June Knight

She featured in four other Broadway shows, Take A Chance (1932), Jubilee (1935)[3] (where she introduced the Cole Porter classic "Begin the Beguine"),[4] The Would-Be Gentleman (1946) (her only non-musical) and Sweethearts (1947).

[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.

[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.

[citation needed] Knight received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on February 3, 1960 for her contribution to the motion picture industry.

June Knight and Robert Taylor in a scene from "Broadway Melody of 1936"