NATIONAL GRIEF

A fifth of Brits were more upset by a celebrity death than that of their own grandparents, new research finds

HALF of Brits have felt truly devastated by the loss of a celebrity that they admired but didn’t personally know, research reveals.

A nationwide study delved into the psychological effect that the death of a well-known figure can have on the public.

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One in five of us have felt more upset at a celebrity death than that of our grandparentsCredit: Alamy

It found that the celebrity death that affected the nation most was Princess Diana's, in Paris in 1997, with a quarter of people saying they had been left grief-stricken when she passed away.

A further 19 per cent of the 1,500 people polled said the passing of comic Robin Williams in 2014 was the most upsetting while 12 per cent said David Bowie’s death in 2016 affected them the most.

Other well-known personalities whose death had a real impact on the nation included singer Amy Winehouse in 2011, George Michael and US superstar Whitney Houston.

Overall, more than one in ten (12 per cent) felt they truly KNEW a star through their creative work, while nine per cent said the death of their hero had felt like they’d lost a family member, and seven per cent even claimed they had felt closer to the star than their own friends and family.

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, found that almost half of the respondents (46 per cent) said that the star they’d grown up with and admired had seemed immortal, and as a result their death had felt very traumatic.

Little surprise then, perhaps, that after the death of their idol, more than two thirds (67 per cent) of Brits said they felt genuine sadness or grief and 45 per cent confessed to crying real tears.

Shockingly, one in seven (13 per cent) claimed they went off their food and one in 14 (seven per cent) admitted they even took the day off work to grieve.

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One in 10 of those surveyed (11 per cent) felt compelled to go to a public place of grieving - such as Kensington Palace after the death of Diana - while 14 per cent joined an online community to help them deal with their grief.

More than a third (37 per cent) said they felt it was tragic when a talented persons’ life was cut short when they had more to give, while almost a third (30 per cent) said their idol’s work had inspired them.

Almost three in 10 (27 per cent) felt like they had lost a part of their childhood when their idol died and more than a fifth (22 per cent) confessed that a celeb’s death had made them think about their own mortality.

And more than half (55 per cent) of those quizzed remember exactly where they were when they heard the news of a celeb death.

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