The Mail on Sunday

Tina turned her back on me, claims adopted son

As musical celebratin­g soul legend’s turbulent life rocks the West End...

- From Caroline Graham and Hugo Daniel IN LOS ANGELES

IT’S a celebratio­n of a quite remarkable life, a victory for talent over poverty and abuse. The new highly acclaimed West End show Tina: The Musical portrays Tina Turner’s famous escape from violent husband Ike and her rise to stardom as a solo performer.

Yet there is another, more troubling side to her success, according to her adopted son – one that is not portrayed on stage.

Because Ike Turner Jnr has claimed that his superstar mother has all but abandoned her family in the US.

‘Tina raised me from the age of two. She’s the only mother I’ve ever known,’ the musician told The Mail on Sunday. ‘But I haven’t talked to my mother since God knows when – probably around 2000. I don’t think any of my brothers have talked to her in a long time either.

‘My mother is living her life – she has a new husband and she’s in Europe. She doesn’t want to have anything to do with the past.’

According to Ike Jnr, Tina, 78, has distanced herself from the part of her life spent with his father and has s cut herself off from her children.

Tina has four children: Craig, now 60, born after she had a fling with a saxophonis­t as a teenager; Ronnie, e, 57, her and Ike’s only child together; r; and Ike Jnr, 59, and Michael, 58, born n to Ike Snr and his first wife but t adopted by Tina when she married d the star in 1962.

The turbulent story of Ike and Tina a is part of music history. The drug g addict son of a Mississipp­i preacher, r, Ike regularly beat up Tina until, l, after 16 years, she fled in the middle e of the night in a bloodstain­ed white suit with just 36 cents in her pocket.

She has lived in Switzerlan­d since 1994 with German music producer Erwin Bach. The couple married five years ago.

Ike Jnr said: ‘ My brothers are doing OK. They get money from a trust fund.

‘ I talk to Ronnie periodical­ly – he’s in great health and married to singer Afida Turner. Craig is in real estate. They both live in LA.

‘Michael is in a convalesce­nt home in Southern California and needs medical support. I’ve been to see him quite a few times. He’s doing great great.’ ’ Asked if Tina ever visits Michael, Ike Jnr replied: ‘No. All she does is send him money.’

On the subject of his father’s violence – something Ike Snr often denied – Ike Jnr is cagey: ‘ My mother and father had no more fights than the people next door to you. I think their problem was her mouth and his mouth – my father didn’t take s*** from nobody.’

Tina announced t o rapturous applause at the new musical’s London premiere that she has finally forgiven her ex-husband.

However, Ike Jnr believes she should have made peace with his father before his death from a cocaine overdose over 11 years ago. ‘I think it’s real late,’ said Ike Jnr, adding that he also suffered at the hands of his father, who pistolwhip­ped him after he began working as Tina’s sound engineer.

But he said he forgave his father while he was still alive – and he wished Tina had done the same.

Ike and Tina were always absent parents, he claimed.

‘We were raised by housekeepe­rs because my mother and father were gone 11 months out of a year.

‘My father took me out of school at 13. I ended up running his recording studio, plus going on the road with them. They made a lot of money on tour and my father used to t make me count it until my hands ha were grey.’

He is worried that the London do musical will reinforce the image im of his father as a monster rather ra than a music pioneer – a perception p cemented by Tina’s autobiogra­phy and the 1993 biopic What’s Love Got To Do With It. But he confirms the truth about a scene where he turns up at his mother’s house covered in blood.

‘When my mother and father separated, he did not want me working with her – and he beat me in the head with a nickel-plated .45 pistol.’

Ike Jnr produced his father’s Grammy-winning album Risin’ With The Blues in 2006 and now wants to focus on the positive aspects of his parents through his tribute band The Love Thang.

He said: ‘All I try to do is do the right thing with the name. I go out there and do my best.’

‘She never visits – all she does is send money’

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TIMES: Ike Jnr, circled, with his father and Craig, top row. Bottom row: Ronnie, Tina and Michael. Left: Ike Jnr today and, right, Tina on stage in 1997 om
TEMPESTUOU­S TIMES: Ike Jnr, circled, with his father and Craig, top row. Bottom row: Ronnie, Tina and Michael. Left: Ike Jnr today and, right, Tina on stage in 1997 om
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