GR
Ginger Rogers
Celebrity
Birth Date: July 16, 1911
Birth Time: 2:18 a.m.
Birth City: Independence, Missouri, United States
Cancer
Degree : 22º40'29.67"
Sun Sign*
Aquarius
Degree : 24º53'26.29"
Moon Sign
Purva Bhadrapada
Pada : 2
Nakshatra
Taurus
Degree : 21º33'17.98"
Ascendant
Updated at Feb 21, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
GR
July 16, 1911
2:18 a.m.
Independence, Missouri, United States
Celebrity
Cancer
Degree : 22º40'29.67"
Sun Sign*
Aquarius
Degree : 24º53'26.29"
Moon Sign
Purva Bhadrapada
Pada : 2
Nakshatra
Taurus
Degree : 21º33'17.98"
Ascendant
Updated at Feb 21, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
Welcome to Ginger Rogers's Kundali Profile page! This page is a hub for exploring the astrological reports, calculations, and different versions of Ginger Rogers's Kundali (if available). You can also discover associated life events, attributes, and Kundalis of other persons associated with Ginger Rogers.

Available Reports

Astrological reports assoicated with this Kundali

Kundali Details

Birth details and configuration for astrological analysis

Birth Details

Gender Female
Weekday Sunday
Date July 16, 1911
Time 2:18 a.m.
Daylight Saving No
City Independence, Missouri, United States
Geo-location 39ºN5'28.03",
Timezone America/Chicago

Residence Details

City Independence, Missouri, United States
Timezone America/Chicago

Time/Correction

Time (America/Chicago) Jul. 16, 1911, 02:18:00 AM
Time (UTC) Jul. 16, 1911, 08:18:00 AM
Time (LMT) Jul. 16, 1911, 02:00:20 AM
Time (Julian) 2419233.84583333
LMT Correction -6.2944 Hrs
Ayanmsha True Chitra - 22º36'24.81"

Birth Place

Birth location on map - Lat: 39ºN5'28.03" Lon: 94ºS24'55.84"

Life Attributes

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

Personal

Death | Long life more than 80 yrs

Passions

Criminal Victim | Missing person

Vocation

Entertainment | Actor/ Actress Entertainment | Child performer Entertainment | Live Stage Entertainment | Night Club/ Vaudeville Entertain/Music | Dancer/ Teacher Writers | Autobiographer

Lifestyle

Work | Work in team/ Tandem

Notable

Awards | Oscar Book Collection | Profiles Of Women

Traits

Personality | Gracious/ sociable

Family

Relationship | Number of Marriages Parenting | Kids none

Life Story

Story of person and major life events assoicated with this Kundali

American dancer and actress, a glamour queen swathed in chic with a firm gaze, strong stride and down-home vowels. Rogers glided across the silver screen with her famous partner dancer, Fred Astaire in ten films. Their most notable film was "Top Hat," a 1935 musical. The dancer prided herself on never taking a formal dance lesson. Rogers struggled to establish her own solo acting abilities and triumphed with her Oscar award for Best Actress in the 1940 drama, "Kitty Foyle." She wrote her autobiography, "Ginger: My Story" in 1991 and accepted a Kennedy Center Honor in December 1992. Her career in the entertainment industry began in vaudeville, reaching to television spanning over 65 years. Virginia Katherine McMath was born in Independence, Missouri where her mother, Lela Rogers was a news reporter. The family moved to Fort Worth, Texas. She made her debut on stage at Central High School in Fort Worth in 1924 in a play written by her mother. As a teenager, she won a Charleston dance contest. She went on to the vaudeville circuit with the name of Ginger Rogers, the surname from her stepfather. Her mother gave up her career as a reporter and scriptwriter to manage her daughter's budding show business career. In 1928, she worked in the act, "Ginger and Pepper" with her first husband Jack Culpepper. In 1929, at 19, she appeared on the Broadway stage in "Top Seed." She was working at Paramount's Long Island studios at the same time. She appeared in a small role in "Young Man of Manhattan." Film audiences were delighted with her one gag line - "Cigarette me, big boy." The line became a part of the American idiom of the day. She won acclaim in George Gershwin's "Girl Crazy" on Broadway and quickly sent to Hollywood in late 1930-31. Rogers worked in song and dance spectaculars, dramas and comedies. She first danced with Fred Astaire in "Girl Crazy" in 1930. At the time, critics felt Rogers self-taught dance style could not equal Astaire's finesse. She was able to silence the opposition and proved she had the necessary dance techniques and expertise to team with Astaire. On screen, the couple had chemistry, off-screen Astaire and Rogers were strictly working partners with different interests. Publicity studio men started rumors about the couple having disagreements off-screen in order to keep their names in the gossip papers. Nothing was further than the truth. Rogers and Astaire always liked and admired each other's talents and respected their work. By 1939, their careers as a dance couple together ran its course and they sought solo projects in the industry. She performed on Broadway shows into her late 70s. Rogers married her second husband, actor Lew Ayres, in 1934. She married her third husband, Marine Private Jack Briggs, nine years her junior, in 1943. In 1953, she married her fourth husband, Parisian attorney-actor and 15 years her junior, Jacques Bergerac. She married her fifth husband actor-director-producer William Marshall in 1961. They formed their own movie production company in Jamaica in 1961. Rogers never had children and never suffered regrets for that decision. A staunch Republican, Rogers fought hard against President Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal policies. She was a devout Christian Scientist who boasted that she never drank or smoked. However she was frequently stopped and fined by Los Angeles police for running red lights and speeding violations. She enjoyed changing her hair color frequently and preferred modern furniture and eye-catching art. Rogers remained slim by avoiding lunch and eating modestly. By 1943, she was one of the ten highest-paid Americans. She invested her six-figure salary in blue chip stocks and land including a 1,100-acre ranch on Oregon's Rogue River. Buying the ranch in 1939, she fished, golfed, played tennis, cooked, painted and managed her investments from her property. She was an active and proud member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Rogers had an extremely close and loving relationship with her mother, Lela Rogers. She grew angry when the media tried to label her mother a stage mom. The two remained very close and she phoned her mother daily to tell her "I love you." She called her mom the most influential person in her life. She felt her mother embodied dignity and good "horse sense." Asked if aging bothered her Rogers replied, "Age can't take your individuality away from you, and that's what counts." She died at her home in Rancho Mirage, CA on 4/25/1995 at 83 from natural causes. She won a Charleston contest at 14 and worked in clubs and vaudeville for two years, Broadway by the time she was 18 and then, Hollywood. She was cast in a small role with dancer Fred Astaire in "Flying Down to Rio" in 1933 that led to a magical screen partnership in ten more wonderful films together. By 1945 her sunny sophistication made her the highest paid performer in Hollywood. She made over 60 other movies to showcase her talent with drama or comedy. In 1940 she won an Oscar for, "Kitty Foyle." Rogers had five childless marriages. She died 4/25/1995, 7:00 AM, Rancho Mirage, CA. Link to Wikipedia biography

Life Events

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

Prize

April 1, 1940

Work : Prize April 1940 (Oscar for Kitty Foyle) .

2

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1991

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1991 (Autobiog)

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Secret Activity

Jan. 1, 1912

Social : Secret activity 1912 (Abducted by dad at age one)

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Unspecified

April 25, 1995

Death, Cause unspecified 25 April 1995 (Age 83) .

Calculations & Features

Calculation and analytics assoicated with this Kundali