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Article claims Toni Fisher used "miss" because
her voice might be mistaken as a man's voice.
This is false; Miss Fisher's voice could not ever
be taken as a man's voice. Maybe there was indeed
a motive to be labeled "miss" , but the sound of the
voice would not be it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.254.13.202 (talk) 18:16, 23 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]
The article Wayne Shanklin does not mention anything about Toni Fisher having been his wife. Some websites, like discogs.com, possibly taking it from Wikipedia state he was her husband. Findagrave.com states "In the early fifties she married composer / arranger /producer Wayne Shanklin", and further down: "She spent the rest of the sixties doing club dates and retired from the music scene after the death of her husband in 1970". However, our article on Shanklin states: "His secretary, Victoria Hamway, worked right alongside him and in 1964, they were married" and then we state that he was survived by "wife Vicki". I have also found complains made from an alleged member of her family about Wikipedia stating that Shanklin had been Toni's husband. The information seems conflicting. Out of doubt, I have removed the statement until we can be sure it reflects real events. Alternatively we could state that "according to this or that source" he had been her husband. HoverfishTalk14:08, 22 August 2013 (UTC)[reply]