The Columbus Dispatch

A public person in a private country

Tina Turner reveled in a ‘normal’ life in her Swiss home

- Boris Heger and Arnd Wiegmann ASSOCIATED PRESS AP

KUESNACHT, Switzerlan­d – In her adoptive country, Tina Turner was more than just a swivel-hipped rock, R&B and pop superstar. She unapologet­ically moved to Switzerlan­d for its discretion and calm, carrying her very public persona into a very private country. She relished her life as a Swiss citizen – and the feeling was mutual.

Mourners laid flowers and candles Thursday outside the gate of her lakeside villa in the upscale town of Kuesnacht, southeast of Zurich, where she lived for decades with her German music-producer husband Erwin Bach until her death on Wednesday at age 83.

It was an understate­d tribute – reflective of the Swiss discretion that had drawn her to the rich Alpine country in the first place.

Neighbors didn’t gawk, hound her for autographs or snap photos. Many Swiss felt a sense of pride that she could retreat here from the pressures of the media spotlight. It afforded her the semblance of a normal life after a turbulent one in her native United States, including at the hands of her late former husband Ike who discovered her, married her and – according to her memoirs – violently beat her.

Celebritie­s of the past including Charlie Chaplin and Freddie Mercury, as well as living stars like Sophia Loren and Shania Twain, have been drawn to Switzerlan­d – often for its reputed respect for private lives. Roman Polanski holed up in an Alpine chalet briefly to skirt U.S. justice, and some of the world’s financial magnates and business gurus have been attracted by the country’s relatively low taxes and secrecy about money matters.

Turner, who moved in the mid-1990s and took Swiss citizenshi­p in 2013 – dispensing with her U.S passport – was arguably the most famous resident in recent years.

Swiss President Alain Berset tweeted a tribute to Turner, calling her an icon and saying his “thoughts are with the relatives of this impressive woman, who found a second homeland in Switzerlan­d.”

Markus Ernst, the mayor of Kuesnacht, a bucolic town on the shores of Lake Zurich, said Turner was engaged in the community – regularly lighting the annual Christmas tree and once inaugurati­ng a municipal rescue boat that has been christened “Tina” – but locals went out of their way to help an overwhelmi­ngly public figure enjoy a private life, too.

“One of the reasons she came to Switzerlan­d was to have a completely normal life,” he said by phone. “She could go to restaurant­s without being photograph­ed all the time … in the street, people didn’t stare at her or ask for her autograph.”

Jamey Keaten contribute­d to this report.

 ?? ?? A woman stands beside flowers and candles laid down at the gate of the house of late singer and stage performer Tina Turner in Kuesnacht, Switzerlan­d.
A woman stands beside flowers and candles laid down at the gate of the house of late singer and stage performer Tina Turner in Kuesnacht, Switzerlan­d.

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