, President
Richard Nixon and First Lady
Pat Nixon on April 17, 1970 While Carter may be best known for singing and songwriting, she was also an author, dancer, actress, comedian, philanthropist, and humanitarian. Director
Elia Kazan saw her perform at the Grand Ole Opry in 1955 and encouraged her to study acting. She studied with
Lee Strasberg and
Sanford Meisner at the
Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre in New York. Her acting roles included Mrs. "Momma" Dewey in
Robert Duvall's 1998 movie
The Apostle, Sister Ruth, wife to Johnny Cash's character Kid Cole, on
Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (1993–97), and Clarise on
Gunsmoke in 1957. She was notable as
Mayhayley Lancaster playing alongside husband Cash in the
1983 television movie Murder in Coweta County. June was also Momma James in
The Last Days of Frank and Jesse James. She also acted in occasional comedy skits for various Johnny Cash TV programs. As a singer, she had both a solo career and a career singing with first her family and later her husband. As a solo artist, she became somewhat successful with upbeat country tunes of the 1950s, such as "Jukebox Blues" and the comedic hit "No Swallerin' Place" by Frank Loesser. Carter also recorded "The Heel" in the 1960s along with many other songs. In the early 1960s, Carter wrote the song "
Ring of Fire", which later went on to be a hit for her future husband, Johnny Cash. She co-wrote the song with fellow songwriter
Merle Kilgore. Carter wrote the lyrics about her relationship with Cash and she offered the song to her sister,
Anita Carter, who was the first singer to record the song. In 1963, Cash recorded the song with the Carter Family singing backup and added mariachi horns. The song became a number-one hit and went on to become one of the most recognizable songs in the world of country music. In her autobiography,
I Walked the Line, Cash's first wife
Vivian Cash disputes that Carter co-wrote the song "
Ring of Fire". Vivian relates the story that Cash told her in 1963: he wrote the song with Kilgore and Curly Lewis while fishing and he was going to give Carter half credit because "[s]he needs the money. And I feel sorry for her." Carter's first notable studio performance with Johnny Cash occurred in 1964, when she sang a duet with him on "
It Ain't Me Babe", a
Bob Dylan composition that was released as both a single and on Cash's album
Orange Blossom Special. In 1967, the two found more substantial success with their recording of "
Jackson", which was followed by a collaboration album, ''
Carryin' On with Johnny Cash and June Carter. All these releases predated her marriage to Cash, after which she changed her professional name to June Carter Cash. She continued to work with Cash on recordings and on stage for the rest of her life, recording a number of duets with Cash for his various albums and being a regular on The Johnny Cash Show'' from 1969 to 1971 and on Cash's annual Christmas specials. After ''Carryin' On
, Carter recorded one more direct collaboration album, Johnny Cash and His Woman'', released in 1973, and, along with her daughters, was a featured vocalist on Cash's 1974 album
The Junkie and the Juicehead Minus Me. She also shared sleeve credit with her husband on a 2000 small-label gospel release,
Return to the Promised Land. Although she provided vocals on many recordings and shared the billing with Cash on several album releases, June Carter Cash only recorded three solo albums during her lifetime: the first,
Appalachian Pride, released in 1975,
Press On (1999), and
Wildwood Flower, released posthumously in 2003 and produced by her son,
John Carter Cash.
Appalachian Pride is the only one of the three on which Johnny Cash does not perform, while
Press On is notable for featuring Carter singing her original arrangement of "Ring of Fire". One of her final appearances was a non-speaking/non-singing appearance in the music video for her husband's 2003 single, "
Hurt", filmed a few months before her death. One of her last known public appearances was on April 7, 2003, just over a month before her death, when she appeared on the
CMT Flameworthy awards program to accept an achievement award on behalf of her husband, who was too ill to attend. She won a Grammy award in 1999 for,
Press On. Her last album,
Wildwood Flower, won two additional Grammys. It contains bonus video enhancements showing extracts from the film of the recording sessions, which took place at the Carter Family estate in
Hiltons, Virginia, on September 18–20, 2002. The songs on the album include "Big Yellow Peaches", "Sinking in the Lonesome Sea", "Temptation", and the trademark staple "
Wildwood Flower". Due to her involvement in providing backing vocals on many of her husband's recordings, a further posthumous release occurred in 2014, when
Out Among the Stars was released under Johnny Cash's name. The album consists of previously unreleased recordings from the early 1980s, including two on which June Carter Cash provides duet vocals. Her autobiography was published in 1979, and she wrote a memoir,
From the Heart, almost 10 years later. ==Personal life==