Surgeon, gynaecologist and brilliant after dinner speaker |
ibiza classifieds |
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Original member 'Right Said Fred' |
Plays Ali McBeal in the hit TV series |
The most powerful man in sport |
The only woman ever to appear with Monty Python's Flying Circus as part of the team. |
Four-piece girl band |
Liverpudlian funnyman |
One of the most memorable R&B/dance groups of the early 1980's |
Member of the Commission Transport (including trans-European networks) |
author of three management books, which have revolutionised corporate and Management development thinking |
After Dinner Speakers: Alvin Stardust, Terence Conran, Kimi Raikkonen
b. Bernard William Jewry, 27 September 1942, London, England. Jewry first enjoyed pop fame during the early 60s under the name Shane Fenton. When the arrival of the Beatles and the subsequent Merseybeat explosion occurred, Fenton effectively retired from singing. In one of the more unlikely comebacks in British pop history, he re-emerged in 1973 as hit singer Alvin Stardust. Bedecked in menacingly black leather, with an image that fused Gene Vincent with Dave Berry, Stardust returned to the charts with the UK number 2 hit "My Coo-Ca-Choo". It was followed by the chart-topping "Jealous Mind" which, like its predecessor, was composed by songwriter Peter Shelley. Two further UK Top 10 hits followed, with "Red Dress" and "You You You" before his chart career petered out with "Tell Me Why" and "Good Love Can Never Die". The indomitable Stardust revitalized his career once more during the early 80s with the Top 10 successes "Pretend" and the commemorative ballad "I Feel Like Buddy Holly", which also mentioned Paul McCartney. Stardust ended 1984 with two further hits "I Won't Run Away" and "So Near Christmas" before once again falling from chart favour. He remains a popular star on the British showbusiness scene and in recent years, as a born-again Christian, presented and performed on BBC television with Christian pop and rock acts.