Margaret Audrey White (2 November 1927 – 8 November 2014), later Lady Wardington, was a red-headed English model who was refused a job as a BBC announcer in case her powerful looks "alarmed timid men from Wigan and country districts." Later she had a career in fashion journalism before concentrating on charity work.
White was born in Bradford, the only child of a commercial traveller who left the family when she was young. She grew up in North London with her mother, Eva. They endured the Blitz during the Second World War together with their cat, named Luftwaffe. She took her school examinations at Henrietta Barnett School at the same time as German doodlebug attacks, the girls sheltering under their desks if it seemed a hit was imminent.
White's first job was as an assistant at an Elizabeth Arden salon in London's Bond Street. Phyllis Digby Morton, editor of Woman and Beauty asked White if she would be photographed for the magazine. From there, a career as a model developed.
White appeared as a bride in posters for British National Savings, had minor roles in several films and worked as an announcer on commercial radio. In 1951 she was rejected for the position of a stand-in BBC television announcer over fears that her appearance would overshadow the content, causing the press to exclaim that she was "Too beautiful for the BBC!".
In 1951 and 1952, White was the face of an advertising campaign for the washing powder Dreft and appeared endorsing the product across newspapers and magazines. Advertising in Picture Post described her as a "fashion model and T.V. girl" and quoted White as saying "I always find time to give my nylons and undies that all-important nightly dip in Dreft".
In September 1952 she appeared on BBC Radio's Light Programme in the series I Like My Job.