HEARTBREAKING ADMISSION: Cliff Richard, 84, Says “I COULD BE DEAD NEXT YEAR” — Music Legend Shares SAD UPDATE Ahead of His New Tour
Cliff Richard has said he will probably be forced to retire from touring, ahead of the music legend’s upcoming shows in Australia and New Zealand.
The hitmaker, who turns 85 in October, said he was unsure if the gigs would be his ‘farewell tour’ because he does not look too far into the future and ‘could be dead next year’.
The Mirror reported he told a New Zealand radio station: ‘The thing I would have to give up probably at some time is touring. It’s very wearing, and you never know when you wake up in the morning whether your voice is still there’.
He was unsure if it would be his final ever tour, but said: ‘I might be dead the next year! So I don’t even think about it anymore. It’s one of those things. As I get older maybe I’ll become less able to perform, so I can’t say’.
Cliff also revealed that he would not be performing his famous dance moves on the Can’t Stop Me Now, due to not wanting to seem an octogenarian ‘trying to be 18’.
‘I’m sure the audience will see that we – the big band and I – are friends and almost a family when we’re on tour. So we’ll try and do something that will make it look as though I’m 18! But I’m not’.

Cliff Richard has said he will probably be forced to retire from touring, ahead of the music legend’s upcoming shows in Australia and New Zealand

The hitmaker, who turns 85 in October, said he was unsure if the gigs would be his ‘farewell tour’ because he does not look too far into the future and ‘could be dead next year’
Sir Cliff, who was awarded his knighthood in 1995, has an epic back catalogue which includes more than 50 studio and live albums.
His music career began when his father bought him a guitar at the age of 16 and he later joined band The Drifters.
In 1958, he had a solo hit with his song Move It and has since sold 250million records.
The Living Doll hitmaker previously insisted he’ll never retire and the word is ‘not in his vocabulary’.
He said in 2022 that he likes the freedom of working whenever he chooses and would like to be less strict with his plans in the future.
Cliff told the Mirror: ‘I don’t know if I ever want to retire. I don’t mind stopping.
‘Stopping would mean that I could absolutely change my mind any time I wanted to, or phone my office and say, “Can you get us a couple of nights at the Royal Albert Hall?”
‘So, retiring is not in my vocabulary, but stopping is good for me – I can work whenever I want to, if I want to.’