Cliff Richard’s staggering net worth revealed weeks after he caused uproar with ‘fat’ Elvis comment

Sir Cliff Richard has been making waves in the last month, after he made an incredibly controversial comment about Elvis Presley's weight gain in the later years of his life during an appearance on This Morning.

The legendary singer is known for crooning many songs, including his iconic Christmas track Mistletoe and Wine.

He has amassed a huge following over the decades, and now in his twilight years, is still going strong and touring for fans.

Yet during his latest interview, the 83 year old star shared a memory with hosts Alison Hammond and Dermot O'Leary that has prompted uproar online.

As we take a look inside Cliff's life and his current net worth, he is currently most talked-about for admitting that he'd once had the opportunity to meet the King of Rock 'n' Roll back in the late 60s/ early 70s.

The star decided to say no because he didn't want to take a photo with Elvis when he wasn't looking at his best.

"He'd put on a lot of weight," Cliff told the presenters. "I thought, 'if I'm taking a photograph with him, and it's going to be hanging on my refrigerator, he's gotta look good."

Unimpressed, Birmingham-born Alison, 48, chimed in: "Should never have put it off just because they're a little bit heavier."

Viewers flocked to the comments on X, formerly known as Twitter, to share their anger, claiming Cliff's comments were "fattist".


Sir Cliff was born Harry Rodger Webb in Lucknow, a city in northern India, in 1940, when it was part of British India.

His career has spanned 65 years, and he has been listed as the only act, with Elvis, to make the UK singles charts in all of its first six decades between the 1950s and 2000s.

The singer's longevity and adaptability in the industry made him a millionaire, and his net worth is now £80 million.

Despite his immense later popularity, Sir Cliff had a modest start. His father Rodger was a catering company manager that serviced the Indian Railways, and his mother Dorothy Marie Webb was a wife and homemaker.

She sadly died at 87 after suffering from Alzheimer's disease for 10 years.

The family travelled around in Sir Cliff's early years, also living in Howrah, West Bengal for a time. They then decided to relocate to Britain permanently in 1948.

Sir Cliff's first job was as a filing clerk for Atlas Lamps in 1957, but his great love was already for music, and at the age of 16, he joined harmony group The Quintones.

Sir Cliff later became the lead singer of the Drifters, not to be confused with the US group of the same name, and was quickly marketed as the English equivalent of Elvis.

The singer's stardom continued to rise, and he became more and more successful as the 60s progressed, forming Cliff Richard and the Shadows to enormous critical acclaim.

To date, he has now sold 260 million albums worldwide.

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