Gemma told of the heartbreak at her father’s death and the injustice of a good man being taken while so young.She said: 'My dad was the most loving, caring admirable father ever yet he had to be taken at such a young age, yet there are other people that are doing such bad jobs at parenting who don’t deserve it who are still walking round healthy as anything and you think where does the fairness come in? Why not take the bad ones and leave the good ones?'She said: 'He works in mysterious ways, the big fella, I was 17 when I lost my dad. 'He had a mild heart attack at work and his best friend found him in his office holding his chest, took him to hospital and they gave him the all clear because he didn’t smoke or drink much and he was big build. He was 52. 'He was in hospital for a week, they gave him the all clear and they said he was ready to come home and he was due home on the Wednesday, so on the Monday and Tuesday he was sat up in bed drinking lemonade and sat round laughing and joking. The Tuesday night we left him and I was supposed to come back Wednesday to bring him back home but Tuesday night I got woken up by my mum, she was stood in the doorway balling and he’d had another mild heart attack in his sleep but this one had killed him. 'The day before he was due to come home, he had been fine, walking about, we had his bags packed for him to come home. He said it was because he was stressed he worked every hour god sent and when he did have a day off he was really into his cars and he was racing his cars. He had Caterham Super 7s, built and raced them, and if he ever had a moment to himself he spent it with my sister or myself and he always said he was doing too much. And that’s why I love chilling out. 'He was healthy in amazing shape, strong, everything. The only thing was I’m an ambassador for the heart foundation and they say that no heart attack comes just like that, there are always warning signs, and a few days before he had chest pains and we all went out racing the cars and he had a burger from a cr*ppy burger stand and he thought it was indigestion and he took Rennies and we were all kind of having a laugh with him because he’d eaten a cr*ppy burger and they were the warning signs that something was wrong. But my nephew, bless him, to this day, who is ten now, turned to me and said, ‘I do wish Grandad David hadn’t eaten that burger’, and he thought it was because he ate a bad burger. 'When you say about God working in mysterious ways, my sister has three children, she had Hadley and then my grandad died not long after he was born and it was like one comes in one goes out. With my dad a few weeks before he died, my nephew Tyler got severely bad meningitis and was in intensive care and we were told he wouldn’t come through and he was only about 3-4 months old and he was tiny so the tubes were so big on him so we all went up to the hospital because we were told we weren’t going to see him again and we all said goodbye to Tyler and left my sister with my brother-in-law and Tyler. My dad came in and said to my sister, ‘If I could swap places with him Nina, I would’, he said if I could be gone and Tyler could stay, then I would that.

‘Miraculously, Tyler pulled through now he’s fine, nothing wrong with him and a few weeks later my dad died. Tyler is the best kid in the world now.'

Biggins said he believes that God takes the best people first. He said: 'They are going on to a better place; I have no fear at all of death because I believe there is something better. I think, and I’m not talking about this week, but this what we’re in is purgatory. Life is purgatory because of so many things.

Rodney, who had been discussing the hard time he had at the hands of his father earlier said: 'You can break the mould, I broke the mould when I grew up. I’ve never done anything other than cuddle and love and nurture my children. I’ve had no greater passion in my life. My children are everything to me.'