Beginnings: Johnny Theakston as Shane Fenton The original lead singer of the group was Theakston, who was born in 1944. When Theakston was a child, he contracted
rheumatic fever. Prior to playing rock'n roll, Theakston was playing skiffle. When the popularity of that genre faded, he switched to the more popular one. The group's roots can be traced to the Diamond Skiffle Group and Roger Lymer and his Crusaders. Following the break up of the two groups, some members from each of them ended up in a group called Johnny Theakston with his Beat Boys. The group's name was changed to Johnny Theakston and the Tremeloes. In the late 1950s, the newly named group took part in, and won a talent show at the Mansfield Palais. Also at the show was a young
Bernard Jewry. He would then join Johnny Theakston and The Tremeloes as their roadie. Occasionally Jewry would perform with them on stage. By 1960 Johnny Theakston decided that the group needed a more commercial name. He had given himself a more American image and adopted the name Shane Fenton. The Shane part was from the western,
Shane. The Fenton part came from a local printing firm. The group had been doing well in the Nottinghamshire area, attracting more attention as they continued playing. The group recorded a demo tape around 1961 which was sent to BBC. At the time the group consisted of Johnny Theakston on vocals, Jerry Wilcock and Mick Eyre on lead and rhythm guitars, Graham Squires on bass and Tony Hinchcliffe on drums. Shortly after the demo was completed, Squires was replaced on bass by Walter Bonney, who billed himself simply as Bonney, and stayed with the group though the following years. As a result of the group's demo tape being heard, they were offered an audition. Just days before the audition was due to take place, Jewry who was a friend of Johnny Theakston's walked over to his house for a rehearsal. His mother said that Johnny had become ill and was in hospital. Two days later Jewry went back and Johnny's mother told him that her son had died at seventeen years of age. The cause of death was rheumatic fever. After the death of Theakston the group were going to call it quits. But because the BBC had responded to the audition tape that had been sent in, the band were invited to play on the
Saturday Club radio pop show. Theakston's mother asked that they keep the group going as a tribute to her son as well as keeping the original name. Jewry took Theakston's place as Shane Fenton.
Bernard Jewry as Shane Fenton Now with Jewry as Shane Fenton, the group had become regulars on
Saturday Club.
Tommy Sanderson who was the
MD for the show became their manager, and they got a recording contract with EMI's Parlophone label. In September 1961, their debut single "I'm a Moody Guy" was released. Not long after the success of the single, the group was soon touring on rock'n'roll package show events. The next single was "Walk Away" which got to No. 38. They did the club circuit through to the early 1970s in Northern England, with a final solo single for Shane Fenton ("Eastern Seaboard") released in 1972. Jewry would later make a name for himself under the name
Alvin Stardust. The Fentones performed at the
Pipeline Instrumental Rock Convention in London in 1995. Lead guitarist Jerry Wilcock, who later worked as a bus driver, died in
Paignton,
Devon in June 2024. ==Discography==