Maggie Stredder
Margaret Elizabeth "Maggie" Stredder was a British singer, known as "the girl with the glasses" for her trademark horn-rimmed spectacles. She sang with the Vernons Girls and then the Ladybirds, with whom she appeared on television during the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.
Biography
Stredder first appeared on television with a female choir on the Six-Five Special in 1957. They then became the Vernons Girls on Oh Boy!, where they featured singing their own songs as well as supporting other artists. She left in 1960 and formed the Two-Tones with fellow ex-Vernons Girl Jean Ryder ; the pair toured military bases, supported acts such as Max Bygraves, and appeared on Sunday Night at the London Palladium.In 1962, she was a founding member of the Ladybirds, with whom she appeared on television during the 1960s and 1970s, and was part of the house singers for Top of the Pops. She appeared as a backing vocalist on as varied records as Jimi Hendrix's "Hey Joe#Jimi Hendrix [Experience version|Hey Joe]" and Benny Hill's "Ernie (The Fastest Milkman in the West)". She also provided vocal harmonies for Sandie Shaw at the 1967 Eurovision Song Contest and Olivia Newton-John at the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest. The Vernons Girls reformed in 1988 to support with Cliff Richard for two shows at Wembley Stadium in 1989; these were recorded and formed his From a Distance: The Event live album. From then until Stredder left in 2001, the Vernons Girls undertook a number of concerts in support of rock and roll artists such as Marty Wilde and Joe [Brown (musician)|Joe Brown], and on the "nostalgia circuit".
On 1 October 1966, Stredder married Roy Tuvey, a comedy scriptwriter. Together they had one daughter and one son, Paul. They divorced in 1988. Having provided entertainment at a number of holiday camps, she came to know Jim Kennedy, the Pontins' entertainments executive; they married in 1999. Her second husband predeceased her in 2015, and Stredder died three years later, on 9 March 2018, from vascular dementia.