In the movies, unpopular teenagers often take solace in the fact that the cool kids will be less successful in later life. While the star quarterback develops a beer gut and the homecoming queen gets fat, the geek grows into his scrawny frame and the ugly duckling becomes a swan.But is that what really happens? We hitchhiked down Memory Lane, finding native Memphians in their high school yearbooks, and what we discovered is that many of the people who are successful now were successful back then. Maybe not popular, necessarily, but successful. Isaac Hayes was voted โMost Talented.โ writer and MIT professor Alan Lightman was a county science fair winner. The following pages are a sampling of actors, politicians, musicians, and notable people about town, as they were during high school. Some were jocks, some cheerleaders, some math majors. But they all smiled for the camera and wondered ย as we all do ย what the future had in store for them. See if you can guess who they are. * The year denotes the date of the photograph in the annual, not the year of graduation. For some of these students, we werenโt able to locate their senior-class yearbook. |
ย This former editor of White Station Highโs newspaper recently wrote a book, but itโs her other lines that have made her famous. |
ย Once voted โMost Talentedโ ย he was a Mid-South Fair talent winner his senior year ย this Highstepper even appeared in a few small roles in movies. |
ย Known as Max, she was voted โBest Typistโ and was the secretary of both her junior and senior classes. |
ย This former Shelby County Commissioner was in the Latin Club, the Pep Club, and something called the Order of the Redman. |
ย This former warrior ought to be in the pictures. She was in the Honor Society, the Pep Club, and treasurer for the Quill and Scroll. |
ย Sports in Memphis wouldnโt be the same without this man. |
ย A founder of the Memphis Digital Arts Cooperative, he lettered in Cross Country in high school. |
ย No one would get โLive at the Gardenโ without the help of this Grammy-nominated Memphian. In high school, she was in the Glee Club and the schoolโs production of โOklahomaโ. |
ย As a student, he was a Hall of Famer at Central and a member of the football team, the band, and the Spanish Club, but itโs his burgers that are legendary now. |
ย This former โMustangโ shoots for the moon, as well as people and pets. |
ย Because of her twinkle toes, people have been swept right off of their feet. |
ย A onetime industrial arts major, he was bass-ic to the Memphis sound. |
ย She keeps old buildings standing, but she isnโt a carpenter. |
![]() ย As class president three years in a row, this legendary guitarist really โStaxโ up. Messick, 1959 |
![]() ย This wild-haired professional partyer once listed his ambition as education. Christian Brothers, 1969 |
![]() ย this educator won first place in various science fairs, was a national merit semifinalist, and was a member of the tennis team, as well as serving on the cast and crew for the schoolโs productions of โOur Townโ and โThe King and I.โ White Station, 1966 |
![]() ย With โoutstanding senior,โ sophomore class president, junior class vice president, and Key Club president on his resume, itโs no wonder this downtown restaurateur later spent over 10 years on the memphis City Council. White Station, 1966 |
![]() ย Once a busy high schooler ย her activities included the Latin Club, the French Club, the Pep Club, the Speech Club, the Student Council, and several musicals ย this former Memphian has made people miserable. White Station, 1966 |
![]() ย Now married to another one of our notables, she knows all about the restaurant biz. St. Agnes, 1966 |
![]() ย Forty years ago, he was on the newspaper staff and a member of the Speech Club, the Latin Club, and the Latin tournament. Now, instead of parsing sentences, he helps give them out. Central, 1968 |
![]() ย This beauty was in the French Club, the Glee Club, and the Pep Club before going on to soap star fame as the glamorous Liza Sentell on the daytime serial โSearch for Tomorrow.โ Central, 1967 |
![]() ย This native Memphian has the power of the pen. White Station, 1986 |
![]() ย this notable performing-arts teacher was a thespian, in the Order of the Redman, president of the band, and a member of the Speech Club. Central, 1967 |
![]() ย Inexplicably known as โMerf the Surfโ in high school, he once wanted to be an architect. Lester, 1969 |
![]() ย Whenever we think of our favorite restaurants in the Bluff City, we automatically think of her. White Station, 1970 |
![]() ย This former math major may not have had anything to do with โCheeseburger in Paradise,โ but โCoast of Marseillesโ and โVolcanoโ were all him. Treadwell, 1966 |
![]() ย Work by this local artist has been featured in โNewsweek,โ โForbes,โ โFortune,โ and โMemphisโ magazines, and heโs helped Memphis in May honor a country or two. Whitehaven, 1962 |
![]() ย Once known as Jimmy, this former panther went on to lead county government. Messick, 1959 |
![]() ย she may have a face for tv, but her voice is for radio. Hutchison, 1968 |
![]() ย This legal eagleโs clients have included Logan Young III, Tiger basketball player Jeremy Hunt, and โHustle & Flowโ actor Anthony Anderson. White Station, 1970 |
![]() ย This 1994 โplayboyโ Playmate was voted โSenior Class Beauty.โ We can see why. Germantown, 1987 |
![]() ย This Blue filmmaker was voted Centralโs โMost Likely to Succeedโ in 1983. Central, 1983 |
![]() ย This former lunchroom monitor turned a profit, so to speak, and then went to work on 5th Avenue. White Station, 1969 |
![]() ย Among other gigs, this feature reporter used to give Memphis its wake-up call. St. Maryโs, 1967 |
![]() ย Among other gigs, this feature reporter used to give Memphis its wake-up call. St. Maryโs, 1967 |
![]() ย The โMouth of the South,โ he majored in vocal music. Treadwell, 1965 |
| Fashion designer Dana Buchman, Musician Larry Raspberry, Civil Rights leader Maxine Smith Linda Rendtorff, Local Film and Television Commissioner Linn Sitler, Southern Heritage Classic founder and local Grizzlies partner Fred Jones Filmmaker Morgan Jon Fox, Songwriter Mary Unobsky, Hueyโs founder Thomas Boggs Photographer Jack Kenner, Ballet Memphis founder Dorothy Gunther Pugh, Donald โDuckโ Dunn Steve Cropper, Memphis Heritage executive director June West, โCommercial Appealโ writer Michael Donahue mit professor and writer Alan Lightman, John Vergos, Actress Kathy Bates Memphis Restaurant Association executive director Wight Fulton Boggs, Shelby County District Attorney General Bill Gibbons, Late actress Sherry Mathis, โCommercial Appealโ columnist Wendi Thomas, Frank Bluestein, chair of Germantown High Schoolโs Fine Arts Department, Former MLGW chairman Herman Morris Karen Blockman Carrier, Singer/Songwriter/producer Keith Sykes, Award-winning illustrator John Robinette, Shelby County Mayor Jim Rout, WKNO broadcaster Kacky Walton, Defense attorney Leslie Ballin Traci Sikkink, Filmmaker Ira Sachs, Former Saks, Inc. CEO Brad Martin, Denise DuBois Taylor, Isaac Hayes, Wrestling promoter and former Gentrys singer Jimmy Hart |

In the movies, unpopular teenagers often take solace in the fact that the cool kids will be less successful in later life. While the star quarterback develops a beer gut and the homecoming queen gets fat, the geek grows into his scrawny frame and the ugly duckling becomes a swan.























