Georgina Baillie (born 7 July 1985) is an English actress, artist, post-punk singer, songwriter, and formerly a burlesque performer. Her stage names have included Voluptua and Georgie Girl.
From 2010 to 2013 she worked as a backing vocalist for Adam Ant and during 2011–2012 as the lead singer of the band Poussez Posse that toured with Ant in over 100 concerts.
In October 2008, Baillie and her grandfather, the actor Andrew Sachs, were the targets of a prank phone call by Russell Brand and Jonathan Ross that resulted in reverberations in the British media.
In 2009, shortly after The Russell Brand Show prank calls, Adam Ant befriended Baillie, and as of 2011 remained close friends. He hired Baillie to oversee his calendar scheduling and asked her to perform back up vocals for his performances. Link to print image. This lasted from 2010–2013. At first she sang with White and later with Georgina "Twinkle" Leahy; she later sang backup alone. As a member of Ant's band "The Good, The Mad and the Lovely Posse", she appeared as a backing vocalist in Ant's "Cool Zombie" music video, released on Blueblack Hussar Records and in concert footage featured in The Blueblack Hussar, a documentary about Ant's early 2010s musical comeback directed by Jack Bond, as well as in extras included on the film's DVD release.
Baillie co-wrote two songs in response to the Jonathan Ross/Russell Brand incident discussed below. One was "Gun In Your Pocket", a song by Ant with input from Baillie in which both Baillie and Brand are discussed. "Gun In Your Pocket" was written in 2010 as single for Ant's upcoming album Adam Ant Is the Blueblack Hussar in Marrying the Gunner's Daughter. In the end the song was released in late 2012 as the B side of the pre-album single "Cool Zombie". The other song was "Rubber Medusa" – a song addressed to Brand from Baillie's point of view, co-written with Ant.
From 2011 to 2012, Baillie was lead singer of the band Poussez Posse, which Ant mentored. There were two incarnations of Poussez Posse. The original line-up featured Baillie with Fiona Bevan and Danie Cox both on guitars, Rachael Smith on drums and Molly Spiers Macleod (daughter of Spizz) on bass. Footage from early 2011 of a band meeting of this first incarnation at Ant's home is included in Bond's documentary. They recorded a single of "Rubber Medusa" (b/w "Teacher") and an EP of four of Cox's songs. Both projects remain unreleased. Bevan left to concentrate on her own music in July 2011 and Cox, Smith and Spiers Macleod all abruptly left in September (to found their own band The Featherz, led by Cox).
At this point, the second incarnation of the Posse was recruited, featuring the return of Corleone on guitar, drummer Jessica Rushton and future Curse of Lono bassist Charis Anderson. This version toured the UK, mainland Europe and Australia supporting Ant and his band between October 2011 and December 2012, with Baillie performing double duty every night as both the Posse's frontwoman and Ant's backing vocalist.
Early in 2013, Baillie dissolved the second Posse. She sang vocals and Corleone played guitar as the duo Vortex Empress. They produced two tracks, "Burn Me" and "Spellbound" and a music video for the former. From mid to late 2013, she sang backing vocals in Guns 2 Roses, (the official Guns 'N Roses tribute act). In 2016, she worked with Boz Boorer singing vocals on the track "Le Stalker" on Boorer's solo album Age of Boom.
John Robb of Louder Than War, in a full interview for the site, described Baillie's work as "punky burlesque". The Evening Standard of London has profiled her music career and musical collaboration and friendship with Ant. The Tampa Bay Times describes Georgie Girl & Her Poussez Posse's music as "fresh and rough", comparing their sound to "Hole vs Garbage vs a sexy, roller-derby squad".
After she stopped working with Ant, Baillie studied acting at The Poor School of drama in London in the mid 2010s. In 2021, she was cast in the lead role in a production of the 1975 Barry Reckord play, White Witch, at the Bloomsbury Theatre. Also in 2021, she appeared in the Kevin Short film, Tom and his Zombie Wife.
The media referred to the incident as "Sachsgate". Sachs never gave his consent to have these messages broadcast on the air. This led to the estrangement of Baillie from her grandparents that lasted for years. The sociologist Chris Rojeck described Ross and Brand's exploit as an "invasion of privacy", and stated that "their remorse is not focused on Andrew Sachs or Georgina Baillie, the victims whose privacy has been violated" but rather the two comedians felt remorse for receiving negative public reactions and disapproval of their stunt.
Baillie stated in the New York Times that she thought Brand was "very much rewarded" for the prank. The prank calls were covered in the news again in the wake of a Sunday Times–Channel 4 investigation into Brand's alleged sexual assaults of other women.Media coverage revisiting prank calls incident, following sexual assault allegation against Brand:
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