Kenneth Wagg

Kenneth Arthur Wagg (6 March 1909[1]–7 May 2000[2]) was an English rackets player, banker, and theatrical producer.

[1] Wagg joined the British Army and served with the Rifle Brigade in the North African campaign in the war.

Wagg was part of the inaugural British rackets tour of the United States following the Second World War.

The New York Times described the match as "one of the most remarkable feats recorded on a rackets court" as Wagg and Atkins came back from 7–0 in the first game with "the greatest single hand of rackets within memory" as their opponents, the American players Robert Grant and Clarence Pell, "found themselves helpless against the absolute perfection, cleverness and finality of the British pair".

[citation needed] Wagg married the actress Clare Sandars, Lady McEwen, and converted to Catholicism in 1973 shortly before their marriage.