Tina Turner children-American-born Swiss musician and actress, Tina Turner was born on November 26th, 1939 in Brownsville, Tennessee in the United States of America.
Turner was born to Floyd Richard Bullock and Zelma Priscilla Bullock and she was their youngest child. She shares the same parents with her two older siblings; Evelyn Juanita Currie and Ruby Alline Bullock.
She subsequently remembers picking cotton with her family as a young child while they resided in the surrounding rural unincorporated village of Nutbush, Tennessee, where her father worked as an overseer of the sharecroppers at Poindexter Farm on Highway 180.
Dr. Henry Louis Gates revealed her ancestral DNA test estimates, which were primarily African, about 33% European, and only 1% Native American, when she took part in the PBS documentary African American Lives 2 alongside him.
She had previously thought that she had a sizable Native American background. Additionally, she is Eugene Bridges’ first cousin once removed.
When their parents moved to Knoxville, Tennessee, to work at a defense installation dur ing World War II, the three sisters were split up when they were very young. Alex and Roxanna Bullock, who served as deacons and deaconesses at the Woodlawn Missionary Baptist Church, were the strict, devout grandparents of Bullock.
Following the war, the sisters relocated to Knoxville with their parents. Turner attended Flagg Grove Elementary School from first through eighth grade. Two years later, the family moved back to Nutbush to live in the Flagg Grove neighborhood.
Turner participated in the Spring Hill Baptist Church choir as a small child in Nutbush. Zelma moved to St. Louis in 1950 when she was 11 years old in order to get away from her abusive relationship with Floyd.
In 1952, her father married a new woman and moved the family to Detroit, two years after her mother had abandoned the family. Turner and her sisters were transported to live in Brownsville, Tennessee, with their maternal grandmother, Georgeanna Currie.
She claimed that her parents didn’t love her and didn’t want her in her autobiography I, Tina. Zelma had intended to leave Floyd, but after learning she was expecting, she stayed.
Turner served the Henderson family as a domestic helper while still a teen. She was at the Henderson residence when she learned that her half-sister Evelyn and her cousins Margaret and Vela Evans had perished in an automobile accident.
Turner, a self-described tomboy, joined the cheering squad and the women’s basketball team at Brownsville’s Carver High School and “socialized every moment she had.”
Turner moved home with her mother in St. Louis when she was 16 years old after the death of her grandma. In 1958, she earned her high school diploma from Sumner High School. Bullock took a job at Barnes-Jewish Hospital as a nurse’s assistant after graduating.
She became well-known as the lead singer of the Ike & Tina Turner Revue before beginning a lucrative solo career, earning her the title “Queen of Rock ‘n’ Roll.”
In 1957, Turner made her professional debut with Ike Turner’s Kings of Rhythm. She made her debut on her first album, “Boxtop,” as Little Ann, in 1958. She made her debut as Tina Turner in 1960 with the popular duet song “A Fool in Love.” Ike & Tina Turner rose to the status of “one of history’s most fearsome live performances.”
Before breaking up in 1976, they had singles like “It’s Gonna Work Out Fine,” “River Deep – Mountain High,” “Proud Mary,” and “Nutbush City Limits.”
The smash song “What’s Love Got to Do with It” from her multi-platinum album Private Dancer from 1984 received the Grammy Award for Record of the Year and went on to become her sole song to reach number one on the Billboard Hot 100.
She was the oldest female solo artist to reach the top of the Hot 100 at age 44. With “Better Be Good to Me,” “Private Dancer,” “We Don’t Need Another Hero (Thunderdome”),” “Typical Male,” “The Best,” “I Don’t Wanna Fight,” and “GoldenEye,” she continued to have chart success.
She established a then-Guinness World Record for the largest paying crowd for a solo performer (180,000) during her Break Every Rule World Tour in 1988. Turner also acted in the films Tommy (1975), Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985), and Last Action Hero (1993).
A biopic based on her memoirs I, Tina: My Life Story, What’s Love Got to Do with It, was released in 1993. After finishing her Tina!: 50th Anniversary Tour, which is the 15th-highest-grossing tour of the 2000s, Turner announced her retirement in 2009.
She was the focus of the Tina jukebox musical in 2018. Turner is one of the best-selling recording artists of all time with over 100 million albums sold globally.
Twelve Grammy Trophies have been given to her, including a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, three Grammy Hall of Fame Awards, and eight awards given in competition. She is the first female and black artist to grace the Rolling Stone cover.
She was listed among the 100 Greatest Artists and 100 Greatest Singers of All Time by Rolling Stone. Both the Hollywood Walk of Fame and the St. Louis Walk of Fame include stars for Turner.
She was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice: first in 1991 with Ike Turner and once in 2021 as a solo performer. She also won the Kennedy Center Honors and the Women of the Year award in 2005.
Turner had four children; Ike Turner Jr., Raymond Craig Turner, Michael Turner and Ronnie Turner.
Born in 1958, Ike Turner Jr. is 63 years old. Ike Jr. started a career in the music industry, following in his father and adopted mother’s footsteps. In the category of Traditional Blues Album, he won a Grammy in 2006 for producing his father’s album Risin’ With The Blues.
According to the Oklahoma Eagle, Ike, Jr. also went on tour with Randi Love, a former bandmate of his father’s.
Craig Raymond, Tina’s first child, was born when she was just 18 years old. Raymond Hill, Craig’s father, was a saxophonist in Ike’s band, Kings of Rhythm.
Throughout his life, Craig stayed out of the public eye and pursued a career in real estate. Sadly, Craig committed suicide at his Studio City, California, home in July 2018 at the age of 59.
61-year-old Michael Turner was born in 1960. Michael is the one of Tina’s four kids about whom the least is known. While remaining out of the public eye, a source who spoke to Fox News reported that Michael, along with his brothers Ike and Ronnie, were “devastated” that they were largely left out of the 2021 HBOMax documentary Tina.
Ronnie Turner, Tina’s youngest son, was born in October 1960. Like his parents, Ronnie had musical talent. According to IMDb, he appeared as a member of The Revue in the 1993 film What’s Love Got to Do With It alongside his mother. Along with his parents, Ronnie also performed.
According to TMZ, Ronnie Turner reportedly passed away on December 8 after paramedics were summoned to treat him in the San Fernando Valley of California because he was having breathing problems and eventually stopped breathing. He was 62.
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