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Sophisticated, highly accomplished African-American performer with a husky, purring voice, once dubbed "the most exciting woman alive" by no less than Orson Welles. Kitt began her career as a Katherine Dunham dancer and as a chanteuse and actor in Europe before returning to the US as a cabaret singer with an international, indeed multilingual, repertoire. A self-styled "sex kitten", Kitt created a world-weary feline femme fatale image onstage, performing songs in over a dozen languages....

Filmography

Instant Karma - ( / / Announced / )
And Then Came Love - ( Mona / 2007 / Released / )
Preaching to the Choir - ( Sister Nettie / 2006 / Released / )
Anything But Love - ( Herself / 2003 / Released / )
Elf - ( Song Performer / 2003 / Released / )
Holes - ( Madame Zeroni / 2003 / Released / )
Hamlet - ( Special Thanks / 2000 / Released / )
The Emperor's New Groove - ( of Yzma / 2000 / Released / )
I Woke Up Early the Day I Died - ( Cult Leader / 1999 / Released / )
Ill Gotten Gains - ( of / 1998 / Released / )
The Jungle Book: Mowgli's Story - ( Voice of Bagheera / 1998 / Released / )
Harriet the Spy - ( Agatha K Plummer / 1996 / Released / )
Unzipped - ( Herself / 1995 / Released / )
Fatal Instinct - ( First Trial Judge / 1993 / Released / )
Boomerang - ( Lady Eloise / 1992 / Released / )
Was Sie Nie Uber Frauen Wissen Wollten - ( Song Performer / 1992 / Released / )
Ernest Scared Stupid - ( Old Lady Hackmore / 1991 / Released / )
Living Doll - ( / 1990 / Released / )
Dragonard - ( Naomi / 1989 / Released / )
Driving Miss Daisy - ( Song Performer / 1989 / Released / Concorde Filmverleih GMBH )
Erik the Viking - ( Freya / 1989 / Released / Hoyts Distribution )
Serpent Warriors - ( Snake Princess / 1986 / Released / Eastern Media Entertainment Inc )
The Pink Chiquitas - ( of Meteorite Betty / 1986 / Released / )
All By Myself - ( / 1981 / Released / )
Friday Foster - ( Madame Rena / 1975 / Released / AIP )
Synanon - ( Betty Coleman / 1965 / Released / Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group )
Anna Lucasta - ( Anna Lucasta / 1959 / Released / United Artists Pictures Inc. )
St. Louis Blues - ( Gogo Germaine / 1958 / Released / )
The Mark of the Hawk - ( Renee / 1958 / Released / Universal-International )
The Mark of the Hawk - ( Song Performer / 1958 / Released / Universal-International )
TV Credits
American Dad ( 2005 / Released ): Voice
TV Land Awards: A Celebration of Classic TV ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
Santa, Baby! ( 2001 / Released ): Voice
The Feast of All Saints ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Welcome to New York ( 2000 / Released ): Actor
Ageless Heroes ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
Nat King Cole: Loved in Return ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
The Famous Jett Jackson ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
Oz ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
The 27th Annual NAACP Image Awards ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
The RuPaul Show ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
The Magic School Bus ( 1994 / Released ): Voice
Matrix ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
A Broadway Christmas ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
The Unforgettable Nat "King" Cole ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
To Kill a Cop ( 1978 / Released ): Actor
Lieutenant Schuster's Wife ( 1972 / Released ): Actor
Batman ( 1966 / Released ): Actor
Jack's Place ( Released ): Actor
Living Single ( Released ): Actor
New York Undercover ( Released ): Actor
Reading Rainbow ( Released ): Narrator
The Nanny ( Released ): Actor
Full Biography (Back to top)

Sophisticated, highly accomplished African-American performer with a husky, purring voice, once dubbed "the most exciting woman alive" by no less than Orson Welles. Kitt began her career as a Katherine Dunham dancer and as a chanteuse and actor in Europe before returning to the US as a cabaret singer with an international, indeed multilingual, repertoire. A self-styled "sex kitten", Kitt created a world-weary feline femme fatale image onstage, performing songs in over a dozen languages. She made her mark in film in the 1950s, beginning with her dazzling quartet of songs in the otherwise dreary "New Faces of 1952"/"New Faces" (1954), a screen record of the popular Broadway revue.

Although Kitt starred in the musical biography of W C Handy, "St. Louis Blues", in the title role in "Anna Lucasta" (both 1958), and was the subject of a 1981 documentary "All By Myself", her career has been uneven. Kitt for one has remarked on an unofficial "blacklisting" against her after she publicly stated that she was against the Vietnam War. For many, Kitt is best remembered for her exciting turn as the Catwoman in the deliberately campy 60s TV series, "Batman". She also garnered praise, though, for her return to Broadway after over two decades in "Timbuktu", a 1978 all-black revamp of "Kismet".

Kitt has for years kept busiest in cabaret, nightclub and concert hall performances, where her charismatic presence, self-mocking humor and still stunning vocal prowess have enchanted her legion of fans with such trademark songs as "C'est si Bon", "I Want to Be Evil", "Monotonous" and "Santa Baby". The late 80s, though, saw Kitt beginning to act more regularly in features, most typically in exotic or outlandish turns in films including "The Serpent Warriors" (1986), "Ernest Scared Stupid" (1991) and the Eddie Murphy vehicle, "Boomerang" (1992). She also made a welcome, if too brief, return to Broadway to play a Tony-nominated featured role in "The Wild Party" (2000), a downbeat musical drama based on Joseph Moncure March's acid portrait of 1920s nightlife culture. Reviews of the show were mixed, but critics were invariably transfixed and impressed with the still-striking diva's potent presence.


Profession(s):
singer, Actor, dancer
Sometimes Credited As:
Eartha Mae Keith-Fields
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Family
daughter:Kitt Shapiro (worked as Kitt's business manager; as of 1990 lived in Greenburgh, Westchester, New York)
father:William Keith-Fields (Caucasian; Kitt did not know him)
grandson:Jason Marshall Shapiro (father, Charles Shapiro; mother, Kitt Shapiro)
husband:William McDonald (married in June 1960; divorced; father of Kitt Shapiro)
mother:Mamie Reily (half-Cherokee, half-black; gave Kitt up to live with foster parents)
Companion(s)
Arthur Loew Jr , Companion , ```..reportedly wanted to marry Kitt but his wealthy family opposed the union
Charles Revson , Companion


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Education
P S 136 New York, New York
The School of Performing Arts New York, New York
Milestones (Back to top)
2000 Returned to Broadway as co-star of the musical "The Wild Party"; received Tony nomination
2000 Provided the voice for the villainess Yzma in the Disney animated comedy "The Emperor's New Groove"
1995 Appeared in the Isaac Mizrahi documentary "Unzipped"
1994 Released first album in several decades, "Back in Business"
1994 Performed one-person show "Yes" at the Edinburgh Festival; delivered Molly Bloom's erotic monologue from James Joyce's "Ulysses"
1993 Acted in the USA Network's action fantasy series, "Matrix"
1986 Began acting more regularly in features with her role in "The Serpent Warriors"
1985 Toured in the musical, "Blues in the Night", in the role of "Woman of the World"
1981 Was the subject of the documentary film, "All by Myself"
1978 Returned to Broadway after two decades in "Timbuktu", a revised, all-black version of the musical, "Kismet"
1978 First TV miniseries, NBC's "To Kill a Cop"
1975 Returned again to features to play a role in "Friday Foster"
1972 TV-movie debut, "Lieutenant Schuster's Wife"
1969 Starred on TV in the syndicated one-woman concert, "The Eartha Kitt Show"
1968 Played role of Catwoman in TV's "Batman" series
1965 Returned to features to play a role in "Synanon"
1958 First top-billed acting role in a feature, "Anna Lucasta"
1957 Film acting debut, "Mark of the Hawk"; also sang the song, "This Man Is Mine"
1955 Earliest TV appearances include a guest spot on the NBC variety special, "Show Biz"
1954 Made film debut performing songs in plotless musical comedy revue, "New Faces of 1952"
1952 Gained notice in the Broadway revue, "New Faces of 1952"
1951 Appeared as Helen of Troy opposite Orson Welles in "Orson Welles' Faust" in France, Germany and Belgium
1946 - 1947 Toured Europe in "Bal Negre" with the Katherine Dunham Troupe
1945 Broadway debut in "Blue Holiday" as member of Katherine Dunham Troupe
Grew up in rural South
Moved to Spanish Harlem to live with an aunt in the 1940s
Joined the Katherine Dunham Dance Troupe
Began career in Europe as dancer-singer-actress before returning to NYC and Hollywood in the 1950s
In response to a direct question at a White House luncheon hosted by Lady Bird Johnson, answered that she opposed the war in Vietnam
Appeared on the London stage as Carlotta Campion in the Stephen Sondheim-James Goldman musical "Follies"; sang the show-stopper "I'm Still Here"
Began annual concert appearances in New York City's Cafe Carlyle in the 1990s
Toured in a stage production of "Cinderella"


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