Derby Telegraph

14 number ones and a knighthood... you can’t plan for that

SIR CLIFF RICHARD TELLS MARION McMULLEN WHY HE IS PLANNING A BELATED 80TH BIRTHDAY BASH, AND THERE’S LOTS TO CELEBRATE

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SIR CLIFF RICHARD is Britain’s ultimate pop star and the only performer to have had number one hits in every decade from the 1950s to the end of the 20th Century.

He’s topped the charts with songs like Living Doll, Bachelor Boy, The Young Ones, Summer Holiday and Devil Woman, but still recalls his very first hit.

“I was just 18 when Move It reached number two in the charts and I don’t remember a massive celebratio­n as royalties had not yet filtered through,” he says. “We were still living in a council house and I think the echoes of my sisters’ and my mum’s screams of joy can still be heard there... and I got a hug from my dad!”

The movies soon came calling with films like Summer Holiday, Wonderful Life, and The Young Ones, and he made an early appearance in the 1959 movie Expresso Bongo as a young teenager discovered singing in a coffee house.

“Making movies was never on my radar as a 17-year-old, wouldbe pop star,” says Cliff, “but to my surprise I was suddenly thrown into the ‘movie arena’ and seeing myself on huge screens was so much more than I had expected.

“The highlights of a recording career are the chart entries, of which I have been lucky enough to have many,” he continues modestly, “but, of course, the 14 number ones top almost everything. I say ‘almost’ because last November I heard that I had an official chart record, with a top five album in eight consecutiv­e decades, and the only thing to top that was the knighthood. You just can’t plan those sorts of things. I am a fortunate man.”

Sir Cliff had planned a nationwide tour to celebrate his 80th birthday last year but the pandemic meant everything had to be put on hold.

He says he is now looking forward to finally celebratin­g a year later and is inviting cinema audiences to mark the special milestone with him. All four of his concerts at London’s Royal Albert Hall have sold out and Cliff Richard: The Great 80 Tour will be shown on more than 1,000 screens in the UK and Ireland next month.

“I hated having to postpone it,” he says.

“I was so looking forward to celebratin­g my 80th with my fans, and the postponeme­nt was very upsetting. To have the opportunit­y to reach an even wider audience in cinemas, and especially for those internatio­nal fans still unable to travel to the tour venues, is a little nerve wracking, but hugely exciting. I’ll begin the tour aged 80 and will be 81 when in cinemas – what a great way to celebrate.”

Cliff promises he will be performing all the biggest hits from his long career, adding: “I will also be singing some of my own favourites – songs that were not singles but are in ‘my favourite songs’ list.

The music industry has seen a lot of changes since Cliff started out and he has embraced the new advances.

“The best change came with technology that allowed us to do on records what seemed like the impossible,” he reflects. “Similarly, on stage, technology allowed us to present shows with colour and effects.”

But some things never change. “Pre-concert there is always a sound-check in which I carefully wake my voice up. Then, a half hour before the show I do a 20-minute vocal warm up and then cross my fingers and hope for the best!”

Making movies was never on my radar as a 17-year-old

Cliff Richard: The Great 80 Tour, will be broadcast from the Royal Albert Hall live in cinemas across the UK and Ireland on October 27 with encore screenings on October 30 and 31. Visit cliffincin­emas. com for booking informatio­n and cinema locations.

 ??  ?? Cliff with his mother Dorothy and sisters Jackie and Joan in 1963, left, and with celebrity pals Cilla Black and Lulu
LIVE AGAIN: Sir Cliff is excited to be back performing
Cliff with his mother Dorothy and sisters Jackie and Joan in 1963, left, and with celebrity pals Cilla Black and Lulu LIVE AGAIN: Sir Cliff is excited to be back performing

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