Richey Edwards: 29 Years of Unanswered Questions
The Manic Street Preachers guitarist vanished without a trace on February 1, 1995. Nearly three decades later, his fate remains one of music's greatest mysteries.

Quick Facts
At 27 years old, Richey Edwards was at the height of his creative powers. As guitarist and primary lyricist for the Manic Street Preachers, one of Britain's most politically charged rock bands, Edwards had become a fixture of 1990s alternative music. Then, on a winter morning in Wales, he simply vanished.
The last confirmed sighting came on the evening of January 31, 1995, at the Embassy Hotel in London. Bandmate James Dean Bradfield saw Edwards in his room, where he received a female visitor named Vivian—details about their encounter remain murky. The following morning, Edwards checked out of the hotel at 7:00 AM. He collected his wallet, car keys, Prozac medication, and passport, but left behind toiletries and some of his antidepressant pills alongside a packed suitcase.
Edwards drove to his flat in Cardiff, leaving his passport and more fluoxetine behind. He then crossed the Severn Bridge toward England, a toll receipt marking his passage. The exact time has been disputed—initially reported as 2:55 PM but possibly occurring at 2:55 AM according to some analyses.
What happened next remains shrouded in mystery. Edwards' Vauxhall Cavalier was discovered abandoned at Severn View service station near Aust in South Gloucestershire, its battery dead. The car contained evidence he had been living in it: family photographs taken just days earlier lay inside. A parking ticket dated February 14 suggested the vehicle had sat there for nearly two weeks before being reported on February 17.
The missing person report wasn't filed until February 2 by band manager Martin Hall. A public appeal followed on February 15. By then, theories were already proliferating. In the weeks before his disappearance, Edwards had withdrawn £200 daily from his bank account—£2,800 total by February 1. He had also spent £9.60 at a Surrey printer's shop the day before, though the purpose remains unclear.


