Michelle Stephenson

Michelle Stephenson
Birth name Michelle Stephenson
Born Abingdon, Oxfordshire, England
Origin England
Genres Pop
Occupation(s) Singer, presenter, reporter
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1990s
Labels Unsigned
Associated acts Spice Girls

Michelle Stephenson is a British singer and television presenter. At the age of 17, she was briefly a member of the English girl group that would go on to become the Spice Girls.[1]

Touch (Spice Girls)

Alongside Melanie Brown, Melanie Laccohee (later replaced by Victoria Adams), Lianne Morgan (later replaced by Melanie Chisholm) and Suzanne Tinker (soon replaced with Geri Halliwell), Stephenson completed the original 1994 line-up of Touch receiving the highest scores at the audition. At the audition, she sang Dina Carroll's song "Don't Be a Stranger".[2] Stephenson was a member of the group for only a short period before commitment issues prompted Heart Management to remove her. According to Bob Herbert, she was fired because "she just wasn't fitting in... she would never have gelled with it and I had to tell her to go".[2]:30 Stephenson later challenged Herbert's claim, stating that it was her decision to leave due to her mother being diagnosed with breast cancer: "To say I was turfed out of the group when I left because I wanted to be with my sick mother – well, what kind of person does that?"[3][4] Adams later dismissed this claim, saying she "just couldn't be arsed" to put in the work the rest of the group was doing.[2]:31 Stephenson was replaced by Emma Bunton.[2][5]

Stephenson has given several interviews about her time with the group, stating that she does not regret leaving them.[6][7]

Presenting and music

Stephenson worked briefly as a TV presenter for LWT,[7] ITV, Friendly TV and BSkyB. She also filmed a TV show in Malta called Wild Games before forming a songwriting partnership with Ben Hackett and Mike Edwards (under the name SHEsongs). She has also worked as a session singer for various record companies. She performed backing vocals for singers like Ricky Martin and Julio Iglesias, while working on her own songs as well. In November 2003, Stephenson recorded and released an EP entitled SHESongs, featuring six songs called "In Control", "Fall Over", "Hey Sugar", "Dirty Music", "Boom, Boom" and "Happens for a Reason".

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
2001 London Weekend Television Presenter 5 episodes[8]
2001 Raw Spice Herself Documentary[9]
2008 E! True Hollywood Story' Herself Documentary'[9]

Albums

  • 2003: SHEsongs (EP)

See also

References

  1. Vanoli, Lisa (Feb 27, 1997). "News: Now it's time for the Spice Boys!". The Stage.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Sinclair, David (2004). Wannabe: How the Spice Girls Reinvented Pop Fame. Omnibus Press. pp. 27–31. ISBN 0-7119-8643-6.
  3. "Posh is so bitchy, says the sixth Spice Girl", Alison Boshoff, Daily Mail 16 September 2001
  4. "Meet the 'Raw' Spice Girl". Entertainment. People. 24 April 1998.
  5. "Timeline: Spice Girls". Entertainment. BBC. 28 June 2007.
  6. "'No regrets' about leaving Spice Girls". News24. 22 March 2001.
  7. 1 2 Kempster, Doug (4 March 2001). "Forgotten Spice Girl; What happened to the one who turned her back on". Sunday Mirror. Findarticles.com.
  8. "Michelle Stephenson". British Film Institute.
  9. 1 2 IMDB. "Michelle Stephenson".

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