CG
Cary Grant
Celebrity
Birth Date: Jan. 18, 1904
Birth Time: 1:07 a.m.
Birth City: Bristol, England, United Kingdom
Capricorn
Degree : 26º31'38.88"
Sun Sign*
Capricorn
Degree : 8º16'55.79"
Moon Sign
Uttara Shadha
Pada : 4
Nakshatra
Libra
Degree : 5º45'27.69"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 12, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
CG
Jan. 18, 1904
1:07 a.m.
Bristol, England, United Kingdom
Celebrity
Capricorn
Degree : 26º31'38.88"
Sun Sign*
Capricorn
Degree : 8º16'55.79"
Moon Sign
Uttara Shadha
Pada : 4
Nakshatra
Libra
Degree : 5º45'27.69"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 12, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
Welcome to Cary Grant's Kundali Profile page! This page is a hub for exploring the astrological reports, calculations, and different versions of Cary Grant's Kundali (if available). You can also discover associated life events, attributes, and Kundalis of other persons associated with Cary Grant.

Available Reports

Astrological reports assoicated with this Kundali

Kundali Details

Birth details and configuration for astrological analysis

Birth Details

Gender Male
Weekday Monday
Date Jan. 18, 1904
Time 1:07 a.m.
Daylight Saving No
City Bristol, England, United Kingdom
Geo-location 51ºN27'18.83",
Timezone Europe/London

Residence Details

City Bristol, England, United Kingdom
Timezone Europe/London

Time/Correction

Time (Europe/London) Jan. 18, 1904, 01:07:00 AM
Time (UTC) Jan. 18, 1904, 01:07:00 AM
Time (LMT) Jan. 18, 1904, 12:56:37 AM
Time (Julian) 2416497.54652778
LMT Correction -0.1731 Hrs
Ayanmsha True Chitra - 22º30'10.04"

Birth Place

Birth location on map - Lat: 51ºN27'18.83" Lon: 2ºS35'47.94"

Life Attributes

List of attributes/tags and tag associated with this kundali.

Diagnoses

Major Diseases | Stroke Psychological | Abuse Drugs

Personal

Death | Long life more than 80 yrs

Vocation

Beauty | Sex-symbol Business | Top executive Entertainment | Actor/ Actress

Lifestyle

Financial | Wealthy Social Life | Hobbies, games Home | Expatriate Home | Left home early less than 18

Notable

Famous | Historic figure Famous | Top 5% of Profession Book Collection | American Book

Traits

Body | Appearance gorgeous Personality | Charismatic Personality | Gracious/ sociable Personality | Loved by all

Family

Childhood | Family distant Childhood | Only child Relationship | Marriage less than 3 Yrs Relationship | Mate - Age difference more than 15 yrs Relationship | Mate - Noted Relationship | Number of Marriages Relationship | Stress - Domestic violence Relationship | Stress - Extramarital affairs Parenting | Kids 1-3 Parenting | Parenting late more than 40

Life Story

Story of person and major life events assoicated with this Kundali

British-American film actor, the quintessential handsome sophisticated male movie star of Hollywood's Golden Era. In 34 years of work, Grant appeared in 72 films, comedies, dramas and tragedies, all with an apparently effortless display of easygoing charm that became his film trademark. Grant was the only son of Elisie Kingdom and Elias James Leach, his dad a half-Jewish pants presser and tailor's assistant. Living in despair and poverty, his father had his mother committed to Fishponds mental institution. The father deceived his son on his mom's whereabouts and took up with his mistress and an illegitimate son. At 13, Grant ran away from home and joined a group of traveling acrobats. By the time he was 17, he worked his way to America taking various jobs as a stilt-walker in Atlantic City and a song and dance man in Philadelphia. He made his Hollywood debut in 1932 with "This is the Night" and appeared in seven more films in the same year. His handsome good looks got him important roles in Marlene Dietrich's "Blonde Venus" and Mae West's "She Done Him Wrong." Grant began to develop his aristocratic screen image persona that would eventually typecast the actor as a light comedian with a smooth "mid Atlantic" accent and glib delivery. In 1936, he made his first major breakthrough film with Katherine Hepburn in "Sylvia Scarlett." He defined American style, taste, and sophistication with "Topper,"1937, "His Girl Friday," 1940, "Gunga Din,"1939 and "The Philadelphia Story" in 1940. Grant also played characters with emotional depth and was praised with two Academy award nominations in "Penny Serenade," 1941 and "None But the Lonely Heart" in 1944. In the '50s and '60s, he worked with suspense thriller British director Alfred Hitchcock. He retired from films in 1966 with "Walk, Don't Run." Grant married his first wife, actress Virginia Cherrill, the leading lady in "Charlie Chaplin's City Lights," in 1934. He was a physically abusive husband and they were divorced within a year. Grant's second marriage was to the Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton in July 1942 at Lake Arrowhead. The marriage ended in a divorce after three years. Though wags called them "Cash and Cary," he was the only husband of Hutton's many who took no financial settlement. He married actress Betsy Drake on 12/25/1949 and the nuptials lasted ten years. Grant grew bored of Drake's company and after the studio day's work refused to talk to his wife. In his boredom, Grant began to chase after the female co-stars in his films. He pursued Grace Kelly during shooting of "To Catch a Thief," 1955, Sophia Loren during the filming of "Houseboat" in 1958 and Audrey Hepburn in 1963 with "Charade." He married his fourth wife, actress Dyan Cannon in July 1965. At 62, his only child, Jennifer Diane was born on 2/26/1966. Cannon divorced Grant in 1967 claiming that he an overbearing husband and control-freak who made her take the experimental drug LSD with him. For a period in the hippie '60s, he explored his realities and consciousness with many acid trips. Highly controlling, he would yell, scream and spank her. In the late 1970s, Grant pursued his fifth wife, Barbara Harris, a press agent for the Royal Lancaster Hotel in London. They married in 1981 and lived in his $5 million French-style farmhouse on top of Benedict Canyon overlooking Beverly Hills. Grant enjoyed being a part of the Hollywood community. He was a regular at the Hollywood race track and shared exclusive box seats with Frank Sinatra and Gregory Peck at the Los Angeles Dodgers stadium. He went to all the best parties in Los Angeles. Grant feared returning back to poverty and lived an economical life in Hollywood. In 1932, he acted as his own agent without a studio contract. He accepted a minimal salary plus 10% of the film's gross. Grant introduced the practice of using his own wardrobe on the movie set and then charging the studio a hefty wardrobe fee. He had script, director, still photograph publicity and cast approval on his films. He sued the comedian actor Chevy Chase when the actor questioned Grant's masculinity on a TV show. Grant accepted a hefty out-of-court settlement from Chase. Despite his millions, Grant limited his household budget to $100 per week for food. When throwing out his shirts, he would meticulously save the buttons. His favorite meal was a turkey sandwich. At his death, his estate was estimated between $40 and $60 million. Grant spent his last years traveling around the U.S. with his young wife, Barbara introducing college students to his work in films. It was at his "Conversation with Cary Grant" show in Davenport, Iowa the actor suffered a massive stroke on 11/29/1986 and died. After his death, books have been written that question Grant's sexuality. When he was a young man living in Greenwich Village, he roomed with gay Australian tie painter, John Kelly. Kelly later moved west and became Orry-Kelly, the Hollywood dress designer. In the early 1930s, Grant and the handsome actor Randolph Scott shared rooms around Hollywood. At the time, the movie community gossiped about the relationship between the two actors but soon each married their wives and the rumors were put to rest until Grant's death in 1986. Link to Wikipedia biography

Life Events

List of life events assoicated with this Kundali profile
S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Contracts/Agreement

Jan. 1, 1929

Work : Contracts, agreements 1929 (Screen test by Paramount)

2

New Job

Jan. 1, 1932

Work : New Job 1932 (Hollywood film debut)

3

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1936

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1936 (With Hepburn in "Sylvia Scarlett")

4

Gain Social Status

Jan. 1, 1941

Work : Gain social status 1941 (Two Academy award nominations)

5

Retired

Jan. 1, 1966

Work : Retired 1966 (His 72nd film and last, "Walk, Don't Run")

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Marriage

Jan. 1, 1934

Relationship : Marriage 1934 (First marriage Virginia Cherrill)

2

Marriage

Jan. 1, 1942

Relationship : Marriage 1942 (Second marriage Barbara Hutton)

3

Divorce

Jan. 1, 1945

Relationship : Divorce dates 1945 (From Barbara Hutton)

4

Marriage

Dec. 25, 1949

Relationship : Marriage 25 December 1949 (Third marriage Betsy Drake, ten years) .

5

Marriage

July 1, 1965

Relationship : Marriage July 1965 (Fourth wife Dyan Cannon) .

6

Divorce

Jan. 1, 1967

Relationship : Divorce dates 1967 (From Dyan)

7

Marriage

Jan. 1, 1981

Relationship : Marriage 1981 (Fifth marriage Barbara Harris)

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Joined Organization

Jan. 1, 1942

Social : Joined group 1942 (Became a U.S. citizen)

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Birth Child

Feb. 26, 1966

Family : Change in family responsibilities 26 February 1966 (Daughter Jennifer Diane born) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Father Death

Dec. 1, 1935

Death of Father December 1935 .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Other Family

Jan. 1, 1918

Other Family 1918 (Ran away from home)

2

Other Death

Nov. 29, 1986

Other Death 29 November 1986 at 12:00 noon in Davenport, IA (Massive stroke, age 82) .

Calculations & Features

Calculation and analytics assoicated with this Kundali