Paul Ames (1934–1935) Arthur Cameron (1938–1943) Carl B. Squier (1949–1967) (his death) Jack Buehler (1969–1987) (her death)[1]
June Knight, born Margaret Rose Valliquietto (January 22, 1913 – June 16, 1987), was an American theatre actress, film actress, dancer and singer.
Early years
Valliquietto was born in Los Angeles in 1913. She was ill early in her life, and was diagnosed with tuberculosis at the age of 4. Following the diagnosis, doctors told her parents that there was a strong chance that she would not reach adulthood. She also had polio, and was unable to walk until she was five years old.[1]
She began to perform songs and dance publicly at age ten.
Career
When Valliquietto first partnered with dancer John Holland, she adopted the stage name June Knight. This had been the name of Holland's previous dance partner.[2]
She also had a short-lived film career, appearing in 12 films from 1930 to 1940, most notably in Broadway Melody of 1936 (1935), in which she sang the hit song "I've Got a Feelin' You're Foolin'" with co-star Robert Taylor.[5]
Personal life and death
Knight married four times. First, to Palm Beach stockbroker Paul Ames, with whom she lived for nine days before he petitioned for a divorce.[6] She then married Texas oilman Arthur A. Cameron.[7] After their divorce she wed Lockheed Aircraft Corporation co-founder Carl B. Squier, whose wife had died in a plane crash 11 years earlier. Their union lasted 18 years. Following Squier's death, she married his Lockheed colleague and friend Jack Buehler.[1]
In 1935, Knight was bound, gagged, and robbed of jewelry by two men, who gained access to her 19th-story New York apartment by posing as film executives. Police believed it was the work of the same men who similarly robbed actress Janice Dawson, by posing as literary agents.[8]
In 1940, Knight (now known as June Cameron), found that the original dancer called June Knight was still using this name, and took the case to court. Knight, the actress, argued that she had registered the name in 1931, and had made the name famous, and that the original dancer had agreed to stop using this name.[9]
^Skolsky, Sidney (August 21, 1933). "Tintypes". Daily News. New York, New York City. News Syndicate Co., Inc. p. 26. Retrieved November 5, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
^ ab"June Knight". Internet Broadway Database. The Broadway League. Archived from the original on 6 November 2018. Retrieved 6 November 2018.