Daily Record

£500k for Social Bite

- EMILY RETTER reporters@dailyrecor­d.co.uk

BANK workers have raised £500,000 for a campaign to end homelessne­ss.

Staff at Clydesdale Bank owners CYBG pledged the cash to Social Bite, who ran Sleep In The Park in Edinburgh in December.

David Duffy, CEO at CYBG, said: “It was our pleasure to be involved in this campaign.”

Social Bite co-founder Josh Littlejohn said: “This has left our team truly humbled and incredibly grateful.” LEMAR has already been voted into Dancing on Ice’s skate-off twice, and he looks certain to be in for another tough time tonight if his stumble on last weekend’s results show is anything to go by.

If a black contestant on BBC rival Strictly landed in the same position, there would be murmurings of racism.

But the 39-year-old singer and songwriter is absolutely confident the colour of his skin is not to blame for him being in the bottom two with his pro partner on the ice, Melody Le Moal.

He faced the same questions back in 2002 when he took part in his first reality show, Fame Academy. Despite his meltingly smooth voice, he only came in third – although the show launched his pop career and catapulted him to fame.

Laidback as ever, he said: “No, I gave the same answer then, too. I have been in the bottom two, but Perri (Shakes-Drayton) is doing exceptiona­lly well and Alex (Beresford). You just got to crack on and skate better.”

But he does admit he is no stranger to racism. Growing up in Tottenham, north London, he knew it too well. He said: “Sure, yeah, definitely, 100 per cent.

“Growing up, it’s part of what you have to deal with sometimes.”

And then, without changing his chilled-out tone, he mentions that he has been assaulted, too.

He said: “It was a racially-motivated attack, nothing to do with fame, when I was much younger.

“I was in a club, one guy came over and started shouting racial slurs at me and hit me over the head with a bottle.

“We got into a fight and that got broken up and, yes, that was it.

“I was hurt enough – but I didn’t end up the worst off.

“It is not a nice thing to happen to anyone, but unfortunat­ely that is the reality of the world sometimes.”

That’s Lemar for you. He is not one to let anyone, or anything, hold him back – and certainly not a little slip on Dancing on Ice, or the controvers­y which seems to have raged after it.

When he stumbled last week in the skate-off against Hollyoaks actress Stephanie Waring, 39, it was widely assumed that he would be going home.

But, instead, head judge Jayne Torvill, 60, backed Christophe­r Dean, 59, and ruled that Lemar should stay in the show, and Steph should go – even though the other judges Jason Gardiner, 46, and Ashley Banjo, 29, disagreed.

Steph this week admitted she was surprised at the decision, given that she did not slip, while Ashley said Lemar had been “given enough chances”.

But Lemar has simply decided to keep plugging away, unrattled.

He said” “I’m not fazed at all, I’m enjoying myself and I’m loving skating and the show.

“Learning from profession­als is brilliant. And I doubt the judges carry their feelings into the following week.

“I’m in contact with Steph, she’s all right, she’s fine. She’s obviously gutted, she would like to still be in the show.”

He is working hard to prove the judges were right to keep him in.

Lemar added: “I have been surprised

I’m not fazed. I’m enjoying myself and I’m loving skating and the show LEMAR

how intense the training is – you have to really put in the hours, I’m putting in two to six hours every single day. You are emotionall­y invested. I can see why Steph is gutted. But we had a hug and she said, ‘Good luck’.” Lemar, his surname is Obika and his parents originate from Nigeria, can sympathise as he knows what it is to overcome hurdles.

Before going on Fame Academy, he had already lost a record deal and was working in a bank and in supermarke­ts. He had a university place to study pharmacy, thinking it might be his safest bet for a career.

But his will to achieve his dreams persuaded him to give Fame Academy a try. It was won by Paisley singer David Sneddon but led to Lemar being signed to Sony.

He released his first single

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom