June Miller

June Mansfield Miller
Miller circa 1933.
Born
Juliet Edith Smerth

(1902-01-07)January 7, 1902
DiedFebruary 1, 1979(1979-02-01) (aged 77)
Other namesJune Mansfield, June Smith, Juliet Edith Smerdt
Spouses
(m. 1924; div. 1934)
Stratford Corbett
(m. 1935; div. 1947)

June Miller (January 7 or 28, 1902 – February 1, 1979)[1] was the second wife of novelist Henry Miller. He wrote prolifically about her and their relationship in his books, usually using the pseudonyms Mona or Mara interchangeably. She also appears prominently in the early diaries of Anaïs Nin.

Early life

June Miller was born in Bukovina, Austria-Hungary (Miller would mention she was 'of Romanian origin' in Sexus) as Juliet Edith Smerdt (or Smerth) (later Juliette), the daughter of Wilhelm and Frances Budd Smerdt, a poor Jewish family. She emigrated with her parents and four siblings to the United States in 1907. At the age of 15, she dropped out of high school to become a dance instructress (a euphemism at the time for a dance partner) at Wilson's Dancing Academy in Times Square, and began going by the name June Mansfield, and occasionally, June Smith.[2][3] (Wilson's was renamed the Orpheum Dance Palace in 1931.) June is quoted as saying, "My formal education amounted to about three and a half years of high school. I was working on a scholarship to Hunter College."[3] In Sexus, Henry Miller writes that June claimed she graduated from Wellesley, but in Nexus, he writes that she never finished high school.

She would reside in New York City for much of her life, excepting a tour of Europe and stints in Paris and Arizona.

Life with Henry Miller

In 1923, while working as a taxi dancer at Wilson's, she met Henry Miller; she was 21 and he, 31. Miller left his first wife and child to marry June in Hoboken, New Jersey, on June 1, 1924.[4] Their relationship is the main subject of Miller's semi-autobiographical trilogy, The Rosy Crucifixion. June is also featured in his best-known works, Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn.

In October 1926, Jean Kronski, an artist and poet, moved in with them at June's urging. June, who was likely bisexual, cultivated a very close relationship with her, often preferring Jean's affections to Henry's. This living arrangement soon fell apart and Jean and June left for Paris together in April 1927. However, two months later the two women started to quarrel, and June returned to Henry in July.[5] The following year, June and Henry left for a tour of Europe, settling in Paris for several months before again returning to New York.[6] June's relationship with Jean is the central piece of Henry's autobiographical novels Crazy Cock (1930, unpublished until 12 years after Miller's death) and Nexus (1959), the third volume of The Rosy Crucifixion. Around 1930, Kronski committed suicide in an insane asylum in New York.[7]

In 1930, Henry moved to Paris unaccompanied. In 1931, while visiting Henry, June met writer Anaïs Nin. Nin quickly became obsessed with her and, like Henry, used her as an archetype in many of her writings. June and Nin became involved in a flirtatious relationship, although Nin denied it was sexual. However, June would figure prominently in her published and unpublished diaries, upon which the movie Henry & June was loosely based. In the film, she was portrayed by Uma Thurman. June was not pleased with the publication of Nin's expurgated diaries, which omitted Nin's affair with Miller and thus omitted the role Nin played in the breakup of the Millers' marriage.[8]

June and Henry divorced by proxy in Mexico City in 1934.[3][9]

Later life

After divorcing Miller, she married insurance salesman Stratford Corbett around 1935.[3] Corbett had been courting her when Miller left for Paris in 1930, and it upset Miller greatly when he found out that June and Corbett were together.[10] Stratford left her in 1947 for the actress Rita La Roy Corbett.[3] June lived in a series of cheap hotels around New York City, such as the Hotel Continental on 95th Street. She was in touch with Miller during this period through the post, and he sent her money through friends and bookstores such as the Gotham Book Mart.[11] The notebooks Miller kept on his 1940 trip across the United States that would become The Air-Conditioned Nightmare included a handful of stray references to June. One reads, "Sit here dreaming of June. Where now, little June? Are you happy?"[12]

During the 1950s, June was admitted to psychiatric wards where she received electric shock treatments, during which she broke several bones after falling off the operating table. She never fully recovered. In 1954, she began volunteering as a social worker. In 1957, she became an intern receptionist at the city welfare department, and was working for the department full-time by 1960. In 1961, she met Miller again; he later wrote that he was shocked at what he saw as 'her deterioration'. The two did not rekindle their relationship.[11][13] In the late 1960s, June moved to Arizona with one of her brothers. Although she expressed a desire to write an autobiography, she never wrote anything other than letters. However, she had enormous literary influence over the works of her ex-husband Miller and Anaïs Nin. She died in Arizona in 1979.

Books featuring June

Fiction

Nonfiction

  • Brassaï, Henry Miller: The Paris Years
  • Mary V. Dearborn, The Happiest Man Alive: A Biography of Henry Miller
  • Kenneth C. Dick, Henry Miller: Colossus of One
  • Robert Ferguson, Henry Miller: A Life
  • Arthur Hoyle, The Unknown Henry Miller: A Seeker in Big Sur
  • Anaïs Nin, The Diary of Anaïs Nin
  • Anaïs Nin, Henry and June, from A Journal of Love: the Unexpurgated Diary of Anaïs Nin, 1931–1932
  • Anaïs Nin, Incest: The Unexpurgated Diary of Anais Nin, 1931–1932
  • Stephen Starck, June Scattered In Fragments: A Biographical Sketch of Henry Miller's Second Wife
  • Frederick Turner, Renegade: Henry Miller and the Making of Tropic of Cancer

References

  1. ^ Mary V. Dearborn's 1991 biography, The Happiest Man Alive: A Biography of Henry Miller, p. 80, gives June Miller's birthday as January 7, 1902; Robert Ferguson's biography from the same year, Henry Miller: A Life, p. 78, gives her birthday as January 28, 1902.
  2. ^ Mary V. Dearborn, The Happiest Man Alive: A Biography of Henry Miller, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1991, pp. 79-80.
  3. ^ a b c d e Kenneth C. Dick, Henry Miller: Colossus of One, Alberts-Sittard, 1967, pp. 159-217.
  4. ^ Dearborn, The Happiest Man Alive, p. 87.
  5. ^ Dearborn, The Happiest Man Alive, pp. 102-17.
  6. ^ Robert Ferguson, Henry Miller: A Life, New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1991, pp. 156-58.
  7. ^ Dearborn, The Happiest Man Alive, p. 119.
  8. ^ Ferguson, Henry Miller: A Life, p. 355.
  9. ^ Dearborn, The Happiest Man Alive, p. 174.
  10. ^ Dearborn, The Happiest Man Alive, pp. 160-61.
  11. ^ a b Arthur Hoyle, The Unknown Henry Miller: A Seeker in Big Sur, New York: Arcade Publishing, 2014, pp. 137-38, 223-25, 266.
  12. ^ Ferguson, Henry Miller: A Life, p. 310.
  13. ^ Dearborn, The Happiest Man Alive, p. 280.