Valerie Mewes (2 August 1931[1] – 9 January 1955) was an English model and celebrity, better known by the name Vicki Martin.
Biography
editStephen Ward, who was to become one of the central figures in the 1963 Profumo affair, claims to have met Mewes in a doorway in Oxford Street during a thunderstorm at night.[2] Ward produced many female protégés, and it is said that Mewes was the prototype for these.[3]
Mewes was best friends with Ruth Ellis,[4] the last woman to be executed in the United Kingdom. The pair had both worked at Murray's Club in Soho, where Stephen Ward later met Christine Keeler.[5]
In 1952, Mewes appeared, playing the part of a model in the film It Started in Paradise.[6] The actress, Kay Kendall, who was a friend of Ward's, also appeared in the film.[7]
In 1953, Mewes gained notoriety as a result of her relationship with Jagaddipendra Narayan, the Maharajah of Cooch Behar, and in 1955, by the manner of her untimely death.[8] It was said that she died driving back to London from an all-night party at Maidenhead to keep an early photo call,[9] however, the true facts remained unclear.[10]
The car in which Mewes died was being driven by the writer Terence Robertson,[11] author of a number of books, including 'The Golden Horseshoe'. Robertson took his own life in January 1970.[12]
External links
editNotes
edit- ^ GRO, September 1931, 3A 46
- ^ Charlton, W. (1963). Stephen Ward Speaks, Conversations with Warwick Charlton
- ^ Summers, A., & Dorril, S. (1988). Honeytrap, The Scandal
- ^ Knightley, P., & Kennedy, C. (1987). An Affair of State: The Profumo Case and the Framing of Stephen Ward
- ^ Charlton, W. (1963). Stephen Ward Speaks, Conversations with Warwick Charlton
- ^ Jakubait, M (2005). My Sister's Secret Life
- ^ Jakubait, M (2005). My Sister's Secret Life
- ^ The Daily Mirror, Monday, 10 January 1955
- ^ Sutherland, D. (1988). Portrait of a Decade, London Life 1945–1955
- ^ Chicago Daily Tribune, Monday, 17 January 1955
- ^ The Daily Mirror, Thursday, 9 March 1955
- ^ Newman, P. (1979). King of the Castle, The Making of a Dynasty: Seagram's and the Bronfman Empire