She was smart, and made the most of her opportunities, using her job on the dance floor to befriend the 9th Duke of Marlborough, as well as a wine merchant, and when he died in 1945, she took up with the president of luxury goods company who died in 1948. She hit the jackpot in 1949, with the third husband, Sir Bernard Docker, then chairman of a British Daimler.
She was made a director of Hooper’s, then Daimler’s body-building company, and bought Glandyfi Castle in Wales for £12,500, and furnished it with £25,000, both sums coming from company coffers. A £5,000 bill was also presented to Daimler for the mink-covered outfit she wore to the 1956 Paris Motor Show.
The parts normally chrome plated got real gold instead, the instrument panel was made of ivory, and the interior was covered in zebra hide. She used zebra “Because mink is too hot to sit on”
I remember posting the gold and zebra car years ago, but I hadn't heard enough about her then to look into the cars she designed https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2007/01/1955-golden-zebra-daimler-with-zebra.html
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