Bergen

Singer

Popular As Beauty Woman of Pains Queen of Arabesque

Birthday July 15, 1959

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Mersin, Turkey

DEATH DATE 1989-8-14, Pozantı, Adana, Turkey (30 years old)

Nationality Turkey

#56502 Most Popular

1958

Bergen (born Belgin Sarılmışer; 15 July 1958 – 14 August 1989) was a Turkish singer.

Belgin Sarılmışer was born on 15 July 1958 in Mersin, the youngest of seven children.

After her parents divorced, she moved to Ankara with her mother.

Bergen, who completed her primary education at Yenimahalle Yunus Emre Primary School, was singing and playing the mandolin at school.

Noticing Bergen's talent for music, the teachers encouraged her to study at the conservatory after graduation.

The artist, entered the exams for the Ankara State Conservatory, won first place in the piano department and studied piano and cello for the first two years.

She had to drop out of school due to financial difficulties and worked as a civil servant in the PTT for a while, after officially raising her age with a court decision.

1977

The claim that she got married in 1977 and had a child was denied by her family.

Her stage life began in 1977 when she went to the Feyman Night Club in Ankara to have fun with her friends, and she accepted a job offer from the club owner, İlhan Feyman after her friends persuaded her to take the stage.

She sang Turkish classical music, Turkish light music and arrangement pieces that were the fashion of the period with the Group Locomotive Orchestra at the Feyman Night Club.[6] She used the name "Bergen" on stage.

In 1977, she took to the stage at Feyman Night Club, where she went to have fun with her friends.

When she was liked by the club owner, İlhan Feyman, she received an offer to work there.

She accepted the offer and took to the stage with the Grup Locomotive orchestra at Feyman Night Club with a repertoire of Turkish classical music and Turkish pop.

When she left her job at Feyman Night Club after a year of work, she accepted the offer of a car from Kuyubaşı Club in Adana in exchange for 8 months of singing work.

But at the end of the job, the car was taken from her and she was left in debt.

1979

In 1979, she started performing as an artist in Ankara Başkent Casino with Bülent Ersoy, İbrahim Tatlıses and Müjde Ar.

1980

She was one of the most prominent Arabesque music stars of Turkey in the 1980s, breaking sales records with her fourth studio album, Acıların Kadını ("Woman of Pains").

She has become one of the symbols and faces of violence against women in Turkey with her life and death.

Her husband, Halis Serbest, threw nitric acid on her face resulting in blindness in her right eye.

After that, she continued singing and chose to cover her blind eye with her long hair.

She was murdered by Serbest, whom she had divorced after releasing several successful albums.

Her personal life was influential in her gloomy voice and contributed to her success throughout the years.

Bergen, a biographical film based on her life premiered in 2022.

1981

In 1981, Bergen left Ankara to do business in Adana where she met Halis Serbest.

Every night he sent flowers to the singer, went to the club where Bergen worked and watched her from the front table.

Through his stubborn insistence she agreed to marry him, however, Serbest was already married to someone else and had three children.

Bergen ended the relationship when it turned out that her marriage, which she thought was real, was a lie arranged by Serbest.

After being subjected to violence by Serbest many times, Bergen left Adana and returned to Ankara and took to the stage again in nightclubs.

She changed her name to 'Bergen', inspired by the Norwegian city of Bergen.

1982

In 1982, she released the album Şikayetim Var (I have a complaint).

Bergen, who said that she fell in love despite the violence that Serbest inflicted on her, married Serbest again on January 9, 1982, officially this time.

In the same year, on October 31, while working in İzmir, she was attacked with nitric acid by someone her husband had paid to attack her.

The artist lost one eye in the attack, and most of her body was burned.

Bergen said the following about the incident:"'Towards the end of our relationship, I found a woman's panties at home. That's when I was completely devastated and fled from Adana to Ankara. As soon as he found out that I had escaped, he followed me. Finally, he found me in a hostel in Izmir. He was threatening me because I didn't give heed. He would say 'I will throw acid on your face'. But I didn't believe it."

Halis Serbes gave 500 thousand liras to a hired killer and sent him to İzmir.

On the night of October 31, 1982, at the gate of the New York pavilion in İzmir Alsancak, Bergen was about to get into a taxi with her mother, when the hired attacker threw a bucket of nitric acid on the singer.

Bergen would describe the event as follows in a later interview::"'In that moment, I lost sight in both my eyes. I was hardly aware of anything as I was a little drunk. I could only hear screams. 'Get her to the water fountain' they said at one point. But the water was cut off. The water flowed like a thin pencil. They tore my clothes and wrapped me with clean ones. At that moment, everything was dark, I couldn't see anything, I couldn't even open my eyes. A short time later, a police car arrived. They took me to Ege University Hospital. I stayed in the hospital for 45 days, because of my wounds.'"

Her mother, who was with her at the time of the incident, said:"'Two years ago, he abducted my daughter. I told Bergen many times that she should not marry this man who is a punk, that he could not make her happy. But she said, 'Once my name is on people's lips with him, I can't go back.' She didn't listen. My daughter, who sang Turkish music in nightclubs, became a sought-after artist in a short time with her voice. My son-in-law, who was jealous of Bergen's success, was creating a disturbance and fighting every day. Finally, thinking that this marriage would not work anymore, she decided to divorce. Despite this, he did not give up on my daughter. He was constantly threatening her, saying, 'I won't leave you to anyone else.'"

Bergen was seriously injured in this incident.

Onur Erol, the famous plastic surgeon of the period, who followed the event from the press, voluntarily helped Bergen.