June Vincent
June Vincent (born Dorothy June Smith; July 17, 1920 – November 20, 2008) was an American actress best known for her roles in film noir and supporting parts in classic Hollywood cinema and television westerns.[1] Born in Harrod, Ohio, she relocated to Keene, New Hampshire, in 1931 when her father, Willis Smith, became pastor of the First Congregational Church, and she later attended Northfield Seminary where she first studied dramatics.[2] Vincent began her professional career in the early 1940s, appearing in over 50 films including Can't Help Singing (1944), The Climax (1944) with Boris Karloff, and her notable turn as Catherine Bennett in the film noir Black Angel (1946).[3][4] After a brief retirement following the birth of her second child, she shifted to television in the 1950s, accumulating more than 100 guest appearances on series such as Perry Mason (in five episodes, including "The Case of the Bartered Bikini" in 1959), Have Gun – Will Travel (three episodes), The Rifleman, and Wanted: Dead or Alive.[4] Her four-decade career encompassed genres from drama and horror to comedy and westerns, often portraying nurses, mothers, and authority figures, before she passed away in Aurora, Colorado, at age 88.[2][1]Early life
Birth and family background
June Vincent was born Dorothy June Smith on July 17, 1920, in Harrod, Ohio.[1] She was the daughter of Willis Smith, a Congregationalist minister, and his wife Sybil Smith.[2] Harrod, a small rural village in Allen County with a population of 389 in 1920.[2] In 1931, the family relocated to Keene, New Hampshire, where Willis Smith assumed the role of pastor at the First Congregational Church.[2]Education and early pursuits
Vincent relocated with her family from Harrod, Ohio, to Keene, New Hampshire, in 1931 when her father, Willis Smith, accepted the position of pastor at the First Congregational Church.[2] There, she attended local schools and was selected as a member of the National Honor Society during high school.[2] She graduated from Keene High School in 1937.[2] Following high school, Vincent pursued formal training in dramatics at Northfield Seminary, a preparatory school in Massachusetts.[5] She then attended Oberlin College in Ohio for one year, where she continued her studies in drama.[5] During this period, she gained initial performing experience through school plays and appearances at the Keene Summer Theatre, honing her skills in local productions.[6] In 1937, at age 17, Vincent moved to New York City to embark on a modeling career, securing work with the prestigious fashion publication Harper's Bazaar.[7] Her modeling assignments provided visibility in the industry, as photographs of her appeared in magazines and caught the eye of talent scouts, paving the way for her entry into professional acting opportunities, including theater.[8]Career
Stage work
June Vincent began her acting career in the late 1930s with summer stock theater in her adopted hometown of Keene, New Hampshire, where she performed at the Keene Summer Theatre following her high school graduation.[2] These early live performances served as her entry into professional acting, building on her modeling background in New York City, and provided opportunities to hone her skills in front of local audiences before transitioning to film.[9] After a period focused on screen work, Vincent returned to the stage in 1957, taking a leading role in the comedy-drama The Man on a Stick at the Pasadena Playhouse in California.[10] This production marked her re-engagement with live theater amid a career increasingly centered on television, allowing her to explore character-driven roles in a regional setting known for nurturing talent.[11] In the ensuing decades, Vincent continued with occasional regional theater engagements through the 1950s to 1970s, viewing the stage as a creative refuge that complemented her screen legacy and emphasized the immediacy of live performance dynamics.[12]Film roles
June Vincent signed a stock contract with Universal Pictures in 1943, launching her cinematic career after initial modeling work caught the studio's attention. Her screen debut came in the musical comedy Honeymoon Lodge (1943), where she played Carol Sterling Crump opposite Harriet Hilliard and David Bruce. Under this contract, she appeared in a variety of B-movies and supporting roles, including the Technicolor musical Can't Help Singing (1944) alongside Deanna Durbin, in which Vincent portrayed the elegant Miss McLean, and the suspenseful horror The Climax (1944) with Boris Karloff.[8][13][14] Over the course of her film career from 1943 to 1959, Vincent appeared in approximately 50 features, predominantly low-budget productions that showcased her versatility in genres such as musicals, noir, and mysteries. A standout role was in the film noir Black Angel (1946), directed by Roy William Neill, where she starred as Catherine Bennett, the devoted wife racing to prove her husband's innocence in a murder plot alongside Dan Duryea and Peter Lorre. Her work at Universal often highlighted her poised, sophisticated screen presence, though she frequently played characters on the periphery of the main action.[15][16] In the late 1940s, Vincent transitioned to Columbia Pictures, where she was cast in a series of westerns and crime dramas, expanding her repertoire but leaning into more antagonistic parts. At Columbia, she embraced roles as sharp-tongued or scheming women, such as in Song of Idaho (1948) and The Creeper (1948), a horror-mystery. This shift extended to independent productions in the 1950s, including The Lone Wolf and His Lady (1949) and Zamba (1949), maintaining her focus on supporting turns in action-oriented B-films.[8][7] Vincent's typecasting as an elegant yet villainous supporting actress became a hallmark of her career, particularly in her Columbia era, where she recalled being "the meanie, the bitch" in most westerns and melodramas, a pattern that carried over from Universal's diverse assignments. This niche allowed her to deliver memorable, if secondary, performances that emphasized icy sophistication over leads, limiting her to ensemble casts amid rising stars. She retired from feature films around 1959 following the birth of her second child, shifting her energies toward family while occasionally returning for television work. Her final film was the independent western The Miracle of the Hills (1959), in which she played Mrs. Leonard.[8][15][17]Television appearances
June Vincent entered television in the early 1950s, marking a shift as her film career under studio contracts began to wind down, with her small-screen debut in the anthology series Trapped in 1951. Over the next two decades, she amassed credits spanning 1951 to 1976, predominantly in guest and recurring supporting roles that highlighted her range across genres, from gritty Westerns to polished legal dramas and whimsical comedies.[18][2] Her early television prominence came in Western series, where she appeared in three episodes of Have Gun – Will Travel (1957–1963), including as Maria Rojas in "Strange Vendetta" (1957), a woman entangled in a vendetta against her family, and as Martha Lathrop in "The Colonel and the Lady" (1957), a figure in a tale of tarnished reputation and frontier justice.[19][20] Vincent's poise in these dramatic roles suited the era's popular oaters, often portraying resilient women navigating moral ambiguities in the Old West. She achieved notable visibility on Perry Mason (1957–1966), guest-starring in five episodes as complex characters, such as the scheming Madge Wainwright, who murders a fashion designer in "The Case of the Bartered Bikini" (1959), and the adulterous Victoria Bannion in "The Case of the Jilted Jockey" (1958). These appearances showcased her ability to embody sophisticated yet villainous figures in the long-running courtroom series, contributing to its anthology-style storytelling.[21][22] As television evolved into the 1960s, Vincent adapted to lighter fare, appearing in The Andy Griffith Show (1960–1968) in the 1965 episode "The Taylors in Hollywood," where she doubled as a glamorous actress portraying an exaggerated Aunt Bee in a meta Hollywood send-up. By the early 1970s, she embraced sitcom dynamics in Bewitched (1969), playing the haughty socialite Cynthia Monteagle in "The Battle of Burning Oak," a character whose snobbery clashes with suburban witchcraft.[23][24] This progression from intense Western dramas to comedic family-oriented shows underscored Vincent's adaptability amid television's rise as the dominant entertainment medium, allowing her to thrive in episodic formats that demanded quick character immersion.[8]Personal life
Marriage and family
June Vincent married William Mueller Sterling, a U.S. Navy lieutenant and pilot, on March 10, 1944, following a blind date arranged during the filming of Ladies Courageous.[25] The couple remained together until Sterling's death on July 20, 2002.[12] The Sterlings had three children: son William Thayer Sterling, born in August 1945; daughter Tina Sterling; and daughter Mindy Sterling, a singer-songwriter born in 1953.[12] The family settled in California during Vincent's active years at Universal Studios in the 1940s, where she balanced her film commitments with early family responsibilities in areas like San Diego.[25][2] Family life significantly influenced Vincent's career trajectory; after the birth of her first child in 1945, she worked sporadically in films, and following the arrival of her second child in the early 1950s, she temporarily retired from feature films to focus on raising her family, having already appeared in approximately 50 productions.[25] This pause allowed her to prioritize domestic life while occasionally returning for television roles later in the decade.[15]Religious affiliations
June Vincent was raised in a religious household, as the daughter of Reverend Willis E. Smith, a Congregational minister who served churches in Ohio and later California.[26] This background instilled in her a strong religious faith, which she maintained throughout her life.[8] In her later years, Vincent continued to practice her faith actively, attending church services weekly alongside fellow actress Lois Collier.[8]Later years and death
Retirement and later acting
Following the birth of her second child, Vincent retired from film acting after appearing in over 50 productions, with her final role as Mrs. Leonard in the 1959 western The Miracle of the Hills.[12] This decision allowed her to prioritize family responsibilities amid her growing household, which included three children with husband William M. Sterling.[12] Her last film credit marked the end of a prolific run in low-budget Hollywood features during the 1940s and 1950s. Vincent's television career continued on a sporadic basis through the 1960s and 1970s, with guest roles in popular series that showcased her versatility in supporting parts. Notable appearances included multiple episodes of Perry Mason and Have Gun – Will Travel, as well as a turn as the snobbish Cynthia Monteagle in the 1969 Bewitched episode "The Battle of Burning Oak."[24] Her final on-screen performance came in 1976 as Ursula Harrison in the Maude episode "The Election," after which she fully retired from acting to focus on personal life.[27] Amid her family commitments, Vincent returned to the stage in regional theater during the late 1950s. She performed in the production The Man on a Stick at the Pasadena Playhouse in 1957, reconnecting with live performance in a more localized setting.[12] Records indicate limited further stage involvement in the 1960s and beyond, with no documented professional engagements after her 1976 television retirement; available sources show gaps regarding potential community theater participation or mentoring roles in later decades.[12]Death and legacy
June Vincent passed away on November 20, 2008, in Aurora, Colorado, at the age of 88.[7] In her later years, she resided in Colorado with family and had been afflicted by arthritis and Parkinson's disease.[12] Following her death, she was cremated, and her ashes were scattered at Arapahoe Lake in Colorado.[12] Vincent's legacy endures as a prolific B-movie actress of the 1940s and 1950s, best remembered for her compelling performances in film noir, including the role of Catherine Bennett in Black Angel (1946) and the lead in Shed No Tears (1948), which have cultivated a dedicated cult following among genre enthusiasts.[28] Her work, spanning over 50 films and 100 television appearances, exemplified the versatility of supporting actresses in Hollywood's golden age, often portraying strong, multifaceted women in crime dramas and westerns.[2] Within her family, Vincent's artistic pursuits influenced her daughter, singer-songwriter Mindy Sterling, who followed a creative path in the entertainment industry.[12] Modern reevaluations of her career, including a 2016 biography by the Allen County Historical Society and local retrospectives such as a 2018 screening and discussion of Black Angel at the Keene Public Library, underscore her contributions to early film noir and her roots as a performer from Harrod, Ohio.[28] These tributes highlight her lasting impact on regional film history and the broader appreciation of overlooked B-movie talents.[2]Filmography
1943
- Honeymoon Lodge - Role: Carol Sterling Crump; Director: Edward C. Lilley; Studio: Republic Pictures.[18]
1944
- The Climax - Role: Marcellina; Director: George Waggner; Studio: Universal Pictures.[29]
- Can't Help Singing - Role: Jeannie McLean; Director: Frank Ryan; Studio: Universal Pictures.[1]
1945
- Here Come the Co-eds - Role: Diane Kirkland; Director: Arthur Lubin; Studio: Universal Pictures.[4]
- The Frozen Ghost - Role: Maura Daniel; Director: Harold Young; Studio: Universal Pictures.[4]
1946
- Black Angel - Role: Catherine Bennett; Director: Roy William Neill; Studio: Universal Pictures.[1]
1948
- Trapped by Boston Blackie - Role: Doris Bradley; Director: Seymour Friedman; Studio: Columbia Pictures.[18]
- The Challenge - Role: Vivian Bailey; Director: Jean Yarbrough; Studio: Republic Pictures.[18]
- Shed No Tears - Role: Edna Grover; Director: Jean Yarbrough; Studio: Eagle-Lion Films.[1]
- The Creeper - Role: Gwen Runstrom; Director: Jean Yarbrough; Studio: 20th Century Fox.[1]
- The Snake Pit - Role: Nurse (uncredited); Director: Anatole Litvak; Studio: 20th Century Fox.[4]
- Tap Roots - Role: Shellie Dabney; Director: George Marshall; Studio: Universal Pictures.[4]
- The Arkansas Swing - Role: Pamela Trent; Director: Ray Nazarro; Studio: Columbia Pictures.[30]
1949
- The Lone Wolf and His Lady - Role: Grace Duffy; Director: John Hoffman; Studio: Columbia Pictures.[18]
- Zamba - Role: Jenny; Director: William Berke; Studio: Republic Pictures.[18]
- Mary Ryan, Detective - Role: Estelle Byron; Director: William Nigh; Studio: Pathé Industries.[18]
- Slightly French - Role: Linda; Director: Douglas Sirk; Studio: Columbia Pictures.[4]
1950
- Counterspy Meets Scotland Yard - Role: Barbara Bernsdorf; Director: Richard H. Landau; Studio: Lippert Pictures.[4]
- In a Lonely Place - Role: Actress (uncredited); Director: Nicholas Ray; Studio: Columbia Pictures.[31]
1951
- Secrets of Monte Carlo - Role: Stella Strutzenbacher; Director: George Blair; Studio: Republic Pictures.[32]
1952
- Confidence Girl - Role: Nancy; Director: Andrew L. Stone; Studio: United Artists.[4]
- Night Without Sleep - Role: Emily Morton; Director: Roy Rowland; Studio: 20th Century Fox.[18]
- Colorado Sundown - Role: Carrie Hurley; Director: William Witney; Studio: Republic Pictures.[18]
1953
- Marry Me Again - Role: Julia; Director: Fred F. Sears; Studio: United Artists.[31]
- The Great Sioux Uprising - Role: Joan Britton; Director: Lloyd Bacon; Studio: Universal Pictures.[4]
1954
- The Miami Story - Role: Holly Abbott; Director: Fred F. Sears; Studio: Columbia Pictures.[4]
1955
- City of Shadows - Role: Linda Fairaday; Director: William Witney; Studio: Allied Artists Pictures.)[33]
1956
- Calling Homicide - Role: Jean; Director: Edward Bernds; Studio: Allied Artists.[4]
1959
- The Big Operator - Role: Mary; Director: Charles Haas; Studio: United Artists.[32]
- The Miracle of the Hills - Role: Mrs. Leonard; Director: Paul Landres; Studio: Republic Pictures.[4]
Television credits
June Vincent made her television debut in the early 1950s and continued guest starring in episodic roles through the 1970s, appearing in over 100 episodes across various anthology and series formats.[34] Her notable television credits from 1951 to 1976 are cataloged below in chronological order, focusing on verified episodic appearances. Episode titles, air dates, and character names are included where available.| Year | Series | Episode Title | Character | Air Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1957 | Have Gun – Will Travel | Strange Vendetta | Maria Rojas | December 7, 1957[19] |
| 1957 | Have Gun – Will Travel | The Colonel and the Lady | Martha Lathrop | December 14, 1957[20] |
| 1958 | Perry Mason | The Case of the Hesitant Hostess | Martha Rayburn | April 5, 1958 |
| 1958 | Perry Mason | The Case of the Jilted Jockey | Victoria Bannion | November 8, 1958[22] |
| 1959 | Perry Mason | The Case of the Bartered Bikini | Madge Wainwright | December 5, 1959[21] |
| 1960 | Have Gun – Will Travel | Black Sheep | Mrs. Duvoisin / Mrs. McNabb | May 7, 1960[35] |
| 1961 | Have Gun – Will Travel | Broken Image | Jeanie Decker | April 29, 1961[36] |
| 1961 | Have Gun – Will Travel | Everyman | Mme. Elaine Destin | April 15, 1961[37] |
| 1961 | Perry Mason | The Case of the Wintry Wife | Laura Randall | February 18, 1961[38] |
| 1961 | Perry Mason | The Case of the Roving River | Chloris Bryant | December 30, 1961 |
| 1962 | Hawaiian Eye | An Echo of Honor | Eleanor Temple | February 6, 1962[39] |
| 1962 | Tales of Wells Fargo | The Wayfarers | Lila Conway | January 29, 1962[40] |
| 1964 | The Alfred Hitchcock Hour | The Ordeal of Mrs. Snow | Agnes Snow | April 3, 1964[41] |
| 1965 | The Andy Griffith Show | The Taylors in Hollywood | The Actress | November 1, 1965[23] |
| 1966 | Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea | The Death Ship | Ava | December 12, 1966 |
| 1969 | Bewitched | The Battle of Burning Oak | Cynthia Monteagle | March 13, 1969[24] |
| 1970 | The F.B.I. | The Diamond Millstone | Grace Toland | October 18, 1970[42] |
| 1972 | The Delphi Bureau | The Merchant of Death Assignment | Charlotte | May 14, 1972 |
| 1972 | Kung Fu | The Stone | Meg | April 13, 1972 |
| 1972 | Maude | Maude Meets the Duke | Ursula Harrison | March 14, 1972 |
| 1972 | The Streets of San Francisco | Trail of the Serpent | Diana | October 12, 1972 |