Roger and Wendy Penney started their entertainment careers as actors, working with Boston's Theatre Company. Using the stage name Roger and Wendy Beckett, by the mid-'60s the pair had turned their attentions to music, becoming fixtures on New York's Greenwich Village folk club scene. By 1967 they'd followed the art crowd into a more electrified folk-rock sound with Roger jammin' on electric autoharp, while Wendy had picked up electric bass.
1969 saw The Beckets join forces with another entertainment couple - singer Sharon Alexander and guitarist Tom Pacheco. As Euphoria, the quartet captured the attention of Jerry Ross who signed them to his newly formed, MGM-affiliated Heritage label releasing an instantly obscure album on the short-lived Heritage label. In 1971 they released an extremely rare vanity project ("Love Roger and Wendy") on their own Horny Records imprint. And that takes you to Bermuda Triangle.