Celebrate Freddie Mercury’s birthday – be Freddie for a day

Charity event held annually in late rock icon’s honour

The late musician Freddie Mercury, lead singer of the ground-breaking band Queen, would be celebrating his 72 birthday on Wednesday September 5 2018.
Fans around the world honour the rock icon Mercury every year on September 5 (Freddie’s birthday) with a global charity celebration called “Freddie for a Day.”
Many celebrate his life by donning a white vest, his famous yellow jacket and sporting a trademark moustache to dress up like the late singer.
The event, celebrated across the globe, raises money for the Mercury Phoenix Trust, the Aids charity set up in his name in 1992.
Freddie died in 1991 at age 45 due to complications from Aids.
20th Century Fox will be releasing Bohemian Rhapsody – a celebration of Freddie’s life and Queen’s music nationally on Friday November 30 2018.
Fun Freddy facts:

Freddie Mercury was born Farrokh Bulsara in Zanzibar (now part of Tanzania).
He adopted the name Freddie while at St Peter’s, the English boarding school he attended in India, before he and his family moved to England.
Freddie became a table tennis champion at the school.
As a child, between the ages of nine and 12, Freddie enjoyed collecting stamps. His personal album contains stamps from Britain, Monaco, Eastern Europe, Aden (now part of Yemen) and Zanzibar. The collection was bought by The Postal Museum (in the UK) in 1993 and proceeds of the sale went to the Mercury Phoenix Trust, the charity that was set up in Freddie’s memory. Freddie was posthumously remembered on one of a special series of stamps that Britain’s Royal Mail produced to mark the millennium.
Freddie once had a part-time job working as a baggage handler at Heathrow Airport.
Freddie co-owned and ran a stall in Kensington Market in London with Roger Taylor, which opened in the summer of 1969. They sold Freddie’s own artwork, as well as second-hand clothes. The two of them kept up the running of the stall, even after Queen released its first album in 1973.
Freddie had four extra teeth on his upper jaw, which were pushing on the front ones. He never considered ‘fixing’ them because he believed that they contributed to the special sound of his voice - the legendary four-octave range.
While the lyrics of ‘Killer Queen’ mention Moët & Chandon, Freddie’s own favourite champagne was Louis Roederer Cristal. His other favourite drinks were Stolichnaya vodka and Earl Grey tea – with milk and two sugars. His favourite champagne cocktail was a Bellini (Cristal and peach puree).
Freddie never needed an excuse for a party. For one celebration, he had a cake made in the shape of the Swiss apartment block where he’d bought a flat – complete with towers and turrets.
In 1979, Freddie performed Bohemian Rhapsody and Crazy Little Thing Called Love with the Royal Ballet.
Freddie loved reading magazines such as Architectural Digest, House & Garden and auction catalogues.
One of the most technically accomplished singers to work in pop music, in a list of the greatest English language singers of the 20th century, compiled by BBC Radio, Freddie was ranked No 10. The list included Frank Sinatra, Billie Holliday, Barbra Streisand, Ella Fitzgerald and Nat King Cole.
Freddie came second in MTV’s list of the 22 greatest singers of the past 25 years – he was beaten by Mariah Carey.
In 2016, a research team undertook a study to understand the unique appeal of his voice.
The Austrian, Czech and Swedish researchers studied archival recordings. They noted the singer’s faster vibrato and use of subharmonics, particularly in comparison to opera singers.
Other than his passion for music, one of Freddie’s favourite hobbies was shopping, mainly for other people. Generous to a fault, he loved buying expensive perfumes, cologne, watches and jewellery.
Freddie also loved cats and owned several – some exotic long-haired cats were gifts from friends and others were rescued from a shelter. One of his cats, Delilah, was the inspiration for a Queen song of the same name.
He was a big fan of the Spanish operatic soprano Montserrat Caballé. The musicians teamed up to record an album together in 1987 called Barcelona and a hit of the same name.
Though Freddie didn’t live to see it, Barcelona was featured at the Olympic Games in 1992, going on to become the best known song of any Olympics.
Queen wasn’t going to release Another One Bites the Dust as a single until Michael Jackson convinced them. It became the most successful American single of their career.
An asteroid was named after Freddie to commemorate what would have been his 70th birthday in September 2016. The International Astronomical Union designated asteroid 17473 as Freddiemercury.
The asteroid was discovered in 1991, the same year Freddie died. It orbits the sun on a path between Mars and Jupiter.
Announcing the news, Brian May said ‘Asteroid 17473 Freddiemercury’ is “just a dot of light, but it’s a very special dot of light”.
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