Early life and career
change
Kitt was born on a cotton plantation in the town of
North, in South Carolina,
where she spent the first 7 years of her life. At the age of 8, she moved with her family to Harlem in New York City, eventually attending the High School of Performing Arts in Manhattan and, in 1943, joining the Katherine Dunham Dance Company. With the Dunham troupe, Kitt performed in Egypt, France, Greece, Turkey, New York, Las Vegas and Hollywood, and eventually secured her first movie acting role in the 1948 film,
Casbah
. For her many outstanding accomplishments, Kitt was honored in 1960 with a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame.
[1]
She provided the voice of the character Yzma in the 2000 animated film,
The Emperor's New Groove
,
and from 2002 to 2006, she was the voice of Queen Vexus in the
Nickelodeon
animated series,
My Life as a Teenage Robot
.
Kitt performed in the Broadway musical productions of
New Faces
and
Timbuktu,
and in numerous films, including
Synanon
,
The Mark of the Hawk
,
All by Myself
and
Accused
. She also made numerous television appearances on The Colgate Comedy Hour, Batman, The Ed Sullivan Show, I Spy, Police Woman, and several others programs.
In her later years, Kitt wrote and published four memoirs,
Thursday's Child
(1956),
Tart is Not a Sweet
,
Alone With Me: A New Autobiography
(1976), and
I’m Still Here; Confessions of a Sex Kitten
(1989). She died on Christmas Day, 2008, at her home in Weston, Connecticut.
- "Kitt, Eartha." World Book Advanced. World Book, 2014. Web. 12 May 2014.
- "Eartha Kitt." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2008. Biography in Context. Web. 12 May 2014.