Youth and the New York years Thad Miller was born in
St. Joseph County, Indiana and was one of three children born to Frank Douglas Miller and Virgillia Raquelle Galnouer Miller (1900 - 1981). His father opened and operated a dental clinic in 1939 in
Converse, Indiana. It is believed that Thad Miller spent most of his childhood in the Converse area. After graduation he lived in Mexico City, moving to New York City in 1956 to pursue acting. He studied drama at the Neighborhood Playhouse with
Robert Duvall and studied at the Playhouse with teacher Sydney Pollack. His classmates included
Suzanne Pleshette,
Keir Dullea and
Wayne Rogers. While living, studying, and acting in New York City, he met and married New York-born Luba, nearly 20 years his senior. They briefly lived in Los Angeles until returning to
Somerset, Indiana to explore art and farming. "I was an unemployed actor who'd married a businesswoman and I wanted to be a farmer and didn't know how to farm," he told a reporter of the Chronicle-Tribune.
Somerset, Indiana His painting years began in Somerset, Indiana after leaving New York City in 1958 and Los Angeles in 1959. Miller's work consisted mostly of portraits using friends and neighbors from the local farming community. He painted in the Flemish old-masters style with a touch of Salvador Dalí's humor added. From 1965 to 1969 he sold more than 200 paintings, mostly to individuals and to fill the walls of five cafeterias,
Laughner's owned by Indianapolis restaurateur, Chuck (Chip) Laughner. In 1974, soon after a fall from a window of his house, Miller was stricken with
Nephritis, a kidney dysfunction. In January 1975, he went off dialysis after a successful kidney transplant. During the Somerset years, his work was exhibited in the
Fort Wayne Museum of Art in Indiana and New York. == Works and auctions ==