Celebrities and locals pay respects to Cilla Black in Liverpool

Crowds at St Mary’s Church in Woolten for funeral of much-loved entertainer

Sir Cliff Richard speaks at the funeral of Cilla Black. Photograph: Ray Tang/REX Shutterstock/PA Wire
Sir Cliff Richard speaks at the funeral of Cilla Black. Photograph: Ray Tang/REX Shutterstock/PA Wire

Sir Tom Jones, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Sir Cliff Richard were among hordes of celebrities who descended on the Liverpool suburb of Woolton to say a tearful final goodbye to Cilla Black.

Fans and mourners packed the streets to pay their respects as a black hearse, bedecked with flowers, carried Ms Black’s coffin on its two-mile journey to St Mary’s Church for her funeral.

Ms Black's close friends Paul O'Grady and comedian Jimmy Tarbuck were among the mourners, with fellow comedian Les Dennis, presenter Carol Vorderman and Mike McCartney, brother of Beatle Sir Paul.

Outside the church, Mr Tarbuck who knew Ms Black since he was 15, said: “She was Liverpool’s Cinderella; if you wrote that story, that’s Cilla Black’s life.

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“Unfortunately she’s left us too early, it’s dreadful. If you met Cilla you liked her, that’s nice to know, she was a delightful girl.”

The 75-year-old said Ms Black would be remembered as “the girl next door, somebody’s favourite auntie, just a nice, nice person”.

Others guests include Gerry and the Pacemakers singer Gerry Marsden, former BBC director-general Lord Birt, television producer Nigel Lythgoe, actress Lorraine Chase, comedian Ted Robbins and former newsreader Gordon Burns.

Sir Cliff paid his own musical tribute during the service, performing his song Faithful One to celebrate her life and mourn the passing of one of Britain’s most enduring and best-loved entertainers.

Speaking ahead of the service, TV celebrity and close friend Christopher Biggins, who gave a reading, said that it was like “Cinderella” had returned home, and that Ms Black will be looking down with her husband Bobby and enjoying a “glass of champagne”.

He told ITV’s Good Morning Britain: “It’s going to be a tough day I think but also a joyous day, saying goodbye to our dear friend Cilla and I think this is absolutely the right place for her to return to. It’s like Cinderella has returned to Liverpool. If Cilla were here, she’d love it.”

Mr Biggins said the family had a little party in a hotel on Wednesday night to remember her, and that her sons Robert and Ben, who spoke at the funeral, are doing “amazingly well”.

He said: “You think she’s going to ring and say, ‘Shall we go to the Ivy?’ or you’re going to turn up somewhere and she’s going to be there. The reality is that she’s not but we’re going to give her a good send off today, a really good send off.”

And Mr Biggins said he thought Ms Black would love the way in which her life is being celebrated, saying: “I think she’s up there with a glass of champagne and Bobby having a laugh and looking to see who’s coming, who’s not here, why aren’t they here, and just having a good time.

“It’s just wonderful for the family and for Cilla. It’s fantastic this tribute that Liverpool is paying to her.”

One of the first people outside the church on Thursday morning was one of Ms Black’s neighbours from her childhood home in Scotland Road.

Robert Ross had returned to Liverpool to pay his respects. Mr Ross (72), who now lives in Colwyn Bay, said: “She was my next-door neighbour. She was a very bright girl, very down to earth.

“I remember her growing up, singing and dancing, going to different parties, going down to The Cavern Club. She used to perform down there with The Beatles.

“She was the Queen of Liverpool, she was. She will be sadly missed.”

Ms Black's funeral was at 1pm at St Mary's Church in the Liverpool suburb of Woolton. The church was where she received a wedding blessing on marrying her much-loved late husband and manager Bobby Willis in 1969.

Liverpudlian entertainers Jimmy Tarbuck led mourners in prayers and Paul O’Grady, who called Black his “best friend”, gave a final eulogy.

During the Catholic requiem mass presided over by the Right Reverend Thomas Williams, Auxiliary Bishop of Liverpool, psalms and biblical readings were given and Amazing Grace was among the hymns sung by the church choir.

Poems were read by two of Ms Black’s three sons, Robert – who is also her manager – and Ben.

Ms Black’s 1964 number-one hit Anyone Who Had A Heart was played and The Beatles composition The Long And Winding Road closed the service.

Her body was laid to rest at a private ceremony in Allerton Cemetery alongside her parents.

Born Priscilla Maria Veronica White, she grew up with her parents and brothers above a barber’s shop in the tough dockland district of Scotland Road, the inner-city area ravaged by wartime bombing.

Ms Black’s first performances were as a youngster standing on a chair during post-pub singsongs with her family in the days long before TV.

Her big break came after she took a part-time job as a cloakroom girl at The Cavern Club, met The Beatles and their manager Brian Epstein and rose to fame and fortune in the Merseybeat era of the Swinging Sixties.

Younger generations grew up with her as a staple of Saturday night TV, on her long-running popular shows Blind Date and Surprise, Surprise.

Ms Black’s career spanned six decades before her sudden death, aged 72, after a fall at her villa in Spain on August 1st.

She may be on course to top the albums chart on Friday, with her The Very Best Of collection provisionally sitting at number two, said the Official Charts Company.

The record re-entered the Top 40 at number 14 two weeks ago following her death.