Bonnie Tyler.Photo:Adam Head/Newspix/Getty

Singer Bonnie Tyler poses during a photo shoot on the Gold Coast, Queensland

Adam Head/Newspix/Getty

Inan interview withThe Guardianreflecting on the 40th anniversary of the 1983 hit, Bonnie Tyler revealed that, before the love song went to her, it was originally intended for a musical about the classic,Dracula-inspired horror figure Nosferatu.

The pop-rock artist explained that the track’s songwriter/producerJim Steinmanfirst worked on the song and shelved it when he was working on the music for a potential stage production about the vampire. “He told me he had started writing the song for a prospective musical version of Nosferatu years before, but never finished it,” Tyler told the outlet.

Bonnie Tyler and Jim Steinman in the ’80s.Gie Knaeps/Getty; Gary Gershoff/Getty

Bonnie Tyler 1987; Jim Steinman 1981

Gie Knaeps/Getty; Gary Gershoff/Getty

The singer-songwriter explained that she wanted to work with the legendary songwriter because she was a fan of his work withMeat Loaf, and “Total Eclipse of the Heart” ended up being the first track they collaborated on.

After working with the hitmaker on a session in New York City, she said that he invited her back and showed the power ballad to her. “I understood immediately what an incredible song it was,” she said of hearing Rory Dodd, the featured vocalist on the track, perform it for the first time.

Although the horror-inspired musical didn’t end up debuting, the song’s music video retained some of its gothic elements. The Welsh artist said, “We shot the video in a frightening gothic former asylum in Surrey. The guard dogs wouldn’t set foot in the rooms downstairs where they used to give people electric shock treatment.”

“I poured my heart out singing it,” the “Holding Out for a Hero” singer added.

“Total Eclipse of the Year” went on to be a No. 1 hit and sit at the top of theBillboard Hot 100for four weeks in 1983, earn a Grammy nomination for best pop vocal performance and is considered one of the most iconic songs of the ‘80s.

In the late ‘90s and 2000s, it actually did make its way into a musical about vampires:Dance of the Vampires, Steinman’s stage adaptation of the 1967Roman PolanskifilmThe Fearless Vampire Killers, which debuted in Vienna in 1997.

Upon the show’sBroadwaydebut in 2002, the composer/lyricist actually first revealed the song’s origin story in an interview withPlaybillwhen explaining why he included the track in the musical that otherwise had original songs.

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He said, “With ‘Total Eclipse of the Heart,’ I was trying to come up with a love song and I remembered I actually wrote that to be a vampire love song. Its original title was ‘Vampires in Love’ because I was working on a musical of `Nosferatu,' the other great vampire story.”

“If anyone listens to the lyrics, they’re really like vampire lines,” he continued. “It’s all about the darkness, the power of darkness and love’s place in dark. And so I figured ‘Who’s ever going to know; it’s Vienna!’ And then it was just hard to take it out."

To celebrate the milestone 40th anniversary of “Total Eclipse of the Heart,” Tyler has set out on ananniversary tour across the globe. After her live dates supporting the release of her 2021 albumThe Best Is Yet to Comewas postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, she shifted the tour to commemorate her legendary hit.

After several dates in Germany in spring 2022, the 2023 leg of the tour kicked off in October and will continue across Europe until early 2024.

source: people.com