Introduction

Không có mô tả ảnh.

The singer’s wife, Patricia, died in February after contracting COVID-19.

Engelbert Humperdinck said he wanted to see “friendly faces” at his wife’s funeral tomorrow (Tuesday, August 3).

Patricia died in February after contracting COVID-19.

Although her funeral will be a private event, Humperdinck said in a YouTube video that he wanted to see fans pay their respects during her final journey from Market Harborough to the chapel in Loughborough, via the family home in Great Glen.

“We have kept our funeral plans private due to the changing COVID-safety challenges,” Engelbert said.

“But Patricia was a proud Leicester woman, the salt of the earth, and much loved from Queniborough where she was born, to Leicester, to Great Glen, our home here.”

“It was great to see friendly faces along the way, especially in Great Glen, and we will slow down respectfully in Queniborough,” he added.

“A prayer, a hello or a wave would be wonderful, absolutely wonderful.

“Wherever you are in the world, please pray for my beautiful, wonderful wife, my beloved Patricia. And remember, I love you.”

Engelbert, born Arnold Dorsey, and Patricia married in 1964 after meeting in a nightclub in Leicester.

“Our family is deeply saddened by the loss of my beloved wife,” he said of her death.

“She passed away peacefully last night, as if by divine providence.

“Her earthly limitations no longer hold her back as she is free to run the beautiful garden of Heaven, reunited with so many loved ones.

“We prayed as a family, blessed her with water from Lourdes and she was… delivered into the arms of Jesus with the help of heartfelt prayers from all over the world.”

The couple have four children: Louise, Jason, Brad and Scott.

Video

You Missed

At 89, Engelbert Humperdinck is no longer just the velvet voice that once defined romance for millions — he is a man standing alone in the quiet after the applause, carrying a love story that even time could not silence. Gone are the roaring stages and dazzling lights. In their place: a trembling confession, eyes glistening, voice unsteady as he speaks of the woman who was never just his wife — but his anchor, his inspiration, his forever. After more than half a century side by side, illness took her from this world… but never from his heart. “She’s still with me,” he whispered — and in that fragile moment, the world seemed to pause. For decades, fans believed his greatest love songs were performances. Now we know they were promises. Promises whispered in hospital rooms. Promises carried through sleepless nights. Promises that did not break when her hand slipped from his. This is not the story of a superstar. This is the story of a husband who still sets a place for her in his memories. Of a man who sings not to an audience — but to the love of his life, wherever she may be. Because for Engelbert, love was never about spotlight or roses. It was loyalty through suffering. Devotion through fading strength. A bond that outlived breath itself. And perhaps that is why his words cut so deeply now. True love doesn’t die when a heartbeat stops. It lingers — in photographs, in melodies, in quiet conversations with the past. It lives on in every note he sings… and in every tear shed by those who finally understand that the greatest romance of his life was never written in lyrics — but in a lifetime of unwavering love.