Partway through the concert, she spotted the proposal in the crowd and excitedly said: “She said yes? Congratulations!", before the camera panned to the couple embracing.
Black and white former stray Sylvester turned up at the Guide Dogs Leamington Spa site in 2016 and "never left".In between submitting to the occasional fuss, he helps train the pups and has amassed his own fan club through monthly features on the dog care team's Facebook page.
Dog wellbeing technician Sarah Cooper said Sylvester was unfazed by his canine companions and "will go in the blocks and sleep in the kennels with the dogs if he wants to"."You'll find him asleep in their beds," she added.Sylvester turned up at the Warwick New Road site as a one-year-old, shortly after a previous kennel cat died.
He is the third cat to live on site since the team leader started her Guide Dogs career 18 years ago."We like a cat here, for the dogs' sake really, for training them," Ms Cooper said.
"We had him microchipped, vaccinated, castrated, de-flead, wormed, and then he stayed."
Sylvester's presence helps test the dogs for what trainers call "cat distraction", Ms Cooper explained."By following some simple but key advice, we can significantly reduce the risk of wildfire occurring."
Firefighters tacked several wildfires across Scotland last year.In May, one blaze saw the A85 in Argyll close after it set alight 500 square metres of grass and gorse.
Another fire spread to 100 square metres of gorse at Brimmond Hill near Aberdeen in the same month.The fire service said it saw