Touted as the “Turkish Liberace,” singer Zeki Muren adored women’s clothes, outrageous makeup and was held up as a gay icon — an unlikely hero for modern-day Turkey. Yet a new show on his life is pulling in record crowds in Istanbul.
Muren bucked all trends in a nation known for its conservatism. He was considered a national treasure by the time of his death in 1996, as dear to the hearts of Turks as Frank Sinatra was to some people from the US.
He neither confirmed nor denied suggestions that he was gay, yet became a hero for the nations homosexuals. This never dented his popularity, even in Turkey’s often homophobic society.
Photo: AFP
A consummate entertainer, Muren was a beloved movie star as well as a prolific songwriter and eccentric vocalist, a master of sentimental “Turkish art music,” which has its origins in the court music of the Ottoman Empire.
This — and his extravagant clothing, baubles and oversized rings — earned him the nickname “Turkish Liberace,” after the flamboyant US entertainer who died in 1987.
Entitled “Here I am, Zeki Muren,” after one of his big hits, the Istanbul exhibition offers a rare look at his extraordinary life. Dozens of photos — from early childhood to flashy stage shows, films, world travels and nights out with stars — along with letters and shimmering artifacts pay homage to his legacy.
In its first 40 days, the show drew a record of 42,000 visitors to the Yapi Kredi Culture Center in the city’s cosmopolitan Beyoglu District, the most for any exhibition held at the site.
Many said this was a sign that Istanbul cultural life remains vibrant, despite complaints that non-Islamic arts are being squeezed out under Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
“He is just a part of our DNA,” Veysel Ugurlu, one of the curators, told reporters. “Everyone has heard a Muren song. Visitors say, ‘This is an exhibition about my life.’”
Muren, who never married nor had children, donated all his possessions to the Turkish Educational Foundation and the Turkish Armed Forces prior to his death.
Ugurlu said the material filled 15 trucks and took organizers six months to sort out — dresses, shoes, letters, records, handwritten lyrics — in chronological order to capture the nostalgia.
One room has letters from Muren’s mother, Hayriye, addressed to “my one and only, darling son.”
“You are the world’s sweetest fruit,” one missive reads.
In another, she compares Muren to “a wingless angel brought to this earth from the moon by the Apollo 11 spaceflight.”
Other rooms show his sky-high platform boots, sequined jumpsuit, bejeweled capes and boldly patterned miniskirts, most of them designed by Muren himself.
Known as the first Turkish man to wear a skirt on stage, the star gave affectionate names to his outfits, like “Moon Prince,” “Purple Nights” or “Hero’s Dream.”
“As you know, the gravity on the moon is low. This makes it difficult for astronauts to walk on the moon. That’s why I’m wearing these boots,” he once said.
One of the biggest draws in the show is a handwritten recipe for a special “Muren Cocktail” of lemon, vodka and cognac, invented by the singer for “long and cold winter nights.”
“But don’t drink too much,” Muren said. “One glass is enough to make you forget about all your troubles and bring you the sweetest of sweet dreams.”
After a life in front of cameras, Muren even died on stage, suffering a heart attack in 1996 at age 65 while recording a show for TRT national television in the western city of Izmir.
The channel had just given him the microphone he had used in his first radio broadcast in 1951. Overcome with emotion, the singer collapsed a few minutes later.
His death plunged Turkey into mourning.
“He was a groundbreaker. He taught us it’s OK to be different, to think differently, to express yourself differently,” Ugurlu said. “He will remain forever in our memory.”
The show, already extended twice, is now set to run until Thursday next week.
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