Dillon Adams Dougherty
Origin/Culture/Country: AmericanDillon Adams Dougherty: (born on December 17, 1982) is amateur golfer from the United States.
Dillon Boucher
Origin/Culture/Country: NewzealandDillon Boucher: is a New Zealand basketball player. He is a small forward. Boucher is not known as a point scorer, but coaches rate him extremely highly for his rebounding, high steal count and all around leadership and commitment.
Matthew Raymond "Matt" Dillon
Origin/Culture/Country: AmericanMatthew Raymond "Matt" Dillon: Dillon was born in New Rochelle, New York to second-generation Irish American Catholic parents Mary Ellen, a homemaker, and Paul Dillon, a portrait painter and sales manager for Union Camp, a packing material manufacturer.[1][2] Through his father, Dillon
Melinda Rose Dillon
Origin/Culture/Country: AmericanMelinda Rose Dillon: is an American actress.Though best known for her supporting performances in films, Dillon got her start as an improvisational comedian and stage actress. Her first major role was as Honey in the original 1962 Broadway production of Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, for which she was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress (Dramatic) Tony Award.
Sean Dillon
Origin/Culture/Country: IrishSean Dillon: an Irish professional footballer who currently plays as a right-back for Dundee United in the Scottish Premier League.Dillon was a youth player with Aston Villa but moved back to Ireland in 2002 with Longford Town, where he won two FAI Cups and a Football League of Ireland Cup during his four years at Flancare Park. In 2006, he moved to Shelbourne and helped them to their thirteenth league championship win, also scoring the only goal of the game in Shel's Intertoto Cup win in Lithuania over FK Vetra. In January 2007, Dillon moved to Scottish side Dundee United for an undisclosed fee.[1]
Kevin Paul Dillon
Origin/Culture/Country: BritishKevin Paul Dillon: is a former professional footballer, and current first team coach of Reading Football Club. He was caretaker manager of Reading from 10 September 2003 to 3 October 2003 after the resignation of Alan Pardew until Steve Coppell was appointed.
Phyllis Dillon
Origin/Culture/Country: JamaicanPhyllis Dillon: was a Jamaican ska and reggae singer who recorded for Duke Reid's lucrative Treasure Isle record label in the late 1960s and early 1970s.Dillon was born in 1948 in Linstead, St. Catherine, Jamaica.[1] Influenced by American singers Connie Francis, Patti Page and Dionne Warwick, she began singing in talent contests. It was during a performance at the Glass Bucket Club in Kingston, Jamaica with the group The Vulcans, that Duke Reid's session guitarist Lynn Taitt discovered Dillon.[1]Dillon was 19 when she recorded her first record for Duke Reid. In 1967, Reid released Dillon's "Don’t Stay Away". While most of Dillon’s subsequent recordings would be covers of popular and obscure American songs including Bettye Swann's "Make Me Yours", Perry Como's "Tulips and Heather," The Grass Roots "Midnight Confessions", and Stephen Stills's "Love the One You're With"; "Don't Stay Away" was an original composition featuring Tommy McCook and the Supersonics as the backing band.