In 1923, while working as a
taxi dancer at Wilson's, she met
Henry Miller; she was 21 and he, 31. Miller left his first wife (Beatrice Sylvas Wickens) and child to marry June in
Hoboken, New Jersey, on June 1, 1924. Their relationship is the main subject of Miller's semi-autobiographical trilogy,
The Rosy Crucifixion. June is also featured in his best-known works,
Tropic of Cancer and
Tropic of Capricorn. In October 1926, Jean Kronski, an artist and poet, moved in with them at June's urging. June, who was likely
bisexual, cultivated a very close relationship with her, often preferring Jean's affections to Henry's. This living arrangement soon fell apart and Jean and June left for
Paris together in April 1927. However, two months later the two women started to quarrel, and June returned to Henry in July. The following year, June and Henry left for a tour of Europe, settling in Paris for several months before again returning to New York. June's relationship with Jean is the central piece of Henry's autobiographical novels
Crazy Cock (1930, unpublished until 12 years after Miller's death) and
Nexus (1959), the third volume of
The Rosy Crucifixion. Around 1930, Kronski committed suicide in an insane asylum in New York. In 1930, Henry moved to Paris unaccompanied. In 1931, while visiting Henry, June met writer
Anaïs Nin. Nin quickly became obsessed with her and, like Henry, used her as an
archetype in many of her writings. June and Nin became involved in a flirtatious relationship, although Nin denied it was sexual. However, June would figure prominently in her published and unpublished diaries, upon which the movie
Henry & June was loosely based. In the film, she was portrayed by
Uma Thurman. June was not pleased with the publication of Nin's expurgated diaries, which omitted Nin's affair with Miller and thus omitted the role Nin played in the breakup of the Millers' marriage. June and Henry divorced by proxy in
Mexico City in 1934. == Later life ==