Aperformer
since the age of five, Michael Jackson is one of the most popular singers in
history. His 1983 album, Thriller, sold forty million copies, making it
the biggest seller of all time. Through his record albums and music videos he
created an image imitated by his millions of fans.
Career planned in advance
Michael Joe
Jackson was born in Gary, Indiana, on August 29, 1958, the fifth of Joe and
Katherine Jackson's nine children. The house was always filled with music.
Jackson's mother taught the children folk and religious songs, to which they
sang along. Jackson's father, who worked at a steel plant, had always dreamed
of becoming a successful musician. When this failed to happen, he decided to do
whatever it took to make successes of his children. He tried to control his
children's careers even after they were adults. The struggle for the control of
the musical fortunes of the Jackson family was a constant source of conflict.
The Jackson
boys soon formed a family band that became a success at amateur shows and
talent contests throughout the Midwest. From the age of five Michael's amazing
talent showed itself. His dancing and stage presence caused him to become the
focus of the group. His older brother, Jackie, told Gerri Hershey in Rolling
Stone, "It was sort of frightening. He was so young. I don't know
where he got it. He just knew. "
Discovered by Motown
The Jacksons'
fame and popularity soon began to spread. While performing at the Apollo
Theater in New York City's Harlem neighborhood in 1968, Motown recording artist
Gladys Knight (1944–) and pianist Billy Taylor discovered them. Later that year
singer Diana Ross (1944–) became associated with the boys during a "Soul
Weekend" in Gary. With Ross's support, the Jacksons signed a contract with
Motown Records. Berry Gordy (1929–), the famous head of Motown, took control of
the Jacksons' careers.
By 1970 the
group, known as the Jackson Five, was topping the charts and riding a wave of
popularity with such hits as "ABC," "The Love You Save,"
and "I'll Be There," each of which sold over one million copies. The
group also appeared on several televised specials, and a Jackson Five cartoon
series was created. Gordy quickly recognized Michael's appeal and released
albums featuring him alone. These solo albums sold as well as those of the
Jackson Five. The group managed to survive Michael's voice change and a bitter
break with Motown Records in 1976, but as the Jackson family they continued to
fight with each other and with their own father.
In 1978 Michael Jackson appeared in The Wiz, an African American
version of The Wizard of Oz. He sang the only hit from the film's
soundtrack album ("Ease On Down the Road") in a duet with the star,
Diana Ross. His success as the Scarecrow was a preview of what was to come in
his videos, for Jackson seemed to care most about dancing. (He later dedicated
his autobiography [the story of his one's own life] to dance legend Fred
Astaire [1899–1987], and the autobiography's title, Moonwalk, refers to
a dance that Jackson made popular.)
Unbelievable success
While working
on The Wiz, Jackson met producer Quincy Jones (1933–). They worked
together on Jackson's 1979 album Off the Wall, which sold ten million
copies and earned critical praise. In 1982 Jackson and Jones again joined forces
on the Thriller album. Thriller fully established Jackson as a
solo performer, and his hit songs from the album—"Beat It,"
"Billie Jean," and "Thriller"—made him the major pop star
of the early 1980s. The success of Thriller (with forty million copies sold,
it remains one of the best-selling albums of all time) and the videos of its
songs also helped Jackson break the color barrier imposed by radio stations and
the powerful music video channel MTV. By 1983 Jackson was the single most
popular entertainer in America.
In 1985 Jackson
reunited with Quincy Jones for USA for Africa's "We Are the World,"
which raised funds for the poor in Africa. Jackson's next two albums, Bad (1987)
and Dangerous (1991), were not as hugely successful as Thriller, but
Jackson remained in the spotlight throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s. In
1992 he founded "Heal the World" to aid children and the environment.
In 1993 he was presented with the "Living Legend Award" at the Grammy
Awards ceremony and with the Humanitarian (one who promotes human welfare) of
the Year trophy at the Soul Train awards.
Rocked by scandal
Despite
Jackson's popularity and good works, he became the subject of a major scandal
(action that damages one's reputation). In 1993 a thirteen-year-old boy accused
Jackson of sexually abusing him at the star's home. Jackson settled the case
out of court while insisting he was innocent. The scandal cost Jackson his
endorsement (paid public support of a company's products) contract with Pepsi
and a film deal. His sexual preference was called into question, and his public
image was severely damaged.
In 1995 Jackson
was criticized following the release of his new album HIStory: Past,
Present, and Future, Book I. One of the songs on the album, "They
Don't Care About Us," seemed to contain anti-Semitic (showing hatred
toward Jewish people) lyrics (words). To avoid further criticism, Jackson
changed the lyrics. He also wrote a letter of apology to Rabbi Marvin Hier,
head of the Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies, who had protested
the lyrics.
Marriage and fatherhood
In 1994 Jackson
shocked the world when he married Lisa Marie Presley, daughter of the late
(deceased) rock legend Elvis Presley (1935–1977). Many felt that the marriage
was an attempt to improve his public image. In August 1996 Jackson and Presley
divorced. In November 1996 Jackson announced that he was to be a father. The
child's mother was Debbie Rowe, a long-time friend of Jackson. They married
later that month in Sydney, Australia. On February 13, 1997, their son, Prince
Michael Jackson, Jr., was born in Los Angeles, California. The couple's second
child, daughter Paris Michael Katherine Jackson, was born in 1998. Rowe filed
for divorce from Jackson in October 1999.
Jackson and his
brothers were elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio, in
1997. Later that year another album, Blood on the Dance Floor: HIStory in
the Mix, containing new versions of songs from HIStory along with
five new songs, was released. The album received good reviews, and the world
continued to be fascinated by the talent and career of Michael Jackson.
In 2000
Jackson's promoter sued him for $21.2 million for backing out of two planned
concerts the previous New Year's Eve. In 2001 Jackson, while delivering a
lecture at Oxford University in England to promote his Heal the Kids charity,
described his unhappy childhood and proposed a "bill of rights" for
children that would provide for the right to an education "without having
to dodge bullets." Later that year Jackson was again elected to the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame, this time as a solo performer. Jackson also released a
new album, Invincible, in October 2001.
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