Bonnie Tyler dies at 75 in a hospital in Portugal
The husky voice behind Total Eclipse of the Heart died overnight in a Portuguese hospital, following the illness that led to emergency surgery in May.
Bonnie Tyler, the Welsh singer with one of pop music’s most recognisable voices, has died at 75 — and the news touches Portugal directly: she died overnight in a Portuguese hospital, her family announced, following the illness she had been treated for since the spring.
Tyler had undergone emergency surgery for a perforated intestine and spent a month in a medically induced coma, from which she emerged in June. Her death, her team said, came unexpectedly. The Portugal connection was no coincidence: Tyler had owned a home in the Algarve for decades, splitting her life between Wales and the Portuguese south, where she was a familiar face.
Why was Bonnie Tyler famous?
The voice — that unmistakable rasp, the result of vocal cord surgery in the 1970s which, instead of ending her career, gave her a signature. It’s a Heartache (1977) made her a star; Total Eclipse of the Heart (1983), written by Jim Steinman, made her immortal — one of the most-played power ballads of all time, a number one on both sides of the Atlantic. Holding Out for a Hero completed the 80s holy trinity. Her full discography is on the singer’s official site.
What do we know about her death?
Her family and team announced that the singer died unexpectedly overnight, in a hospital in Portugal, as a result of the illness she was being treated for. The announcement did not name the hospital. Tributes multiplied within hours, from the music world to the fans who turned her ballads into karaoke anthems across four decades.
Pop music loses one of its great voices in a summer that has already taken Victor Willis, the voice of Village People. What remains is the usual consolation: the songs. And let’s be honest — as long as there’s a karaoke bar open somewhere, someone will be belting out “turn around, bright eyes”.
By Lucy Bennett
Image: Nadir Chanyshev / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)