Susan Maughan (born 1 July 1938) is an English singer who released successful singles in the 1960s. Her most famous and successful song, "Bobby's Girl" (a cover of the Marcie Blane single), reached number three in the UK Singles Chart at Christmas time in 1962. It also reached number six in the Norwegian chart in that year.
She was born Marian Maughan and hailed from Consett, County Durham, in the north east of England. As a child, her family relocated to Birmingham, and after leaving school she became an office typist. But Susan’s nine-to-five working life was set to change when she answered an advertisement in Disc Weekly for a featured vocalist with the Ronnie Hancox Dance Band. Susan successfully auditioned and during her three years with Hancox she learnt to read and write music.
In 1961 she was introduced to agent Dick Katz, who was looking for a female vocalist to join the Ray Ellington Quartet. Within a few weeks Susan was enjoying her first engagement with the quartet at the Sporting Club in Monte Carlo. She remained with Ellington for a year. Susan had also signed to the Philips label and was destined for fame with guidance from her producer, Johnny Franz – even though her first three efforts failed to chart.
Her 1961 debut release, Mama do the twist, should have been a big hit – it was catchy and topical at a time when the twist was the current dance craze. Her second single, Baby doll twist, was backed with a lively up-to-date version of the old Sophie Tucker song Some of these days. Her third offering found Susan in a melancholy mood with I’ve got to learn to forget.
However, her fourth single, Bobby’s girl, proved a winner. It had been recorded by Marcie Blane in the States and the spoken opening lyric began, “When people ask of me, what you would like to be, now that you’re not a kid anymore.” Susan hated the intro. “It sounded so awful,” she said. “I couldn’t imagine myself sounding so twee. So we changed the routine and decided I should start off singing the chorus… ‘I wanna be Bobby’s girl’. As soon as I heard our version, I could imagine everyone whistling it – and they did.”The disc peaked at number three in the UK charts in October 1962. The flip side, Come a little closer, is worthy of note and could have been hit in its own right.
Susan, a brunette, was easy on the eye and had a certain ‘girl next door’ quality, and quickly developed a fan base. More discs followed: Hand a handkerchief to Helen, which peaked at number 41 in February 1963, was regarded by many as a reference to Helen Shapiro, whose career was now on the wane. The flip side, I’m a lonely one too, deserves a mention, as Susan wrote it herself and it was also recorded by fellow Philips singer Rose Brennan. Her third and last chart entry, She’s new to you, just broke into the top 50 at number 45 in May 1963.
Susan with Billy J. Kramer and The Beatles |
By now, Susan was well known and part of the line-up for the 1963 Royal variety show, which also starred the Beatles. She became a popular guest on television shows, including Ready steady go!, Thank your lucky stars and the Morecambe and Wise Show. Besides success on the small screen, Susan also took the female lead in the musical film What a crazy world alongside Marty Wilde, Joe Brown and blonde-topped Grazina Frame. A further musical feature, Pop gear, stars a host of 1960s names including beat babe Billie Davis and Susan.
Her first long player for Philips in 1963 was titled I wanna be Bobby’s girl but…, followed by the release of Swingin’ Susan and, a year later, came Sentimental Susan. The two albums present her singing standards, which suit her singing voice very well. She also released four EPs for Philips. However, like many of her contemporaries, the arrival of the beat boom spelled trouble for Susan. Now deemed outdated by fans who had adored her just a year or so earlier, her records failed to sell. Her second single of 1966, Where the bullets fly, was the title track of a spoof James Bond film and very much in the dramatic, Shirley Bassey mould.
In 1967 another long player titled Hey look me over featured Susan offering a jazz approach to old songs as well as current items. In 1971 came a switch to the Spark label, then to Ember for the release of her This is Me album in 1974 and several singles including El bimbo – which was also recorded by a host of other European girl singers, including Italy’s Rosanna Fratello and Finland’s Marion Rung. By the late 1970s and 80s, Susan had carved a niche in pantomime work and as a regular fixture on the 1960s nostalgia circuit.
Today, she is still in demand for 1960s tours, most recently sharing billing with Barry Ryan and Dave Berry. Part of her set incorporates a tribute to some of the other girl singers of the 1960s – Helen Shapiro, Dusty Springfield, Petula Clark, Kathy Kirby and Cilla Black – and she sings a song most associated with each particular star.
She married advertising executive Nicolas Teller, February 1965. She now lives in Eastbourne with second husband Nick Leigh, a theatre director. (Edited mainly from Ready Steady Girls)