Legendary Welsh singer Bonnie Tyler remains in intensive care at a Portuguese hospital where she is fighting a serious infection following emergency surgery for a perforated intestine.
The 74-year-old performer suffered cardiac arrest when medical staff at Faro Hospital tried to bring her out of a medically induced coma. Doctors had to resuscitate the “Total Eclipse of the Heart” singer, who continues to receive treatment in the intensive care unit.
How the Health Crisis Unfolded
Tyler’s medical emergency began approximately a month ago when she started experiencing discomfort while performing in the United Kingdom, according to her friend Liberto Mealha. When doctors in London ran tests, they found nothing alarming. Mealha first met Tyler when he opened a nightclub in Albufeira in the 1980s near the singer’s holiday home, and his daughter is Tyler’s goddaughter, underscoring the closeness between the two families.
“She started feeling unwell during a concert in London and went to a doctor for tests, but they didn’t detect anything there,” Mealha explained. “She decided to travel to the Algarve, where she began to feel severe abdominal pain.”
The singer had been maintaining her professional activity despite complaining of persistent pain for several weeks. Tyler spent two days bedridden at her Algarve home before her husband, Robert Sullivan, took her to a private hospital. She was urgently transferred to Faro Hospital on April 30, 2026, where doctors discovered her intestines had ruptured.
A Frightening Turn After Surgery
“Bonnie has been put into an induced coma by her doctors to aid her recovery,” a spokesperson for the singer said in a statement. “We know that you all wish her well and ask for privacy at this difficult time, please.”
Doctors are attempting to control the generalized infection with antibiotics while keeping her sedated in the intensive care unit. Her condition has been described as “seriously ill but stable,” and her doctors have expressed confidence she will make a full recovery, according to an official statement released May 12.
Sullivan has been spending every day by his wife’s bedside, only leaving the hospital at night to sleep at home. According to Mealha, Sullivan is convinced his wife would not have survived had she remained in the U.K. and is deeply grateful to the medical team in Faro.
Fans Rally Behind the Singer
News of the reported cardiac arrest, which emerged on May 15, has prompted an outpouring of support from fans around the world. Well-wishers from the U.K., Portugal and beyond have flooded social media with messages of encouragement for the beloved performer.
Her representatives have not yet publicly commented on the reports of the cardiac arrest. For now, Tyler’s family, friends and millions of fans worldwide are holding out hope that the singer who gave the world some of its most enduring power ballads will pull through.
A Career Spanning Five Decades
The health scare comes just weeks after Tyler marked a major career milestone. On April 29, the singer celebrated the 50th anniversary of her debut single, “My! My! Honeycomb,” which launched her career in the 1970s.
She rose to global superstardom in the 1980s with “Total Eclipse of the Heart” and “Holding Out for a Hero,” both of which remain staples on radio and in films decades later. Tyler released her first album, “The World Starts Tonight,” in February 1977 and scored her first major hit with “It’s a Heartache” off the “Natural Force” album in 1978.
The Welsh singer has carved out a unique place in British music history. With early hits like “Lost in France,” she became the first British female artist to debut at No. 1 on the U.K. Albums Chart, and she remains the only Welsh artist ever to land a No. 1 on the U.K. Singles Chart. She also represented the United Kingdom at the Eurovision Song Contest in 2013.

