George M. Cohan — the "Yankee Doodle Dandy" who practically built the modern American musical — is described here as a Manifestor with a 3/5 Profile and Ego Aut
George M. Cohan's Human Design: Manifestor 3/5
George M. Cohan — the "Yankee Doodle Dandy" who practically built the modern American musical — is described here as a Manifestor with a 3/5 Profile and Ego Authority. Reading these energies through the lens of his public career, a clear pattern emerges: a self-starting showman who learned by doing, projected a magnetic "fixer" image, and followed his own desires with intense willpower. This is an interpretation based on what he was publicly known for, not a claim about his private life.
The Manifestor Energy
Manifestors make up only about 9% of the population. Their design is to initiate — to start things, spark new directions, and set things in motion. They have a closed, repelling aura, which can feel distancing to others, and they are built to be independent rather than to wait for invitations or consensus.
In Cohan's career, this energy is unmistakable. He didn't ask for permission to reinvent Broadway entertainment — he built Cohan & Harris, wrote his own material, produced his own shows, and essentially invented the integrated American musical comedy. He went from child vaudeville performer to Broadway's most powerful figure on his own terms, often clashing with theater owners, the Shuberts, and fellow performers. The closed, "do-not-disturb" aura of a Manifestor is consistent with his reputation for being imperious, ambitious, and not easily told what to do.
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Calculate your chartStrategy: To Inform
A Manifestor's strategy is to inform — to let key people in on what they are about to do before acting, rather than asking for permission. This is not consensus-building; it's a courtesy that smooths the way for the powerful things a Manifestor is here to launch.
The Cohan legend is full of this pattern. He announced his moves to the world, sometimes literally from the stage. His smash-hit style was itself a kind of informing — he told audiences exactly what he was offering ("Give My Regards to Broadway," "I'm a Yankee Doodle Dandy") and let them in on his vision. When he wanted to change a show, fire a star, or stage a patriotic revue in the middle of World War I, he didn't wait for approval.
Authority: Ego
Ego Authority (sometimes called Will) makes decisions through the heart — through what you genuinely want, and what brings fulfillment. It's about following desire, not logic or emotion.
Cohan lived where his willpower and his heart's desire pointed. He was famously stubborn about his work, his contracts, and his vision. He walked away from comfortable arrangements to keep writing and producing. The word "Ego" in the authority name is fitting for a man who built an entire theater image, a patriotic persona, and a body of work from raw personal drive.
Profile 3/5: The Martyr/Heretic
The 3/5 is one of the most recognizable profiles on stage. The 3 line learns through trial and error — life is a series of experiments, and mistakes are part of the curriculum. The 5 line is the Heretic: outwardly trustworthy and focused,


