Penny McLean
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Singer Penny McLean was born Gertrude Wirschinger on November 4, 1948
in Klagenfurt, Carinthia, Austria. Penny married German
Holger Münzer in the late 60s; the couple
performed as a duo in that same era. McLean recorded her debut single
in 1972. She changed her stage name to Penny McLean for the 1974
single, "A Letter from Miami" (Penny claims she got this particular
name from a séance). In 1975, McLean joined the disco trio,
Silver Convention; the group not only
had massive hits with the classic disco anthems, "Fly, Robin, Fly" and
"Get Up and Boogie", in the mid-70s, but also performed the charming
tune, "Telegram", at the 1977 Eurovision Song Contest. Moreover, Penny
had a big solo smash with the bouncy, "Lady Bump", in 1975. Alas, such
additional solo singles as "Devil Eyes" and "Nobody's Child" were
undeserved commercial flops. McLean remained a member of
Silver Convention until the group
broke up in 1979. She continued with a floundering solo career up until
the mid-80s. Penny quit the music business in 1985 and went on to write
several best-selling nonfiction books on such subjects as ghosts, fate,
and numerology. McLean still appears on assorted German music variety
TV shows, singing her signature hit, "Lady Bump".