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Who are the models in the Robert Palmer video?

Who are the models in the Robert Palmer video?

Music video The five models in the video are Julie Pankhurst (keyboard), Patty Kelly (guitar), Mak Gilchrist (bass guitar), Julia Bolino (guitar), and Kathy Davies (drums). Mak Gilchrist recalled to Q: “I was 21 and got the part on the strength of my modelling book.

Who sang I’m addicted to love?

Fredrick Jacobs
I’m Addicted to Love/Artists

Who got Robert Palmer’s money?

The proceeds went to Robert’s five children from his two marriages to Shelley Palmer and Susan Palmer. And this nonsense about funeral expenses not being paid had nothing to do with reality. The Palmer family arranged their father’s funeral.

Is Robert Palmer of RP Funding married?

A native of Lakeland, Fla., Palmer and his wife, Jill, have local ties to the area and have maintained a residence in Neptune Beach since 2007.

When did Robert Palmer release addicted to love?

Robert Palmer’s “Addicted to Love” earned him a Grammy in 1987 for Best Rock Vocal Performance, Male, and a year before that he released an iconic music video featuring a bevy of fembot beauties. So where are the Robert Palmer girls today?

When did the Robert Palmer girls come out?

The Robert Palmer Girls Today. Robert Palmer’s “Addicted to Love” earned him a Grammy in 1987 for Best Rock Vocal Performance, Male, and a year before that he released an iconic music video featuring a bevy of fembot beauties.

Who is the girl in the Robert Palmer commercial?

Julie Pankhurt continued appearing in music videos like Harry Connick, Jr.’s “Recipe for Love” and Robert Palmer’s “Simply Irresistible” Pepsi commercial. Professionally, she’s transitioned from modeling to a nanny to a photography agent and even a director for commercials.

Guitarist Patty Elias, one of the video’s models, jokes that the video may have been more popular than the song itself. In addition to Palmer and the five women, five musicians, off-camera, were miming what the models were supposed to do with their instruments due to British media production laws.