Natasha Hamilton, the charismatic Kitten star, made a return to her Merseyside roots to illuminate Liscard’s Christmas lights, giving an update on her diagnosis with Hashimoto’s disease, her new musical interests, and her five-year-old life.
Natasha Hamilton has shared a huge insight into the future of Atomic Kitten. At 42, Natasha, mother-of-five and singer, is embracing a full-circle moment as she returns to her roots to help lift her hometown’s spirits during what locals have called their “worst Christmas ever.” Once the teenage girl belting out songs in Liscard pubs at just 13, Natasha is now the woman lighting up the district — quite literally — by climbing to the top of a 30ft Norwegian Pine to switch on the lights for a community so close to where she grew up. “Liscard has such a special place in my heart,” she said.
“It wasn’t just about turning on a tree,” she tells us with that familiar mix of Northern warmth and honesty. “It was about giving the community their Christmas back.” And it’s a community that needs the boost. With Asda research showing 73% of Brits feeling the “Grinch Pinch”, Liscard’s festive celebrations have been scaled back in recent years – even becoming known online for having “the worst Christmas tree in Britain.”
But this year, after the community reached out asking for help, Asda stepped in. What followed was a joyful transformation, with Natasha leading the comeback in true headline-making fashion.
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Being escorted 30 feet in the air on a cherry picker while the wind was blowing was terrifying, I’ll tell you. she chuckles. My daughter was yelling, “Mummy, come down!” But it was incredible when the lights went on and I witnessed everyone cheering. It sounded like hope.
The night was more than a festive switch-on; it was a reunion between Natasha and the town that shaped her. Born and raised in Liverpool, she spent her early teens performing across the Wirral before shooting to international fame as part of Atomic Kitten. The trio, known for smash hits like Whole Again and The Tide Is High, sold millions, toured the world and became a defining girl band of the 2000s.
She recalls, “We were just kids.” However, Liverpool and the Wirral had a positive impact on us from day one. I can’t enter Liverpool without someone shouting my name because I still feel that love. Natasha cautions against ever saying never because the Atomic Kitten clan is still very close to Jenny and Liz, and that there is never a chance that things will change.
It’s that nostalgia and sisterhood that Natasha dives into in her latest project, Girlbands Forever, the tell-all TV documentary revisiting the highs and lows of girl group life. “It was a 44-hour interview condensed into a few minutes,” she says. “It was exhausting but really cathartic. I remembered things I hadn’t thought about in years. And what struck me most was how many of us, in different bands, were going through the same pressures — but we were always being pitted against each other. It made me really appreciative of what we actually achieved, and very proud to have represented the North West in such a pivotal way in pop music.”
When she discusses the later friendships, she becomes enthralled. “We all enjoyed doing The Big Reunion in 2013.” We finally developed into real people, not just band members. It resembled family. What is Natasha most proud of after dominating the charts for three decades? Although there are numerous achievements, she continued, “My career highlight would be playing the West End lead actress, which was the youngest female actress to do the role.” The ending of the show gives me a unique sense of relief unlike anything I’ve ever felt.
With children ages 2, 11, 13, 19, and 21, Natasha’s household is a bustling whirlwind of routines, school plays, teenage milestones, and toddler magic. Family is at the heart of everything Natasha does. Natasha cheers with pride as she discusses taking her to see Santa because this is her youngest daughter’s first Christmas that she will actually understand. She adored it without a doubt. It created magic.
Her other children are just as busy. “Alfie performed in Grease last week, and Ella had a solo in her Christmas show… they love it! And my eldest son, Josh, came home from Australia last Christmas — that was the best gift ever.” But how does Natasha get herself ready for Christmas? She explained: “We do the reindeer food leaving carrots and sprinkle rainbow glitter on the doorstep to show he’s been, leave milk and cookies for Santa every year. Christmas Day is always about having festive family fun, it gets quite competitive at times with the games, and then karaoke comes out at the end of the day.”
Motherhood, however, has taught Natasha the importance of balance. Diagnosed last year with Hashimoto’s disease, she’s learned to slow down. “It makes you realise you’re not invincible. Some days need to be soft days. I’ve not had a drink for eight weeks — I’m just filling my own cup.”
Natasha’s creative drive is unmatched despite living in a full-time job. She’s now established herself as a solo record label, Morpho Records, after decades in the field. She proudly declares, “I want to support the next wave of UK pop artists.” Kai Bosh, her first signing, is already getting ready for a massive 2026. Natasha is also making brand-new music herself, with an EP and a debut single due out in January.
She smiles up and says, “I’m really ready for next year.” It will be incredible, they say. The Hamilton family will be celebrating Christmas in the way that they know how to do: loud, joyful, and full of love before another whirlwind of releases, filming, and school runs kicks off.
She laughs, “It’s karaoke, dancing around the kitchen table, silly games, disco lights, and wrapping the living room door so the kids have to burst through it in the morning.” The best chaos is “complete chaos,” not “the complete chaos.”
Natasha still occasionally feels misunderstood for a woman who has spent more than 25 years in the public eye. I’m tough, people think. I must be, too. However, I cry at everything because I’m so soft underneath.
Source: Mirror

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