KM
Karl Malden
Celebrity
Birth Date: March 22, 1912
Birth Time: 5 p.m.
Birth City: Chicago, Illinois, United States
Aries
Degree : 1º57'51.95"
Sun Sign*
Aries
Degree : 28º29'31.67"
Moon Sign
Krittika
Pada : 1
Nakshatra
Leo
Degree : 27º30'32.15"
Ascendant
Updated at Feb 21, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
KM
March 22, 1912
5 p.m.
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Celebrity
Aries
Degree : 1º57'51.95"
Sun Sign*
Aries
Degree : 28º29'31.67"
Moon Sign
Krittika
Pada : 1
Nakshatra
Leo
Degree : 27º30'32.15"
Ascendant
Updated at Feb 21, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
Welcome to Karl Malden's Kundali Profile page! This page is a hub for exploring the astrological reports, calculations, and different versions of Karl Malden's Kundali (if available). You can also discover associated life events, attributes, and Kundalis of other persons associated with Karl Malden.

Available Reports

Astrological reports assoicated with this Kundali

Kundali Details

Birth details and configuration for astrological analysis

Birth Details

Gender Male
Weekday Friday
Date March 22, 1912
Time 5 p.m.
Daylight Saving No
City Chicago, Illinois, United States
Geo-location 41ºN51'0.11",
Timezone America/Chicago

Residence Details

City Chicago, Illinois, United States
Timezone America/Chicago

Time/Correction

Time (America/Chicago) Mar. 22, 1912, 05:00:00 PM
Time (UTC) Mar. 22, 1912, 11:00:00 PM
Time (LMT) Mar. 22, 1912, 05:09:24 PM
Time (Julian) 2419484.45833333
LMT Correction -5.8433 Hrs
Ayanmsha True Chitra - 22º37'18.5"

Birth Place

Birth location on map - Lat: 41ºN51'0.11" Lon: 87ºS39'0.18"

Life Attributes

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

Personal

Death | Long life more than 80 yrs

Vocation

Business | Top executive Business/Marketing | Advertising Entertainment | Actor/ Actress Entertainment | Live Stage Entertain/Business | Director Writers | Autobiographer

Lifestyle

Work | Loves job Financial | Rags to riches

Notable

Awards | Emmy Awards | Oscar

Traits

Body | Other body

Family

Relationship | Marriage more than 15 Yrs Parenting | Kids 1-3

Life Story

Story of person and major life events assoicated with this Kundali

American actor, commercial pitchman, writer, and president of the Motion Picture Academy. Malden made a film career playing the Everyman. The versatile actor played priests to gangsters, heroes to heavies, ordinary, decent men just trying to survive in the world. Struggling for work in the theater in the late '30s, Malden's career took off in the '40s with film roles directed by friend Elia Kazan. After playing in the original stage company of "A Streetcar Named Desire," Malden landed the role on film. He received the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for the role with his co-star Vivian Leigh in 1952. He wrote his autobiography with his screenwriter daughter, Carla, "When Do I Start" published by Simon and Schuster November 1997. As president of the Motion Picture Academy, he came under heat by the motion picture community for the awarding of Elia Kazan, a controversial figure in his role in the Hollywood black-list, a lifetime Academy award in the ceremony of 1999. Malden's father, Petar Sekulovich, emigrated to America stopping at Ellis Island on 4/18/1906. The Serbian immigrant wanted to live in San Francisco but ended up in the Serbian community of Chicago. Malden was born in Chicago but his father moved the family to Gary, Indiana when he was five-years-old. His father supported the family for 38 years driving the milk wagon in town. Raised speaking no English, Malden found school in Gary frustrating and difficult. He could not understand what English words meant nor how to spell words. Malden's love for the theater stemmed from his father's dedication to staging Serbian productions in Gary, Indiana. As a teen, Malden appeared as a pasha in many of his father's stage plays. In high school, he excelled at basketball, winning the championship game. He played the lead in his senior class play, Shaw's "Arms and the Man." He won a scholarship to Arkansas College in Batesville, Arkansas but turned the award down when he discovered that he would have to play basketball and football. He went back to Gary, Indiana and worked at a steel mill. Working beside the open hearth furnaces propelled Malden to re-evaluate his career choice. For Malden, acting could be the only possible escape from a hellish existence in a steel mill. Saving $300 dollars in three years, he arrived without references at the Goodman Theater in Chicago. The teachers allowed the young man to stay but he suffered incredible financial hardships, sleeping in the bus station and school basement and stealing sandwiches from other student lunch bags because he was so hungry. In 1936, he graduated from the theater school but could not afford the five-dollar diploma. He went back to Gary, Indiana and drove the milk wagon like his father. It seemed that his destiny was never to be an actor, when an acquaintance from the Goodman Theater called him in Gary and offered him a part in a play in New York City. Malden made his Broadway debut in "Golden Boy,"1937, under the direction of Elia Kazan and the famous Group Theater of New York. He received good notices for his role but Malden was not able to capitalize on his success. He moved back to Gary to earn money in the summer of 1937. In the fall of 1938, he returned to NYC but struggled to get theater work. He made endless rounds of casting offices between 1938-1940, acting in eight plays that fizzled on the stage. He considers this time period his most chaotic and confusing, almost giving up his acting career for the seduction of a regular, stable, 9-to-5 office position. His dry period at its most dispiriting only confirmed to himself how much he needed to be an actor. With his resolution fixed, in 1940, Malden went to Hollywood and made his film debut in "They Knew What They Wanted." He went into the Air Force during World War II. After the war, he went back to New York. Kazan cast Malden in "A Streetcar Named Desire" on Broadway in 1947. His career began to accelerate after his excellent reviews by theater critics. He returned to Hollywood to make the films, "Ruby Gentry," 1952, "On the Waterfront," 1954, "Baby Doll," 1956, "Pollyanna," 1960, "Birdman of Alcatraz," 1962, "Gypsy," 1962 and "Patton" in 1970. In 1957, he directed a film entitled "Time Limit." With a kindly, craggy face and a bulbous nose that he had broken twice in his teens, his small, bright blue eyes portray intelligence and sensitivity that is always appealing. Malden recognized his limitations as a leading man and settled for playing strong supporting players. He appeared in a dozen TV movies, earning an Emmy award in 1984 for his role in NBC's "Fatal Vision." He played Lt. Mike Stone opposite Michael Douglas in the '70s TV cop show "The Streets of San Francisco" which lasted five years. He appeared as the pitchman for the American Express Traveler's Checks warning viewers "Don't leave home without it." In 1990, Malden was elected President of the Motion Picture Academy. An excellent fund-raiser, he raised over $12 million for the Center of Motion Picture Study in Beverly Hills, CA. No one is more surprised than Malden on his ability to preside over the motion picture academy. He never in his wildest dreams thought that he would be the president of anything. The biggest corporate contributor to the Center of Motion Picture Academy is the American Express Corporation. Malden met his wife actress Mona Graham at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago. They married in December 1938. The couple was so poor their wedding dinner was spent at the Chock Full O'Nuts coffee shop where they had a total of 80 cents between them. The couple had two children. At 86, the actor says, " I'm a workaholic. I love every movie I've been in, even the bad ones, every TV series, every play, because I love to work. It's what keeps me going." Malden died at his Los Angeles home at age 97 on July 1, 2009. Link to Wikipedia biography

Life Events

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

New Job

Jan. 1, 1937

Work : New Job 1937 (Broadway debut)

2

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1947

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1947 (Broadway appearance in "Streetcar Named Desire")

3

Prize

Jan. 1, 1952

Work : Prize 1952 (Oscar for Best Supporting Actor)

4

New Career

Jan. 1, 1957

Work : New Career 1957 (Directed a film)

5

Prize

Jan. 1, 1984

Work : Prize 1984 (Emmy Award for "Fatal Vision")

6

New Career

Jan. 1, 1990

Work : New Career 1990 (Pres. of Motion Picture Academy)

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Marriage

Dec. 1, 1938

Relationship : Marriage December 1938 (Mona Graham) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Degree Completion

Jan. 1, 1936

Social : End a program of study 1936 (Graduated theater school)

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Unspecified

July 1, 2009

Death, Cause unspecified 1 July 2009 (Age 97 in Los Angeles) .

Calculations & Features

Calculation and analytics assoicated with this Kundali