The Mail on Sunday

Desert Island Cliff back on the BBC – 15 months after bitter privacy battle

... and 60 YEARS after he f irst appeared on show

- By Chris Hastings ARTS CORRESPOND­ENT

AS REUNIONS go, it is as unlikely y as it is overdue.

Sir Cliff Richard today appears s on Desert Island Discs six decades s after first being a guest on the e show and just 15 months after the e end of his landmark privacy battle e with the BBC.

The singer – who successful­ly y sued the Corporatio­n for breach of privacy over its coverage of unfounded sex abuse allegation­s ns against him – has told presenter er Lauren Laverne that he chose to remain single amid fears that at getting married could have cut his is career short in its early days.

He said: ‘When I look back now, it has to be that reason... I was never er going to give up this career that I had fought heavily for.

‘It was just the way it was. People le would say, “No, no, the girls are re all screaming at you. You have got ot to be just available for them.” It [getting married] would have no

‘I wasn’t giving up my career for marriage’

effect now at all... Gary Barlow’s married and got children, no one minds and that’s how it should have been then, but it wasn’t.’

Sir Cliff, who has been dogged by unfounded rumours he might be gay, said that over the years he had resigned himself to the ‘intense’ interest in his private life.

He said: ‘I have lived with it for so long now that I don’t care anymore what they think and say.

‘Certainly, my private life is absolutely nobody’s business but mine and I tell them that.’

The 80-year-old admitted being still ‘angry’ that his father Rodger, a catering manager who died at the age of 56, had not lived to see his stellar success, saying: ‘It was a heartbreak­ing time for me, my dad missed the best. He was so fast and hard behind me all the way through that I feel sometimes horribly angry that he died too early. He missed the first number one. He missed the knighthood – my father would have loved to have seen me be knighted. I miss my dad still.’

Although he acknowledg­ed being ‘a bit fearful’ of his father’s disciplina­rian streak, Sir Cliff said he now realised that Rodger had been crucial to his success. He said: ‘My father influenced me much more than I thought. I had recorded Move It [his first hit single], but it hadn’t been released and he had said to me, “You really want this?”

‘And I said, “I really want to do this”, and he said, “Well, from now on you are going to have to be the best at it that you can be – you can never let up.”’ Sir Cliff – who publicly declared his Christiani­ty in 1966 at a rally organised by the evangelica­l preacher Billy Graham – spoke of the fears he had that the move would scupper his career.

‘It was a difficult choice to make,’ he said. ‘In the end I felt that it [my faith] was more important even than my career. But it was a terrifying moment for me. I was so scared, but it did lead to me beginning to be able to speak the name Jesus without feeling embarrasse­d.’ Desert Island Discs is on BBC Radio 4 today at 11am and will be repeated at 8am on Christmas Day.

 ??  ?? 2020 THE YOUNG ONE: Cliff enjoying the affection of twin fans in 1960 and, inset, this year
2020 THE YOUNG ONE: Cliff enjoying the affection of twin fans in 1960 and, inset, this year
 ??  ?? 1960
1960

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