LH
Lena Horne
Celebrity
Birth Date: June 30, 1917
Birth Time: 11:45 p.m.
Birth City: Flatlands, New York, United States
Cancer
Degree : 8º45'44.0"
Sun Sign*
Libra
Degree : 27º28'47.13"
Moon Sign
Vishakha
Pada : 3
Nakshatra
Pisces
Degree : 17º39'21.18"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 25, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
LH
June 30, 1917
11:45 p.m.
Flatlands, New York, United States
Celebrity
Cancer
Degree : 8º45'44.0"
Sun Sign*
Libra
Degree : 27º28'47.13"
Moon Sign
Vishakha
Pada : 3
Nakshatra
Pisces
Degree : 17º39'21.18"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 25, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
Welcome to Lena Horne's Kundali Profile page! This page is a hub for exploring the astrological reports, calculations, and different versions of Lena Horne's Kundali (if available). You can also discover associated life events, attributes, and Kundalis of other persons associated with Lena Horne.

Available Reports

Astrological reports assoicated with this Kundali

Kundali Details

Birth details and configuration for astrological analysis

Birth Details

Gender Female
Weekday Saturday
Date June 30, 1917
Time 11:45 p.m.
Daylight Saving No
City Flatlands, New York, United States
Geo-location 40ºN37'16.39",
Timezone America/New_York

Residence Details

City Flatlands, New York, United States
Timezone America/New_York

Time/Correction

Time (America/New_York) Jun. 30, 1917, 11:45:00 PM
Time (UTC) Jul. 01, 1917, 04:45:00 AM
Time (LMT) Jun. 30, 1917, 11:49:16 PM
Time (Julian) 2421410.69791667
LMT Correction -4.9289 Hrs
Ayanmsha True Chitra - 22º41'29.11"

Birth Place

Birth location on map - Lat: 40ºN37'16.39" Lon: 73ºS56'5.5"

Life Attributes

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

Diagnoses

Body Part Problems | Heart Body Part Problems | Surgery

Personal

Death | Long life more than 80 yrs

Vocation

Entertainment | Actor/ Actress Entertainment | Child performer Entertainment | TV series/ Soap star Entertain/Music | Dancer/ Teacher Entertain/Music | Vocalist/ Pop, Rock, etc. Politics | Activist/ social

Lifestyle

Work | Travel for work Work | Work alone/ Singular role Financial | Rags to riches Home | Many moves

Notable

Awards | Tony Famous | Top 5% of Profession Book Collection | Profiles Of Women

Traits

Body | Appearance gorgeous Body | Race Mind | Education extensive

Family

Childhood | Abuse - Physical/ Verbal Childhood | Memories Bad Childhood | Parents divorced Relationship | Marriage more than 15 Yrs Relationship | Mate - Age difference more than 15 yrs Relationship | Mate - Interracial Relationship | Number of Marriages Relationship | Widowed Parenting | Kids 1-3 Parenting | Kids -Traumatic event

Life Story

Story of person and major life events assoicated with this Kundali

American singer and actress with depth and character, as well as classic beauty and talent. Her great-grandparents had been a slave and white owner; being light-skinned, she was one of the first blacks in film to win serious widespread respect and popularity. As a chorus girl at age 16, she sang with bands and did club dates, moving to Hollywood in 1941 and into films the following year. At that time, there were only two types of roles available: all-black movies, or strictly singing parts that were edited out when the film was shown in the South. Her first dramatic role in an integrated film was not until 1969 when she appeared in "Death of A Gunfighter," but by then, she was a top draw in glamorous Las Vegas shows. Horne also built up credits in TV guest shots as well as specials. Her mother, Edna, was an actress and her father a hotel operator. When Lena was three, they divorced. For years thereafter, as her parents focused on their own lives, the child was sent to various families and friends homes. One caregiver in Miami beat her, while a mentally unstable housekeeper in Atlanta cut switches from trees and twice-weekly would swat the naked, wet child after her bath. Horne occasionally returned to the only refuge she knew, her grandparents' home. It was her well-educated grandmother, an early civil rights activist, who became her primary influence. However it was her mother who projected her frustrated show business ambitions onto her daughter, taking her out of school to become a member of the chorus line at the Cotton Club in Harlem where her $25/week salary earned her the title of breadwinner in her family. Her mother's controlling influence dictated Lena's attempt to escape by "running away and getting married" at the age of 19 to Louis Jones, 28 years older, extremely controlling, and a friend of her dad's. A second husband later died of heart failure. Moving to Pittsburgh, Horne's first marriage lasted four years and gave her two kids, Gail and Teddy. Teddy stayed with his father, and Horne took Gail to New York City in 1940. In New York, Horne gained immediate acclaim at an integrated club, Café Society, recorded with bandleader Artie Shaw, and was exposed to politics and racist struggles with the help of actor-singer Paul Robeson, and learned singing styles from Billie Holiday and Teddy Wilson. Horne took her act to Los Angeles in the early '40s and was offered a contract by Louis B. Mayer. She established herself in two all-black 1943 musicals: "Stormy Weather", in which she sang the title song, and "Cabin in the Sky". She was profiled simultaneously in the magazines Time, Life and Newsweek and became a wartime pin-up for both black and white soldiers. When she married Lennie Hayton, an MGM white arranger and composer in December 1947, blacks and whites reacted with equal virulence, to her dismay. Horne was blacklisted and shut out of Hollywood in the early '50s because of her association with her left-leaning friend, Paul Robeson. Forced to perform abroad for seven years, she returned to American night clubs in the late 50's with a more mature sexy toughness that made her a Las Vegas sensation. Comedian Alan King, who opened the show for her, described Lena as "rebellious with sassiness." One of her first LP records with RCA Victor in the 1950's, "Lena Horne at the Waldorf-Astoria", became the largest-selling album by a female performer in RCA's history. She appeared as a frequent guest with television hosts Ed Sullivan, Steve Allen and Perry Como, and starred in musical and television specials with Judy Garland, Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra. Strongly affected by events of the 1960's civil rights movement, Horne was not immune to the segregation and bigotry of the day and participated actively in the marches, performing in rallies and pressing for federal action. In the early 1970's , Horne was devastated by the loss of Billy Strayhorn, Duke Ellington's arranger-composer and the man she considered her 'soul mate' from 1967, and then, all within an 18-month period, the deaths of her husband, her son Teddy from kidney disease, and her dad. She retreated from the public eye until Alan King encouraged her back onto Broadway's stage in 1981 with "Lena: The Lady and Her Music." The one-woman show, which won a Tony award, marked the arrival of another level of mature acclaim for Horne. One of the achievements about which Horne is the proudest is an honorary doctorate received from Howard University. Deemed a "rare, inspiring woman," at the age of 80, Horne was enjoying her New York apartment, five grandchildren, favorite lamb chops and red wine. Right around the same time, in the early '90s, Horne underwent pacemaker surgery. At first she was hesitant, "I hated the idea of something...not me being inside me." However, she came to the realization that the pacemaker would allow her to work and went ahead with the operation. She died in Manhattan on May 9, 2010. Link to Wikipedia biography

Life Events

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

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1943

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1943 (Musical, "Stormy Weather")

2

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1943

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1943 (Musical, "Cabin In the Sky")

3

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1969

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1969 (Film, "Death of A Gunfighter")

4

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1981

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1981 at 12:00 midnight in New York, NY (Musical, "Lena: The Lady and Her Music")

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Marriage

Dec. 1, 1947

Relationship : Marriage December 1947 (Second marriage, Lennie Hayton) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Residence Change

Dec. 1, 1947

Family : Change residence December 1947 (Moved to Hollywood) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Signficant Person Death

Jan. 1, 1967

Death of Significant person 1967 (Billy Strayhorn, "soul mate")

2

Partner Death

Jan. 1, 1971

Death of Mate 1971 (After long-term relationship)

3

Unspecified

May 1, 2010

Death, Cause unspecified 9 May 2010 (Age 92 in Manhattan) .

Calculations & Features

Calculation and analytics assoicated with this Kundali