Trace DeMeyer (born 1956), Shawnee-Cherokee author, artist, poet and journalist
Russ Meyer | Meyer Lansky | Meyer Schapiro | Joyce Meyer | Roelf Meyer | Urban Meyer | Nicholas Meyer | Stephenie Meyer | Paul Meyer | Egon Meyer | Russ Meyer's | Meyer Lutz | Johannes Meyer | Eric Meyer | Eric A. Meyer | Christopher Meyer | Stephen C. Meyer | Sabine Meyer | Philipp Meyer | Eve Meyer | Conrad Ferdinand Meyer | Breckin Meyer | Yves Meyer | Werner Meyer-Eppler | Paul Meyer (clarinetist) | Meyer Werft | Meyer Corporation | Meyer Berger | Marvin Meyer | Krzysztof Meyer |
One of de Meyer's short stories, Clothes and Treachery, was made into The Devil's Pass Key, a 1919 silent movie by director Erich von Stroheim.
Known for "her elusive combination of childlike innocence and soigné charm" and described as "tall and slender, with Venetian red hair", Olga de Meyer was muse and model to many artists, among them Jacques-Émile Blanche, James McNeill Whistler, James Jebusa Shannon, Giovanni Boldini, Walter Sickert, John Singer Sargent, and Paul César Helleu.
De Meyer was a member of the highly successful and highly influential dance project Technotronic, who had the 1989 smash hit "Pump Up the Jam", which was certified triple platinum and reached #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 charts.
Patrick De Meyer is a Belgian songwriter, composer and producer who has written and performed with several successful elecronica acts, most notably Technotronic, T99, Daisy Dee and 2 Unlimited.