Keeler had also slept with a Soviet naval attache, and the resulting collision of sex, wealth and national security issues rattled Britain's establishment, almost toppled the Conservative government and fascinated the nation. The scandal led to pimping charges against Stephen Ward, a well-connected osteopath who had introduced Keeler to Profumo at a country-house party thrown by aristocrat Lord Astor. [...] Rice-Davies agreed to revisit the scandal to help Andrew Lloyd-Webber with his 2013 musical "Stephen Ward," which depicted Keeler, Rice-Davies and Ward — who took a fatal drug overdose the night before he was found guilty of "living off immoral earnings" — as victims of British Establishment hypocrisy.