Ben Beaumont-Thomas 

Bonnie Tyler, 80s pop legend known for Total Eclipse of the Heart and more, dies aged 75

Welsh singer and Eurovision entrant’s other hits included Footloose soundtrack smash Holding Out for a Hero
  
  

Bonnie Tyler performing at the 2013 Eurovision song contest in Malmö, Sweden.
Bonnie Tyler performing at the 2013 Eurovision song contest in Malmö, Sweden. Photograph: Action Press/Shutterstock

Bonnie Tyler, the Welsh singer whose husky yet commanding voice made songs such as Total Eclipse of the Heart into 1980s classics, has died aged 75.

A message on her Facebook page reads: “Bonnie’s family and team are heartbroken to announce that Bonnie unexpectedly passed away last night in hospital in Portugal as a result of the illness that she was being treated for.”

In May, Tyler had undergone emergency intestinal surgery at a hospital near Faro, Portugal, where she lived. She was later put into an induced coma in an attempt to assist her recovery. She was then taken out of the coma, but a representative said she remained “very unwell and in intensive care”.

As well as 1983’s Total Eclipse of the Heart, which reached No 1 in the US and UK and is arguably the power ballad by which all others should be judged, Tyler’s hits included Holding Out for a Hero, which brought explosive panache to the Footloose soundtrack and reached No 2 in the UK charts in 1984; and the dolorous It’s a Heartache, which provided her breakout success in 1977.

Keir Starmer was among those paying tribute to Tyler. Starmer’s official spokesperson said: “The prime minister is saddened to hear about the death of Bonnie Tyler, one of Britain’s greatest recording artists, an iconic figure. She leaves behind a catalogue of music, from Total Eclipse of the Heart to Holding Out for a Hero that continues to touch lives, flood dance floors, and fill karaoke booths. The prime minister’s thoughts are very much with her friends and family.”

Born Gaynor Hopkins in the village of Skewen near Swansea, Tyler grew up in a council house with five older siblings. “I class myself as a working-class girl and I’ve never stopped working,” she told the Guardian in 2013. “I do an awful lot [of performances] because I feel other people would love to be offered what I’m offered.”

Her music career had a modest beginning: singing cover versions in local clubs while working in a grocery shop. But a talent scout heard her singing Freda Payne’s Band of Gold one evening, and she recorded a demo to pitch to record labels – after two years, RCA eventually signed her, and she took on her stage name Bonnie Tyler.

Her first single was a flop, but the second, Lost in France – a swaying Francophile ballad complete with accordions and “ooh la las” – went into the UK Top 10, and the follow-up More Than a Lover was also a moderate hit. After successful surgery on nodules on her vocal cords – “my voice was huskier than before, and had more of an edge,” she later said of the procedure – then came the utterly dejected It’s a Heartache, a perfect match for her newly toughened-up vocal tone. It became her first US success with a No 3 placing there as well as No 4 in the UK.

Tyler proved to be supremely versatile, hopping between country-tinged ballads and disco-pop tracks such as 1979 hit (The World is Full of) Married Men, recorded for a film adaptation of the Jackie Collins novel of the same name. But Tyler wanted to branch into rock music, and courted Jim Steinman, who’d had huge success as Meat Loaf’s chief collaborator on Bat Out of Hell and more.

Steinman was impressed by Tyler and gave her Total Eclipse of the Heart (reportedly provoking jealousy in Meat Loaf later on). Tyler told a friend at the time: “I recorded an incredible song today. The trouble is, it’s so long, I don’t think anybody will ever play it” – but after this seven-minute epic was shortened to a radio-friendly four, it became an enormous hit. With “turn around …” interjections from uncredited singer Rory Dodd, the duet dramatised the blotting out of a torrid love affair, and as well as becoming a karaoke favourite and a transatlantic No 1, it topped the charts in Australia, Canada, Ireland and numerous other territories.

“Some people think this song is about a vampire, but I’ve never understood that interpretation,” she later said. “Jim did once tell Playbill that he had been working on a musical interpretation of the silent film Nosferatu. I’ve always thought of Total Eclipse as an impassioned love song.” The accompanying album Faster Than the Speed of Night – including a spirited cover of John Fogerty’s Have You Ever Seen the Rain? – topped the UK album chart.

Bringing a showboating sense of drama to her vocal performances, Tyler was now at her commercial peak, with the uptempo Holding Out for a Hero – another song by Steinman – displaying a different but equally bombastic side to her artistry. Her 1984 Giorgio Moroder collaboration Here She Comes earned Tyler her third Grammy nomination in two years; her Steinman collaborations continued as he executive-produced 1986 album Secret Dreams and Forbidden Fire, including the moderately successful single If You Were a Woman (And I Was a Man), plus a cover of the song that got her discovered, Band of Gold. The following year she appeared in a starry George Martin-helmed audio adaptation of her countryman Dylan Thomas’s classic Under Milk Wood, alongside Tom Jones, Anthony Hopkins, Alan Bennett and more, with music by Elton John.

While her UK and US commercial success then began to ebb – even as her hits endured on oldies radio – she remained a major force in western Europe, with 1991 album Bitterblue, produced by German pop figure Dieter Bohlen, topping the charts in numerous countries. A series of 1990s follow-ups were also successful across the continent, and a 2003 bilingual re-recording of Total Eclipse of the Heart with French star Kareen Antonn was a huge success in France, spending 10 weeks at No 1.

That success made Tyler a natural choice for the UK’s Eurovision entry, but her 2013 effort Believe in Me didn’t capture European voters’ attention and she could only place 19th out of 26 countries. “I’m sure a lot of people will be disappointed on my behalf but I have really enjoyed my Eurovision experience,” she said after the result. “I did the best that I could do with a great song. I don’t feel down and I’m ready to party.”

It at least helped to buoy her first album since 2005, Rocks and Honey, which was a moderate success, and its follow-up Between the Earth and the Stars took her back to the UK Top 40 album chart for the first time since 1986. Her final studio album was 2021’s The Best Is Yet to Come, though she revisited Total Eclipse of the Heart with EDM megastar David Guetta for the 2025 single Together, in collaboration with Hypaton.

Beginning in 1973, Tyler had a long marriage to property developer Robert Sullivan, who also represented Great Britain at judo in the 1972 Munich Olympics. They didn’t have children, though Tyler suffered a miscarriage when she was 39. “We just thought it wasn’t meant to be,” Tyler later told the Guardian. “I have a large family anyway. I have five godchildren, 16 nieces and nephews, and 12 great nieces and nephews, so there is no shortage of children in my life.”

 

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