Background
Sheila Lugg was born in Mullion, Cornwall in 1934.
Sheila Lugg was born in Mullion, Cornwall in 1934.
She attended Truro Girls School and studied piano, violin and trombone at the Royal Academy of Music, then was a member of the Ivy Benson All Girls Band between 1956 and 1958.
She began her career as a trombone player during the 1950s in all-female bands. Subsequently, she formed a vocal/trombone duo, The Tracy Sisters, who appeared in variety, on radio and television, as well as in cabaret all over the world. When the act broke up, she joined British Broadcasting Corporation Television as an announcer and worked mostly in television until 1974 when she became the first female newsreader on British Broadcasting Corporation Radio 4"s on 16 July.
She also qualified as a Special Policewoman in London.
On British Broadcasting Corporation Radio 2 Tracy devised and presented the Truckers" Hour, based on a format she had learnt about on a visit to the United States of America. She introduced Big Band Special featuring performances by the British Broadcasting Corporation Big Band. She would sometimes join the trombone section of the band in non-broadcast concerts.
She was also a regular contributor to Radio 4"s Breakaway. While on Saga Radio, Tracy presented a big band show called Swing Time with Sheila Tracy, a programme which was syndicated across the Saga network.
Two of the books she wrote are Bands, Booze & Broads (1995), a collection of her interviews with the American sidemen who played with the top bands in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s.
And Talking Swing (1997), on British musicians of the same era. She was a popular lecturer on P&O cruises. She wrote two other reference works.
In 1997, she was made a Freeman of the City of London and an Associate of the Royal Academy of Music.
She is a former President of The British Trombone Society. The couple had one child, born in 1965.
Sheila Tracy died at the age of 80, on 30 September 2014, at the Princess Alice Hospice in Esher, Surrey.