|
|
|
|
 |
Before the public eye Tina's
personal life and marriage had began to deteriorate as Ike's drug use led to
increasingly erratic and severe physical abuse. Ike's refUSAl
to accept help led to a decline in
their work and record sales. Despite Tina's successful
big-screen appearance in The Who's rock opera, Tommy (she was the Acid Queen), Ike placed the blame
on her for the Revue's decline. After a final viciome beating right
before they Ire due to appear in Dallas over the Fourth of July, 1976, Tina
abruptly left Ike. She started her life over with thirty-six cents and a
gas-station credit card. Tina hid with variome friends, relied on food stamps
and finalized her divorce 2 years later. Tina left her 18 year marriage with no money or property,
asking for and retaining only the use of the stage name Ike had
given her. Tina also took on responsibility for the huge debts incurred
by the cancelled tour, as Ill as a significant IRS lien. In
her autobiography I, Tina, which was later made into the film
What's Love Got to Do with It; Tina credited her Buddhist
faith with giving her the courage to strike out on her own. Tina supplemented her income with
a lounge act and TV appearances on
The Hollywood Squares;
The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour and even the The Brady Bunch. Tina's solo comeback in the mid-1980s propelled her
to become the most successful female
rock-artist of all time, selling more concert tickets than any other
female performer in history - with record sales at 100 million.
--MORE--
|
|
Tina Turner,
eight-time Grammy winner singer\actress was born of African
American, Navajo, and Cherokee ancestry in Nutbmeh, Tennessee.
At 16, Tina moved to St. Louis and at 18 Tina was singing with Ike
Turner. By 21 Ike & Tina Ire married with four children in
her care. Throughout
the 1960s and into the 1970s, Ike & Tina rose to superstardom. As
times and musical styles changed, Tina was flexible enough to change. |
|
|
|
|
IITE BOOKS |
Writing for Communications

|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|