
Ozzy Osbourne's family breaks down as metal icon farewelled
Thousands of mourners came out to watch the funeral procession. They chanted 'Ozzy!' and raised their hands in 'devil's horns' sign as his cortege rolled down Broad Street in Birmingham's city centre.
The world last week lost Ozzy Osbourne, the front man of Black Sabbath, heavy metal founder and bat-munching TV dad. But Birmingham lost a native son, a 'Brummie lad' and 'working class hero' from the Aston neighbourhood, where parents toiled in the local factories as their kids learned to bang on drums and guitars.
If you'd like to view this content, please adjust your .
To find out more about how we use cookies, please see our Cookie Guide.
Amid the tribute, deeply moving moments unfolded as Ozzy's wife Sharon Osbourne and their children, Kelly and Jack, stepped forward to place roses atop the growing mound of flowers at the 'Black Sabbath Bench'. The family of Ozzy Osbourne: Jack, Sharon and Kelly Osbourne. Credit: Joe Giddens / PA
If you'd like to view this content, please adjust your .
To find out more about how we use cookies, please see our Cookie Guide.
He was born John Michael Osbourne and died on July 22, at 76, of a variant of Parkinson's disease, likely not helped much by a once-wild lifestyle of drugs and alcohol. He performed - sitting on a black throne - in a farewell concert at Birmingham's Villa Park soccer stadium earlier this month.
Because of the Emmy-winning MTV reality show, 'The Osbournes,' many Americans might remember him best as an economic migrant to Beverly Hills. But 90210 was not his forever home. He was buried Wednesday in England.
Tracey Beebee, 60, a lifelong fan from an old coal mining village north of Birmingham, wept openly. 'At a time in my life when I didn't fit - when a lot of us didn't fit in - we had Ozzy,' Beebee said. 'All the odd people didn't feel so odd because we had Black Sabbath.'
Black Sabbath is widely credited as a foundational heavy metal band, noted for its dark, heavy, loud blues rock-influenced sound, with lyrics about doom and destruction.
'No band is more influential on heavy music than Black Sabbath, - a truism we might even extend to the idea of heavy metal thinking,' wrote the Washington Post pop music critic Chris Richards in a recent appreciation, 'that is, a heightened state of youthful ennui and fomenting skepticism routinely dismissed throughout the pop culture of the '80s and '90s as loser juvenilia.'
In Birmingham, England's second city, the metalheads waited quietly for the hearse to appear, with many mourners dressed in black jeans and leather vests, sporting old and new concert T-shirts, celebrating not only Black Sabbath but also their spawn, bands named Cannibal Corpse, Hell Storm and Slayer.
Though some in the crowd discretely sucked down cans of beer, it was a kid-friendly celebration for the Prince of Darkness, who liked to describe himself as 'a family man.'
If you'd like to view this content, please adjust your .
To find out more about how we use cookies, please see our Cookie Guide. Sharon Osbourne lays flowers at the Black Sabbath Bridge bench on Broad Street in Birmingham. Credit: Jacob King / PA Sharon Osbourne and Kelly Osbourne lay flowers and view the messages. Credit: Jacob King / PA
In interviews here, ageing thrashers pointed at Gen Z fans and nodded appreciatively.
'The young will keep the tradition alive,' said John Cooper, 69, a lifelong local Sabbath fan and retiree who spent his working life in a factory that made nuts and bolts.
His friend, Baz Drew, 53, showed off a tattoo on his left arm. It featured a fading visage of Ozzy in his younger years, but underneath he had just added the dates marking the rocker's birth and death, '1948 to 2025.'
'He was from this place, he was this place,' Drew explained, which, in honesty, 'he might have described as a slum.'
'He remained a Brummie lad,' he said. 'He was humble. But he was huge.'
Drew's friend, Chris Carpenter, 51, who works at a factory making Land Rovers, showed off his four fingers, which were also tattooed, to read 'O-Z-Z-Y.'
'He was bigger than the queen, really,' Carpenter said. The mourners agreed it was a travesty that Osbourne wasn't knighted by King Charles III, who was a fan of sorts.
The British press revealed that the two exchanged correspondence over the years. Osbourne performed at Queen Elizabeth II's Golden Jubilee concert at Buckingham Palace in 2002, playing the Black Sabbath hit 'Paranoid.'
In a less regal, if no less memorable, moment, during a solo performance in Des Moines on Jan. 20, 1982, Osbourne bit the head off of a bat. He later joked that the stunt would appear in his obituary.
At one point Wednesday, the crowd grew silent as Ozzy's wife, Sharon Osbourne, and two of their children, Kelly and Jack, stepped out of a black car to place roses beside the mountain of flowers left on top of the 'Black Sabbath Bench' next to the 'Black Sabbath Bridge,' just down the road from the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, which is featuring the exhibit 'Ozzy Osbourne: Working Class Hero.'
If you'd like to view this content, please adjust your .
To find out more about how we use cookies, please see our Cookie Guide.
Osbourne and his band mates were from the Aston neighborhood. His dad was a toolmaker; his mum worked at an auto parts factory. The bassist for Black Sabbath, Geezer Butler, was from down the road. The Butler family's home had been bombed by the Luftwaffe in World War II. The band's guitarist, Tony Iommi, lost the tips of the middle and ring fingers of his right hand at his job at a sheet metal plant.
Osbourne was scheduled to be buried at a private ceremony.
The Lord Mayor of Birmingham, Zafar Iqbal, said Osbourne put Birmingham 'on the map.'
'I think it was a fitting tribute to a legend who was a Brummie through and through,' Iqbal said. 'Like his final gig, he came back home and we were proud to have him.'
David Winser, 20, was carrying a bouquet of red roses, with a handwritten note thanking Osbourne for all he meant to him, adding, 'Heroes get remembered and legends never die.'
Winser plays guitar and has dreams, too, and a band. What's it called? 'Doesn't have a name yet,' he said.
Along the curb, Mel Higgins, 21, a student, said her favorite Osbourne song was probably 'No More Tears' from 1991, which the singer once called 'a gift from God.'
Asked how long she's been a fan, Higgins said, 'Since I was a baby.'
'My dad used to play Black Sabbath records all the time,' she said, adding that she was happy to celebrate the passing star. 'Because not really anybody famous is from Birmingham,' she said.
© 2025 , The Washington Post
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
I feared ruining The Studio, says Dave Franco
Dave Franco feared he would "ruin" The Studio. The 40-year-old actor made a cameo appearance in the hit comedy series, and he's admitted to being shocked by his Emmy nomination. The Hollywood star - who has been nominated for the Best Guest Actor in a Comedy Series gong - told People: "I always saw that coming. No, it's insane. "And the truth of it all is I truly did not think this nomination was even a possibility. I remember when they first sent me all of the episodes [of the show after filming], I started watching through it, and I was like, 'Oh no. This is my favourite show, and I'm about to come in and ruin it.'" Dave - who is married to actress Alison Brie - actually double-checked his nomination online. The actor shared: "[Allison and I] also didn't know when the nominations were being announced, and so we were in our kitchen, and I got a text from my publicist, and it just said 'EMMY NOMINATION.' And I go, 'Oh my God. [...] I think I just got nominated for an Emmy.' "I had to Google it. I didn't believe it." Meanwhile, Alison - who has worked with Dave on movies like 2023's Somebody I Used to Know - recently revealed that the couple's 'shorthand has gotten shorter and shorter' in their professional relationship. The actress and Dave love working together, but they're still "very selective" about the projects they commit to. Alison told Collider: 'I think, to do this project, we have acted in some things together, and by this point, Dave has directed me in a couple of movies, we wrote a film together. "Our shorthand has gotten shorter and shorter to where it's like a mind-meld, eye-contact thing. "We've been together over a decade, so has this couple in the movie. We're very selective about projects that we will act in together. "We read scripts quite often, where we would act together, and it's all about which one makes the most sense, and this one did."

News.com.au
2 days ago
- News.com.au
Kelly Osbourne made emotional final promise to dad Ozzy before his death: report
Kelly Osbourne is reportedly doing her best to keep the final promise she made to her father, Ozzy Osbourne, before he died. 'The last few days have been a tough ride, but Kelly has been focused on executing plans with her mum,' a source told the Daily Mail on Friday. 'Of course, there have been tears, but she promised her dad — who openly spoke about not wanting people to mourn but rather celebrate his life — that she would not crumble in public.' According to the source, Ozzy — who died last Tuesday at the age of 76 — 'always pushed' his family to 'celebrate what people have done in life, not f***ing worry about what's next.' While Kelly, 40, is trying to maintain her strength and composure, she and her siblings are reportedly 'concerned about the impact this is having on [matriarch] Sharon' Osbourne, who was married to the rock legend for 43 years. 'She and Ozzy were such a unique couple,' the source said, adding that 'them being apart … is heartbreaking.' Sharon, 72, looked visibly distraught during her late husband's funeral procession through his home city of Birmingham, England, on Wednesday. A hearse containing the former Black Sabbath frontman's body travelled along Broad Street and made its way to the Black Sabbath Bridge and bench, where thousands of mourners from around the world left flowers and messages. Sharon, Kelly, and her brother, Jack Osbourne, 39 — who were all part of the cortège — tearfully exited their vehicle to stop at the bench. Sharon, who was held up by Kelly and Jack, sobbed as she bent down to place a pink flower wrapped in black paper among the massive pile of tributes. The emotional bunch, which eventually included two of Ozzy's other kids — son Louis Osbourne, who is about 50, and daughter Aimee Osbourne, 41 — turned to face the crowd and flashed peace signs before getting back in their car. The event, which preceded a 'small, private funeral,' was funded by the Osbourne family. While Ozzy had Parkinson's disease and limited mobility stemming from a 2003 quad bike accident that nearly killed him, his cause of death has not yet been revealed. Shortly after paramedics tried for hours to save his life, his family issued a collective statement that read, 'It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning.' 'He was with his family and surrounded by love,' they continued. 'We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time. Sharon, Jack, Kelly, Aimee and Louis.' Kelly went on to tell her Instagram followers, 'I feel unhappy I am so sad. I lost the best friend I ever had.' Ozzy's health was reportedly already in 'fragile' condition when he and Sharon, who wed in 1982, moved back to England in 2023 to live out 'their final chapter' in Buckinghamshire. Together, they had Aimee, Kelly and Jack, while Ozzy shared Louis with his first wife, Thelma Riley, to whom he was married from 1971 to 1982. The exes are also parents to son Elliot Kingsley, who is in his mid-50s, and daughter Jessica Osbourne, 45.


Perth Now
2 days ago
- Perth Now
Justin Timberlake diagnosed with ‘relentlessly debilitating' Lyme disease
Justin Timberlake has been diagnosed with 'relentlessly debilitating' Lyme disease. The 44-year-old singer and actor disclosed the diagnosis in a statement posted on Instagram after the final show of his Forget Tomorrow tour, which concluded in Turkey on Wednesday (30.07.25.) Justin told fans: 'I've been battling some health issues, and was diagnosed with Lyme disease – which I don't say so you feel bad for me – but to shed some light on what I've been up against behind the scenes.' Lyme disease is a bacterial infection spread to humans by ticks, which can cause symptoms ranging from nerve pain and fatigue to cognitive difficulties and chronic illness. In his statement, Justin added the diagnosis helped explain 'why (he) would be onstage and in a massive amount of nerve pain or, just feeling crazy fatigue or sickness'. He said: 'I was faced with a personal decision. Stop touring? Or, keep going and figure it out.' Justin, who first rose to fame as part of the boy band *NSYNC, opted to continue. 'The joy that performing brings me far outweighs the fleeting stress my body was feeling,' he said – adding: 'I'm so glad I kept going.' He also said sharing his condition publicly was important to ensure his struggles were not 'misinterpreted', adding he was proud to prove his 'mental tenacity' during the tour, which has received mixed reviews for what some described as underwhelming performances. Justin went on: 'I chose to be transparent about (my) struggles, so they would not be misinterpreted.' The performer has sold more than 88 million records worldwide and has won ten Grammy Awards. His latest tour began in April 2024 and included performances across Europe, North America and Asia. He is married to 42-year-old actor Jessica Biel, with whom he shares two sons, Silas and Phineas. Justin is far from the first celebrity to open up about being diagnosed with Lyme disease. Fellow singer Avril Lavigne and model Bella Hadid have both spoken publicly about their experiences with the illness in recent years. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates around 476,000 Americans are diagnosed and treated for the condition annually.