Robbie Williams’ wildest moments from near-drug overdose to celeb dates revealed as he marks 50th birthday with bash
FOR a man who sang: “I hope I’m old before I die/I hope I live to relive the days gone by”, against all odds, he got there.
(Quite literally, reliving the days gone by in a recent four-part Netflix documentary).
Tomorrow, Robbie Williams turns 50 — the baby-faced star of Take That is all grown up.
With 14 No1 albums here, countless awards, a wonderful family, several homes across the planet, millions in the bank and more social media followers than the population of Finland, he is a success by anyone’s definition of the word.
His is a life well lived.
“I know I have a big life,” he told me, unsentimentally, last year. “I know it’s not normal.”
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With his phone book, Robbie could be celebrating this milestone birthday with a gram of Colombia’s finest, two bottles of 1996 Dom Perignon and half of Hollywood’s Walk Of Fame (the non-dead half).
Back in the day, he probably would have been.
Instead, he tells me, he’s spending it at home with his wife, Ayda, and four beautiful children, Teddy, Charlie, Coco and Beau.
The couple’s menagerie of dogs, including 18-year-old Poupette, no longer continent, and Mr Showbiz OBE — an ironic nod to Robbie’s own lack of Buckingham Palace gong — will be there too.
As will his beloved mother-in-law Gwen, and her partner, who live with Robbie and Ayda for much of the year.
The family will have a quiet supper together, and be in bed by midnight.
Robbie will be made to blow out the candles on his birthday cake as the family warble “Happy birthday”, with varying degrees of tunefulness.
At heart, Port Vale supporter Robbie remains one of us — normal, despite his anything-but-normal lifestyle.
He says he may well have a series of small celebrations with family and friends over the summer, once the weather in London is less depressing.
The Robbie of 50 is all about family.
Yes, he remains deeply ambitious, but the chaos of yesteryear is long gone — in its place a calmness and happiness.
This is a man with absolutely nothing left to prove.
Frankly, Robert Peter Williams could be a complete and utter tosser.
Once upon a time, he kind-of was.
Lost in a world of drink, drugs and his own exacting ego, Robbie hated the world, he hated the tabloid press and, above all else, he hated himself.
He also really, really hated me.
He despised an ill-considered quip, referencing his former penchant for cocaine, that ran in a showbiz column I headed at another newspaper.
For years we’d glare at one another from afar, like Coleen and Rebekah, or Tom and Jerry, at parties.
Me chasing him for interviews, him steadfastly refusing. And fair enough, really.
When I joined The Sun, the paper who resolutely panned his big comeback single, Rudebox, he must have loathed me that much more.
For years we’d glare at one another from afar, like Coleen and Rebekah, or Tom and Jerry, at parties
Clemmie Moodie
But then, slowly, things started to change.
I interviewed his wonderful wife, Ayda, and we got on brilliantly.
A couple of years later I bumped into her at hardcore gym class Barry’s Bootcamp, where neither of us could understand the instructor.
Ayda is beautiful, funny, smart and charming. I was determined to befriend her.
Over time, I ground her down, and she — gingerly at first — re-introduced me, piecemeal, to Robbie.
Today, 25 years sober, he is kind, knowing, hugely self-aware and, well, incredibly happy. He’s also very forgiving.
Eventually, he entrusted me enough with an interview, and we’ve got on ever since.
“Friends” might be pushing it, but I genuinely adore him.
The other day I texted Robbie, and he immediately FaceTimed back from his sprawling Californian mansion. I was outside Tesco’s, in the dark and rain.
But for all the Coutts accounts and supercars, Robbie remains defiantly down to earth.
Sure, he may have a private chef, but you feel he knows his way around a toilet brush. So to speak.
Rob, you’re the most insecure famous person on the planet
Clemmie Moodie
He’s certainly not shy of hard work, and be it art, writing music, going to the gym, negotiating deals or making films, Robbie is, and always has been, a grafter.
He also takes everything with a pinch of salt — including fame.
As I once told him: “Rob, you’re the most insecure famous person on the planet.” Because he is.
He’s certainly come a long way from Stoke-on-Trent.
Robbie was just 16 when he joined Take That in 1990.
He was the youngest member of the band alongside Gary Barlow, Howard Donald, Mark Owen and Jason Orange.
The quintet redefined what it was to be a boyband, with their homoerotic music videos appealing to schoolgirls, mums and gay men alike.
The group went on to exceed all expectations, selling out shows all over Europe.
But by 1994 pressures were beginning to show and Robbie had become caught up in the darker side of the industry.
In November that year, he nearly suffered a drug overdose the night before Take That were scheduled to perform at the MTV Europe Music Awards in Berlin.
Less than a year later he shattered hearts across the country when he quit Take That as tensions between himself and Gary escalated.
In 1996, with his notoriety at fever pitch thanks to a very intoxicated trip to Glastonbury the previous summer, Robbie launched his solo career.
Despite being a household name, he initially struggled to make waves by going it alone.
His debut single Old Before I Die reached No2 in the UK charts but overseas the track went under the radar.
Luckily for him, despite his first album Life Thru A Lens missing out on the Top Ten and peaking at No11, it contained a trump card: Angels.
The Guy Chambers co-penned track went on to become an instant classic and is still his best single to date.
It was also the 34th best-selling UK single of the 1990s.
The track caused album sales to rocket and Life Thru A Lens remained in the top ten of the charts for 40 weeks.
It went on to sell more than 2.4 million copies and once again made a household name of still-young Robbie.
Two more albums followed as well a hit single Kids with Kylie Mingoue on third album Sing When You’re Winning.
Every time we turn on the TV, there’s a woman Rob’s slept with on my screen
Ayda Field
In 2003, and at the height of his fame, Robbie played to 375,000 fans over three nights at Knebworth, Hertfordshire.
Though after living in a whirlwind for the past decade, the singer says he can’t even remember the gig.
As a man who once joked he’d “slept with four out of five Spice Girls”, the star’s lovelife was the stuff of tabloid dreams at this time.
He dated both Ginger Spice Geri Halliwell and All Saints singer Nicole Appleton, and was linked to a string of glamorous leading ladies including actresses Cameron Diaz, Nicole Kidman and Lindsay Lohan.
As Ayda once quipped: “Every time we turn on the TV, there’s a woman Rob’s slept with on my screen.”
However, that all changed in 2006 when he met American Ayda after she appeared in a UFO documentary he was working on. (Robbie really really loves UFO’s)
Married 15 years next year, Robbie and Ayda are, genuinely, the most sickeningly loved-up couple I’ve ever met — famous or otherwise.
It was their chemistry which landed them multi-million pound deals as judges on the X Factor — they’re good friends with Simon Cowell and his fiancée Lauren Silverman — and their no-holds-barred podcast is refreshingly unsanitised.
Unlike many stars, Robbie does his own social media, and isn’t governed by an all-seeing publicist or agent.
He is his own man.
He’s also half the man he once was after finally overcoming his long-documented battles with food which saw him vicariously dubbed “Blobby Williams” at his heaviest.
Last year he joked the secret was an Ozempic-esque fat jab, due to his crippling “diagnosis of type two self-loathing”.
Whatever he’s doing, it’s working — as recent photos to plug his wife’s new collection of Ayda Activewear demonstrate.
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It seems, aged 50, Robbie really has cracked that crazy lil’ thing called life.
Happy birthday, Rob.