. (Zucker resigned on Feb. 2 over a consensual relationship with a key lieutenant, CNN reported.)

A 2018 file photo of CNN Worldwide President Jeff Zucker attending the 12th Annual “CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute” at American Museum of Natural History on Dec. 9, 2018 in New York City.
A 2018 file photo of CNN Worldwide President Jeff Zucker attending the 12th Annual “CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute” at American Museum of Natural History on Dec. 9, 2018 in New York City. Mike Coppola Getty Images for CNN

Miami Killian Senior High

Miami natives Chuck Todd and José Díaz-Balart hosted the first Democratic presidential debates in Miami in June 2019.
Miami natives Chuck Todd and José Díaz-Balart hosted the first Democratic presidential debates in Miami in June 2019. NBCUniversal

Killian has graduated a slew of sports stars. But did you know TV journalist and current moderator of NBC’s “Meet the Press” Chuck Todd is a notable Killian alum?

File photo of University of Florida President Kent Fuchs during a press conference at Emerson Alumni Hall in Gainesville in 2014.
File photo of University of Florida President Kent Fuchs during a press conference at Emerson Alumni Hall in Gainesville in 2014. Doug Finger AP

So is Kent Fuchs, the president of the University of Florida in Gainesville.

Booker T. Washington High School

In this Sept. 23, 2010, photo, singer Sam Moore arrives at the official opening of The Ray Charles Memorial Library in Los Angeles.
In this Sept. 23, 2010, photo, singer Sam Moore arrives at the official opening of The Ray Charles Memorial Library in Los Angeles. Chris Pizzello AP

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Sam Moore is a Class of 1953 Booker T. Washington grad.

In 2020, Moore, whose hits include “Soul Man” and “Hold On, I’m Comin’” was inducted into the Miami-Dade County Public Schools Alumni Hall of Fame.

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Dorothy Jenkins Fields has devoted her life to preserving the heritage of the African-American community and raising awareness of African-American history to a national level. Fields is one of the six woman who have played significant roles in Miami shared history. She is photographed at the entrance of the Lyric Theater where the Miami’s Black Archives is housed on Thursday, February 4, 2021 in Miami’s Historic Overtown.
Dorothy Jenkins Fields has devoted her life to preserving the heritage of the African-American community and raising awareness of African-American history to a national level. Fields is one of the six woman who have played significant roles in Miami shared history. She is photographed at the entrance of the Lyric Theater where the Miami’s Black Archives is housed on Thursday, February 4, 2021 in Miami’s Historic Overtown. Carl Juste cjuste@miamiherald.com

Miami historian Dorothy Jenkins Fields, founder of the Black Archives, History and Research Foundation of South Florida graduated in 1960.

“Miami-Dade County’s first senior high school, ‘free to all Black children,’ was Booker T. Washington Junior-Senior High. It opened the 1926-1927 school year,” Fields wrote in a column for the Miami Herald in 2017. “Educating children was important in the Black community from the time Black men stood as incorporators for Miami to become a city on July 28, 1896.”

Hialeah Senior High School

Y-100 radio programmer and DJ Bill Tanner (left) and pop music star Harry Wayne Casey of KC and the Sunshine Band in Miami in the 1970s in a Facebook post.
Y-100 radio programmer and DJ Bill Tanner (left) and pop music star Harry Wayne Casey of KC and the Sunshine Band in Miami in the 1970s in a Facebook post. Bill Tanner Facebook

Before songwriter-producer Harry Wayne Casey claimed “I’m Your Boogie Man” as the namesake of Miami-based ‘70s pop act KC and the Sunshine Band, he boogied in the halls of Hialeah Senior High.

Fellow singer Jon Secada can also call Hialeah Senior High an alma mater.

Miami Springs Senior High

A proud Carrie Meek, center, with her son Kendrick after he was declared winner of the Democratic Senate primary, at the Westin Diplomat, 3555 South Ocean Drive, Hollywood, Florida, Tuesday, August 24, 2010.
A proud Carrie Meek, center, with her son Kendrick after he was declared winner of the Democratic Senate primary, at the Westin Diplomat, 3555 South Ocean Drive, Hollywood, Florida, Tuesday, August 24, 2010. MARICE COHN BAND MIAMI HERALD STAFF
Sen. Manny Diaz Jr., R-Hialeah, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis at William A. Kirlew Junior Academy, a Seventh-day Adventist K-8 school in Miami Gardens, in 2019.
Sen. Manny Diaz Jr., R-Hialeah, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis at William A. Kirlew Junior Academy, a Seventh-day Adventist K-8 school in Miami Gardens, in 2019. DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@elnuevoherald.com

Rep. Kendrick Meek, the former Democratic member of the U.S. House of Representatives and son of the late Florida Congresswoman Carrie Meek, and Rep. Manny Díaz, Jr., Republican member of the Florida House, are Miami Springs alum.

Ransom Everglades

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“Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs” and “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” director Phil Lord grew up in Coconut Grove. Miami Herald file

Film director Phil Lord who brought “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” to screens in 2018 was in the Coconut Grove school’s “verse” at his 1993 graduation.

Drummer Mike Malinin who played for rock band the Goo Goo Dolls and for country singer Tanya Tucker and “Hill Street Blues” actor Bruce Weitz and “Dexter” book series author Jeff Lindsay are also Ransom alum. (Lindsay attended Ransom under his real name, Jeffry Freundlich.)

Gulliver Preparatory School

Enrique Iglesias at the Latin Billboard Awards.
Enrique Iglesias at the Latin Billboard Awards. Telemundo

The private school was home to Julio Iglesias’ performing sons, pop stars Enrique Iglesias and Julio Iglesias Jr.

Southwest Miami Senior High

File photo of then Florida Republican Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen.
File photo of then Florida Republican Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen. Miami Herald file

Ileana Ros-Lehtinen represented Florida’s 27th congressional district from 1989 to 2019. She is a former member of the Florida House of Representatives and Senate. And she’s a 1970 graduate of Southwest Senior High.

Musician Ed Calle, who has played on countless sessions for artists ranging from the Bee Gees to Gloria Estefan, is from the Class of 1977.

Sportscaster Jim Lampley, the voice for 30 years of “HBO World Championship Boxing” was heard around the halls of Southwest as a member of the 1966 class.

Miami Coral Park Senior High School

Danny Pino attends the Los Angeles premiere of “Mayans M.C.” in Hollywood on Aug. 27, 2019
Danny Pino attends the Los Angeles premiere of “Mayans M.C.” in Hollywood on Aug. 27, 2019 Richard Shotwell AP

Actor Danny Pino, who had starring roles in TV’s “Cold Case” and “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit,” and the 2005 film, “The Lost City,” which was directed by Miami Beach alum Andy Garcia, graduated in 1992.

Fellow actor Steven Bauer of “¿Qué Pasa, USA?” in the late-1970s, “Scarface” (1983) and the more recent “Breaking Bad” and “Better Call Saul” graduated in 1974.

Armando Christian Pérez can call Coral Park his alma mater, too. You know him better as rapper Pitbull. Or simply, Mr. 305.

Pitbull
Pitbull Miami Herald file Univisión

Coral Reef Senior High

Jessica Darrow in a file photo performing as the title character in a 2010 Miami Children’s Theater performance of “The Drowsy Chaperone.”
Jessica Darrow in a file photo performing as the title character in a 2010 Miami Children’s Theater performance of “The Drowsy Chaperone.” Courtesy Jessica Darrow Miami Herald file

Jessica Darrow was a musical theater standout from Coral Reef Senior High in South Miami-Dade and Miami Children’s Theater when she was honored as a 2013 National YoungArts Foundation winner.

Darrow is currently co-starring in the new animated Disney film “Encanto,” as Luisa Madrigal, who sings Lin-Manuel Miranda’s song in the film, “Surface Pressure.” On the current Billboard Hot 100 chart, Darrow’s “Surface Pressure” is No. 10 book-ending a Top 10 headed by Adele’s “Easy on Me.”

“Encanto” tells the story of the extended Madrigal family, including, clockwise from center: the heroine Mirabel (voice of Stephanie Beatriz); her cousins Antonio (Ravi Cabot-Conyers), Camilo (Rhenzy Feliz) and Dolores (Adassa); Uncle Félix (Mauro Castillo) and Aunt Pepa (Carolina Gaitan); her grandmother, Abuela Alma (María Cecilia Botero); her mother Julieta (Angie Cepeda) and father Agustín (Wilmer Valderrama); and her sisters Luisa (Jessica Darrow) and Isabela (Diane Guererro).
“Encanto” tells the story of the extended Madrigal family, including, clockwise from center: the heroine Mirabel (voice of Stephanie Beatriz); her cousins Antonio (Ravi Cabot-Conyers), Camilo (Rhenzy Feliz) and Dolores (Adassa); Uncle Félix (Mauro Castillo) and Aunt Pepa (Carolina Gaitan); her grandmother, Abuela Alma (María Cecilia Botero); her mother Julieta (Angie Cepeda) and father Agustín (Wilmer Valderrama); and her sisters Luisa (Jessica Darrow) and Isabela (Diane Guererro). Disney Handout photo
Read Next

Miami Herald Staff Writer Howard Cohen is a Class of 1981 Christopher Columbus High School grad.

This story was originally published January 29, 2022 at 7:00 AM.

Howard Cohen
Miami Herald
Miami Herald consumer trends reporter Howard Cohen, a 2017 Media Excellence Awards winner, has covered pop music, theater, health and fitness, obituaries, municipal government, breaking news and general assignment. He started his career in the Features department at the Miami Herald in 1991. Cohen is an adjunct professor at the University of Miami School of Communication. Support my work with a digital subscription
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