Belfast Telegraph

Girls Aloud share new clip as they poke fun at Cheryl for past reunion comment

- By Roisin O’connor

GIRLS Aloud have shared a new clip in which they poke fun at bandmate Cheryl for her past comments about the prospect of a reunion.

The girl group delighted fans last year when they announced a huge UK and Ireland tour for 2024, with plans to celebrate late member Sarah Harding, who died of breast cancer in 2021.

Along with Harding, Girls Aloud rose to fame while competing on ITV talent show Popstars: The Rivals in 2002, splitting in 2013 following a greatest hits tour.

Singer Cheryl had previously brushed off questions about whether a reunion tour would ever take place.

Speaking to camera for the Girls Aloud documentar­y Off the Record in 2006, she insisted: “There’ll be no reunions, though. Could you imagine? 30-odd-yearold... ‘I’m just a love machine’? Nah. No thanks.”

In their latest Instagram post, Girls Aloud gather around Cheryl, awkwardly glancing around as they play a Lady Gaga clip that says: “Oh look... you know what? I don’t... I... we didn’t say that, no, but it looks an awful lot like that doesn’t it?”

The post is captioned with Cheryl’s quote: “There’ll be no reunions though.”

“So... yeah, anyway... See you at the Girls Aloud Show next month,” the group joked.

In a statement last year announcing the tour, Cheryl said that a reunion had in fact been on the band’s minds until Harding’s death.

“We all started talking about the possibilit­y of doing something to celebrate Girls Aloud’s 20-year anniversar­y a few years ago. The anniversar­y seemed like an obvious thing that we would celebrate. But when Sarah fell ill all priorities changed,” the “Love Machine” singer explained.

“She passed away a year before the anniversar­y and it just didn’t feel right, it felt too soon. But now, I think there is an energy that does makes it feel right. It’s the right time to celebrate Sarah, it’s the right time to celebrate the band and the right time to celebrate the fact we can still do this 21 years later. That’s a big honour in lots of ways.”

Kimberly Walsh added that the band has noticed an “outpouring” of love from their fans following Harding’s death, adding that the love they have felt has somehow “ignited” the band again.

“Over the last year, we’ve felt this outpouring of love — obviously towards Sarah, but actually towards all of us as a group. And I guess it’s ignited something in all of us again,” Walsh said. “It feels like something has changed and it does feel like the right time to celebrate Sarah and the 20-year anniversar­y that we didn’t celebrate at the time.”

Speaking about the girls upcoming tour, Nadine Coyle said she is “dead against” Girls Aloud performing any new covers.

Last week the Derry native appeared alongside bandmates Kimberley Walsh, Nicola Roberts and Cheryl on BBC Radio 2 to speak with Scott Mills about their upcoming tour.

Girls Aloud’s covers of famous pop songs from throughout the decades have become nearly as notorious as the group’s own original tracks.

Their most popular remakes include The Pretenders’ I’ll Stand by You, Teenage Dirtbag by Wheatus and Olivia Newton-john’s Hopelessly Devoted to You, from the 1978 movie Grease.

However, when asked by presenter Mills today whether the singers will be taking on any new versions for their reunion shows, Nadine debated with her bandmates that it could be too much to add to their already lengthy discograph­y.

“I was dead against it,” said the 38-year-old.

“I was like, ‘we’ve got so many songs of Girls Aloud as our own, why do we need to be doing this?’

“They [the other girls] like doing the covers, but I’m like: ‘we’ve already done so many’.”

The Girls Aloud reunion shows will kick off from 18 May at the 3Arena in Dublin and conclude on 29 June at the M&S Bank Arena in Liverpool.

‘We all started talking about the possibilit­y of doing something to celebrate Girls Aloud’s 20-year anniversar­y a few years ago’

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