Bonnie Tyler, voice behind 'Total Eclipse of the Heart', dies at 75

Published 09 Jul, 2026 04:41pm 3 min read
Britain's Bonnie Taylor rehearses her entry "Believe In Me" ahead of the Eurovision Song Contest 2013 Grand Final in Malmo. -- Reuters file
Britain's Bonnie Taylor rehearses her entry "Believe In Me" ahead of the Eurovision Song Contest 2013 Grand Final in Malmo. -- Reuters file

The gravelly tone that made Bonnie Tyler’s singing instantly recognisable was the result of an accident.

After an operation to remove vocal cord nodules in 1977, she was ordered to rest her voice.

But one day she screamed in anger, permanently altering ​it.

Six years on, the Welsh singer would release her best-known song, Total Eclipse of the Heart, which flaunted her husky sound and ‌was nominated for a Grammy Award.

Holding Out for a Hero, another dramatic rock ballad, was released soon after, helping Tyler make her mark on Britain’s pop scene.

Both recordings have since featured in films, television shows and advertisements.

Tyler, whose releases also included It’s a Heartache and Lost in France, has died, BBC News reported on Thursday. She was 75.

‘I wouldn’t say boo to a goose’

Tyler was born Gaynor Hopkins in south Wales in 1951, the fourth of six children of a coal miner ​and a homemaker.

She grew up in a four-bed council house with a large garden in the village of Skewen, outside ⁠Swansea.

“I think Mam and Dad had it really hard, bringing up a big family on very little,” she told The Guardian newspaper in 2012.

Music ​was a constant of daily life, whether played on a radiogram or sung by her mother, who would intone opera or “Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polkadot ​Bikini” as she did housework.

At seven, Tyler went to see a musical at the local church.

There she fell in love with Irving Berlin’s song There’s No Business Like Show Business, first giving the shy child the desire to perform.

“I wouldn’t say boo to a goose, and yet there was a part of me that yearned to sing ​in front of people,” she recalled in her memoir, Straight from the Heart.

‘This was the song’

She started out as a teenage backing singer before releasing several ​albums of her own in the 1970s.

But it wasn’t until the early 1980s, when she started working with American lyricist Jim Steinman, that she had her commercial breakthrough.

She ‌won over ⁠Steinman, then already famous for composing Bat out of Hell for Meat Loaf, by sending him demos of the theatrical rock songs she knew would suit her voice.

Of the moment she first heard his composition, Total Eclipse, she recalled: “I knew this was the song I had been waiting for all my life.”

Recorded by Tyler, the “Wagnerian-like onslaught of sound and emotion”, as Steinman described the piece, would go on to top the charts in both the UK and ​US.

Featuring the powerful lyrics Once upon a time, ​I was falling in love, ⁠But now I’m only falling apart, the song has been streamed more than one billion times on the online music platform Spotify.

It has featured in the movies Old School and Bandits, the television shows Glee and Grey’s Anatomy, as well as an ​advertisement for Mastercard.

Creating ‘Bonnie Tyler’

From the 1990s onwards, she had more success in Norway, Austria and France than at ​home, although she represented ⁠Britain in the 2013 Eurovision Song Contest, and was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire, for services to music, in 2022.

Tyler married property developer Robert Sullivan, her first serious boyfriend, in 1973.

“I am still very much in love with him and he with me,” she said 40 years later. ⁠The couple ​did not have children.

Tyler never really liked her birth name.

Asked how she arrived at ​her pseudonym, she told BBC Radio Wales: “I got a broadsheet newspaper, and I made an effort to write all the first names I came across on one list and all the ​surnames on another, and I went through them both and came up with Bonnie Tyler.

“And it’s been a brilliant name.”

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