There are many famous and influential people who came from different fields and became famous in 50’s generation. This is merely a short list of famous people from different walks of lives who make their mark in 1950s.
       
  
 
    Real Name: Norma Jeane     Mortenson or Baker
 
    Born: 6/1/26 in Los Angeles, California
    
    Died: 8/5/62
    
    Legendary actress and star of such films as Gentlemen Prefer Blondes  (1953)     and Some Like It Hot (1959). She was married to baseball  legend Joe DiMaggio     and playwright Arthur Miller (see     Arts). She  died of an overdose of sleeping pills, which probably was     suicide.
    
       
    
   
      Born: 2/27/32 in London,     England
    
      Actress. Her films include National Velvet (1944), A Place in the      Sun (1951), Giant (1956) and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958), and  Cleopatra     (1963). She won Oscars for Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?  (1966) and     Butterfield 8 (1960). Taylor has been active in  fundraising for AIDS-related     causes. Her former husbands include  Eddie Fisher, Richard Burton (twice) and     most recently construction  worker Larry Fortensky
      
      list of her hubbies
      
      Elizabeth Taylor's   Marriages
      
      Conrad "Nicky" Hilton,   Jr. (1950-51) (hotel heir)
      
      Michael Wilding (1952-57) (British actor) (2   sons)
      
      Michael Todd (1957-58) (producer) (he died) (1 daughter)
      
      Eddie   Fisher (1959-64) (American singer)
      
      Richard Burton (1964-1974)(Welsh   actor)
      
      Richard Burton (1975-1976) (Welsh actor)
      
      John Warner (1976-1982)   (US Senator)
      
      Larry Fortensky (1991-1996)
    
 
      Real Name: Doris von Kappelhoff
      
      Born: 4/3/24 in     Cincinnati, Ohio
      
      A singer, actress who was America's No.1 female box office      attraction during the late 1950s and '60s. Doris Day starred in a number      musicals, comedies, and thrillers, including The Pajama Game (1957)  and Pillow     Talk (1959), often pairing with Rock Hudson. She later  left films to star in     the popular TV sitcom The Doris Day Show  (1968–73). Her hit songs include     Que Sera Sera.
    
       
    
      Born: 8/6/11 in Jamestown, New York
      
      Died: 4/26/89
      
      Zany comedienne best known and loved for     I Love Lucy (1951–57).  Lucille     Ball won 8 Emmys over the years of her career. Her films  include Stage Door     (1937) and Mame (1974). She was married to Cuban  bandleader Desi Arnaz, with     whom she had children Desi Arnaz, Jr.  and Lucy Arnaz and later to Gary Morton.
    
       
       
    
      Born:1/8/1935 in Tupelo,     Mississippi
      
      Died: 8/16/1977 in Memphis, Tennessee
      
      The     Elvis Presley section of the     FiftiesWeb
    
       
    
      Born: 2/2/31
      
      Died: 9/30/55
      
      Brooding,     rebel actor who achieved cult-figure status after making  only three films,     Rebel Without a Cause (1955), East of Eden (1955)  and Giant (1956). Dean died     in a car accident which cut off a  promising career.
    
       
    
      Born: 12/12/15 in Hoboken, New Jersey
      
      Died: 5/14/98
      
      Both an Academy Award-winning actor and a Grammy     Award-winning  singer. 'Ole Blue Eyes, the Chairman of the Board is perhaps best      known as the leader of the Rat Pack, a group which included Dean Martin,  Sammy     Davis Jr., Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop. Sinatra was a  heartthrob for     bobby-soxers who phrasing of songs remains classic.  His screen performances     include From Here to Eternity (1953) for  which he won the Oscar, The Manchurian     Candidate (1962), and The Man  With the Golden Arm (1955).
    
       
    
      Real Name: Marion Michael Morrison
      
      Born: 5/26/1907 in     Winterset, lowa
      
      Died: 6/11/1979
      
      Portrayed the quintiessential American     hero onscreen. Best known as a  cowboy in John Ford directed Westerns such as     Stagecoach (1939),  Fort Apache (1948) and She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949) and     Rio  Grande (1950). Wayne won an Academy Award for True Grit (1969).
    
       
    
Harry S. Truman was born on May 8, 1884 in Lamar, Missouri. He became the 33rd President of America and held the prestigious office from 1945 to 1953. In 1950s most American did not expect that Harry Truman would become one of their most highly regarded presidents. It was during the World War II he became famous in history for dropping atom bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6 and August 9, 1945. Following that Japan surrendered on August. Truman did so to defeat the Axis power.
       
       
    
      February 4, 1913 October 24, 2005
      
      On December 1, 1955 she boarded a bus in Montgomery, Alabama and sat  down in the colored section. Several white passengers then boarded and  the driver asked her to give up her seat for one of them.  She refused  and the driver called the police and she was arrested.
    
1955        Rosa Parks, a  42-year-old seamstress and secretary of the Montgomery NAACP, was  arrested in Montgomery, Alabama, as she sat in a section of a bus just  behind the area reserved for whites. She refused to move to the back the  bus, which defied the South’s segregationist laws. This started the  Dec. 5 bus boycott, a year-long boycott of the buses by blacks, which  launched the Civil Rights movement in the United States. 
       
    
      January 15, 1929-April, 1968
      
      Assassinated on April 4, 1968, in Memphis, Tennessee He organized and  led marches for blacks rights to vote, desegregation, labor rights, and  other basic civil rights.
    
       
    
      November 14, 1908-May 2, 1957
      
      
      the term "McCarthyism" coined in 1950 in reference to McCarthy's practices, was soon applied to similar anti-communist pursuits
      
      
      Beginning in 1950, McCarthy became the most visible public face of a  peroid of intense anti-communist suspicion inspired by the tensions of  the Cold war. He was noted for making claims that there were large  numbers of Communists and Soviet spies and sympathizers inside the  federal government and elsewhere. Ultimately, McCarthy's tactics and his  inability to substantiate his claims led to his being discredited and  censured by the United States Senate.
    
       
    
      
      Born on April 21, 1926 and (still Living)
    
    
      She became queen upon the death of her father on February 6, 1952.
      Married Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh and has four children and eight  grandchildren. Elizabeth II also holds a variety of other positions,  among them is Head of the Commonwealth, Supreme Governor of the Church  of England, Duke of Normandy, Lord of Mann, and Paramount Chief of Fiji.  the Queen regnant of sixteen independent states and their overseas  territories and dependencies, which are the United Kindom, Canada,  Australia, New Zealand, Jamaica, Barbados, the Bahamas, Grenada, Papua  New Guinea, the Solomon Island, Tuvalu, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and  the Grenadines, Antigua and Barbuda, Belize, and Saint Kitts and Nevis
    
       
    
      Born:10/17/1915 in New York     City
      
      Leading American dramatist whose best known work, "Death of a Salesman"      (1949) won the Pulitzer Prize. Other works include "The Crucible"  (1953), "A     View From the Bridge" (1955 also a Pulitzer Prize),  "After the Fall" (1964) and     the screenplay for "The Misfits" (1961).
      
      Miller's fame increased when     he married Marilyn Monroe in 1956, later     to divorce in 1961.
      
      In 1957     Miller was convicted of contempt of Congress for refusing to  name names to the     House Un-American Activities Committee. In 1958  United States Court of Appeals overturned the     conviction.
      
      Arthur Miller (Best known as author of death of a Salesman) was born on    October 17, 1915 in New York city  and was a leading American  dramatist  who is best known work “Death of the  salesman” won the  Pulitzer Prize.  Miller’s fame increased especially in 1956  when he  married Marilyn  Monroe. In 1956, Miller was awarder honorary Degree at   the university  of   Michigan but also called  before the house  Committee on un-American  like activities. In 1958, the United States   Court of Appeals  overturned the conviction.
    
       
    
Luice Armstrong famously known as Satchmo was an American singer and jazz trumpeter born in the early 1900s. He had a strong effect on solo and collective improvisational jazz performances with his distinctive voice and charismatic presence. He was skilled at impressing his audience by bending melody and lyrics, as well as wordless vocalizing. Armstrong whose influence went beyond jazz was once described by Steve Leggett to be perhaps the most important musician of the century of American origin.
       
    
Paul Moustapha Anka was a famous singer, actor and songwriter. His fame took root in the 50s when he produces his first hits like “Lonely Boy”, “Put your Head on My Shoulder” and “Diana”.
       
    
Chuck Berry is a singer, songwriter and guitarist of American origin famous for his pioneering work as a rock and roll artist. He is actually considered to have “assembled” rock and roll putting together its essential pieces.
       
       
    
      Born:1899 in Oak Park,     Illinois
      
      Died: 7/2/1961
      
      One of the great American writers of the 20th     century. Hemingway's  lean stories usually dealt with men living active,     dangerous lives,  soldiers, fishermen, athletes, bullfighters, who meet     challenge and  hardship with quiet courage. Works include "A Farewell to Arms"      (1929),"To Have and Have Not" (1937), "For Whom the Bell Tolls" (1940),  and     "The Old Man and the Sea" (1952). Many of Hemingway's books were  made into     movies. He was awarded the 1954 Nobel     Prize in  literature
      
      Hemingway shot himself, committing suicide by gun     as had his father before him.
    
       
    
      Born:     3/26/1911 in Columbus, Mississippi
 
  Died: 2/24/1983 in New York     City
  
  South's greatest playwright whose plays reflected his Southern      experience. He achieved more fame when many of his plays were made into  movies.     Works include "The Glass Menagerie" (1945), "A Streetcar  Named Desire" (1947     for which he won the Pulitzer), "Cat on a Hot  Tin Roof" (1955 for which he won     the Pulitzer) and "Night of the  Iguana" (1961).
  
    1955        Perry Como recorded his big hit "Hot-Diggety-Dog."
    
    
1953       Tenley Albright  became the first American to win the women’s world figure skating championship at a competition in Davos, Switzerland.
1953        F.M. Adams became the 1st US commissioned woman army doctor.
1955        Apr 15, Ray Kroc  acquired the McDonald’s chain of fast food restaurants. He was a food  service equipment salesman who owned the national marketing rights to  the milk-shake mixers used at the chain. He purchased the chain from  Richard and Maurice McDonald who started the operation in California in  1948.
1955        Dec 9, Sugar Ray Robinson won the middle-weight boxing crown for the third time when he knocked out Carl "Bobo" Olson in Chicago.
1959         Fidel Castro took over Cuba. Fidel Castro led Cuban revolutionaries to victory over Fulgencio Batista, who fled to the Dominican Republic.
1959  The "Bozo the Clown" live children's show premiered on TV.
Elizabeth Taylor starred in A Place in the Sun (1951), Giant (1956) and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958).
Doris Day  (real name Doris von Kappelhoff ) starred in The Pajama Game (1957) and Pillow Talk (1959.
Lucille Ball starred in I Love Lucy from 1951-1957.
James Dean starred in Rebel Without a Cause (1955), East of Eden (1955), and Giant (1956). He died at an early age in 1955.
Frank Sinatra won an Oscar for From Here to Eternity in 1953.
Jonas Salk   During the 1950s, Salk developed, tested and refined the first  successful killed-virus polio vaccine, using inactive (dead) poliovirus  cells that were injected into the body. 
George Catlett Marshall General,President American Red Cross, ex-Secretary of State and of Defense, Delegate to the U.N. Originator of the "Marshall Plan"'.