RB
Richard Burton
Celebrity
Birth Date: Nov. 10, 1925
Birth Time: 3 p.m.
Birth City: Tregaron, Wales, United Kingdom
Scorpio
Degree : 17º42'12.89"
Sun Sign*
Leo
Degree : 16º40'16.97"
Moon Sign
Purva Phalguni
Pada : 2
Nakshatra
Pisces
Degree : 7º58'51.85"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 25, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
RB
Nov. 10, 1925
3 p.m.
Tregaron, Wales, United Kingdom
Celebrity
Scorpio
Degree : 17º42'12.89"
Sun Sign*
Leo
Degree : 16º40'16.97"
Moon Sign
Purva Phalguni
Pada : 2
Nakshatra
Pisces
Degree : 7º58'51.85"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 25, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
Welcome to Richard Burton's Kundali Profile page! This page is a hub for exploring the astrological reports, calculations, and different versions of Richard Burton's Kundali (if available). You can also discover associated life events, attributes, and Kundalis of other persons associated with Richard Burton.

Available Reports

Astrological reports assoicated with this Kundali

Kundali Details

Birth details and configuration for astrological analysis

Birth Details

Gender Male
Weekday Tuesday
Date Nov. 10, 1925
Time 3 p.m.
Daylight Saving No
City Tregaron, Wales, United Kingdom
Geo-location 52ºN13'10.2",
Timezone Europe/London

Residence Details

City Tregaron, Wales, United Kingdom
Timezone Europe/London

Time/Correction

Time (Europe/London) Nov. 10, 1925, 03:00:00 PM
Time (UTC) Nov. 10, 1925, 03:00:00 PM
Time (LMT) Nov. 10, 1925, 02:44:16 PM
Time (Julian) 2424465.125
LMT Correction -0.2622 Hrs
Ayanmsha True Chitra - 22º48'5.6"

Birth Place

Birth location on map - Lat: 52ºN13'10.2" Lon: 3ºS55'58.62"

Life Attributes

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

Diagnoses

Major Diseases | Stroke Psychological | Abuse Alcohol

Personal

Death | Illness/ Disease Misc. | Changed name

Passions

Sexuality | Extremes in quantity

Vocation

Entertainment | Actor/ Actress Entertainment | Live Stage

Lifestyle

Financial | Rags to riches Home | Expatriate

Notable

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

Family

Childhood | Family large Childhood | Family traumatic event Childhood | Order of birth Relationship | Mate - Noted

Life Story

Story of person and major life events assoicated with this Kundali

Welsh actor, brilliant and famed first for Shakespeare, then for international films in a meteoric career, a blazing rise across the heavens before an early death of a stroke at 58. He was nominated for the Best Actor Oscar for his roles in a half dozen magnificent films. He was a wild Celtic charmer who spoke with the tongue of angels and revered intelligence and scholarship but surrendered all to eagerly to the lure of liquor, womanizing and excess. As a legendary film star he was noted as much for his roistering appetites as his acting brilliance, plus a global romance conducted in the privacy of the first page and TV newscasts. In all too brief a time, he was burnt-out, living quietly in Switzerland. He left such memorable performances as "Equus" on Broadway in 1976, for which he got a Tony, his "Hamlet" and "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf." The 12th of 13 kids of a poor Welsh mining family, whose mother died two years later, he started drinking at 15 and was fully an alcoholic by the '60s; he died with a liver three times a normal size. As a youth, he met his mentor, Philip Burton, whose name he took professionally. Philip, to whom he referred as his foster father, was an actor and professor of literature who taught Richard to speak, overcoming his incomprehensible Welsh accent. He primed the boy for his early debut, when he made a glorious entry on to the English stage. The play opened in Liverpool and later ran in London. At 18, Burton joined the Royal Air Force and was sent to Canada for training as an air navigator. He left the service as a sergeant in 1947. Back in London, he joined a production company that paid him $30 a week for a year. His first film was in 1949, "The Last Days of Dolwyn." He made his Broadway debut in Christopher Fry's "The Lady's Not for Burning." One of the extras in his first film was Sybil Williams, who became his first wife. He was casting about when, as he said later, "lightning struck." His agent informed that 20th Century Fox wanted to star him in "My Cousin Rachel." The financial draw seemed a fortune to the young couple. Sybil stayed in London while Richard found Hollywood with all its glitter and all its access. He began to drink heavily and fall into easy beds. He became a drinking buddy with Spencer Tracy and Humphrey Bogart. While on the party circuit a day in 1952, one of the gorgeous women whom he met was a 20-year-old named Elizabeth Taylor, sitting on the other side of a swimming pool and meeting his gaze. He made "The Robe" the following year and was nominated for an Oscar for these first two pictures as well as three others. While not filming, Burton played in the London legitimate theater. He and Sybil had two daughters, Kate and Jessica, who was born autistic. In 1960, 20th Century Fox assigned him to a film that was being made in Rome, "Cleopatra," starring Elizabeth Taylor. During the filming, the two stars, both married, met with an irresistible impact. They couldn't keep their hands off each other. The film became one of the most expensive failures in Hollywood history, but Liz-and-Dick provided hot copy for the media. They divorced their respective mates, Sybil Burton and Eddie Fisher, and married. Of Burton's five marriages, two were to Elizabeth Taylor, by whom he was utterly bewitched. They would ultimately pair in nearly a dozen films and one stage play, Noel Coward's "Private Lives," 1983. Their conspicuous consumption was notorious, of houses, yachts, diamonds; they spent millions on the good life. After eight years of marriage he wrote, "My God she's a beauty. I look at her when she's asleep at the first light of a gray dawn and wonder at her." They were both drinking, Burton was endlessly womanizing, and their fights sounded like raging tenement brawls. It ended with their divorce in 1974. A year later they married again in Africa, October 1975, both mesmerized by their marital and sexual volcanic vortex. They were the same people as before, and the ending was predictable. By December he had met a beautiful, very British model, Susan Hunt. They married on 8/21/1976, a marriage that lasted six years. His last wife was Sally Hay, a former secretary, who inherited his estate, but Elizabeth never left his mind and heart. During the peak days of his success, Burton was supporting some 42 friends and relatives. For all his fame and wealth, he was never far from inexplicable melancholy. He died of a cerebral hemorrhage on 8/05/1984, Geneva, Switzerland. Link to Wikipedia biography

Life Events

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

Marriage

Feb. 1, 1945

Relationship : Marriage 5 February 1945 (married Sybil Williams) .

2

Relationship Begin

Jan. 1, 1960

Relationship : Begin significant relationship 1960 (met Elizabeth Taylor)

3

Divorce

Dec. 1, 1963

Relationship : Divorce dates 5 December 1963 (divorced Sybil Williams) .

4

Marriage

March 15, 1964

Relationship : Marriage 15 March 1964 (first time to Elizabeth Taylor) .

5

Divorce

June 26, 1974

Relationship : Divorce dates 26 June 1974 (divorced Elizabeth Taylor) .

6

Marriage

Oct. 10, 1975

Relationship : Marriage 10 October 1975 (re-married Elizabeth Taylor) .

7

Divorce

Aug. 1, 1976

Relationship : Divorce dates 1 August 1976 (divorced Elizabeth Taylor for second time) .

8

Marriage

Aug. 21, 1976

Relationship : Marriage 21 August 1976 (married Susan Hunt) .

9

Divorce

Jan. 1, 1982

Relationship : Divorce dates 1982 (divorced Susan Hunt)

10

Marriage

July 1, 1983

Relationship : Marriage 3 July 1983 (married Sally Hay) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Disease

Aug. 1, 1984

Death by Disease 5 August 1984 (Age 58, of cerebral hemorrhage) .

Calculations & Features

Calculation and analytics assoicated with this Kundali