Coleen Nolan Faced Criticism for Wanting to Sing at Kim Woodburn’s Funeral — But When Her Voice Broke the Silence, Everyone Wept

It was a moment no one expected to move them — and yet, it left not a single dry eye in the room.

In the days leading up to Kim Woodburn’s funeral, many were surprised — and even outraged — when Coleen Nolan expressed her wish to perform a song as her personal farewell to the late television star. Their famously rocky relationship, marked by fiery on-screen confrontations and a feud that played out in public for years, made her offer feel inappropriate to some.

“Why would she want to sing for someone she clashed with so much?” one mourner reportedly whispered.
“It’s not her place,” others said online, with some even calling it “a publicity stunt.”

But Coleen remained silent through the noise. She didn’t post on social media. She didn’t defend herself. She simply showed up, dressed in quiet mourning, holding a small folded piece of paper and a heart full of emotion.

As the ceremony reached its most solemn point, the room fell still. Then — just her voice.

A single, trembling note. Soft. Raw. Real.

She sang “Wind Beneath My Wings,” a song she later revealed was one Kim once said reminded her of her mother.

And suddenly, everything changed.

The same people who moments earlier raised eyebrows and whispered doubts were now lowering their heads, wiping away tears, many moved by the vulnerability and pain in Coleen’s voice. It wasn’t just a performance — it was a release. A letting go of anger, of misunderstandings, and perhaps… of regret.


A Complicated Bond, a Simple Goodbye

Kim Woodburn and Coleen Nolan were never close friends. Their fallout on Celebrity Big Brother became tabloid fodder, and they were rarely mentioned in the same breath without the word “feud.”

But as Coleen later said in a quiet statement to a family friend:

“We fought. We hurt each other. But we were two strong women trying to survive in a harsh world. And in the end… I wanted to honor that.”

Kim’s family, initially hesitant, later thanked Coleen for the gesture — and the room full of mourners, once uncertain, applauded through their tears as the final note faded into silence.


Sometimes, peace comes too late — but when it comes, it heals more than we know.