Jane Lumb
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jane Katherine Lumb (November 23, 1942 – February 8, 2008) achieved fame in Great Britain and internationally as a fashion model and actress in the 1960s. She was well known for appearing in series of advertisements for Fry's Turkish Delight.[1]
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[edit] Background
Jane Lumb was born near Hebden Bridge, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, England. Her father was a mill owner. Lumb was educated at a private boarding school where her unruly behaviour tended to mask her academic ability. She passed 4 A levels at the age of 17 and won a place at Oxford University to read English, but never took this up, having attended a tutorial college for a year, from where she absconded with a medical student. In the 1970s Lumb took an English degree from the Open University.
[edit] Swinging Sixties
Lumb found work as a fashion model, appearing in the first international edition of the Pirelli Calendar in 1964,[2] for which she was photographed by Robert Freeman on a beach in Majorca.[3] Her friends during the "Swinging Sixties", of which she has been described as "one of the iconic faces",[4] included models Twiggy and Paulene Stone. According to the Liverpool Daily Post over forty years later, Lumb had "long legs, a short skirt, a come-hither pout, a rich dad and a boarding school voice".[5]
Lumb mixed also in musical circles, appearing in a promotional film for the Rolling Stones’ song Ruby Tuesday. Other film credits included Goldfinger (1964), Carry On Cleo (1964), Carry On Spying (1964), Dr Who and the Daleks (uncredited, 1965) and a fleeting appearance in Joe Massot’s 13-minute short Reflections on Love (1966), with Jenny Boyd, whose sister Pattie had married George Harrison after meeting him on the set of A Hard Day's Night.[6] Lumb appeared in television advertisements for Fry's Turkish Delight,[7] famous for their sensuality and slogan, "full of Eastern promise".
Lamb posed again for Pirelli in 1973, the calendar for that year being shot by Brian Duffy,[8] one of a group of sixties' photographers, including David Bailey and Terence Donovan, whom Pattie Boyd has referred to as "rock 'n' rollers without the music".[9] Photographer Philip Townsend described Lumb as among the "top five" on any photographer's list of subjects in the 1960s.[10]
[edit] Family and later work
Lumb’s partner for several years was Tony Hicks of the Hollies. In 1976 she married Tony Gourvish, a manager in the music business, who had previously partnered the writer Germaine Greer. They had a daughter.
Lumb was later involved in public relations, working with, among others, the bands Showaddywaddy and the Bay City Rollers. She also represented the chef Anton Mosimann.
Jane Lumb died from breast cancer in 2008. The Times noted in its obituary that she had prided herself on her ability to complete its crossword.
[edit] References
See generally,The Times, 15 March 2008
[edit] Notes
- ^ "Our regular column covering the passing of significant - but lesser-reported - characters of the past month.", BBC News, 2008-04-02. Retrieved on 2008-04-02.
- ^ Pirelli Calendar 1964
- ^ Google Image Result for http://blog.canalcom.com.br/up/c/ca/blog.canalcom.com.br/img/pirelli64jan.jpg
- ^ The Times, obituary, 15 March 2008
- ^ David Charteris, Liverpool Daily Post, 18 March 2008
- ^ Pattie Boyd (2007) Wonderful Today
- ^ David Charteris, Liverpool Daily Post, 18 March 2008
- ^ Pirelli Calendar 1973
- ^ Pattie Boyd (2007) Wonderful Today
- ^ The Philip Townsend Archive | Sixties London | Celebrity Portrait Photographer 1960 - 1969 | Picture the Sixties
[edit] External links
- Jane Lumb at the Internet Movie Database
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