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Suzy Miller
View on WikipediaSusan Miller (born c. 1949[1]) is a British model, dancer, and choreographer.[2] She has acted in several films such as Twenty Nine (1969) and The Wild Geese (1978). Miller gained notoriety for being married to Formula 1 race driver James Hunt (in 1974), and leaving him for Richard Burton in 1976.[2]
Key Information
Biography
[edit]Miller grew up in Southern Rhodesia (modern Zimbabwe) with her parents, a twin sister and a brother.
By the age of 24, she was a successful fashion model in Britain.[3] She was known for being one of the "beautiful people" and for getting easily whatever she wanted. [4]
In 1974, she met James Hunt in Spain. He proposed to her only weeks later, and they were married the same year.[3][5] The couple were considered "one of the sporting world's most happily married couples."[6] The couple spent their honeymoon in Antigua with one of Hunt's close friends, also newly married, and then settled in Spain for tax reasons.[5] Later, Miller described feeling that Hunt's career came ahead of everything else in his life.[7] He was also frequently unfaithful and the marriage floundered.[8]
In December 1975, the actor Richard Burton met Miller at a Swiss ski resort and invited her to return to New York with him.[2] Their relationship developed quickly and Burton left Elizabeth Taylor for Miller. Burton allegedly paid Hunt $1 million as part of the divorce settlement between Hunt and Miller.[2] Miller claimed that part of the reason she initially became involved with Burton was so that she could make Hunt jealous.[7] Miller divorced Hunt in Haiti in June 1976.[8] After her divorce from Hunt, she and Burton had a honeymoon of sorts,[9] and were married in August 1976 in Arlington, Virginia, U.S.[3][10]
During their marriage, Miller was reported to be jealous of Burton's ex-wife Taylor.[11] An interesting anecdote involves Miller's jealous insistence that, while Burton was appearing in a revival of Camelot in Toronto, a page from the program displaying an advertisement of Taylor's jewelry line must be removed from every copy or Burton would not go on. Trying to keep peace with his wife, Burton acquiesced and the theatre's staff had to remove the offending page from thousands of copies of the program.
The marriage between Burton and Miller ended in their 1982 divorce, which was settled in Haiti.[12]
Miller married a third time, to American millionaire Jack Cawood, a real estate developer in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, and the couple moved to the United States.[3][13]
Film portrayal
[edit]Ron Howard's 2013 film Rush recounts the intrigues surrounding her former husband, Hunt, with the role of Miller being played by Olivia Wilde.[2] At the time, it was reported that Miller was living on the Spanish island of Ibiza.[2]
Filmography
[edit]Acting roles
[edit]- Twenty Nine (1969) as Priscilla
- The Wild Geese (1978) as Egyptian girl flirting with Faulkner
References
[edit]- ^ "Between Love and Haiti". Caribbean World. 13 April 2014. Retrieved 9 October 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f "The Woman Who Got Between Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton". yahoo.com. 18 September 2013. Retrieved 19 April 2015.
- ^ a b c d Cashmore, Ellis (2016). Elizabeth Taylor: A Private Life for Public Consumption. New York: Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-62892-070-3.
- ^ Gardner, Marilyn; Gardener, Hy (1 June 1977). "Burton, Taylor Seem Happy With New Spouses". The Oil City Derrick. Retrieved 31 May 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b "Racer's Wife Knows He's Boss". The Daily Courier. 27 September 1975. Retrieved 31 May 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Burton's New Bride-To-Be". Independent Press-Telegram. 25 April 1976. Retrieved 31 May 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b "The Wife Who Loved & Lost". Oakland Tribune. 16 January 1977. Retrieved 31 May 2016 – via Newspaper Archive.
- ^ a b "Between Love and Haiti". Caribbean World. 13 April 2014. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
- ^ O'Brien, Jack (10 September 1976). "Voice of Broadway". Anderson Daily Bulletin. Retrieved 31 May 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Eisenberg, Dennis (13 March 1978). "Burton Without Booze". The Ottawa Journal. Retrieved 31 May 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Walter Scott's Personality Parade". The San Bernardino County Sun. 5 October 1980. Retrieved 31 May 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Turner, Robin (28 March 2013). "Richard Burton and the wife he 'bought' for a million dollars". walesonline. Retrieved 27 November 2025.
- ^ "Lakeland Ledger - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved 2016-07-05.
External links
[edit]- Susan Hunt at IMDb
- Susan Hunt on BFI
Suzy Miller
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Birth and family background
Susan Miller, professionally known as Suzy Miller, was born on 19 May 1949.[6][7][8] Her full name at birth was Susan Miller, and she was raised in a British expatriate family. She spent much of her childhood in Southern Rhodesia (present-day Zimbabwe) alongside her parents, twin sister Vivienne, and a younger brother.[9]Education and initial interests
Suzy Miller was born Susan Miller on 19 May 1949 and spent her early years in Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), where she grew up with her parents, a twin sister, and a brother. She later moved to England, where she pursued interests in the performing arts, including dance and modeling, which formed the basis for her professional career.Career
Modeling and dance beginnings
Suzy Miller entered the modeling industry in the late 1960s, signing with London-based agencies and featuring in photoshoots for British fashion magazines.[10] Miller also pursued dance, contributing to entertainment projects as a dancer during her career.[3] The transition from amateur pursuits to professional status in the 1960s-1970s entertainment scene was challenging, amid intense competition and the era's evolving beauty standards. Miller navigated these hurdles by leveraging her versatility in both fields.[5]Acting roles
Suzy Miller made her screen debut in the 1969 short film Twenty-Nine, directed by Brian Cummins, where she portrayed Priscilla, a character involved in the protagonist's tumultuous evening of revelry and regret.[11] The 26-minute British production follows a man piecing together a night of debauchery, blending elements of drama and introspection, and marked Miller's entry into acting as a young model transitioning to on-screen work.[12] In the mid-1970s, Miller appeared on television in The Superstars, a BBC sports competition series, participating as herself in the 1975 episode alongside her then-husband James Hunt, showcasing her athleticism in various challenges.[13] This non-scripted role highlighted her physical prowess from her dance and modeling background, rather than dramatic performance. Her most notable film role came in 1978 with The Wild Geese, an action-adventure directed by Andrew V. McLaglen, in which she played an uncredited Egyptian girl flirting with the character Faulkner, portrayed by her husband Richard Burton.[14] Filming took place on location in South Africa, where Miller joined Burton on set, including during cast events like Roger Moore's 50th birthday celebration near Tshipise. The role, though brief, underscored her presence in high-profile productions facilitated by her modeling fame and personal connections. Miller's acting career remained limited, encompassing a handful of appearances that leveraged her poised, glamorous persona from modeling into subtle dramatic and televisual contributions, without pursuing extensive on-screen work.Choreography work
No reliable information is available on choreography work by Suzy Miller.Personal life
Marriage to James Hunt
Suzy Miller, a rising model and dancer, met Formula One driver James Hunt in Spain in the summer of 1974, where he was spending time between races. Their courtship was intense and rapid, fueled by Hunt's charismatic personality and the excitement of his burgeoning racing career; he proposed to her only a few weeks after they first encountered each other at a social club.[15] The couple married on 19 October 1974 at Brompton Oratory in London, in a ceremony attended by prominent figures from the motor racing world, including drivers and team principals, which drew significant media attention for its blend of glamour and sport. The wedding symbolized the intersection of Hunt's high-octane lifestyle and Miller's modeling world, with guests describing it as a star-studded event befitting the couple's rising fame.[16][17] The marriage lasted less than two years, ending in divorce in June 1976 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, where quick divorces for foreigners were facilitated. Strains emerged from Hunt's notorious playboy lifestyle, characterized by heavy partying, drinking, and infidelities, which clashed with Miller's increasing desire for personal independence amid her own professional pursuits in modeling and dance.[18][19] Publicly, their union was portrayed in British tabloids as a glamorous yet volatile match, highlighting the couple's jet-setting lifestyle, lavish events, and the contrasts between Hunt's adrenaline-fueled existence and Miller's elegant poise, often sensationalizing the tensions that ultimately led to their separation.[2]Marriage to Richard Burton
Suzy Miller met Richard Burton at the end of December 1975 while skiing in Gstaad, Switzerland, during her separation from Formula 1 driver James Hunt, which left her in a vulnerable position.[20] The encounter occurred on a ski lift, where Burton, then 50 and recently remarried to Elizabeth Taylor, spotted the 26-year-old model and began pursuing her, leading to an affair that drew immediate media attention despite his ongoing marriage to Taylor.[20][9] Following the finalization of their respective divorces in June 1976—Miller from Hunt in Haiti and Burton from Taylor in Haiti—the couple married in a private civil ceremony on August 21, 1976, in Arlington, Virginia.[21] The swift union, just weeks after the divorces, was facilitated in part by Burton's reported payment of $1 million to Hunt to cover Miller's divorce settlement, a detail that fueled sensational headlines about the "million-dollar wife" transfer and amplified the scandal surrounding the affair.[20] The marriage lasted six years but was strained by Burton's chronic alcoholism, volatile temperament, and the relentless media scrutiny that followed the high-profile couple.[19] They separated in August 1981, with the divorce announced in February 1982, citing family considerations and Burton's health issues as key factors; despite the end, they maintained an amicable relationship, describing themselves as "close friends."[22][1] The split, while less tumultuous than Burton's unions with Taylor, nonetheless contributed to the narrative of his turbulent personal life amid ongoing public fascination.Subsequent marriages and family
After her divorce from Richard Burton in 1982, Suzy Miller largely withdrew from public life, prioritizing privacy following the intense media scrutiny of her earlier relationships.[22] The couple had separated in August 1981, and the dissolution marked the end of her high-profile romantic chapter with no reported children from the union or her prior marriage to James Hunt.[1] In 1985, Miller married for a third time, to American millionaire and real estate developer Jack Cawood on July 20 in Virginia; the couple relocated to the United States, where she has maintained a low profile with limited public details on family developments as of 2025.[23] This shift allowed her to focus on a quieter existence, away from the glamour and controversies of her modeling and acting days.Legacy and portrayals
Cultural impact
Suzy Miller emerged as an emblem of 1970s glamour, bridging the high-octane world of Formula 1 racing with the elegance of fashion modeling through her marriage to champion driver James Hunt. Her poised presence at races and social events infused the sport with celebrity allure, transforming pit lanes into stages for jet-set style.[24] As a blonde, leggy model frequently featured alongside Hunt, Miller amplified their status as media darlings, with her career in fashion underscoring the era's fusion of athletic heroism and sophisticated femininity. Tabloids chronicled their whirlwind romance and subsequent divorce, casting her as a symbol of the period's glamorous, transient celebrity culture.[24][2] Her later union with actor Richard Burton drew significant media attention due to public scrutiny and scandal.[25][19]Depictions in media
Suzy Miller was portrayed by Olivia Wilde in the 2013 biographical sports drama film Rush, directed by Ron Howard, which chronicles the rivalry between Formula One drivers James Hunt and Niki Lauda during the 1976 season.[26] Wilde's depiction captures Miller's role as Hunt's wife, emphasizing her glamorous modeling background and the strain on their marriage amid Hunt's high-profile lifestyle and infidelities.[27] The film accurately reflects key events, such as Miller's brief marriage to Hunt and her subsequent affair with Richard Burton, though it slightly dramatizes the timeline of their courtship for narrative effect—Hunt proposed after weeks, not the day they met.[5] Reviewers noted Wilde's resemblance to the real Miller and described her performance as fine and supportive.[28][29][30] Miller features prominently in biographies of her former husbands, where her marriages are depicted as pivotal chapters in their tumultuous personal lives. In Tom Rubython's Shunt: The Story of James Hunt (2010), Miller is portrayed as a glamorous yet disillusioned figure whose whirlwind romance and divorce from Hunt amid his playboy reputation highlighted the era's Formula One celebrity culture; the book provides the first detailed account of the love triangle involving Burton.[31] Similarly, in The Richard Burton Diaries (edited by Chris Williams, 2012), entries from the late 1970s reference Miller's integration into Burton's world post-Taylor, depicting her as a stabilizing yet scandal-prone partner during his later years of excess and reflection.[32] These works draw on personal correspondence and interviews to illustrate how Miller's high-profile transitions fueled media frenzy around 1970s celebrity entanglements. Documentaries on 1970s Formula One and celebrity culture often reference Miller in the context of Hunt's off-track drama. The 2001 BBC production The Real James Hunt explores Hunt's career and personal excesses, portraying Miller as emblematic of the rock-star lifestyle that defined F1 drivers, including archival footage of their 1974 wedding attended by racing luminaries.[33] Broader retrospectives, such as episodes in F1 history series, mention her as a symbol of the sport's intersection with Hollywood glamour during the sport's golden age.[34] In literary works on Formula One and Hollywood scandals, Miller appears as a recurring motif of glamour and controversy. Books like Rubython's Shunt and broader F1 histories, such as Christopher Hilton's James Hunt: Against All Odds (1996), depict her marriage to Hunt as a cautionary tale of fleeting celebrity unions amid the high-stakes world of motorsport.[35] In Hollywood-focused texts, such as Sam Kashner and Nancy Schoenberger's Furious Love: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, and the Marriage of the Century (2010), Miller is noted briefly as Burton's post-Taylor bride, underscoring the scandalous romantic entanglements that defined his later career.[36] Recent coverage in the 2020s has revisited Miller's story through lenses of celebrity history and gender dynamics in sports. A 2025 People magazine article on Burton's marriages discusses Miller's union with him from 1976 to 1982, drawing on archival accounts to contextualize her role in 1970s tabloid lore.[37] In November 2025, articles in Today's Magazine and Getworld portrayed her as a glamorous 1970s icon, exploring her life, career, and marriages.[38][39] Such pieces often frame her experiences as emblematic of women's navigation of fame in male-dominated arenas like racing and film.Filmography
Film appearances
Suzy Miller made her screen debut in the 1969 British short film Twenty-Nine, directed by Brian J. Cummins, where she portrayed the supporting character Priscilla.[40] In this mystery drama, which follows a man awakening in unfamiliar surroundings after a night out, Miller's role contributes to the unfolding intrigue surrounding personal relationships and lost time. Her next film appearance came nearly a decade later in the 1978 action-adventure The Wild Geese, directed by Andrew V. McLaglen. Miller played an uncredited minor role as an Egyptian girl who flirts with Colonel Allen Faulkner, the mercenary leader portrayed by Richard Burton—her husband at the time. This brief scene enhances the film's exotic African setting and tense atmosphere amid the story of elite soldiers rescuing a political prisoner.[40]Television and other credits
Suzy Miller made limited but notable appearances on British television during the 1970s, primarily in celebrity and event-based programming.[40] In 1975, she appeared on the sports competition series The Superstars, credited as herself in her capacity as the wife of Formula 1 driver James Hunt, who competed in the event alongside other elite athletes in challenges such as tennis, canoeing, and weightlifting. The episode highlighted celebrity participants testing their athletic prowess in a decathlon-style format broadcast on BBC.[41]) Miller's television presence extended to the 50th Annual Academy Awards in 1978, where she was present as an audience member during the live broadcast from the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles.[42] Beyond these, her professional credits include a brief appearance in the short film Stars' War - The Flight of the Wild Geese (1978), a documentary-style production focusing on the making of the film The Wild Geese, in which she had a role.References
- https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q16770428
