Pop Star Receives Home Town Theatre’s Top
Honour
Little Mix star Jade
Thirlwall has been honoured by the Customs House.
The singer honed her skills
at The Customs House in South Shields, appearing on stage on numerous occasions
before finding international stardom via The X Factor. She returned home over the Easter bank
holiday weekend to be inducted as an Honorary Fellow of The Customs House
Academy.
Jade was welcomed into the
fellowship by Ray Spencer MBE, Executive Director of The Customs House, at a ceremony
for invited guests, including fellow The X Factor winner and Honorary Fellow,
Joe McElderry. Both Jade and Joe, who have been friends since they started
singing together as teenagers, were interviewed by BBC Look North presenter
Jeff Brown as part of the event, which raised funds for The Customs House Trust.
Jade, 26, who climbed Mount
Kilimanjaro for Comic Relief this year, said: “I am so, so happy to
have been given this award. I’m very proud to come from South Shields and to
have learned so much from performing at my local theatre. From singing there to
seeing the famous panto every year, The Customs House holds a very special
place in my heart. It’s important to support such an amazing local theatre
which provides so many opportunities for young people who love performing arts.
The Customs House certainly helped me and I will always support them, see shows
there whenever I’m home and take great pride in my Honorary Fellowship award.”
During the ceremony, Jade was also presented with a
personalised piece of artwork by South Shields artist and Honorary Fellow of
The Customs House Academy, Bob Olley.
Jade’s talent was spotted
at an early age on the performing arts circuit in South Shields and she was a
member of several groups, including South Shields Musical Society, Performers
Stage School and John Christopher Theatre Company.
She first auditioned for
The X Factor in 2008, making it as far as the boot camp stages twice, before
returning for the eighth series in 2011, where Little Mix were formed and went
on to become the biggest girl band in the world. Jade teamed up with Perrie
Edwards, Leigh-Anne Pinnock and Jesy Nelson, who had all auditioned
successfully as soloists, and Little Mix became the first group to win the
competition.
Their debut single,
Cannonball, topped the charts and they have since reached No.1 with Wings,
Black Magic and Shout Out To My Ex, with Jade earning song-writing credits on a
number of tracks. Their debut album, DNA, was released in 2012, reaching the
Top 10 in 10 countries, including the UK and US. It was followed by Salute in
2013 and Get Weird in 2015. Their fourth album, Glory Days, was their first UK No.1
album and their fifth album, LM5, was released in November last year, peaking
at No.3 in the UK.
Honorary
Fellowships are bestowed on people who are from, or have been associated with,
South Tyneside, who have gone on to make a significant contribution to the
development of arts and entertainment locally, nationally and internationally. Existing
Honorary Fellows include: Sarah Millican, Jason Cook, Chris Ramsay, Encore,
Ann-Marie Owens, John Woodvine, John Hays, Tom Kelly, John Miles, Andy Bogle,
Lindsay Kemp, Sheila Graber, Bob Olley, Alex Ferguson, Richard Ord, George
Irving and Sandford Goudie.
Mr Spencer said: “Jade is an absolute joy to be in the presence of, her
simple unspoilt, unaffected nature is a testimony to someone with their feet
firmly on the ground and proud of their heritage. We are so lucky that a global icon has loaned
their support to The Customs House and we are delighted she accepted an
Honorary Fellowship of The Customs House Academy."
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