'American tale of celebrity' ends...
By Brooks BARNES
Los Angeles - For his legions of fans, he was the Peter Pan of pop
music: the little boy who refused to grow up. But on the verge of
another attempted comeback, he is suddenly gone, this time for good.
Michael Jackson, whose quintessentially American tale of celebrity
and excess took him from musical boy wonder to global pop superstar to
sad figure haunted by lawsuits and failed plastic surgery, was
pronounced dead Thursday afternoon at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical
Center. Mr. Jackson was just 50 years old, having spent 39 of those
years in the public eye he loved.
The singer was taken to the hospital, a six-minute drive from the
rented Bel-Air home in which he was living, shortly after noon by
paramedics for the Los Angeles Fire Department.
Jermaine Jackson said his brother was pronounced dead at 2:26 p.m.
"It is believed he suffered cardiac arrest at his home," he said softly
at a news conference at the hospital. A personal physician first
attempted to resuscitate Michael Jackson before paramedics arrived. A
team of doctors attempted to resuscitate Mr. Jackson for more than an
hour, his brother said. An autopsy will be performed to determine the
cause of death.
"May our love be with you always," Jermaine Jackson concluded his
gaze aloft.
As with Elvis Presley or the Beatles, it is impossible to calculate
the full effect he had on the world of music. At the height of his
career, he was indisputably the biggest star in the world; he has sold
more than 750 million albums. Radio stations across the country reacted
to his death with marathon sessions of his songs. MTV, which was born in
part as a result of Mr. Jackson's groundbreaking videos, reprised its
early days as a music channel by showing his biggest hits.
From his days as the youngest brother in the Jackson 5 to his solo
career in the 1980s and early 1990s, Mr. Jackson was responsible for a
string of hits like "I Want You Back," "I'll Be There" "Don't Stop 'Til
You Get Enough" "Billie Jean" and "Black and White" that exploited his
high voice, infectious energy and ear for irresistible hooks.
As a solo performer, Mr. Jackson ushered in the age of pop as a
global product - not to mention an age of spectacle and pop culture
celebrity. He became more character than singer: his sequined glove, his
whitened face, his moonwalk dance move became embedded in the cultural
firmament.
But not long after his entertainment career hit high-water marks -
"Thriller," from 1982, has been certified 28 times platinum by the
Recording Industry Association of America - it started a bizarre
disintegration. His darkest moment undoubtedly came in 2003, when he was
indicted on child molesting charges. A young cancer patient claimed the
singer had befriended him and then fondled him at his Neverland estate
near Santa Barbara, Calif., but Mr. Jackson was acquitted on all
charges.
Reaction started trickling in from the entertainment community late
Thursday.
"I am absolutely devastated at this tragic and unexpected news," the
music producer Quincy Jones said in a statement. Mr. Jones, who produced
"Thriller" said Mr. Jackson "had it all - talent, grace, professionalism
and dedication." He added, "I've lost my little brother today, and part
of my soul has gone with him."
Apollo Legend
The Apollo Theater, where Mr. Jackson and his brothers first
performed in 1969 (they won amateur night), said, "We will always
remember Michael in our hearts as a true Apollo legend, known for his
professionalism and grace."
Kenny Ortega, the director and choreographer who was working with Mr.
Jackson to create the London concert series, called "This is It," said,
"This is all too much to comprehend."
Impromptu vigils broke out around the world, from Portland, Ore.,
where fans organized a one-gloved bike ride ("glittery costumes strongly
encouraged") to Hong Kong, where fans gathered with candles and sang his
songs.
Mr. Jackson was an object of fascination for the news media since his
first hit, "I Want You Back," in 1969. His public image wavered between
that of the musical naif, who wanted only to recapture his youth by
riding on roller-coasters and having sleepovers with his friends, to the
calculated mogul who carefully constructed his persona around his
often-baffling public behavior.
Mr. Jackson had been scheduled to perform 50 concerts at the O2 arena
in London beginning next month and continuing into 2010. The shows were
positioned as a comeback, with the potential to earn him up to $50
million, according to some reports.
But there has also been worry and speculation that Mr. Jackson was
not physically ready for such an arduous run of concerts, and his
postponement of the first of those shows to July 13 from July 8 fueled
new rounds of gossip about his health.
"The primary reason for the concerts wasn't so much that he was
wanting to generate money as much as it was that he wanted to perform
for his kids," said J. Randy Taraborrelli, whose biography, "Michael
Jackson: The Magic and the Madness," was first published by Citadel in
1991. "They had never seen him perform before."
Mr. Jackson's brothers, Jermaine as well as Jackie, Tito, Marlon and
Randy, have all had performing careers, with varying success, since they
stopped performing together. (Randy, the youngest, replaced Jermaine
when the Jackson 5 left Motown.) His sisters, Rebbie, La Toya and Janet,
are also singers, and Janet Jackson has been a major star in her own
right for two decades. They all survive him, as do his parents, Joseph
and Katherine Jackson, of Las Vegas, and three children: Michael Joseph
Jackson Jr., Paris Michael Katherine Jackson and Prince Michael Jackson
II.
Michael Joseph Jackson was born in Gary, Ind., on Aug. 29, 1958. The
second youngest of six brothers, he began performing professionally with
four of them at the age of 5 in a group that their father, Joe, a
steelworker, had organized the previous year. In 1968 the group,
originally called the Jackson Brothers, was signed by Motown Records.
The Jackson 5 was an instant phenomenon. The group's first four
singles - "I Want You Back," "ABC," "The Love You Save" and "I'll Be
There" - all reached No. 1 on the pop charts in 1970, a feat no group
had accomplished before. And young Michael was the center of attention:
he handled virtually all the lead vocals, danced with energy and
finesse, and displayed a degree of showmanship rare in a performer of
any age.
In 1971, Mr. Jackson began recording under his own name, while
continuing to perform with his brothers. His recording of "Ben," the
title song from a movie about a boy and his homicidal pet rat, was a No.
1 hit in 1972.
The brothers (minus Michael's older brother Jermaine, who was married
to the daughter of Berry Gordy, Motown's founder and chief executive)
left Motown in 1975 and, rechristened the Jacksons, signed to Epic, a
unit of CBS Records. Three years later Michael made his movie debut as
the Scarecrow in the screen version of the hit Broadway musical "The
Wiz." But movie stardom proved not to be his destiny.
Music stardom
Music stardom on an unprecedented level, however, was. Mr. Jackson's
first solo album for Epic, "Off the Wall," released in 1979, yielded
four No. 1 singles and sold seven million copies, but it was a mere
prologue to what came next. His follow-up, "Thriller," released in 1982,
became the best-selling album of all time and helped usher in the music
video age. The video for the album's title track, directed by John
Landis, was an elaborate horror-movie pastiche that was more of a
mini-movie than a promotional clip and played a crucial role in making
MTV a household name.
Seven of the nine tracks on "Thriller" were released as singles and
reached the Top 10. The album spent two years on the Billboard album
chart and sold more than 100 million copies worldwide. It also won eight
Grammy Awards.
Such accomplishments would have been difficult for anyone to equal,
much less surpass. Mr. Jackson's next album, "Bad," released in 1987,
sold eight million copies and produced five No. 1 singles and another
state-of-the-art video, this one directed by Martin Scorsese. It was a
huge hit by almost anyone else's standards, but an inevitable letdown
after "Thriller."
It was at this point that Mr. Jackson's bizarre private life began to
overshadow his music. He would go on to release several more albums and,
from time to time, to stage elaborate concert tours. And he would never
be too far from the public eye. But it would never again be his music
that kept him there.
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US pop star Michael Jackson and
his then-wife Lisa-Marie Presley enjoying their honeymoon at
Euro Disneyland in Marne-la-Vallee outside Paris, where they
stayed in the Sleeping Beauty Suite of the Disneyland Hotel
on September 6, 1994 - AFP |
Even with the millions Mr. Jackson earned, his eccentric lifestyle
took a severe financial toll. In 1988 Mr. Jackson paid about $17 million
for a 2,600-acre ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., 125 miles northwest of Los
Angeles. Calling it Neverland after the mythical island of Peter Pan, he
outfitted the property with amusement-park rides, a zoo and a 50-seat
theater, at a cost of $35 million, according to reports, and the ranch
became his sanctum.
But Neverland, and Mr. Jackson's lifestyle, were expensive to
maintain. A forensic accountant who testified at Mr. Jackson's
molestation trial in 2005 said that Mr. Jackson's annual budget in 1999
included $7.5 million for personal expenses and $5 million to maintain
Neverland. By at least the late 1990s, he began to take out huge loans
to support himself and pay debts. In 1998 he took out a loan for $140
million from Bank of America, which two years later was increased to
$200 million. Further loans of hundreds of millions followed.
The collateral for the loans was Mr. Jackson's 50 percent share in
Sony/ATV Music Publishing, a portfolio of thousands of songs, including
rights to 259 songs by John Lennon and Paul McCartney that are
considered some of the most valuable properties in music.
In 1985 Mr. Jackson paid $47.5 million for ATV, which included the
Beatles songs - a move that estranged him from Mr. McCartney, who had
advised him to invest in music rights - and 10 years later Mr. Jackson
sold 50 percent of his interest to Sony for $90 million, creating a
joint venture, Sony/ATV. Estimates of the value of the catalog exceed $1
billion.
Last year Neverland narrowly escaped foreclosure after Mr. Jackson
defaulted on $24.5 million he owed on the property. A Los Angeles real
estate investment company, Colony Capital LLC, bought the note, and put
the title for the property into a joint venture with Mr. Jackson. In
many ways, Mr. Jackson never recovered from the child molestation trial,
a lurid affair that attracted media from around the world to watch as
Mr. Jackson, wearing a different costume each day, appeared in a small
courtroom in Santa Maria, Calif., to listen as a parade of witnesses
spun a sometimes-incredible tale.
The case ultimately turned on the credibility of Mr. Jackson's
accuser, a 15-year-old cancer survivor who said the defendant had gotten
him drunk and molested him several times. The boy's younger brother
testified that he had seen Mr. Jackson fondling his brother on two other
occasions.
After 14 weeks of such testimony and seven days of deliberations, the
jury returned not-guilty verdicts on all 14 counts against Mr. Jackson:
four charges of child molesting, one charge of attempted child
molesting, one conspiracy charge and eight possible counts of providing
alcohol to minors. Conviction could have brought Mr. Jackson 20 years in
prison. Instead, he walked away a free man to try to reclaim a career
that at the time had already been in decline for years.
Avid shopper
After his trial, Mr. Jackson largely left the United States for
Bahrain, the island nation in the Persian Gulf, where he was the guest
of Sheik Abdullah, a son of the ruler of the country, King Hamad bin Isa
al-Khalifa. Mr. Jackson would never return to live at his ranch. Instead
he remained in Bahrain, Dubai and Ireland for the next several years,
managing his increasingly unstable finances. He remained an avid
shopper, however, and was spotted at shopping malls in the black robes
and veils traditionally worn by Bahraini women.
Despite the public relations blow of his trial, Mr. Jackson and his
ever-changing retinue of managers, lawyers and advisers never stopped
plotting his return.
As part of the agreement that saved Neverland, all of the property
inside the house had to be removed quickly, and Mr. Jackson's
representatives hired a Los Angeles auction house, Julien's Auctions, to
prepare a sale of memorabilia from the ranch, according to court papers.
More than 2,000 items were to be put up for sale in April 2009, and the
value of the auction was estimated at up to $20 million.
But shortly before the sale, Mr. Jackson sued to prevent it, saying
that he had never been given an opportunity to remove personal items. On
the day the exhibition of the sale opened to the public - in a converted
former department store in Beverly Hills - the auction house and Mr.
Jackson announced that they had reached a settlement to return all of
the property to him.
By early 2009, Mr. Jackson was living in a $100,000-a-month mansion
in Bel Air, to be closer to "where all the action is" in the
entertainment business, his manager at the time, Tohme Tohme, told The
Los Angeles Times.
A spokesman for the Los Angeles Police Department said Mr. Jackson
was not pronounced dead until about 2:30 p.m. The department assigned
its robbery and homicide division to investigate the death, but the
spokesman said that was because of Mr. Jackson's celebrity. "Don't read
into anything," the spokesman told reporters gathered outside the Bel
Air house. He said the coroner had taken possession of the body and
would conduct an investigation. In another indication that the scrutiny
never stopped, paparazzi photographers were already waiting outside Mr.
Jackson's home when the ambulance arrived to take him to the hospital.n
New York Times
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