Wilde - in The Arts

In The Arts

  • Andrew Wilde (pianist) (b. 1965), English classical pianist
  • Andrew Wilde (actor), English actor
  • Barbie Wilde (b. 1960), Canadian actress
  • Brandon deWilde (1942–1972), American actor
  • Brian Wilde (1927–2008), British actor
  • Cornel Wilde (1915–1989), American actor and film director
  • Danny Wilde (musician) (b. 1956), American musician and founding member of The Rembrandts
  • David Wilde (b. 1935), British pianist and composer
  • Hagar Wilde (1905–1971), screenplay writer
  • James Plaisted Wilde, Baron Penzance (1816–1899), British judge, Shakespeare Baconian, rose-breeder and amateur gardener
  • Jane Francesca Agnes, Lady Wilde (1821–1896), Irish political activist, poetess, folklorist, mother of Oscar Wilde
  • Jinian Wilde, British singer, part of Uniting Nations and other musical projects
  • John Wilde (1919–2006), American painter associated with Magic Realism
  • Kim Wilde (b. 1960), British pop singer, gardener, and pop culture figure
  • Liz Wilde, American radio personality
  • Marty Wilde (b. 1939), British rock and roll singer and actor, father of Kim and Ricky Wilde
  • Nurit Wilde (b. 1971), Israeli-born photographer, socialite, and occasional actress
  • Olivia Wilde (b.1984), American actress
  • Oscar Wilde (1854–1900), Irish writer
  • Patrick Wilde, British television, stage and screen writer
  • Ricky Wilde (b. 1961), British songwriter, musician, record producer, landscape gardener
  • Ted Wilde (1893–1929), comedy writer and director of silent movies
  • Thomas Wilde, 1st Baron Truro (1782–1858), Lord Chancellor of England
  • Wilbur Wilde (b. 1955), Australian saxophonist
  • William Wilde (1815–1876), Irish eye and ear surgeon, writer on medicine, archaeology and folklore, father of Oscar Wilde

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Famous quotes containing the word arts:

    What ails it, intrinsically, is a dearth of intellectual audacity and of aesthetic passion. Running through it, and characterizing the work of almost every man and woman producing it, there is an unescapable suggestion of the old Puritan suspicion of the fine arts as such—of the doctrine that they offer fit asylum for good citizens only when some ulterior and superior purpose is carried into them.
    —H.L. (Henry Lewis)