HE MET HER BACKSTAGE AT THE OPRY IN 1956. HIS LAST SHOW WAS ON HER FAMILY’S STAGE IN 2003 — TWO MONTHS AFTER SHE DIED AND TWO MONTHS BEFORE HE FOLLOWED. “The spirit of June Carter overshadows me tonight.” Johnny Cash first saw June Carter backstage at the Grand Ole Opry in 1956. She came from the Carter Family — the family that helped build country music itself. He married her in 1968. For thirty-five years, she was the voice beside him, the hand that pulled him out of every dark place he wandered into. On May 15, 2003, June died. She was 73. Seven weeks later, Cash sat on a stool at the Carter Family Fold in Virginia — the small wooden stage that belonged to her family. He could barely see. His hands shook. But he played. “Ring of Fire.” “Folsom Prison Blues.” And then “I Walk the Line” — the song he wrote in 1956, the year they met, as a promise to stay faithful. He played it on her stage. Without her. One last time. On September 12, he was gone. He was 71. He met her in the house of country music. He said goodbye from the house she grew up in. And the song that started it all — a promise to walk the line for her — was the last thing her family’s stage ever heard him sing.
Johnny Cash and June Carter: The Love Story That Began Backstage and Ended on a Family Stage Some love stories…