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Ronnie Wood and Peter Tatchell among those arriving for Paul O'Grady's funeral

Celebrity friends of Paul O'Grady have begun to arrive at a church in Kent for the TV star's funeral (Gareth Fuller/PA)
Ellie Iorrizo and Gwyn Wright, PA

Celebrity friends of Paul O’Grady have begun to arrive for the TV star’s funeral.

Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood and comedian Alan Carr were welcomed to St Rumwold’s Parish Church in the Kent village of Bonnington by sombre music from the Salvation Army Band.

Comedian and TV presenter Jo Brand arrived with soap star Cheryl Fergison, followed by actress Linda Henry, who plays Shirley Carter in EastEnders.

LGBT rights campaigner Peter Tatchell wore a purple shirt and black tie, while TV presenter Gaby Roslin sported an all-black ensemble as she entered the Grade I listed church.

Paul O’Grady funeral
Well-wishers at the Walnut Tree Pub in Aldington, Kent (Yui Mok/PA)

Mourners have lined the streets of nearby Aldington, the village where O’Grady lived for more than 20 years, to watch the procession and pay their respects.

A cortege of limousines and a coffin in a horse-drawn carriage will travel from his home to the church in the early afternoon.

Personal notes from his family, including his daughter, Sharyn Mousley, were left outside the church attached to wreaths of lilies, in an apparent nod to the star’s famous drag alter ego, Lily Savage.

The day will also feature a guard of honour with dogs from Battersea Dogs & Cats Home.

A bake sale was organised outside the Walnut Tree pub in Aldington, with proceeds going to Battersea, with which he worked closely throughout his life.

Paul O’Grady funeral
Pupils and teachers from Aldington Primary School pay their respects (Yui Mok/PA)

Aldington Women’s Institute (WI) chairwoman Ginny Taylor, who organised the sale, told the PA news agency: “We wanted to honour Paul because he was very much part of our village. He was lovely, an absolutely lovely man.

“He was always very engaged. He must have got fed up to his back teeth with everyone but he was always good. It is a real shock just even talking about it.”

WI member Linda Harman said the response from the village has been “phenomenal”.

“We have had other celebrities living in the village. Paul was the one who gave back,” she said.

Walnut Tree landlady Karen Barrett told PA that O’Grady had been a regular and was “lovely”.

Paul O’Grady funeral
Many tributes were linked to the TV star’s love of dogs (Yui Mok/PA)

She said: “I don’t quite know how I feel about today to tell you the truth … until he comes past and I am going to cry.

“It will be real. He was just lovely and if you didn’t get to meet him then you missed out on life. You really did, he was just great.”

Ms Barrett, who became emotional while talking about O’Grady, said she is focusing on making sure “the day goes well and he would be proud of us”.

She added: “I moved into the village 22 years ago, the same time as Paul did.”

O’Grady, who rose to fame as Lily Savage before going on to host a string of television programmes as himself, died “unexpectedly but peacefully” at his home on March 28 at the age of 67.

Born in Birkenhead on the Wirral, Merseyside, he later adopted Kent as his home for more than 20 years.