Samantha Fox

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Samantha Fox
Samantha Fox in Lombardy crop.jpg
Fox live in Rescaldina, Italy, in 2009
Background information
Birth name Samantha Karen Fox
Also known as Sam Fox
Born (1966-04-15) 15 April 1966 (age 58)
Mile End, London, England
Origin London, England
Genres Pop, dance, house, freestyle
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter, former glamour model, actress, TV personality, record producer
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1983–1987 (model)
1986–present (singer)
Labels Jive Records, Sony Music
Associated acts Stock Aitken Waterman, Full Force, Günther, Marc Mysterio
Website www.samfox.com

Samantha Karen "Sam" Fox (born 15 April 1966) is an English dance-pop singer, songwriter, actress, and former glamour model. In 1983, at age 16, she began appearing on Page 3 of The Sun, and continued as a Page 3 girl until she was 20. During this time, she became the most popular pin-up girl of her era, as well as one of the most photographed British women of the 1980s.

In 1986, she launched her pop-music career with her debut single "Touch Me (I Want Your Body)", which hit Number 1 in 17 countries. In 1988, Fox received a Brit Award nomination for Best British Female Artist.[1] She has also appeared in a number of films and reality television shows, and has occasionally worked as a television presenter.

Background

The eldest daughter of Carole Ann Wilken, an actress, and the late John Patrick Fox. Samantha Karen Fox comes from a family of market traders from Chapel Market, Islington, London. She has a younger sister, Vanessa Lai Fox.

Education

Fox attended St Thomas More Catholic School, Wood Green and took an interest in the theatre from an early age. She first appeared on a theatre stage at age 3, and was enrolled in the Anna Scher Theatre School from age 15.[2] The next year she got her first record deal,with Lamborghini Records.[3]

In 1982, when Fox was 16, her mother submitted several photographs that she had taken of her daughter in lingerie to The Sunday People newspaper's Girl of the Year amateur modelling contest.[2][4] She came in second out of 20,000 entrants[5] and the photographs drew her to the attention of the newspaper The Sun, which invited her to pose for Page 3.[2][4] Her parents gave their consent for her to pose topless,[5] and her first Page 3 photograph appeared in the Sun on 22 February 1983.[6] She signed a four-year Page 3 modelling contract with the Sun,[5][7] and won its "Page 3 Girl of the Year" award for three consecutive years between 1984 and 1986.[8] She is recognized today as the most popular pin-up girl of her era, as well as one of the most-photographed British women of the 1980s.[9]

In 1986, Fox retired from Page 3 modelling, at the age of 20, and transitioned into a career in pop music. In 1995, aged 29, she made a one-off appearance in the Sun to promote Page 3's 25th anniversary. After receiving an overwhelmingly positive reader response, she appeared in the slot every day of that week, with Friday's final topless picture given away as an A3-sized poster. The following year she appeared in the October issue of Playboy magazine.[10]

In 2008, Fox was voted the top Page 3 girl of all time.

In December 2009, her latest compilation was issued, Greatest Hits, both in single CD and double CD formats.[11] In 2012 her first 4 albums were-re-issued as double deluxe CDs by Cherry Red.

Film and television

Fox was invited to star in a Bollywood film Rock Dancer.[12]

In the late 1980s, she appeared in television adverts for Leicestershire-based car dealership network with the slogan "Follow the Fox to Swithland Motors". Around the same time, she also appeared in television adverts for bingo in The Sun newspaper.[13]

In 1989, she co-presented the BRIT Awards with Mick Fleetwood, which became notorious for turning into a shambles; Fox has asserted in interviews since that the autocue did not work properly that night. She spent a year in New York presenting pop promo videos for MTV, and she made other attempts at TV presenting, including an interview with Rolf Harris, which was ill-fated even before it started as Fox referred to her interviewee as "Ralph" on several occasions, annoying the normally genial Harris.

In 1990 she appeared on the sitcom Charles in Charge as Samantha Steele, a fictional rock star whose agent pushes her to romance Charles (Scott Baio) so the paparazzi will print it in the tabloids. She featured in the ITV programme An Audience with... Ken Dodd (1994). She also featured in 2 movies: It's Been Real, written and directed by Steve Varnom and starring John Altman; and The Match, written and directed by Mick Davis and starring Pierce Brosnan, Ian Holm, Tom Sizemore, Neil Morrissey, David Hayman and Isla Blair.

In 2008, Fox and her partner Myra took part in Celebrity Wife Swap, exchanging with Freddie Starr and his wife Donna. In November 2009, she took part in ITV's I'm a Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here; she was voted out on Day 16. In July 2010, she appeared in a celebrity episode of Come Dine With Me with Calum Best, Janice Dickinson, and Jeff Brazier.

Personal life

File:Samantha Fox and partner.jpg
Fox (left) and her girlfriend Myra Stratton at the 2010 Fate Awards in Belfast

Fox's father Patrick, a former carpenter, managed her career until 1991, when she hired accountants to trace over £1 million that she believed he had embezzled from her accounts. She sued her father, who by then had divorced and remarried, and in May 1995 she was awarded a £363,000 court settlement.[14] Patrick Fox died in 2000, at which time they had not spoken for almost a decade.[15]

In 1994, it was reported that Fox had become a born again Christian;[16] that year she played at the Christian arts festival Greenbelt.[17]

In the late 1980s Fox became romantically linked with Australian con man Peter Foster. They began dating but she turned down his marriage proposal.[18] She also had a relationship with Paul Stanley, guitarist and singer of the rock band Kiss.[19][20] Rumours regarding Fox's sexual orientation began to surface in 1999 when she judged a lesbian beauty pageant, and rumours circulated that the woman she resided with—Cris Bonacci, the Australian former guitarist for the rock band Girlschool—was her lover. Though the two women did live in the same residence together, neither stated publicly that they were lovers. The relationship was confirmed later by Bonacci in an interview.[21] Prior to Bonacci, Fox shared her home with Debbie Connor, but again she herself never stated that they were romantically linked, only that they were "best mates".[22]

In February 2003, Fox made a statement about her personal life:[23][24] "I have slept with other women but I've not been in love before Myra Stratton. People say I'm gay....I don't know what I am. All I know is that I'm in love with Myra [Stratton, my manager]. I love her completely and want to spend the rest of my life with her." Fox said that she had been reluctant to come out because, having already dealt with obsessed fans and stalkers, she feared fans' possible reactions.[25] In August 2009, she announced her plans to form a civil partnership with Stratton.[26]

On 2 August 2015, Fox's long-term partner, Stratton, died following a two-year battle with cancer. She was 60 years old. Fox announced the news via Twitter and Facebook: "It is with great sadness we announce the passing of Myra Stratton. She was Samantha Fox's partner and manager for the past 16 years."[27]

Charitable activity

Samantha Fox donated her favourite bra to a charity auction.[28]

In June 2011, she appeared as part of a campaign for LGBT charity The Albert Kennedy Trust.[29]

Discography

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References

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  10. Gallery of various 1996 issues of Playboy featuring Fox at playboycoverarchive.com
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  12. "Samantha Fox - Bollywood 'Rock Dancer' 1995" on YouTube
  13. "Central Adverts, c. 1987" at YouTube
  14. Christa D'Souza, "The Curse of Page 3: Sam Fox on Her New Life—and Today's Topless Pretenders", The Express, 18 February 1997.
  15. Sam Fox: I Love a Woman but I'm No Lesbian Daily Mirror
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  18. The Guardian, 6 December 2002
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  20. Samantha Fox Interview
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  23. The Mail on Sunday 2 February 2003, page 12, Rebecca Hardy. Retrieved from Infotrac Newspapers Online on 12 September 2006.
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  25. She's still up front, Harriet Lane, The Guardian, 2 February 2003, retrieved 27 May 2009.
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External links

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