A
Private Eye cover at the time of Profumo had a photograph of "the lovely" Rice-Davies with the caption (without any headline or other identification), "Do you mind? If it wasn't for me – you couldn't have cared less about Rachman". Rice-Davies released a 45
EP on the
Ember label (EMB EP 4537) in May 1964 entitled
Introducing Mandy, which included cover versions of songs such as "
All I Do Is Dream of You" and "
You Got What It Takes". Rice-Davies traded on the notoriety the trial brought her, comparing herself to
Nelson's mistress,
Lady Hamilton. In 1965 she was an associate of pre-fame
David Bowie, attending his rehearsals and live performances. In 1966 she married an Israeli businessman, Rafi Shauli and moved to
Israel. The couple had one daughter together and Rice-Davies
converted to Judaism. She also opened nightclubs and restaurants in
Tel Aviv. In 1980, with Shirley Flack, Rice-Davies wrote her
autobiography,
Mandy. A year later she appeared in the
Tom Stoppard play,
Dirty Linen and New-Found-Land. In 1989, she wrote a novel entitled
The Scarlet Thread. The Ottoman Empire provided the backdrop and the novel was described as a stirring wartime saga in the spirit of
Gone with the Wind. Subsequently, journalist
Libby Purves, who had met Rice-Davies when
Mandy was published, invited her to join a female re-creation on the
River Thames of
Jerome K. Jerome's comic novel
Three Men in a Boat. This expedition was commissioned by
Alan Coren for the magazine
Punch, the other members of the party being cartoonist Merrily Harpur and a toy
Alsatian to represent Montmorency, the dog in the original story. Purves recounted how she "immediately spotted that this Rice-Davies was a woman to go up the Amazon with" and, among other things, that "only Mandy's foxy charm saved us from being evicted from a
lock for being drunk on pink
Champagne." Rice-Davies appeared in television and film productions, including
Absolutely Fabulous and episode 6 of the first series of
Chance in a Million. Her film career included roles in
Nana, the True Key of Pleasure (1982),
Black Venus (1983) and
Absolute Beginners (1986) as the mother of Colin, whose father was played by
Ray Davies. In the 1989 film
Scandal, about the Profumo affair,
Bridget Fonda portrayed Rice-Davies alongside
Joanne Whalley as Keeler. She was closely involved in the development of
Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical
Stephen Ward about Ward's involvement in the Profumo affair, in which she was portrayed by Charlotte Blackledge. The musical opened on 19 December 2013 at the
Aldwych Theatre. On
Radio 4's
Midweek on 5 February 2014, Rice-Davies said of Stephen Ward, "I didn't fall for him, but I did have an affair with him." She once described her life as "one slow descent into respectability". ==Illness and death==