Only former pop stars are familiar with a certain kind of obscurity, the kind that comes with a quiet, purposeful decision to just walk away rather than with scandal or collapse. Long before it became popular to choose not to be famous, Andrew Ridgeley, the former half of Wham!, made that decision. Most people are unaware, however, that his retreat from public life was interspersed with a truly terrifying health crisis that not only changed his physical state but also perhaps gave his post-Wham! existence of a true sense of purpose.
It took place in the middle of the 1990s, after Ridgeley and his partner Keren Woodward had already withdrawn to a medieval farmhouse close to Cornwall. He went surfing off the coast of England with his brother Paul, engaging in the kind of leisurely, low-key activities that had become Ridgeley’s post-Wham! routine. Neither of them anticipated returning seriously ill. After raw sewage was dumped straight onto the beach where they were surfing, both men developed a severe waterborne illness. It’s the kind of detail that sounds almost ridiculous: a former pop star was killed by tainted seawater close to a public beach, not by excess or addiction.
The illness was severe enough to make an impression. And instead of quietly getting better and moving on, Ridgeley took a step that, to be honest, very few people in his situation would take. He took his story to The Times. He joined Surfers Against Sewage, a campaigning organization committed to cleaning up British coastlines and drawing public attention to the very real health risks posed by sewage discharged near swimming and surfing locations, and became an outspoken, tenacious supporter of water quality. It’s possible that this cause gave him a genuine sense of engagement with the world outside of the stage, something that Formula Three racing and a poorly received solo album never quite managed.

The fact that the illness sped up rather than slowed down his post-fame reinvention is somewhat ironic. By now, Ridgeley had distanced himself from nearly everything. In 1990, Rolling Stone gave his solo album Son of Albert a half-star after it received harsh criticism. His brief foray into Formula Three motor racing had resulted in eight crashes and no significant outcomes. He tried acting in Los Angeles, but it didn’t work out. For all intents and purposes, Andrew Ridgeley had already left the public eye by the time he and his brother paddled out into those tainted waters.
The illness imbued the quiet years with a sense of moral significance. His support of Surfers Against Sewage was motivated by firsthand knowledge of the harm that untreated sewage causes to human health rather than being a celebrity vanity project. It’s difficult to ignore how neatly this story contradicts everything Wham! once stood for: carefree hedonism, the easy glamour, and the idea that nothing really mattered after the moment. Choosing to take action after becoming ill in a contaminated sea off the coast of Cornwall is as far from “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go” as it gets.
Road cycling, surfing when the water is clean enough, and the occasional public appearance for causes he genuinely cares about are all examples of Ridgeley’s purposefully modest lifestyle by any celebrity metric. Today, his health seems stable. By all accounts, he handled the posthumous induction of George Michael at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2023 with the same quiet poise that has characterized the previous thirty years. The illness fades, but its legacy—a man radicalized by contaminated water into something akin to a true environmentalist—remains quietly at the core of Andrew Ridgeley’s identity long after the music stopped.
FAQs
Q1: What illness did Andrew Ridgeley contract?
He contracted a serious waterborne illness from raw sewage discharged near a public beach.
Q2: When did Andrew Ridgeley fall ill?
The illness occurred during a surfing trip with his brother in the mid-1990s.
Q3: Was Andrew Ridgeley’s brother also affected?
Yes, his brother Paul contracted the same waterborne illness from the contaminated water.
Q4: What did Andrew Ridgeley do after recovering from his illness?
He became a vocal campaigner for water quality through Surfers Against Sewage.
Q5: Has Andrew Ridgeley’s illness had a lasting impact on his life?
It gave his post-Wham! years of genuine purpose as an environmental advocate.

