In 1990, Bucks Fizz became a three-piece (G, Nolan and Baker), and they continued to tour the country. Apart from a 1991
live album, no other recordings were made by the group. Baker left the group in 1993 and around this time G largely took over the management of Bucks Fizz, employing two new members, Heidi Manton and Amanda Schwartz. In 1995, Nolan also left the group and so G became the only original member. G took on former
Dollar star
David Van Day as Nolan's replacement. Van Day was keen to record with the group, but G decided that this was not economically viable and was happy to continue touring. Unrest grew between the two and eventually after a show in the
Falklands, Van Day quit the group. G rapidly employed a replacement, while Van Day launched a rival group along with former member Nolan. Unhappy with the situation, G filed a lawsuit against this version of the group and attempted to gain the rights to the Bucks Fizz name. In the early 2000s, G took Van Day to court, but was initially unsuccessful. Eventually he won the right to perform in the only officially recognised Bucks Fizz, following Nolan's departure from the Van Day version. In 2004, G performed once again with original members Nolan and Baker and later member,
Shelley Preston as part of the
Here and Now 1980's revival tour. This took in several arenas around the UK, but remained a one-off as G returned to his currently performing line-up. He also briefly appeared alongside Nolan, Baker, Preston and original member Aston in the video for
Comic Relief's 2007 single "
I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)" Members of Bucks Fizz continue to tour in two versions; one version consists of Cheryl Baker, Jay Aston, Matthew Pateman, and Nikk Mager as
The Fizz (Mike Nolan left in 2024), whilst the other contains Bobby G, his wife and two other singers as Bucks Fizz. == Solo career ==