A SUPER soprano snatched back charitable donations from a thief midway through her classical recital.
Lucy Britner was singing Abendempfindung by Mozart to a packed Unitarian Church in Brighton when she saw two men lurking in the doorway next to a wooden bowl of cash donations.
Miss Britner said: “At first I thought they were interested in the singing but then I saw them looking at the money and one of them tried to conceal the other while he perched next to the bowl and grabbed some cash.”
The 30-year-old was forced to break off her performance last Sunday mid-note and run down the aisle to the front door.
She said: “Frustratingly, I was the only one facing that direction so I just had to run out and stop them.”
The 70-strong audience swivelled in their seats and gasped as she shouted: “What are you doing?”
Miss Britner wrestled the money back off the thief and prised open his hands to retrieve the notes.
Members of the audience, including an off-duty police officer, tried to chase after the two men but they made a quick exit.
Miss Britner’s fiancé Luke Ellis, 30, who accompanied her onstage for one song, was in the vestry arranging some flowers when he heard the commotion.
He said: “I didn’t know what the heck was going on. I had an image in my mind of someone jumping up and down in the audience and then saw what had happened. Everyone was just bewildered.”
After protecting the donations – about £150 – Miss Britner went back to the stage and finished the song.
Mr Ellis, whose parents Vic Ellis and Margaret Grimsdell also played, said: “She took it in her stride, even after physically restraining one of them.”
Miss Britner added: “It was unnerving but I had spent months practising those songs and there was no way I wasn’t going to carry on.”
The show ended on a high note, with more than £300 collected for The National Brain Appeal.
Miss Britner, of Brighton, performed her show, Centuries Of Song, in memory of her friend Alan Lodge, who died aged 29 from a brain haemorrhage.
To donate to The National Brain Appeal, visit the charity’s website at nationalbrainappeal.org
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