June Rose Bellamy, also Yadana Nat-Mei (Burmese: ရတနာနတ်မယ်; lit. Goddess of the Nine Jewels, 1 June 1932 – 1 December 2020)[3] was the First Lady of Myanmar as the fourth wife of the 4th President of Burma Ne Win.[4] She was a great-granddaughter of Crown Prince Kanaung.[5]
June Rose Bellamy | |
---|---|
ရတနာနတ်မယ် | |
First Lady of Myanmar | |
In role 24 December 1976 – May 1977 | |
President | Ne Win |
Preceded by | Ni Ni Myint |
Succeeded by | Ni Ni Myint (remarried) |
Personal details | |
Born | Yadana Nat-Mei 1 June 1932 Maymyo, British Burma[1] |
Died | 1 December 2020[2] Florence, Italy | (aged 88)
Spouses | |
Children | Michael Bellamy Postiglione Maurice Postiglione |
Parent(s) | Herbert Bellamy Hteiktin Ma Lat |
Known for | great-granddaughter of Prince Kanaung Mintha, ex-wife of Ne Win |
Early life and career
editJune Rose was born on 1 June 1932 in Maymyo, British Burma as the sole child of Princess Hteiktin Ma Lat of the Konbaung dynasty and Herbert Bellamy, an Australian orchid collector long settled in Burma. She is a granddaughter of Prince Limbin. She was She was educated at St Joseph's Convent School, Kalimpong, India, also educated in Rangoon, Burma. After the war, as a teenager, she wrote an essay for a competition called "The World We Want", sponsored by the New York Herald Tribune, which won a prize to visit the US along with 30 international students. She became a TV host in the Philippines and took up painting.
June Rose was offered a female lead role in the war film The Purple Plain, as the young Burmese nurse who gives a suicidal pilot (played by Gregory Peck) an interest in life, but says she pulled out during the shooting in Ceylon. "It was so Hollywood, it was ridiculous; it was an insult to anything that had to do with Burma," she said.[6]
Marriage
editFirst
editJune Rose was first married to Mario Postiglione, a physician and Senior Malaria advisor of WHO in Rangoon, Damascus, Geneva and Manila. The couple divorced in 1954, after having two sons, Michael Bellamy Postiglione and Maurice Postiglione.[7]
Second
editIn 1963 June Rose met Ne Win, Burma's new military ruler, in Europe, where she was living. Ne Win suggested she come back to Burma, but she was unwilling to leave Italy. On a later visit he proposed. They married in 1976, but the marriage lasted only five months. Ne Win accused her of being a CIA spy and divorced her.[8]
Later life and death
editAfter she returned to Italy, June Rose taught International and Italian cooking in Florence, as well as carrying on charitable work, through Rangoon-based doctors, putting young Burmese students through medical school. She has since written cookbooks, including The Soul of Spice, featured at the 2017 Turin Book Fair.[8]
In popular culture
edit- Yadana Nat-Mei is the subject of Than Win Hlaing's historic book Yadana Nat-Mei or once First Lady, first published in 2015.[11]
- According to her son Michele Postiglione Bellamy, June Rose completed her memoirs before her death which is expected to be published in June 2021.[1]
- A documentary film about her life called Rhapsody in June is in the works.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b c Green, Penelope (2021-02-03). "June Rose Bellamy, Adventurous Burmese Princess, Dies at 88". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-02-05.
- ^ "ဦးနေဝင်း၏ ဇနီးဟောင်း ရတနာနတ်မယ် ကွယ်လွန်". Mizzima Daily (in Burmese). 2 December 2020.
- ^ Green, Penelope (3 February 2021). "June Rose Bellamy, Adventurous Burmese Princess, Dies at 88". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 February 2021.
- ^ Bayin, Anne (3 September 2019). "Lunch with a Myanmar Princess". The Irrawaddy.
- ^ "A Palace Assassination that Altered Myanmar's History". The Irrawaddy. 2 August 2019.
- ^ Hamish McDonald (4 January 2013). "Between two worlds". Griffith Review. Archived from the original on 4 January 2013.
- ^ "Yadana Nat-Mei, Myanmar princess and first lady, dies at 88". Coconuts. 2 December 2020.
- ^ a b "Hamish McDonald, "Between two worlds", Griffith REVIEW Edition 27: Food Chain". Archived from the original on 2010-06-13. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
- ^ "ကုန်းဘောင်မင်းဆက် ကနောင်မင်းသားကြီး၏ မြစ်တော်စပ်သူ ရတနာနတ်မယ် ကံတော်ကုန်လွန်". The Myanmar Times (in Burmese). 2 December 2020. Archived from the original on 5 June 2022. Retrieved 2 December 2020.
- ^ "Lunch With a Myanmar Princess". The Irrawaddy. 2 December 2020.
- ^ "ရတနာနတ်မယ် (သို့မဟုတ်) တခါတုန်းက သမ္မတကတော်". The Myanmar Times (in Burmese). 7 May 2015.