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Michael Jackson
Singer, songwriter. Born August 29, 1958, in Gary, Indiana, as
the seventh of nine children. Jackson and his brothers Jackie,
Tito, Marlon, and Jermaine were assembled into a simmnging group
when Michael was only five years old. Despite his extremely
young age, he soon distinguished himself as a singer and dancer
of prodigious ability. No mere child prodigy, Michael had a gift
for vocal phrasing that was not only well beyond his years, but
would have been astonishing in a performer of any age. After
winning several talent contests, the Jackson 5, as the group was
called, signed a recording contract with the trailblazing soul
label Motown and proceeded to rule the charts in the late 1960s
and early ‘70s with such hits as "I Want You Back," "Stop, the
Love You Save," "ABC," and "Dancing Machine." By 1972, Michael
had begun releasing solo albums, and he sang the hit title song
to the movie Ben.
Michael and the group (with the exception of brother Jermaine)
left Motown in 1975, signing with Epic Records, which also gave
Michael a solo deal. Two years later, he starred in the film
version of the hit musical The Wiz, which also featured singer
Diana Ross and comic Richard Pryor. Quincy Jones, who produced
the soundtrack album, became one of Michael's longtime friends
and collaborators. The year 1979 saw the release of Jackson's
extraordinarily successful album Off the Wall; this record
included the hit singles "Rock With You" and "Don't Stop 'Til
You Get Enough" and eventually sold some 10 million copies.
The singer had matured into a dynamic adult entertainer, but he
also began to make his mark as a songwriter, crafting durable
pop that synthesized rock and disco.
Jackson's next album, Thriller, was a quantum leap for him both
creatively and commercially. Produced by Jones, the recording
spanned a number of pop genres—cannily enlisting rock guitar
idol Eddie Van Halen to play a solo on "Beat It," for example,
guaranteed access to listeners Jackson might not otherwise have
reached—and fired a record-setting seven Top 10 singles up the
charts, notably the title track, a duet with Paul McCartney
titled “The Girl Is Mine,” the insinuating "Billie Jean," and
the raucous "Beat It." The state-of-the-art videos that
accompanied these singles, meanwhile, coincided with the sudden
dominance of Music Television (MTV); Jackson's distinctive
"Moonwalk" and overall visual panache (combined with brilliant
choreography and lavish special effects) won him an even vaster
audience. Thriller went on to become the bestselling album of
all time and garnered an unprecedented eight Grammy Awards;
Jackson also snagged a Grammy for his participation in the E.T.:
The Extraterrestrial soundtrack album.
Jackson was a crucial player in the all-star benefit project We
Are the World, which sought to combat hunger in Africa. In
addition to his epochal solo work, he continued working with his
brothers as part of The Jacksons; their 1984 "Victory" tour was
a landmark of the decade.
Michael Jackson ruled the 1980s.
Though his next album, Bad performed less spectacularly than did
Thriller, it was a colossal hit by any other standard. He also
racked up both music industry awards and honors from the United
Negro College Fund, the NAACP, and even the president of the
United States. He had his occasional bad moments—his head was
burned during the shooting of a commercial for Pepsi cola, for
which he had a lucrative endorsement deal, and speculation
abounded that he lightened his skin and had plastic surgery to
make himself look more "white”—but by and large his image as the
world's most beloved entertainer was undimmed. Jackson’s memoir,
Moonwalk, was adapted into a film in 1988. In 1990, the
performance rights organization BMI presented the first Michael
Jackson award—to its namesake.
In early 1991, Michael’s sister and fellow pop star Janet
Jackson announced that she had scored the biggest record deal in
history early. One week later, Michael announced his new Sony
contract, which made Janet's look paltry by comparison. His 1991
release Dangerous, however, did not perform to expectations.
Some controversy was generated by the fact that Jackson
reportedly only granted his innovative "Black or White" video to
MTV on the condition that the network refer to him as the "King
of Pop." A 1993 interview with talk-show host Oprah Winfrey, an
unusual step for the press-shy Jackson, helped boost sales. Over
time, the album performed impressively; again, only the
standards previously set by Jackson himself cast any doubt on
its popularity
He was showered in laurels in 1993, including a Living Legend
Award at the Grammys and, more controversially, the Humanitarian
of the Year trophy at the Soul Train Awards.
Yet Jackson's reputation as an androgynous recluse who lived in
a state of perpetual adolescence—rumors of his Peter Pan-like
life and hobbies at his sprawling ranch and amusement park,
“Neverland,” abounded—only increased. He also earned the scorn
of some self-appointed moral guardians when one of his videos
showed him smashing a car window and grabbing his crotch more
flagrantly than usual; he excised the footage as soon as the
eyebrows were raised.
No one could have anticipated, however, the charges that rocked
the entertainment world in 1993. A 13-year-old boy, identified
only as a "friend" of the singer's, asserted that Jackson had
sexually abused him during his stay at Neverland. Jackson was on
tour when the allegations were made public, and he promptly
brought the series of performances to a halt, claiming
exhaustion and addiction to painkillers. After extensive legal
wrangling and much mud-slinging from both the boy's family and
lawyers and Jackson's defense team, Jackson opted to settle out
of court for an estimated $20 million. Though he settled,
Jackson denied any wrongdoing.
Despite investigation of a second boy who said he'd slept in the
same bed with Jackson—but alleged no improper behavior on the
entertainer's part—the Los Angeles District Attorney brought his
investigation to a close in 1994. Jackson's attorney said this
was due to lack of evidence, though others claimed it was the
boy's refusal to testify that weakened the case
Meanwhile, longtime friends of Jackson's had issued passionate
statements in his defense. "I am mortified and disgusted by what
has been reported with no evidence of anything untoward," fumed
producer Bruce Swedien, as quoted in Rolling Stone. "Michael is
one of the most decent people I've ever met in my life. These
allegations are preposterous." Jackson's own public statement
expressed confidence that he would be fully exonerated. "I am
grateful for the overwhelming support of my fans throughout the
world," it concluded. "I love you all."
Yet the scandal devastated Jackson and heightened speculation
that his career was over. He lost his Pepsi endorsement as well
as a deal to develop several films in which he hoped to star.
"They just pulled the plug when the scandal broke," noted
director John Landis—who had helmed the epic "Thriller" video—to
Entertainment Weekly. The rumor-mongering over the alleged
molestation continued, as the media and industry insiders played
the age-old game of trying to pin down Michael Jackson's
personal life.
In 1994, Jackson shocked the public again—in a very different
way. He and Lisa Marie Presley, daughter of rock innovator and
cultural icon Elvis Presley, were married in a secret ceremony
in the Dominican Republic. The unexpected union was the cause of
further speculation: had Jackson married to divert attention
from his alleged homosexuality and/or pederasty? Was he hoping
to save his career by establishing himself as a "normal" and
adult man? A very staged kiss at the MTV Video Music Awards
added fuel to the fire.
Meanwhile, Michael Jackson returned to what he did best—making
records. He commenced recording new tracks for an ambitious
package that would include his greatest hits along with an
album's worth of new material. He gathered a number of hot
songwriters and producers and even recorded a duet with his
sister Janet. Epic Records, the branch of Sony that handled his
recordings, prepared for a massive media assault. Jackson and
Lisa Marie appeared on a television interview with Diane Sawyer;
the singer and his bride vehemently insisted that they had a sex
life and planned to have children. Naturally, such urgency only
encouraged those who felt that their public claims to "normalcy"
were career propaganda. Even so, the interview earned
astronomical ratings and helped prepare the way for the new
album's marketing blitz. This included the sudden appearance of
building-high statues of the performer, one of which is pictured
on the cover of the disc.
The marketing campaign for HIStory: Past, Present and Future,
Book 1 (1995) was the biggest ever seen for an album; amid the
hype, strangely enough, Jackson was trumpeting the message that
he resented intrusions into his privacy. When HIStory was
released it met with mixed reviews. "It's not where music is
headed, it's where music has been," complained radio station
music director Bruce St. James, quoted in Newsweek. The public,
despite the media bombast, seemed to agree. The debut single,
"Scream”—a raucous duet with Janet that was supported by a
flashy science-fiction video—earned only a lukewarm reception,
and HIStory dropped out of the top ten after only a few weeks
Yet the record could scarcely be considered a failure, given
that it was a double album and promised to issue singles for at
least another year. One, the ballad "Childhood," also appeared
on the soundtrack of the family film Free Willy 2, promising an
even wider audience. "There will probably be nine singles,"
pronounced Epic executive David Glew to Billboard. "That puts us
through two Christmases ... I think this will be one of the
biggest albums of all time, [but] we know it will take the full
weight of this company." Meanwhile, many fans who didn't adore
the new tracks would likely still invest in the package just to
have Jackson's classic hits in one place.
Another scandal erupted immediately, however; it involved the
presence of apparently anti-Semitic lyrics on the song "They
Don't Care About Us." Steven Spielberg, superstar filmmaker and
stalwart defender of Jackson during his earlier travails,
publicly criticized the lyrics, as did many other individuals
and groups. Jackson announced that he harbored no prejudice
toward anyone, though his remark that "my lawyers are Jewish"
scarcely banished all doubt. A smaller ripple came from the
revelation that Lisa Marie's two children from her previous
marriage were unhappy living at Neverland. The couple would
divorce amicably in 1996.
Later that same year, Jackson announced that Deborah Rowe, an
assistant to his dermatologist, was pregnant with his child. The
couple were married in Australia soon after his announcement,
and Rowe subsequently gave birth to a son, Prince Michael
Jackson Jr.
A daughter, Paris Michael Katherine, was born in the spring of
1998. Jackson and Rowe announced their intention to divorce in
the fall of 1999. In 2002, under a veil of secrecy, a second son
named Prince Michael II was added to the brood. The child's
mother remains unnamed
In 1997, Jackson released Blood on the Dance Floor: HIStory in
the Mix, a combination of some new and some remixed material.
His first new studio album in six years, titled Invincible, hit
stores in October of 2001.
The albums relatively poor performance -- by July 2002 it had
sold only 4 million copies worldwide -- led Jackson to publicly
criticize Sony Music, which he claimed failed to properly
promote his work. Jackson went further, claiming his treatment
was indicative of racism and black exploitation in the music
industry. He enlisted the aid of controversial activist Al
Sharpton to forge a campaign against supposed mistreatment.
In February 2003, Britain's ITV network broadcast the first-ever
documentary about the controversial pop king called Living with
Michael Jackson. ABC purchased the rights to broadcast the
interview to American audiences on 20/20, though Jackson claimed
it to be "a gross distortion of the truth." A year later, in
January 2004, Jackson pleaded not guilty to nine felony charges
against him, including seven counts of performing lewd or
lascivious acts on a child under 14 and two counts of
administering an intoxicating agent. The case, which echoes the
charges brought against Jackson a decade earlier, is pending in
Santa Barbara County Superior Court
Even when beset by rumor and scandal—and such has been his
situation for much of his career—Michael Jackson has managed to
translate adversity into greater fame. While many argue that his
work has been uneven, his contribution to modern pop has been
enormous.
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