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Pastor Charles Ellis with the singer Ariana Grande after she performed at the funeral service for Aretha Franklin at the Greater Grace Temple in Detroit, Michigan, on Friday. Former US President Bill Clinton is in the background. Photo: Reuters

Pastor apologises for ‘groping’ Ariana Grande at Aretha Franklin’s funeral

An embrace after her performance draws criticism for being too familiar

Music

Ariana Grande had just belted out one of Aretha Franklin’s signature hits at the queen of Soul’s funeral on Friday, which prompted officiating pastor Charles H. Ellis III to call the young singer onstage to honour her as “an icon herself.”

But it is a remark that came before that – and what some have described as too-familiar touching from a much older man – that has Ellis apologising to the singer, an army of her outraged fans and the Hispanic community.

“I’ve got to apologise, because I have to brush up,” he said soon after calling Grande back to the podium. “My 28-year-old daughter tells me, ‘Dad, you are old at 60.’ When I saw Ariana Grande on the program, I thought that was a new something at Taco Bell. Girl, let me give you all your respect.”

Some have said Ellis groped Grande after her performance. He apologised, saying “it would never be my intention to touch any woman's breast”. Photo: AFP

As he joked about the young singer, he wrapped his hand around her, high above her waist in an act many are calling groping.

In an interview with Associated Press on Friday, Ellis, the pastor of the 6,000-member Greater Grace Temple in Detroit, apologised.

“I personally and sincerely apologise to Ariana and to her fans and to the whole Hispanic community,” Ellis said. “When you’re doing a program for nine hours you try to keep it lively, you try to insert some jokes here and there.”

He told the AP that any inappropriate touch was incidental, and that he had hugged all the performers, male and female. Hugging, he said, is a common way of showing love at his church.

“It would never be my intention to touch any woman’s breast … I don’t know I guess I put my arm around her,” Ellis said, adding: “Maybe I crossed the border, maybe I was too friendly or familiar but again, I apologise.”

But for many the apology was not enough. They held up the touching as a public display of what routinely happens to female artists in an era of #MeToo.

And many said the affront was not the only one Grande endured during her brief time onstage.

Grande performing as Clinton and others watched. Photo: Reuters

Fox News panellists, for example, blasted former president Bill Clinton for apparently staring at Grande’s backside during her performance as the singer performed directly in front of him.

Some on social media dragged the singer for wearing a short black dress to a funeral, which some deemed disrespectful.

Publicly, Grande has been quiet on the matter. She could not immediately be reached for comment on Saturday.

But her defenders responded with tweets that included the hashtag #RespectAriana.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Pastor apologises to grande
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