Along with Johnny Rotten, Soo Catwoman and Siouxsie Sioux, she is credited with creating the London punk look.
Her style and dress sense-a bleached platinum-blonde bouffant hairdo with dark raccoon-like eye make-up-made her a highly visible icon of the London punk subculture.
Worked as a veterinary nurse and bred Burmese cats.
Worked in the infamous Sex and Seditionaries shops as a boutique
assistant.
Was in Adam and the Ants before leaving in May 1978.
Worked as manager for Adam and the Ants.
She took the single name Jordan at the age of 14, in Seaford.
She recorded the track "Lou" (about Lou Reed) as a guest lead vocalist with the band Adam and the Ants for BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel's Peel Sessions and often performed the song live with them from mid-1977 up to May 1978 when she left the band.
In the 1980s, she managed the band Wide Boy Awake, in which her then-husband Kevin Mooney was a guitarist. Mooney had previously been a bassist of Adam and the Ants.
Rooke's autobiography, Defying Gravity: Jordan's Story, written with Cathi Unsworth, was published by Omnibus Press in 2019.