STARS of the ITV talent show The Voice will perform in a charity concert in Southampton tonight and Echo readers are being invited to attend for free.

There will also be an opportunity to meet the performers ahead of the show, including Hampshire’s own Harry Fisher.

Former Romsey schoolboy Harry will appear alongside fellow 2016 Voice finalists Heather Cameron-Hayes, Aine Carroll, Deano Boroczky and Vangelos Polydorou at Central Hall in aid of U Support, a charity that gives children with life-limiting illnesses access to live music, football matches and other thrilling events.

Each act will perform an individual set, followed by a spectacular finale in the intimate 700-seater main hall.

The concert is free to anyone wishing to attend who goes along to the U Support Children’s Charity office at Unit 11 The Marlands Shopping Centre (next to their Tea rooms ChariTeas).

And if you go between 2pm and 3pm on Saturday to collect them you will be able to meet the stars of The Voice too.

The free tickets are only available from the U Support offices at the Marlands as they only have a limited number of 200 to give away. Tickets have been on sale at £15.

The ticket giveaway is now possible due to the generous sponsorship of John Lewis and Waitrose.

Concert organiser and charity CEO/founder Adam Gregory told the Daily Echo: “We are only a small family-run charity so we are over the moon. This is very much a celebration of our partnership with John Lewis and Waitrose who have subsidised everything we are trying to do. I’m absolutely delighted. It’s just incredible for our charity.”

The U Support charity was set up by Adam back in 2003 when he was coaching kids’ football and a broken leg and back injury left him in a wheelchair on and off and registered disabled for eight months.

It was whilst attending the 2003 FA Cup final and realising he was the only person there in a wheel chair that he decided he needed to do something to make football more inclusive for all – and the idea for the charity was born. Now U Support helps up to 20,000 disabled youngsters a year aged six-16 attend sporting and music events.