Actress and model June Palmer was born on August 1, 1940, in London, England. She started out in the adult entertainment industry working as a topless dancer at the Windmill Theatre in London. She began modeling while still in her late teens in 1959. With her sweetly comely face, long black hair and generously proportioned ripe'n'robust 3...
Show more »
Actress and model June Palmer was born on August 1, 1940, in London, England. She started out in the adult entertainment industry working as a topless dancer at the Windmill Theatre in London. She began modeling while still in her late teens in 1959. With her sweetly comely face, long black hair and generously proportioned ripe'n'robust 38-23-37 voluptuous figure, Palmer soon became a popular and beloved pin-up queen in both Britain and America. She achieved her greatest fame with her frequent collaborations with noted glamour photographer George Harrison Marks. Among the men's magazines Palmer graced the covers of and/or had pictorials in are "Fiesta," "Parade," "Adam," "Beau," "Dapper," "Modern Man," "Sir!," and "Monsieur." June popped up in minor parts in such films as On the Game (1974), the Hammer horror outing Une messe pour Dracula (1970), It's the Only Way to Go (1970), and The Nine Ages of Nakedness (1969). Of course, said small roles often featured Palmer in various stages of undress. She appears as herself in the comedic documentary The Naked World of Harrison Marks (1966) and also acted in a few "nudie-cutie" loops for Marks.June retired from modeling in the late 1960s. However, she made a surprise comeback at age 37 with a stunning nude pictorial in the November 1977 issue of "Mayfair." At age 53 Palmer married stuntman/photographer Arthur Howell in 1963. June and Arthur ran the Strobe Studio in Clapham, South London. Palmer divorced Howell in 2000 and married another man. She died suddenly at age 63 on January 6, 2004. Show less «