Codenames for the machine while under development included: Raisin, Pizza, Adam Ant.
Among the bewildering number of changes was the change of the lead from Adam Ant to Sting to Martin Hewitt.
Adam | Adam Smith | Adam and Eve | Adam Mickiewicz | Adam Sandler | Adam Lambert | Adam-12 | Adam Ant | Adam Faith | Adam Again | Adam Michnik | Robert Adam | Adam Sedgwick | Adam Savage | Adam (Bible) | Adam West | Adam of Bremen | ant | Adam Warlock | Adam Strange | Adam Hochschild | Adam Rapp | Adam Hughes | Adam Carolla | Adam Baldwin | Hans-Adam II, Prince of Liechtenstein | Adam Hart-Davis | Adam Buxton | Adam Brand | Adam Yauch |
Her designs found early success with such notables as Adam Ant, Samantha Fox and Tony James, but she wanted to reach ordinary women.
Winton left Pick of The Pops on 30 October 2010 due to other work, and he counted down the charts from 1959 and 1983 with classics from Culture Club, Fats Domino, The Cult, Adam Ant and Dickie Valentine.
Mars went on to appear in many more films, including Drop Dead Rock with Debbie Harry and Adam Ant, Jennie Livingston's Who's the Top?, Venus Boyz, Mary Harron's The Notorious Bettie Page and a documentary based on her own life, The Dark Matter of Mars.
Formed by creative director Rob O'Connor in 1981, it is notable for creating record sleeve designs for bands such as Blur, Siouxsie & the Banshees, Stereophonics, Killing Joke, Sandie Shaw, Adam Ant, Catatonia, Jesus Jones, Squeeze, Crowded House, Dr John, Simple Minds, Sarah Brightman and Menswear.
Mandel eventually moved behind the scenes, working on the horror comedy Dead Men Don't Die (1991) starring Elliott Gould as well as co-producing Love Bites, starring Adam Ant, in 1993.
In April 2010 they supported Adam Ant at his notorious comeback gig at the Scala and in June they performed alongside Martin Creed at London's ICA.
The upper middle field of the sleeve includes the record covers of the singles included in the compilation, while the table below features: a lipstick, a bottle of Coca-Cola, sunglasses, earphones and a copy of the legendary ex-Yugoslav music magazine Džuboks with Adam Ant on its front cover.