Cliff Richard's 'secret relationship' exposed: 'We had to keep a low profile!' | Celebrity News | Showbiz & TV | Express.co.uk

Introduction:

Today, after decades of silence, Carol Costa—the first girlfriend and first great love of Cliff Richard—finally speaks with clarity, humor, and a touch of wonder about the whirlwind romance that shaped both of their young lives. She remembers a twenty-year-old Cliff, not yet a knighted cultural icon, but a nervous, excitable boy named Harry Webb who knocked at her door, tossed stones at her window, slipped upstairs to her bedroom, and confessed his heart while she was still in her curlers. “Everybody had curlers in those days,” she laughs. For more than twenty years, she kept their relationship hidden, suppressing the emotional weight of a love that once felt like destiny.

Cliff Richard | The Guardian

Their story began in 1958, when Carol accompanied her younger sister to a concert at London’s Jizik Empire. Jet Harris, the future Shadows bassist, spotted the blonde sisters sipping Coca-Cola in the bar and ushered Carol backstage. There she met Cliff—anonymous, shy, still performing under his birth name—yet already radiating star potential. In Cliff’s recent biography, he refers to Carol only briefly, describing the relationship as an infatuation and implying she pursued him. Carol rejects that version, believing it reduces the sincerity and depth of what they shared.

During their courtship, Cliff would eagerly flip through property listings in Country Life, choosing future homes where, he said, they might one day raise a family. Carol genuinely believed she was looking at her future as Lady Richard. “It makes me laugh now,” she admits, but back then, their dreams felt tangible. They whispered about marriage, children, and a life beyond the stage lights—plans he made her believe were real.

Fame, however, complicates love. As Cliff’s career exploded—hit records, films like The Young Ones and Summer Holiday, and the unstoppable momentum of the Shadows—normal relationships became harder to protect. He struggled to know who was genuine and who was chasing glamour. Yet Carol insists he remained gentle, grounded, and protective. He even visited her grandmother in hospital, slipping in unnoticed behind dark glasses.

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The relationship quietly dissolved, and in June 1959 Carol married Jet Harris. The marriage was short-lived, strained by infidelity and emotional distance. When it ended, Cliff phoned—not as a lover, but as a worried friend. Carol still remembers the big red American car, the radio humming, their laughter, their innocence.

Cliff’s life continued to be shaped by complicated romances. He later dated Australian performer Delia Wicks, ending the relationship in a letter explaining that his music came first and that she deserved a life untouched by the sacrifices of fame. The letter surfaced only after her death, a reminder of ambitions that demanded difficult choices.

Even at eighty-four, Cliff Richard remains driven—still performing, still recording, still chasing excellence. And while history remembers the star, Carol Costa remembers the boy. Her story does not expose scandal—it restores humanity. It reminds us that before he belonged to Britain, he belonged to her.

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