Eartha Kitt's Human Design Chart
6/3 Sacral GeneratorAmerican singer and actress who rose from grinding, abject poverty; an illegitimate child of a half-black, half-American Indian woman and a white father whose identity she never learned. She was called “yella gal” and shunned by her South Carolina neighbors. At one time, little Eartha Mae, her mom and half-sister lived in a forest, surviving on wild berries. Eventually her mom ran off, leaving her to neighbors who subjected her to merciless beatings. At eight, she was rescued by Aunt Mamie, who brought her to Harlem to live. It was there she got her first break, learned to dance with the all-black Katherine Dunham Company.
She escaped to Europe as a dancer, learning her craft and breaking hearts as a member of the Dance Troupe. After meeting her in Paris in 1951, Orson Welles dubbed her the most exciting woman alive. Her Broadway breakthrough came with “New Faces of 1952.” She had a couple hit records, “C’est Si Bon” and “Santa Baby” and a stint as Catwoman on the “Batman” TV series.
She was once banned in Boston after terrifying the Brahmans with her predatory sexuality. When she famously denounced the Vietnam War in front of Lady Bird Johnson, she was unwelcome in America for six years, 1968-1974.
Her up-and-down career was echoed with her love life. She married only once, briefly, to realtor Bill McDonald, the father of her one daughter, Kitt Shapiro. She had two long, intense relationships, cinema king Arthur Loew Jr. and cosmetic baron Charles Revson.
Kitt speaks six languages, has written three autobiographies, including “I’m Still Here,” 1990 and has been nominated for two Tony’s, an Emmy and two Grammy’s. A gutsy, sexy feminist who never was a shrinking violet, she stood up for causes long before they were considered chic, the environment, the homeless, civil right, AIDS, declaring when something is important, it is important to stand up for it.
After five decades, she still electrifies the stage with her one-of-a-kind persona in a vibrant and fresh cabaret act. She purrs, prowls and growls, coos and cracks up.
In 2006 she was diagnosed with colon cancer, and she died of the disease on 25 December 2008, aged 81, in Weston, Connecticut.
Link to Wikipedia biography
Discover More Famous People
Browse and analyze over 55,000 public figures and celebrities.
Ra Uru Hu
5/1 Manifestor
Martha Stewart
4/6 Manifestor
David Lynch
4/6 Generator
Barack Obama
6/2 Projector
Steve Jobs
6/3 Generator
Vladimir Putin
5/1 Manifestor
Kim Kardashian
3/5 Generator
Michael Jackson
1/3 Projector
Marilyn Monroe
6/2 Projector
Ariana Grande
2/4 Projector
Oprah Winfrey
2/4 Generator
Johnny Depp
2/4 ManifestorWhat is HumanDesign.ai and how does it work?
Curious what makes Eartha Kitt tick? HumanDesign.ai instantly maps their exact birth data into a fully interactive clickable bodygraph chart, letting you hover or tap every center, channel, and gate for plain-language explanations. Bella, the platform’s built-in AI guide, adds context in real time, translating complex mechanics into everyday insights so you can see how Eartha Kitt’s strengths, challenges, and life themes play out on-screen.
The same tools are waiting for you. Generate your own Human Design Chart in seconds, open a library of 2000+ suggested questions, and chat with Bella as often as you like to decode your design, daily transits, and even relationship dynamics.
Want to compare energies? Save unlimited charts for friends, family, or clients, then ask Bella to reveal compatibilities, composite patterns, or coaching tips, all in one conversation thread.
Start free with core features, or unlock our Personal and Pro plans for deeper dives: unlimited Q&A, celebrity chart search spanning 55,000+ public figures, white-label PDF reports, branded content generation, and a professional profile with built-in booking for practitioners. Whether you’re exploring your own potential or guiding others, HumanDesign.ai delivers an ever-expanding toolbox of AI-powered insights—no spreadsheets, no jargon, just clarity at your fingertips.
Ready to see yours? Signup for FREE today!