Tina Maddison
/Tina Maddison
QT No 25 - November 1958
QT No 25 - November 1958
These three shots are all of lovely VERENA MAY, a starlet featured in German films, and who has a dark beauty not usually associated with fair Teutons. The hairstyle can change the look but not the girl.
Windswept on a swing is GISELA SCHUMANN, and snug in a chair is BARBARA BONGE.
Span No 84 - August 1961
If you think this is all about how to stop your hair falling out by giving it brandy, you must be going bald or something.
We are actually referring to BRANDY SCOTT, a most intriguingly named dolly from the southwest.
It's Brandy's ambition, as a talented amateur dramatics performer and a dancer who naturally delights the eye, to appear in the musical HAIR. Girls of extremely noteworthy talent have appeared in this fabulously modern musical, and Brandy would make one more never-to-be-forgotten member of the cast.
Span No 212 - April 1972
It's often like that. It was like it when ELIZABETH GALLACHER went out to look for some springtime primroses.
But that feller Kilroy and all his fellow travellers had been there before Liz and there wasn't a primrose in sight. They'd all been nicked.
It didn't actually make life inconsolably desolate for Liz, but it did put her right off Kilroy.
Kilroy, you remember if you're old enough was the legendary character who became famous during the Second World War. Whenever a pub sold out of beer, or you turned up for a date and found your girlfriend had gone off with someone else, it was a case of "Kilroy was here hard luck, mate."
You probably know all that. You probably want to know about Liz, not the unspeakable Kilroy.
Well, Liz is a Scottish girl and a real dream of a girl.
Absolutely lovely legs and beautiful eyes
Beautiful Britons No 137 - April 1967
Moon Goddess…
Would you know a pure goddess of the moon if you saw one?
You wouldn't? Then we suggest you look more closely at the photograph, which, incidentally, is of a lovely girl named Diana Welsher. Our infallible Dictionary of Girl's Names assures us that the name Diana means pure goddess of the moon. This rather seems to prove something, if only that Dictionaries of Girls' Names are a lot of rubbish.
Did Diana think she matched up to the title of "Pure Goddess of the Moon?"
'Depends on what you mean by pure,' she said, giving us a shrewd look. "I mean, I like pure things. Like pure whisky, for instance never any water with it.' But what about the "Goddess of the Moon" bit?
"Maybe that fits, too," she said. "I'm out late most nights with friends .. maybe I see more of the moon than the sun."
Diana has a good life. Parties every night and nothing to do but relax during the day ... Seems her father owns seventeen gold mines, and her mother has just inherited two and a half million pounds from an uncle who had twenty-three oil wells. On top of this, Diana won £25,000 last week on her premium bond. But, she says, she's not going to let the £25,000 change her life. She'll put it away in the bank and carry on exactly as before lazing in the sun, sipping iced Pimm’s, perhaps a taste of caviar for elevens, provided she's awake by then, of course. A glass or two of champagne when she feels in need of mild refreshment.
At this point we had to leave, as her father had just come home with a present for her.
"Oh, not another steam yacht, daddy," we heard her protest.
Well, being a Pure Goddess of the Moon can be rather a strain sometimes.
Mustang No 5 - 1968
Beauty queen ANNE DUKE is what we call a picture of health.
It helps, of course, to have a figure of 37-24-36, since in the eye of the beholder this gives any girl a good start in the health stakes.
Anne was born in Wales and now lives in Berkshire, where she is able to indulge one of her passions car driving amid miles and miles of quiet countryside.
Driving her Mini is something Anne adores; she just loves to be behind the wheel.
How about boyfriends, then?
Boyfriends (said Anne) are marvellous, because you can always ring them up and have them change a wheel or unclog a carburettor or something. Boyfriends mustn't only be good-natured and dishy; they must also be practical as well.
At twenty-one, Anne is no slowcoach when it comes to assessing the masculine qualities that appeal most to her.
Span No 200 - April 1971
This is only the second time we've seen DAWN GRAYSON, but it makes no difference. We're out cold all right, just as we were when we met her the first time. It's exhilarating when you come to and realise how impressionable you still are.
Beautiful Britons No 120 - November 1965
Victoriana was bric-a-brac, red flannel and whacking great pieces of furniture. It still is. Only people collect it now instead of throwing it away.
Victoriana was music-hall.
The music-hall featured girls in funny tights and yards of lace, and sometimes male impersonators in top hats.
A girl like JEAN ASTON looks great in a top hat, but you couldn't include her in any Victorian set-up.
The top hat would have been approved but not the skimpy undies, they'd have locked her up and sent out for a dress that reached to her ankles.
Oh well, san fairy.
She's acceptable in this modern age. And she only sings and dances for amateur shows. There's always a rush to fill the seats, of course, a because a lovely amateur can be an audience's idea of sheer delight.
Beautiful Britons No 192 - November 1971
Ah dear, when you're young what is more beautiful than bounce? All that youth and vitality, all that urge to jump around and dance about and look as irrepressible as ANN LESLIE. If you've got a pain in your tibia, it probably makes you wince just to look at Ann cavorting so uninhibitedly, in which case go and put a hot plaster on. And have a nice cup of cocoa.
Span No 182 - October 1969
That's a name that's caught on lately.
It certainly suits a certain lively, lovely blonde dolly called TIFFANY TRACE.
Tiffany is a riding-school instructress and can teach even the most awkward-looking pupil to develop a graceful seat. She's nineteen, has green eyes and intends in due course to see the world-probably on horseback.
Besides being good with horses she can also paint and her main outdoor activity, aside from an exhilarating gallop, is archery.
If your only interest is going down to the corner shop for fish and chips, you'll be inert in five year’s time. Buy yourself a saddle and look for a horse.
Span No 200 - April 1971
Span No 221 - January 1973
This month's very decorative cover girl is model ANNE MONTGOMERY much-travelled girl who wants to travel even more. Every time she goes away, of course, it's a pleasure to welcome her back, but it's a dud world in between.
Beautiful Britons No 106 - August 1964