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Planet in House
Planet in Sign
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birth charts with Kronos in AriesYou will find on these pages astrological charts of thousands of celebrities with Kronos in Aries. Just click on the celebrities of your choice to get their interactive natal chart, planetary dominants and excerpts of astrological portrait. in ![]()
Biography of Steven Geray (excerpt)
Steven Geray, born István Gyergyai on 10 November 1904 and died 26 December 1973, was a Hungarian-born American actor who appeared in over 100 films and numerous television shows. He featured in major Hollywood productions such as Alfred Hitchcock’s Spellbound (1945) and To Catch a Thief (1955), Joseph L.
Biography of Rafael Obregón Loría (excerpt)
Fernando Rafael Obregón Loría, born on 9 July 1911 in San José and died on 25 April 2000, was a Costa Rican historian and educator. Raised in a scholarly family, he grew up surrounded by books and learning. After completing his studies, he taught geography, history, mathematics, and cosmography in various institutions, including the Liceo de Costa Rica and the University of Costa Rica.
Biography of Rudolf Dittler (excerpt)
Rudolf Dittler (November 2, 1881 – January 21, 1959) was a German physiologist and university professor.He studied medicine in Freiburg, Munich, Berlin, and Leipzig, earning his doctorate in 1907 and his habilitation in 1909, becoming associate professor in 1915. During World War I, he served as chief physician and commander of a medical company, receiving both classes of the Iron Cross.
Biography of Kent Smith (actor) (excerpt)
Frank Kent Smith, born March 19, 1907 in New York City and died April 23, 1985 in Woodland Hills, California, was an American actor with a long career in stage, film, and television. A Harvard graduate, he began acting in 1929 and appeared on Broadway in major plays throughout the 1930s to 1950s.
Biography of Robert Paverick (excerpt)
Robert Paverick, born on November 19, 1912, in Borgerhout, Belgium, and died on May 25, 1994, was a Belgian footballer. He played mainly as a defender for Royal Antwerp FC during the 1930s and 1940s, becoming one of the team’s key figures.
Biography of Muriel Dowding (excerpt)
Muriel Dowding, Baroness Dowding (22 March 1908 – 20 November 1993), was an English humanitarian and animal rights activist. A vegetarian, spiritualist, and theosophist like her second husband Lord Dowding, she campaigned fiercely against vivisection and for animal welfare. She coined the term “cruelty-free” and became a pioneer of the movement.
Biography of Aníbal Milhais (excerpt)
Aníbal Augusto Milhais (July 9, 1895 – June 3, 1970), born and deceased in Valongo (Murça), is remembered as the most decorated Portuguese soldier of World War I. He became widely known by the nickname “Soldado Milhões” (Soldier Millions), a play on his name suggesting that he was “worth a million men” on the battlefield.
Biography of Frederick Loewe (excerpt)
Frederick Loewe, born Friedrich "Fritz" Löwe on June 10, 1901, in Berlin and died on February 14, 1988, in Palm Springs, was an American composer of German origin. With lyricist Alan Jay Lerner, he formed one of Broadway’s most celebrated partnerships, creating Brigadoon, Paint Your Wagon, My Fair Lady, Camelot, and the film musical Gigi, which won nine Academy Awards.
Biography of Gerard Walschap (excerpt)
Jacob Lodewijk Gerard, Baron Walschap (born 9 July 1898 in Londerzeel-St. Jozef – died 25 October 1989 in Antwerp) was a Belgian writer. Initially educated in Catholic schools, he left priesthood training and became a journalist. He married in 1925 and had five children, including Hugo, who became an ambassador for the King of Belgium.
Biography of Pablo Abril de Vivero (excerpt)
Pablo Enrique Germán Abril de Vivero (born October 28, 1894, in Lima – died April 11, 1987, in Monte Carlo) was a Peruvian poet, writer, and diplomat. A passionate promoter of literature and the arts, he is best remembered for his close friendship with fellow Peruvian poet César Vallejo, with whom he maintained an enduring correspondence during their years in Europe.
Biography of Adriano Gozzini (excerpt)
Adriano Gozzini, born on April 13, 1917, in Florence and deceased on September 24, 1994, in Pisa, was an Italian physicist renowned for his work in experimental physics. He graduated in 1940 from the University of Pisa, training at the Scuola Normale Superiore under Luigi Puccianti, and later established Pisa’s first microwave spectroscopy laboratory.
Biography of Léon Jongen (excerpt)
Léon Jongen (born 2 March 1884 in Liège – died 18 November 1969 in Brussels) was a Belgian composer, pianist, conductor and teacher. He was the brother of composer Joseph Jongen and won the Belgian Prix de Rome in 1913. He succeeded his brother as organist of Saint-Jacques Church in Liège.
Biography of Lily Latté (excerpt)
Born on October 14, 1901, in Berlin into a Jewish family, Lily Latté was a German actress and the companion, later wife, of film director Fritz Lang.She began her film career with a small uncredited role in Liliom (1934). In 1931, she met Lang and became his secretary, assistant, and close confidante.
Biography of Leila Hyams (excerpt)
Leila Hyams (May 1, 1905 – December 4, 1977) was an American actress born into a show business family. The daughter of vaudeville comedians John Hyams and Leila McIntyre, she began performing on stage as a child before turning to modeling when theater roles proved scarce.
Biography of Boy Capel (excerpt)
Arthur Edward Capel CBE (20 December 1881 – 22 December 1919), known as Boy Capel, was an English polo player best remembered as Coco Chanel’s lover and patron. Born into a British family with roots in England, Ireland, and France, he became a wealthy shipping merchant and prominent figure of high society by 1909.
Biography of Russ Bender (excerpt)
Russ Bender (born January 1, 1910, died August 16, 1969) was an American actor. Before entering the film industry, he wrote detective stories for magazines, a career interrupted by his military service. When he returned to civilian life, the market for such stories had declined, prompting him to pursue acting.
Biography of Hans Paasche (excerpt)
Hans Paasche, born April 3, 1881, in Rostock and assassinated May 21, 1920, in Waldfrieden, was a German naval officer turned pacifist, social reformer, hunter, African explorer, and writer. The son of Reichstag vice president Hermann Paasche, he sought to challenge Prussian militarism and became a provocative, charismatic public figure.
Biography of Nicolás Guillén (excerpt)
Nicolás Cristóbal Guillén Batista, born July 10, 1902, in Camagüey and died July 16, 1989, in Havana, was a Cuban poet, journalist, and politician, widely regarded as Cuba’s national poet. His revolutionary ideals led to exile under Batista before returning in 1959.
Biography of Marcellus Schiffer (excerpt)
Marcellus Schiffer, the pen name of Otto Schiffer, was born in Berlin on June 20, 1892, and died on August 24, 1932. He was a German cabaret writer, graphic designer, painter, and librettist. The son of a Jewish timber merchant who died when he was five, he studied art with Emil Orlík before discovering his true vocation as a satirical writer, also producing poetry and illustrations.
Biography of Ugo Locatelli (excerpt)
Ugo Locatelli (born February 5, 1916 – died May 28, 1993) was an Italian international footballer who played as a midfielder or forward. Considered one of Italy’s greatest players, he won both a gold medal at the 1936 Summer Olympics and the 1938 FIFA World Cup, one of only four Italian players to achieve this feat.
Biography of Jo Mielziner (excerpt)
Joseph Mielziner (born March 19, 1901 – died March 15, 1976) was an American scenic and lighting designer, widely regarded as “the most successful set designer of Broadway’s Golden Era.” He created the scenery and lighting for more than 200 productions, pioneering the concept of “selective realism” and earning seven Tony Awards as well as an Academy Award for Picnic.
Biography of Léon Moussinac (excerpt)
Léon Moussinac, born January 19, 1890 in Migennes and died March 10, 1964 in Paris, was a French writer, journalist, historian, and film critic.The son of a stationmaster, he lost his father in 1907 and had to work while completing law studies.
Biography of André Corthis (excerpt)
André Corthis, born Andrée Magdeleine Husson (April 15, 1882 – August 8, 1952), was a 20th-century French writer. She spent part of her youth in Spain, which would become a recurring theme in her work. At age twelve, she began writing poetry.
Biography of Rose McConnell Long (excerpt)
Rose McConnell Long (born April 8, 1892, in Greensburg, Indiana – died May 27, 1970, in Boulder, Colorado) was an American politician who served as a U.S.senator from Louisiana, succeeding her late husband, Huey Long.She was the third woman ever to serve in the U.S.
Biography of W. Clement Stone (excerpt)
William Clement Stone, born on May 4, 1902, in Chicago and died on September 3, 2002, in Evanston, was an American businessman, philanthropist, and New Thought self-help author.Coming from humble beginnings, he lost his father at an early age and began working as a child.
Biography of John Collier (fiction writer) (excerpt)
John Henry Noyes Collier (born 3 May 1901 in London, died 6 April 1980) was a British writer and screenwriter, best known for his short stories, many published in The New Yorker from the 1930s to the 1950s.His acclaimed collection Fancies and Goodnights won the International Fantasy Award and remains in print.
Biography of Teresa Hooley (excerpt)
Teresa Mary Hooley (January 19, 1888 – April 4, 1973) was an English poet also known as Mrs. F. H. Butler. Born in Risley, Derbyshire, she grew up at Risley Lodge in a wealthy lace-manufacturing family. Before World War I, she gained recognition publishing poems in the Daily Mirror alongside Edith Sitwell, who did not admire her work.
Biography of Leo Frobenius (excerpt)
Leo Viktor Frobenius, born June 29, 1873, in Berlin and deceased August 9, 1938, in Biganzolo, Italy, was a German ethnologist and archaeologist specializing in African studies. A self-taught scholar, he was among the first Europeans to approach African civilizations with cultural respect and intellectual curiosity.
Biography of Dora Jacobsohn (excerpt)
Dora Elisabeth Jacobsohn (1908–1983) was a German-Swedish physiologist and endocrinologist, regarded as an early pioneer of neuroendocrinology.She is best known for her collaboration with Geoffrey Harris proving that the hypothalamus regulates the anterior pituitary through the hypophyseal portal system. Born in Berlin, Jacobsohn earned her M.D.
Biography of Desmond Morton (civil servant) (excerpt)
Major Sir Desmond Morton KCB CMG MC (13 November 1891 – 31 July 1971) was a British army officer and government official. He played a key role before World War II by organizing opposition to appeasement of Nazi Germany. He supplied Winston Churchill—then out of office—with intelligence on German rearmament, bolstering Churchill’s public warnings.
Biography of Gianfranco Giachetti (excerpt)
Gianfranco Giachetti, born in Florence on September 17, 1888, and deceased in Rome on November 29, 1936, was an Italian stage and film actor. Raised artistically in Venice, he began his career in amateur companies before joining Ferruccio Benini’s troupe in 1914 and later Giovan Battista Bosio’s company after World War I, where he excelled in Goldoni’s plays.
Biography of Franco Alfano (excerpt)
Franco Alfano, born March 8, 1875 in Posillipo, Naples, and died October 27, 1954 in San Remo, was an Italian composer and pianist.He is best remembered today for his operas Cyrano de Bergerac (1936) and Risurrezione (1904), and for completing Puccini’s unfinished opera Turandot in 1926.
Biography of Günther Weisenborn (excerpt)
German writer and anti-Nazi resistance fighter, Günther Weisenborn (10 July 1902 – 26 March 1969) was known for his politically engaged literary work and opposition to the Nazi regime. He collaborated with Bertolt Brecht, Slatan Dudow, and Hanns Eisler on the play The Mother, adapted from Gorky.
Biography of Hans Habe (excerpt)
Hans Habe, born János Békessy on February 12, 1911 in Budapest and died September 29, 1977, was a Hungarian-American writer and newspaper editor. He became a U.S. citizen in 1941 and published under several pseudonyms, including Antonio Corte and Alexander Holmes.
Biography of Dirk Coster (excerpt)
Dirk Coster (5 October 1889 – 12 February 1950) was a Dutch physicist and professor of physics and meteorology at the University of Groningen.He is best known as the co-discoverer of hafnium (element 72) in 1923, alongside George de Hevesy, through X-ray spectroscopic analysis of zirconium ore.
Biography of Denis Johnston (Irish writer) (excerpt)
William Denis Johnston (18 June 1901 – 8 August 1984) was an Irish writer born in Dublin, known mainly as a playwright, but also for essays, memoirs, literary criticism and an eccentric book on cosmology. His time of birth comes from the book "Denis Johnston: A Life by Bernard Adams" (Dublin: Lilliput, 2002).
Biography of Richard Church (poet) (excerpt)
Richard Thomas Church, born March 26, 1893, in Battersea and died March 4, 1972, in Cranbrook, was an English writer, poet, novelist, and critic. The son of a postal worker and a schoolteacher, he published his first poetry collection The Flood of Life in 1917 but worked in the Civil Service until 1933, when he turned to full-time writing.
Biography of Frans de Nerée tot Babberich (excerpt)
Frans Joseph Marie de Nerée tot Babberich, born on 13 February 1882 in Zevenaar and died on 5 June 1929 in The Hague, was a Dutch painter, draftsman, and sculptor. He sometimes used the pseudonym Larec Eeren, an anagram of his brother Carel's name.
Biography of Pedro Espinel Torres (excerpt)
Pedro Espinel Torres, born in Lima on August 1, 1908, and who died there on November 8, 1981, was a Peruvian composer of música criolla, known as “El Rey de las Polcas.” Coming from a humble background, he left school after the first grade to help support his family, working as a messenger, apprentice typographer, and lumber depot clerk.
Biography of Egil Hagen (excerpt)
Egil Hagen (August 29, 1912 – July 29, 2004) was a Norwegian composer, cabaret artist, and lyricist. He first appeared as a member of 6 Syngende Studenter (“Six Singing Students”), performing to support the Winter War relief effort. During World War II, he worked as an actor and revue writer for Chat Noir and Edderkoppen, and in the winter of 1944–1945 he presented his own cabaret at the Carl Johan Teatret.
Biography of Marjorie Weaver (excerpt)
Marjorie Weaver, born on March 2, 1913, in Crossville, Tennessee, and died on October 1, 1994, was an American film actress active from the 1930s through the early 1950s. The daughter of John Thomas Weaver and Ellen Martin, she studied at the University of Kentucky and Indiana University, where she won several beauty contests.
Biography of Giuseppe Migneco (excerpt)
Giuseppe Migneco (born February 9, 1903 (Wikipedia has 1908 in error), in Messina, and died February 28, 1997, in Milan) was a prominent Italian painter of the 20th century.After completing classical studies in his hometown, he moved to Milan in 1931 to study medicine, while beginning his artistic career.
Biography of Ernestina de Champourcín (excerpt)
Ernestina de Champourcín (born 10 July 1905 in Vitoria-Gasteiz, died 27 March 1999 in Madrid) was a Spanish poet linked to the Generation of ’27. Born into an aristocratic family, she received a refined education and developed a passion for poetry and languages early on.
Biography of José Storie (excerpt)
José Storie (born 2 April 1899 in Bruges – died 29 July 1961) was a Belgian painter best known for his portraits. Educated in Bruges, Brussels, and Paris, he received a thorough artistic training, though it was disrupted by World War I.
Biography of Gerald Finzi (excerpt)
Gerald Raphael Finzi, born July 14, 1901 in London and died September 27, 1956 in Oxford, was an English composer whose music is deeply infused with poetic sensibility. Best known for his choral works, he also wrote orchestral and concert pieces, including Dies natalis and concertos for cello and clarinet.
Biography of Paul Alduy (excerpt)
Paul Alduy, born October 4, 1914, in Lima, Peru, and died January 23, 2006, in Perpignan, was a French senior civil servant and politician.A law graduate from the universities of Montpellier and Paris and of the École Libre des Sciences Politiques, he began his diplomatic career in Ankara in 1942 before joining Free France.
Biography of Karl Theodor Bluth (excerpt)
Karl Theodor Bluth (May 5, 1892 – March 5, 1964) was a German psychiatrist and writer.He first studied literature and philosophy in Bonn, Berlin, and Jena, completing his studies in 1914, before enrolling in medicine at the University of Rostock in 1918.
Biography of Edwin Elmore (excerpt)
Edwin Elmore (born January 18, 1890, in Lima – died November 2, 1925, in the same city) was a Peruvian writer and academic.Born into a prominent family, he was the son of Teodoro Elmore Fernández de Córdoba, a former minister and engineer, and Irene Letts Basadre.
Biography of Louis Rimbault (excerpt)
Louis Rimbault (April 9, 1877 – November 10, 1949) was a French individualist anarchist, revolutionary syndicalist, and advocate of naturism and veganism. Born in Tours, he promoted a lifestyle of simplicity, non-violence, and harmony with nature through the libertarian free communities movement.
Biography of Kate Barnard (excerpt)
Catherine Ann “Kate” Barnard (May 23, 1875 – February 23, 1930) was the first woman elected to a state office in Oklahoma and the eleventh woman in the United States to hold statewide public office. Elected in 1907, she served as Oklahoma’s first Commissioner of Charities and Corrections for two four-year terms, the only position the 1907 state constitution allowed women to hold. |
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