Caprice Bourret, 53, cuts an elegant figure in a black ensemble
by Chloe Louise For Mailonline · Mail OnlineCaprice Bourret cut an elegant figure in black as she attended the Free Free 'Who You Are' Gala, Ladbroke Hall, London on Wednesday.
The singer, 53, looked chic as she stepped out in a plunging black top which featured slits up the caped arms and fully exposed her cleavage.
She paired her stylish top with a pair of matching black flared trousers.
Adding inches to her frame, she paired her ensemble with a pair of black heeled shoes.
For the glitzy evening, Caprice styled her blonde tresses in a pin-straight look which flowed past her shoulders.
To accessorise, she kept it simple with a pair of long black and gold dangly earrings and a myriad of gold necklaces.
In 2022, Caprice admitted she thought she was going to die when she was diagnosed with her brain tumour five years before.
That year, she shared a graphic image of her surgery scar, taken after her 2017 operation during which doctors removed part of her skull to take out the growth.
She shared the image to mark five years since she was given the all-clear after the surgery for her meningioma - a tumour that grows on the membrane that covers the brain.
Caprice welcomed her sons, Jett and Jax, in 2013 after three unsuccessful rounds of IVF.
One son was born via surrogate and one born by her but she has chosen not to disclose which son was born by which method.
The London-based TV personality also said: 'After my tumour I had to reassess my life. I knew I had to change things - I felt that instinctually.
'And I realised I wasn't giving anything back. I'm so blessed in life, but life is like a circle and you can't just keep taking, you must give back too.
'So, I started doing a lot of work with Brain Tumour Research, not only giving my own money but my time as well.'
She continued: 'I think a lot of people in the celebrity world give their time to things because of the publicity, but for me, I wanted to make a difference and for it to mean something.
'It's important for me to know I'm helping make a difference to others, but I don't normally shout about it.'
There is no proof that IVF can cause meningioma brain tumours but scientists suggest it may accelerate the growth of ones that already exist.
This is because female reproductive hormones women are given during fertility treatment to improve chances of success are known to help tumours to gro