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To: Dqban22
Posted on Tue, Jul. 22, 2003

Tens of thousands turn out for salsa legend Celia Cruz's funeral
BY RALPH R. ORTEGA, JOSE MARTINEZ AND DAVE GOLDINER
New York Daily News

NEW YORK - (KRT) - New York buried its beloved Azucar on Tuesday after an unforgettable and emotional final farewell to salsa queen Celia Cruz.

Waving flags and tossing white rose petals, tens of thousands of fans lined Fifth Avenue as Cruz's coffin rolled by in a glass-enclosed carriage drawn by two white horses.

The cheering throngs sang Cruz's songs, packed St. Patrick's Cathedral for a star-studded funeral Mass and crowded into leafy Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, where she was laid to rest.

"Celia, we are missing you so much already," said Rosa Pagan, 64, of East Harlem. "Goodbye, until we meet again in eternity."

Mayor Michael Bloomberg joined celebrities like Willie Colon, Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffith at the jam-packed Mass as thousands of fans listened on the street outside.

Patti LaBelle sang a mournful version of "Ave Maria," and Victor Manuelle had the crowd dancing in their pews with a version of Cruz's "La Vida es un Carnaval" ("Life is a Carnival").

"Celia, and her azucar, too, will live forever," the salsa star sang.

Torrential rain drenched the crowds outside, but mourners saw the rain as nothing less than a sign from a higher power.

"The sky is crying for our queen," said Antonio Perez, 47, of the Bronx.

The adios ultimo to Cruz, who died last week of cancer at age 77, unfolded with the same glittery panache and style that marked her six-decade singing career.

Overflow crowds of fans gathered before dawn outside the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel, many of them hoping against hope to catch a final glimpse of the Cuban-born singer.

Pedro Knight, Cruz's husband, arrived for a last moment alone with the body of his wife of 41 years.

The procession was led by a shiny white Cadillac convertible carrying a statue of La Virgen de la Caridad, the patron saint of Cuba.

It was followed by the horse-drawn carriage topped with white flowers and lavender roses - Cruz's favorites - and by a half-dozen limousines carrying friends and relatives.

"It reminds me of Princess Diana's funeral," said Carmen Medina, 47, a social worker from the Bronx. "She deserves it, too. Celia was a queen to us."

Knight linked arms with Bloomberg and Colon as they were led into St. Patrick's, which was packed with mourners and electric with emotion.

"She had such power to bring us together and make us vibrate like instruments in her orchestra," said Auxiliary Bishop Josu Iriondo, who delivered a homily in Spanish.

Pallbearers carried Cruz's Cuban flag-draped coffin out of the cathedral into the sunshine, and fans erupted in more chants.

As Knight waited to leave in a limousine, housekeeper Berta Posso slipped under a police barricade and rushed to his open window.

"She was an angel on this Earth," whispered Posso, 56, of the East Village.

"Gracias, hermana," the white-haired Knight replied. "Thank you, sister."

A few miles north, thousands more fans waited for hours playing tambourines, dancing and singing Cruz's songs inside the cemetery in the Bronx.

The skies opened again as Cruz's coffin was carried past leafy trees for a graveside service at the cemetery where Miles Davis, Duke Ellington and Lionel Hampton are buried.

Her body was entombed in a temporary mausoleum until a special sarcophagus can be built for her.

"My heart feels sad," said Anna Gutierrez, 42, of the Bronx, who belted out her own version of "Carnaval." "But I also feel happy because I'm singing for her."

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(New York Daily News correspondent Austin Fenner contributed to this report.)

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© 2003, New York Daily News.


4 posted on 07/22/2003 7:32:03 PM PDT by Dqban22
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To: Dqban22
New York says final farewell to Celia Cruz

BY RENE RODRIGUEZ
rrodriguez@herald.com
7/23/2003

NEW YORK - They were everywhere at once, it seemed:

Gathered outside the Upper East Side funeral home where an estimated 20,000 people had turned out on Monday to pay their respects; lined up and down a 30-block stretch of Fifth Avenue, where her funeral procession would soon file by; clustered outside St. Patrick's Cathedral in midtown Manhattan, hoping to snag precious seats for her memorial Mass; huddled outside the gates of Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, where Celia Cruz finally would be laid to rest.

Fans of the late Cuban singer overran New York City on Tuesday, buffeted -- but not deterred -- by a ferocious summer thunderstorm that could not dampen their affection for their beloved guarachera, who died July 16 of a brain tumor in her Fort Lee, N.J., home at the age of 77. Even if Gov. George Pataki had not already proclaimed Tuesday ''Celia Cruz Day'' across the state of New York, it still would have felt that way here.

The day began where it had ended Monday, outside the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Home, where several hundred people gathered on street corners behind police barricades as drivers of passing cars honked their horns and yelled: ``We love you, Celia!''

Shortly before 1 p.m., the mood of quiet expectation gave way to wild cheers and cries of ''Celia!'' as the singer's coffin, draped in a Cuban flag, was placed in a glass-enclosed horse-drawn carriage adorned with lavender roses and yellow azaleas. The carriage headed south on Fifth Avenue, accompanied by limousines carrying family members, friends and truckloads of wreaths and floral arrangements.

Befitting the singer's reputation as the Queen of Salsa, the procession imparted a regal air as it headed towards St. Patrick's. Along the way, curious passers-by mingled with diehard fans, leaning over barricades to snap photos.

''Who is she?'' a dog walker juggling five charges asked. ''Era la reina (She was the queen)!,'' replied a woman clad in a T-shirt emblazoned with Cruz's image. A double-decker sightseeing bus rode past, the tourists aboard capturing the scene with camcorders.

The crowd swelled in numbers as the procession reached midtown, where fans swarmed outside the fabled church, a mass of jostling umbrellas, loud cheers and joyous applause. The rain fell hard, but few seemed to notice. A woman dressed as the Statue of Liberty shouted ''Libertad para Cuba! (Freedom for Cuba!)'' while waving a papier-mché torch.

Inside, where a crowd of 2,000 family members, celebrities and lucky fans were gathered, the mood was calmer and more reflective. Antonio Banderas, Melanie Griffith, Rubén Blades, Paquito D'Rivera and Mayor Michael Bloomberg were among those who listened to the 90-minute Mass, conducted in Spanish.

In a moving homily punctuated by applause, auxiliary Bishop Josú Iriondo recounted Cruz's humble roots and ensuing career, spoke about the inspirational power of her life and music and celebrated her irrepressible spirit.

''She never distanced herself from ordinary people, and the higher she flew, the higher those people flew with her,'' Iriondo said. ``Celia prophetically said she would live forever, and she will. You haven't left us, Celia. We don't see you, but we feel you, because like divine sugar, you live on to sweeten the coffee that is your people.''

Iriondo also spoke about Cruz's 41-year marriage to Pedro Knight, who received a standing ovation. With peals of thunder rumbling outside, singer Patti LaBelle performed a soulful rendition of Ave Maria, bringing it to a close with a gentle, but perfectly appropriate, ''Azucar!'' -- Cruz's trademark.

Outside the church, the Mass was broadcast via loudspeakers for the thousands who did not make it inside, but much of the crowd opted to celebrate instead, clapping and singing in the intermittent rain.

''It's a very sad occasion, but Celia always said she wanted to be remembered as someone who brought happiness to our lives,'' said Yolanda Rodrigo, 46, of New York City, who took the day off from work to attend the services. ``I know she would have wanted us to celebrate today.''

As if by design, the rain ceased and the sun even shone weakly through the clouds as the Mass ended and Cruz's coffin was placed in a hearse to be taken to Woodlawn Cemetery, home to other musical greats such as Duke Ellington, Irving Berlin and Miles Davis. There, too, a large crowd of fans awaited the singer's arrival, ready to bid her a final, but upbeat, farewell.

In the liner notes for her upcoming album Regalo del Alma (Gift From the Soul), due for release next week, Cruz wrote: ``This record is dedicated to . . . all of you who keep giving me such great strength and hope.''

Tuesday, they went on giving just that, seemingly intent on continuing to do it forever.





5 posted on 07/23/2003 9:44:58 AM PDT by Dqban22
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