Here is an expanded list of notable celebrities, activists, and public figures who have publicly praised, defended, visited, or shown support for Hugo Chávez, Nicolás Maduro, or Venezuela's Bolivarian Revolution (often framed as anti-U.S. imperialism or 21st-century socialism). This includes stronger endorsements as well as less direct or one-time associations, such as meetings or visits. Support was most prominent in the 2000s–early 2010s, often tied to anti-imperialist views, and largely faded amid Venezuela's later crises.
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Sean Penn (actor): Multiple visits to Chávez (e.g., 2007, 2012); called him a champion of the poor and "fascinating guy"; praised Maduro's "proven leadership" after Chávez's death in 2013.
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Oliver Stone (director): Directed South of the Border (2009) praising Chávez and left-wing leaders; called Chávez a "great hero" who would "live forever in history" (2013 statement); defended Venezuelan socialism against protests (2014).
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Danny Glover (actor): Frequent visits; praised Chávez as a "social champion" and defender of democracy; received government funding for film projects; defended the regime under Maduro (2014).
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Michael Moore (director): Praised Chávez's use of oil wealth for free health/education and poverty reduction (tweets and statements post-2013 death); met Chávez in 2009.
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Naomi Campbell (model): Met Chávez (2007); praised his welfare programs and called him a "rebel angel."
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Kevin Spacey (actor): Visited and held a three-hour meeting with Chávez (2007) while scouting film locations.
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Diego Maradona (soccer legend): Strong supporter with tattoos of leftist icons; pledged eternal loyalty to Chávez (2010 visit).
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Don King (boxing promoter): Praised Chávez and the "revolution" on state media (2004).
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Harry Belafonte (singer/activist): Called millions of Americans supportive of Chávez's revolution (2008); aligned with anti-imperialist views.
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Tim Robbins (actor): Visited Venezuela; associated with critics of U.S. policy, aligning with Chávez's anti-imperialism.
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Benicio del Toro (actor): Met Chávez after filming Che (2009); seen as sympathetic to revolutionary figures.
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Jesse Jackson (civil rights activist): Visited (2005); praised Chávez's focus on the poor and offered prayer at funeral (2013).
Less direct associations include figures who met Chávez or aligned broadly with anti-U.S. imperialism but did not always explicitly praise the regime extensively:
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Susan Sarandon → Sympathizer through anti-imperialist activism.
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Noam Chomsky → Intellectual supporter of Chávez's anti-U.S. stance.
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Jimmy Carter → Observed elections positively but not overt praise.
Note: Some later visits under Maduro (e.g., Jamie Foxx and Lukas Haas in 2016) involved meetings but lacked clear public praise. Much of this support was criticized for overlooking authoritarian trends and human rights concerns, and few defenses emerged in recent years as crises deepened.