Bonnie Tyler
By Jon Blistein - 7/9/2026, 12:13 PM - 1,595 words
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Bonnie Tyler, British singer, during a live concert performance at the Montreux Rock Festival, in Montreux, Switzerland, 1984.
David Redfern/Redferns/Getty Images
Bonnie Tyler , the powerhouse Welsh vocalist behind indelible Eighties hits like "Total Eclipse of the Heart" and "Holding Out for a Hero," has died at age 75.
A statement posted on her website confirmed the singer’s death. “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,” the statement read. “We will issue a further statement shortly but for now ask for privacy to deal with this tragedy.”
In early May, Tyler was hospitalized in Faro, Portugal after undergoing emergency intestinal surgery. Over the next few days, Tyler's doctors put her in an induced coma to aid her recovery, while they later described her condition as "seriously ill but stable."
Tyler broke through in the U.K. and Europe with 1976's "Los in France" before crossing over in the United States with 1977's "It's a Heartache." But her most enduring hit was 1983's "Total Eclipse of the Heart.” Since its release, the song has barely strayed from the popular consciousness, popping up every time there's a noteworthy lunar or solar eclipse, while remaining a potent, evergreen karaoke classic .
Penned by Jim Steinman , best known for his work with Mea Lloaf, "Total Eclipse of the Heart" was a nearly seven-minute power ballad suffused with longing and yearning. Tyler had the vocal power and gravitas necessary to deliver mighty hit, but the famous rasp in her voice also lent the performance that necessary, frayed-edge vulnerability.
"I poured my heart out singing it," she put it, simply enough, in a 2023 interview with The Guardian .
Born Gaynor Hopkins on June 8, 1951, Tyler grew up in a large family in a small village outside Neath, Wales. She described her mother in a 2005 documentary as a "wonderful" opera singer, who only sang around the house, but could stop people in their tracks as they passed the family's house. Tyler's siblings introduced her to a variety of music and she religiously listened to the radio, developing a particular fondness for Tina Turner and Janis Joplin.
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Tyler never envisioned herself as a professional singer, but that changed after her aunt entered her into a local talent competition in 1969. After placing second, a newly confident Tyler auditioned to be a back-up singer for a local group and got the gig. Not long after, she formed her own band, Imagination.
"We were working like six nights a week, every week," Tyler recalled in that 2005 doc. "For peanuts really, but we loved it! Anything was better than working in the fruit and veg that I did work in when I first left school."
While singing with Imagination, a talent scout spotted Tyler and brought her to London to cut a demo. A few months later, RCA offered her a contract and, after choosing the moniker Bonnie Tyler, she released her debut single, "My! My! Honeycomb" in April 1976. Though that song failed to chart, Tyler's follow-up, "Lost in France" cracked the Top 10 in the U.K. and enjoyed further success across Europe.
But around the same time, Tyler developed nodules on her vocals cords, threatening her ability to sing. She underwent surgery, then had to endure six weeks of intense vocal rest, which included neither singing, nor speaking. A self-admitted "chatterbox," Tyler struggled to follow these rules and, one day, while driving with her mother, even let out a frustrated scream. The repercussions were significant.
"[A]fter I got my voice back, I went into the studio for the first time and started singing. The band said, 'Woah, your voice sounds great,'" Tyler recalled in a 2009 Guardian article. "My voice was huskier than before, and had more of an edge. It turned out losing my voice was not too treacherous for me."
On Tyler's 1976 debut, The World Starts Tonight , her vocal tone was practically crystalline. But she returned on 1977's Natural Force with a rasp that would become her signature. The change was immediately clear on "It's a Heartache," a major hit in the U.K. and Europe, that also broke in the U.S., peaking at Number Three on the Billboard Hot 100.
Over the next few years, Tyler released modest hits like 1979's "My Guns are Loaded" and "(The World is Full of) Married Men." In 1981, she released her last album with RCA , Goodbye to the Island , after which she began searching for a new label and creative direction. She signed with CBS and, after expressing a desire to make music like Meat Loaf, started working with his primary collaborator, Jim Steinman .
In a 1983 interview, Steinman admitted he was surprised Tyler reached out, noting a lot of metal acts were eager to work with him following the success of Meat Loaf's Bat Out of Hell ; but he also loved Tyler's voice - "one of the most passionate voices I've ever heard in rock & roll" - and believed her past records "weren't really getting out what she was capable of."
At an early session, Steinman played Tyler an in-progress track he'd begun writing during a recent lunar eclipse. He described it as "more of a fever song" about the darker sides of love, the eclipse serving as the "perfect image to describe when someone is totally overwhelmed by love."
Tyler "understood immediately what an incredible song it was," as she put it in that 2023 Guardian interview. She went on to recall a letter she sent a friend not long after recording “Total Eclipse of the Heart”: "I recorded an incredible song today,” she wrote. “The trouble is, it's so long, I don't think anybody will ever play."
Released in February 1983, "Total Eclipse" was cut down for radio, but as Tyler noted, as the song gained momentum, "everybody loved it so much they played the full album version." Further bolstered by a memorable video filmed at an old sanatorium in England, "Total Eclipse" steadily rose up the charts, eventually hitting Number One on the Hot 100 in October, and spending four weeks there.
"Total Eclipse of the Heart" anchored Tyler's fifth album, Faster Than the Speed of Night , which went to Number One in the U.K. and peaked at Number Four on the Billboard 200. Tyler earned two Grammy nominations, too, Best Pop Female Vocal Performance for "Total Eclipse," and Best Rock Female Vocal Performance for all of Faster Than the Speed of Night (though she went home empty-handed).
While Tyler never had another song as big as "Total Eclipse of the Heart," she followed it up with a run of memorable singles, including "A Rockin’ Good Way (to Mess Around and Fall in Love)” with Shakin' Stevens; "Here She Comes" (produced and co-written by Giorgio Moroder); "If You Were a Woman (And I Was a Man)”; and “Loving You’s a Dirty Job but Somebody’s Gotta Do It” with Todd Rundgren. The biggest of these, though, was "Holding Out for a Hero," another Steinem concoction cut for the Footloose soundtrack .
Over the coming decades, Tyler continued to tour and record regularly, enjoying particularly strong and sustained support in Europe. One notable song was her 1995 cover of Air Supply’s “Making Love (Out of Nothing At All),” which incorporated samples of Tyler’s mother singing an aria from Puccini’s Madame Butterfly .
In 2021, Tyler released her 18th, and now final studio album, The Best Is Yet to Come . (A live album, In Berlin , arrived in 2024.) In 2025, Tyler even returned to the charts in France after partnering with David Guetta and Hypaton for the single, "Together." When Tyler was hospitalized in Portugal, she was preparing to embark on yet another tour later that month.
Tyler never lost her enthusiasm for music and performing, nor did her love ever waver for her biggest hit. During a solar eclipse in 2017, she performed "Total Eclipse of the Heart" on a cruise ship positioned in the path of totality; and when the cosmic event occurred again, Tyler gamely did the press rounds as the hit enjoyed a fresh surge in streams , and even returned to some charts.
"It’s no good singing if you just want to be a pop star," Tyler wrote in 2009, "you’ve got to work at it and do it for the love for it, not because you think it will make you famous. I never did that, I never thought about that. I advise wannabe singers to form a band, practice in your garage if you have to, but do as many charity or open mic shows as possible to get experience. I sang for seven years before getting a record deal and I was already loving what I was doing. I just got lucky and got discovered."
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