This approachable blue-eyed blonde with a striking, open-faced beauty
had a very encouraging career going for her in 30s Hollywood but
extenuating circumstances hurt her chances in the long run. In less
than a decade and a half June Lang was out of pictures altogether
(after appearing in over 30) and therein was glimpsed here and there on
TV and commercials until her full retirement. Although June never lost
her stunning looks and vivacity, she never managed to return, although
she indeed contemplated it from time to time.
Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota as Winifred June Vlasek on May 5, 1917,
June was encouraged to perform at a young age. Dancing at school
functions and local amateur Elks Club events from age five, her family
moved to Hollywood when she was around seven. There the child joined up
with the "Meglin Kiddies" revues and performed with the outfit in
various vaudeville shows. Attending the Hollywood Professional School,
she matured quickly and began finding jobs in various chorus lines,
including one at the Orpheum Theatre. The thirteen-year-old was even
cast in the show "Temptations of 1930" after convincing the dance
director she was 18.
June made an inauspicious debut in pictures as an extra in
Young Sinners (1931) and was again
unbilled in
Barbara Stanwyck's
The Miracle Woman (1931) and
Janet Gaynor's
Daddy Long Legs (1931). Fox
Studios took an interest in her after the director of
She Wanted a Millionaire (1932),
John G. Blystone, saw bright promise in
June after she performed a brief swimming pool bit. Given her first
speaking role, a featured femme part, in
Chandu the Magician (1932)
starring
Edmund Lowe and a scene-stealing
Bela Lugosi, June's career began a steady
incline.
Billed as June Vlasek at first and seen prominently in such films as
The Man Who Dared (1933) and
I Loved You Wednesday (1933),
June received the second femme lead role in the plush yet whimsical,
operetta-styled
Music in the Air (1934)
top-lining
John Boles and
Gloria Swanson, who played a
temperamental Teutonic diva. Adapted from the 1932 Broadway show with a
Billy Wilder screenplay and songs composed
and written by
Jerome Kern and
Oscar Hammerstein II, second lead
ingénues June (now billed June Lang) and her partner
Douglass Montgomery actually
received more focus than the stars. June followed this with the
Hal Roach-produced Laurel and Hardy comedy
Bonnie Scotland (1935). She would
work again with Hardy in his solo movie effort
Zenobia (1939).
Fox did not renew June's contract in 1935 after production chief
Winifield Sheehan, who had taken a professional interest in June, left
the studio. Yet within a year she was back in the fold when the new
studio casting director spotted her dancing at The Trocadero Club. June
made one of her most impressive films at Fox in 1936, the war-themed
The Road to Glory (1936) with
the 19-year-old playing opposite the more-seasoned
Fredric March and
Warner Baxter. In addition to such regular
fare as
The Country Doctor (1936),
which showcased the newsworthy Dionne Quintuplets, and
Ali Baba Goes to Town (1937),
in which she played a beautiful princess, June is perhaps best
remembered for her co-starring roles in two
Shirley Temple hearttuggers:
Captain January (1936), in which
she played a schoolteacher, and
Wee Willie Winkie (1937), in
which she portrayed Shirley's widowed mother. As fate would have it,
the extremely photogenic June was relegated primarily to decorative
roles in "B" films for the most part, but she tried to make the most of
it until fate intervened and the beginning of the end began to show
itself.
Fox sent June to England in 1938 to film
So This Is London (1939) but
the threat of war there so terrified her that she abandoned the set and
returned home. Fox quickly ended her contract for making that choice.
Worse yet, a disastrous and ill-conceived 1939 marriage to handsome
Chicago mobster
Johnny Roselli tarnished
her Hollywood reputation completely. Roselli later became pals with
film producer
Bryan Foy and was brought into
Foy's minor company, Eagle Lion Studios, to serve as a producer of a
few gangster movies.
Although June maintained that she was initially naive to her husband's
mob-related activities and the couple did eventually divorced in 1943
(Roselli was indicted and convicted of racketeering during their
marriage and later found murdered amid controversy in 1976 at age 71),
her career never recovered from such bad press. 1941 and 1942 were her
last productive years as a "B" co-star with the "Poverty Row" offerings
Too Many Women (1942),
The Deadly Game (1941) and
City of Silent Men (1942) most
representative of what she was handed.
She made fleeting appearances after that, some of which were unbilled,
and ended her movie career passively with the second-string programmers
Three of a Kind (1944)
Lighthouse (1947). TV appearances were
sporadic come the 1950s and early 1960s. She was the on-the-air
"telephone girl" for a local Los Angeles talk show for a time, pitched
products on TV, and also served as a photo model before she gracefully
left the limelight altogether.
June's first brief marriage (1937-1938) was to playboy
agent-turned-producer
Victor M. Orsatti). A third marriage
to Lt. William Morgan in 1944 produced her only child, Patricia (she
suffered a miscarriage earlier). The marriage to Morgan, who later
became a businessman, ended bitterly in 1954 and June never remarried.
In later years both her mother and daughter lived with her in her North
Hollywood home. Daughter Patricia dedicated her life to working with
handicapped children, at one time working for the Lowman School in the
Los Angeles valley area. June died shortly after her 88th birthday and
was buried at Forest Lawn Cemetary in Los Angeles.