
Actor
June Lang
Born 1917 · Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia June Lang (born Winifred June Vlasek, May 5, 1917 – May 16, 2005) was an American film actress. Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the daughter of Edith and Clarence Vlasek, Lang originally trained as a dancer in "kiddie revues" and went to Hollywood at the urging of her mother. She made her film debut in 1931 and caught the eye of Darryl F. Zanuck at 20th Century Fox, gradually securing second lead roles in mostly B movies. Noted for her fragile and demure appearance, she was usually cast as the little sister or the heroine's best friend in light comedies and adventure films. She soon graduated to leading roles, most notably in Bonnie Scotland (with Laurel and Hardy, 1935), in The Road to Glory (with Fredric March, Warner Baxter and Lionel Barrymore—written in part by William Faulkner—1936), and in Wee Willie Winkie (directed by John Ford, with Shirley Temple, Cesar Romero, and Victor McLaglen, 1937).
Acting

Bonnie Scotland
Lorna MacLaurel · 1935

The Miracle Woman
Church Choir Singer (uncredited) · 1931

Wee Willie Winkie
Joyce Williams · 1937

Flesh and Fantasy
Angela (uncredited) · 1943

Love Time
Bit (uncredited) · 1934

White Hunter
Toni Varek · 1936

Captain January
Mary · 1936

Chandu the Magician
Betty Lou Regent (as June Vlasek) · 1932

Inside Information
Kathleen Burke · 1939
City of Silent Men
Helen Hendricks · 1942

Stage Door Canteen
June Lang · 1943

Ali Baba Goes to Town
Princess Miriam/June Lang · 1937

One Wild Night
Gale Gibson · 1938

The Man Who Dared
Barbara Novak · 1933

The Road to Glory
Monique La Coste - nurse · 1936

International Settlement
Joyce Parker · 1938

George White's 1935 Scandals
Chorine (uncredited) · 1935

Nancy Steele Is Missing!
Sheila O'Neill / Nancy Steele · 1937

The Deadly Game
Christine Reisner · 1941

The Country Doctor
Mary MacKenzie · 1936
For Love or Money
Susan Bannister · 1939

Three of a Kind
Delores O'Toole · 1944

Every Saturday Night
Bonnie Evers · 1936

Captain Fury
Jeanette Dupré · 1939