“Portugal
is like home to me,” says Tyler who will be singing Believe in Me during the contest in Malmo , Sweden ,
on Saturday night.
Public broadcasters in Portugal ,
Slovakia and
Bosnia-Herzegovina have cited economic reasons for withdrawing, although the 39
participating countries will include debt-ridden Greece ,
Cyprus and Spain . It is the third time Portugal
has been absent since it first took part in the contest in 1964.
The Welsh songstress stayed with her then manager, Ronnie Scott, who had
a recording studio in his villa at Vilamoura. It was there that she recorded
her first album.
Two years later she and her property developer husband,
Robert Sullivan, a black-belt European judo champion, bought a villa in
Albufeira. Recently they have been staying in an apartment at a nearby marina
while having the villa completely rebuilt.
Their summer pleasures include power boating, lunching on clams
or prawns with piri-piri chicken and a nice bottle of white wine, and spending
the afternoon lying on the beach. Had it not been for her demanding career,
Bonnie says she would spend 99% of her time here.
“I live a very
un-showbizzy life. That red carpet stuff... avoid it like the plague, I do,” she
told the Daily Mirror last week.
“I love the Algarve . I never get tired of it,” she
said in a interview with Sir Owen Gee on
the Algarve ’s
Kiss FM radio station a few weeks ago. She
has been travelling the world as a professional singer for decades. “But when I
come to the Algarve
I really feel like I’m coming home.” (For more on this interview, click on the Kiss FM You Tube link below).
The Eurovision Song Contest may be the biggest challenge
of Tyler ’s long
musical career as she will be performing in front of an estimated 120 million
viewers.
The 61-year-old admitted to the Daily Mail that she
doesn’t fancy her chances. “It’s a tricky one the Eurovision Song Contest
because it’s not all about the music, is it?”
Cliff Richard singing Congratulations
famously lost by just a single point in 1968 after locking himself in the
toilet because he was so nervous about the voting. Reuters reported many years
later that the dictator Franco had rigged the vote so that the Spanish entry
won, thus ensuring the next competition would be held in Spain .
The rules have changed so that no such skulduggery is now possible,
but still there is the farce of tactical voting between neighbouring countries.
“No, of course she won’t,” says Sandy Shaw, Britain ’s
first Eurovision winner (1967). “She’s
got a terrible song and deserves much better. I don’t know why they do this –
why don’t they let the public choose? Bonnie’s a fantastic person and has a
fabulous voice but if they don’t get to pick the song or the person it stops
people feeling involved.”
Win or lose, the warm, witty and down-to-earth Bonnie
Tyler will leave the “mayhem” of Malmo
behind and shortly be back ‘home’ and able to relax.
“As soon as I get off the plane in Faro, I switch off
completely,” she says.
·
Bonnie at Kiss FM:
·
Believe in Me: