There
can be few people in the western world who haven't heard of the game Six Degrees
of Kevin Bacon, or played it themselves. I haven't exactly calculated how
many steps I am removed from the actor, because for me the game ends when I say
my mother's maiden name is Bacon. The
game was invented one January night in Pennsylvania in 1994 by three college students,
Craig Fass, Brian Turtle and Mike Ginelli. Having nothing better to do, and having
just seen Bacon's 1984 movie Footloose on TV, they theorized he
must have worked with everyone in Hollywood and set about devising a game to prove
it. What the game eventually proved, after being translated to computer speak
in 1996 by Brett Tjaden and Glenn Wasson, computer science doctoral candidates
at the University of Virginia, was that Bacon could be connected to any other
Hollywood identity in the last 15 years by a factor of four moves or less. Talk
about well connected. Throw any name at the Oracle
of Kevin Bacon and it will come up with links from your choice to the
actor. In fact, it's said the only name that has stumped the oracle is Lassie,
and that may only be because the dog star wasn't in the data base. Lassie
is actually only three degrees away from Kevin Bacon—she worked with Elizabeth
Taylor, who is two. Obviously, all this is too intriguing for an astrologer to
pass up, especially one whose mother's maiden name is Bacon. What
is going on here? Bacon was born on July 8, 1958. One glance at his chart gives
a possible clue to this phenomenon. The North Node is the point I look at for
connections. While it is variously described as the path we must follow in this
life and the point at where good karma is earned, I have found it most active
in meetings. If it is activated by transit, progression or in a solar return,
the result is invariably a meeting with a person or a group that becomes significant
in the life. Depending on the planet and its aspects, the connections can be good
or not so good. Aspects of Venus, for example, invariably lead to friendships
or love affairs.
The
whole world is Bacon's friend, it seems, so where is his natal North
Node? In Libra, the sign ruled by Venus. Not quite six degrees away is
Jupiter. With the North Node at 27 Libra 49 degrees and Jupiter at 22 Libra
17, that's close enough to six degrees for me. Jupiter in aspect to the North
Node indicates many meetings, many connections, and in Libra, assures they will
be mostly pleasant. Let's fast forward to that snowy night in January, 1994 when
three college students were looking for something to pass the time. They happened
upon Kevin Bacon.
At that time, in Bacon's chart, his progressed Venus was applying a square to
his natal North and South Nodes. Progressed Jupiter, at 26 degrees Libra, was
coming up for full conjunction with that natal North Node. By transit, Saturn
was trining that same natal North Node, and Pluto, from the sign of Scorpio, was
exactly semisextile to the natal North Node in Libra. Even his solar return (for
1993—as the game was devised in January 1994, halfway between returns) had
Mercury squaring his North Node from Cancer, while the North Node in his solar
return chart was trining natal Uranus. And where was Jupiter? Six degrees of Libra.
Two years later, when Brett Tjaden, of the University of Virginia, and Glenn Wasson
designed the Oracle website, Bacon's progressed Jupiter had moved to within a
degree of his natal North Node. Now, as I write this, his progressed Jupiter is
inching into full conjunction with the North Node. This game is going to get bigger.
According
to Anne Oldenburg, who interviewed one of the game originators Brian Turtle for
USA Today, Turtle said, "I guess the stars were aligned just
perfectly that night." Indeed, they were.
| ABOUT
THE AUTHOR Gail
Kavanagh, a
resident of Sydney, Australia, has become a trusted astrologer for
a number of clients. She is also a freelance writer, and works for a local newspaper.
Gail has created Astrotales, an interpretation based on the myths of the
signs and planets and the storytelling tradition of her people. Send
an email to
the author. Visit
Gail Kavanagh's website.
| |