Michael Joseph Jackson (born August 29, 1958,
in Gary, Indiana), is an American singer, songwriter, record producer,
actor,
and philanthropist. He began his career as the lead singer of the Motown
act, The Jackson 5, in the 1960s, and made his first solo recordings
in 1971 as part of the Jackson 5 franchise. Jackson began a full-fledged
solo career in 1979 and formally parted with his siblings in 1987, and
has since become the most successful recording artist in black music
history, and one of the most successful solo artists in music history.
His 1982 album Thriller currently holds the title of
being the best selling album in history, it has been said that 60 million
copies have been sold worldwide. In addition to his albums, Jackson
has also recorded thirteen number-one hits, including "Don't Stop
'Til You Get Enough", "Rock With You", "Billie Jean", and "Beat It". In addition to his thirteen number-one singles,
he also is credited with a further four number-one singles with his brothers
in the group The Jackson 5, giving him a total of seventeen number-one
singles on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. His distinctive dance moves,
music videos, and pop appeal have inspired and influenced many of today's
singers, such as Janet Jackson, Usher, Beyoncé, and Justin Timberlake.
Despite his career success, he has been dogged by media attention over
allegations of child sexual abuse, which resulted in a trial and acquittal
in 2005.
Early childhood.
Jackson was born the seventh of nine children in Gary, Indiana, to Joseph
and Katherine Jackson. The entire family - including older siblings,
Rebbie, Jackie, Tito, Jermaine, LaToya and Marlon, and younger siblings
Randy and Janet - lived together in a tiny two-bedroom house,
and Jackson's father earned a meager living working in a steel mill.
At the behest of their mother, but against Joseph's wishes, the Jackson
children were raised as Jehovah's Witnesses and practiced door-to-door
evangelism.
In accordance with Joseph Jackson's strict rules, the children were
kept locked in their house while he worked the night shift. However,
the children would regularly sneak out of the house to their neighbors' homes,
where they practiced singing and playing music. The older Jackson brothers
would sometimes play Joseph's prized guitar without his permission
while he was at work. Eventually, Joseph found out about their musical
abilities and decided to capitalize upon it, in order to leave Gary for
California.
The Wiz and Off The Wall.
In 1978, Michael co-starred in The Wiz as the Scarecrow, with former
labelmate Diana Ross as Dorothy. The musical film's songs were arranged
and produced by famed producer Quincy Jones, who found a rapport with
Jackson. After Jackson signed a solo contract with Epic in 1978, he began
work on his first of several albums with Jones.
Michael Jackson's 1979 album Off the Wall was a worldwide hit, and spawned
the number-one hit singles and music videos "Don't Stop 'Til You
Get Enough" and "Rock With You". The ballad "She's
Out Of My Life" also reached the top ten in 1980. With that accomplishment,
Jackson became the first solo artist to have four Top 10 hit singles
in the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart from a single album. The album
went on to sell over seven million copies in America, establishing Jackson
as a musical force without his brothers.
Thriller.
In the 1980s, Jackson released a progression of solo albums of slickly-produced
synthesizer-heavy pop. In what was perhaps the "Golden Age" of
the video clip, some of Jackson's videos were virtually short films
with detailed plots, special effects, and featuring Jackson's distinctive
dance style.
His Thriller album, released in 1982, produced seven top-ten hit singles,
broke sales records, and became the best selling album in music history.
The "Billie Jean" music video, released to promote Thriller,
became the first video by a black artist to be aired on MTV. The seven-minute "Thriller" music
video / short film became the world's best selling home video at the
time (packaged with the featurette The Making of Michael Jackson's "Thriller"),
and is considered by many music industry critics to be one of the greatest
music videos of all time and a large step forward in artistic quality
for music videos. The album's third major single, "Beat It", was another #1 pop hit in the U.S., accompanied by a popular "West
Side Story" inspired music video. The videos for "Billie Jean", "Thriller" and "Beat
It" frequently place highly on MTV and VH1 countdowns of notable
classic videos, and receive airplay on MTV2 to this day.
While performing "Billie Jean" during the Motown 25: Yesterday,
Today, Forever special on television on May 16, 1983, Jackson publicly
performed his moonwalk dance for the first time. In January 1984, at
the American Music Awards, Jackson was nominated for nine awards, and
won a record eight. At the Grammy Awards in February, Jackson was nominated
for twelve awards, and won a record-breaking eight: seven for Thriller
and one for his narrative on The E.T. Storybook. In May, Thriller was
certified by the Guinness Book of Records as the best selling popular
music album of all time. The same year, he was also awarded the H. Claude
Hodson Medal of Freedom at the NAACP Image Awards, honored at the White
House by President Ronald Reagan with the Presidential Special Achievement
Award, and was awarded a star in November on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
By 2005, Thriller had been certified twenty-seven times platinum in the
U.S.
Jackson became a spokesman for Pepsi at the height of Thriller's popularity.
In a famous incident, his hair was accidentally set on fire on January
27, 1984, while singing "Billie Jean" during a Pepsi commercial
shoot in Los Angeles. He received hospital treatment for second degree
burns to his scalp after his hair caught on fire due to an error involving
the shoot's special effects. (A fireworks display erupted behind Jackson,
showering him in sparks.).
We Are the World" and Captain Eo.
Inspired by Band Aid, Michael Jackson was instrumental in organizing
the recording of the single "We Are the World", which he co-wrote
with former Motown labelmate, Lionel Richie. The single was released
in 1985 to raise money for USA for Africa, a charity working to raise
awareness about and give aid to impoverished families in Africa".We
Are the World" featured forty-four different vocalists, including
Jackson, Ritchie, Harry Belafonte, Cyndi Lauper, Diana Ross, Ray Charles
and Stevie Wonder, and sold 7 million copies in the United States, becoming
one of the best-selling singles of all time.
Bad.
In 1987, Jackson released the album Bad, and began his first solo world
tour, performing to sold-out audiences across the world. The Bad world
tour broke all existing attendance records. Jackson would later break
the Bad world tour attendance records with the Dangerous world tour,
and top those records with those for the HIStory world tour. The following
year, Jackson released a film entitled Moonwalker, and an autobiography,
entitled Moon Walk.
Bad was another multi-platinum success for Jackson, although it was
not as successful as "Thriller" had been. Its first five singles
and music videos, "I Just Can't Stop Loving You", "Bad", "The
Way You Make Me Feel", "Man in the Mirror", and "Leave
Me Alone" provided Jackson with another string of hits, and made
him the first artist to generate five number one singles off of one album.
The other two singles, "Another Part of Me" and "Smooth
Criminal" kept Jackson on the charts throughout the year as he toured.
Dangerous.
Jackson was awarded a new record breaking $890 million contract by Sony
in March, 1991, and released his first album under the new contract,
Dangerous, that November. While in the U.S., sales for the album only
reached seven million, internationally Dangerous eclipsed Bad as the
second best-selling album of Jackson's career, reaching over twenty-nine
million albums sold. Its major hit singles included "Black or White", "Remember
the Time", "In the Closet" and "Jam".
As was becoming the standard for Jackson, the album's music videos were
among the most costly and innovative of their time".Give in to
Me" featured Slash from Guns n' Roses in its video. The video was
shot a few days before the Dangerous Tour started, in Munich in 1992.
The directors were the Austrian duo Rossacher and Dolezal who shot many - if
not all - of the videos and specials for Freddie Mercury and the
band Queen. The video for "Heal the World" featured children
and adults from throughout the world, in order to correspond to Jackson's
charity of the same name".Will You Be There" showed Jackson
singing in front of scenes from Free Willy. Several of the other videos
had complex storylines and dance sequences, and featured cameo appearances
by celebrities. The video for "Jam", directed by David Kellogg,
showed Jackson and Michael Jordan playing basketball and dancing together,
while "Remember the Time" was set in an ancient Egyptian palace,
and starred Eddie Murphy and Iman as the pharaoh and his queen. Also,
it featured a cameo by basketball player, Magic Johnson".In The
Closet" featured Jackson and model Naomi Campbell as lovers.
Personal life.
Michael Jackson continued to engage in door-to-door evangelizing as a
Jehovah's Witness after becoming famous, but in disguise. His career
and flamboyant lifestyle led to friction with congregation elders. At
one point, his sister, LaToya, was shunned by Jehovah's Witnesses, and
in 1987, he formally left the religion.
Jackson's most famous home is his 2,600 acre (eleven square-kilometer)
Neverland Ranch in Santa Ynez, California, which he purchased in 1988.
It is named after the magical kingdom, Neverland, from the children's
story, "Peter Pan". Jackson, a huge Disney fan, built an amusement
park on the ranch, and frequently welcomes sick and poor children there
to visit and sponsors charity drives for children. Jackson's relationships
with children, both his own and others, have been controversial: his
sleepover parties at Neverland have received widespread critical media
coverage, especially after he revealed that he sometimes slept in the
same bed with several unrelated children.
He claims that he likes to be surrounded by children because of their
sense of innocence, which he feels he lost too soon. His song "Childhood" included
the lyric, "It's been my fate to compensate, for the childhood I've
never known". Jackson is fond of animals: he owns a private zoo
at Neverland, and was often seen with a chimpanzee named Bubbles and
a snake called Muscles in the 1980s. Jackson claims that Neverland has
inspired much of his work, having once told an interviewer that he liked
climbing trees to write songs like "Will You Be There" and "Heal
the World".
Jackson is noted for his humanitarian efforts, and has often used his
music, including the all-star single "We Are the World" (1985), "Man
in the Mirror" (1987), "Heal the World" (1992), "Earth
Song" (1995), "Cry" (2001), and "What More Can I
Give" (2003) to support and promote various causes. The "Heal
the World" foundation was created by Jackson in 1992, with assistance
from former President Jimmy Carter. Jackson was considering a tour of
Africa in May or June 2004 to raise money to fight AIDS; Zimbabwe, South
Africa, and Senegal were among the countries he had planned to visit.
Over the years, Michael Jackson maintained a number of high-profile
celebrity friendships with entertainers such as Diana Ross, Elizabeth
Taylor, Marlon Brando, Macaulay Culkin, Emmanuel Lewis, Chris Tucker,
and others. Jackson is also the godfather of Lionel Richie's adopted
daughter, Nicole Richie and of Barry Gibb's son Michael Gibb.
Michael Jackson was hospitalized Wednesday, 6 December 1995, suffering
from dehydration and low blood pressure after he collapsed on stage during
rehearsals at the Beacon Theater in New York. New York Emergency Medical
Service received a call at 4:51 p.m. from a security guard at the theater
saying Jackson was not breathing, but when they arrived minutes later
he was awake. Emergency workers determined that Jackson was suffering
from exhaustion, dehydration and dangerously low blood pressure. He was
released from hospital on Tuesday, 12 December 1995.
Since his trial ended, Jackson has been staying in Bahrain
with Shaikh Abdullah Ben Hamed Al Khalifa, the Prince of Bahrain. He
recently visited Dubai (United Arab Emirates) with an eye to buying property
in one of the country's new developments. Jackson has been touring Dubai
with UAE champion rally driver Mohammad Ben Sulayem.
Ben Sulayem remarked that the star was normal and down-to-earth: "Definitely
the guy is a normal human being like us. I think he's more normal than
most people. We know all about his music and his incredible career, but
not many people realise what a genuinely nice person he is. He's very
pleasant to be with. He's a gentleman". Jackson also took time off
with fans, chatting with them and posing for photographs during his visit
to Dubai".He is still in Dubai for a few more days. He wants to
see more of the city. And we would like him to come back when the temperature
is more reasonable", Ben Sulayem told the press.
Jackson's marriages and children.
In 1994, Jackson married Lisa Marie Presley, the daughter of Elvis Presley;
the marriage was severely criticized by the media and lasted less than
two years. Despite some comments questioning the validity of this union,
Presley has always maintained that they both shared a normal couple's
life during their time together. The separation date on divorce papers
was indicated with Sunday, 10 December 1995. A day when Jackson was
still hospitalized after suffering dehydration during rehearsals for
his "One Night Only" special at New York's Beacon Theater.
In 1996, Jackson married Deborah Jeanne Rowe, with whom he had a son,
Michael Joseph Jackson, Jr. (who publicly goes by the name "Prince"),
and a daughter, Paris-Michael Katherine Jackson. They were divorced in
1999. Rowe later said that she wanted Jackson to have the children as
a "gift", which she had offered even while Jackson was married
to Presley. Rowe had given up her parental rights to the children, but
as of 2005, a family court case is under way regarding visitation. The
godparents of these two children are Macaulay Culkin and Elizabeth Taylor.
Around February 2002, Jackson had another son, Michael Joseph Jackson
III, called both "Prince Michael II" and "Blanket", apparently with a surrogate mother whose identity has not been disclosed.
In late 2002, Jackson stirred up controversy while staying at the Adlon
hotel in Berlin, by briefly suspending him over the edge of a balcony
so that fans could see him. Jackson defended his actions, saying that
he held the child very tightly. Jackson's children are veiled or masked
when they appear in public with him, which he describes as a security
measure. Rowe said it was her idea from the beginning.
After the children were seen in Martin Bashir's Living with Michael
Jackson documetary special, many in the press and the public questioned
whether Prince and Paris were actually Jackson's children, as they had
no noticeable African features about them. Jackson explained that his
own father is African-American, but has blue eyes, and that some of the
Jackson family ancestors are Caucasian, and even Indian. However, during
the interviews for the same special, Jackson revealed that "Blanket's" mother
was black.
There had been rumors that Jackson was having children by various women.
One woman claimed that she was giving birth to quadruplets fathered by
Jackson, a claim later proven to be false. Jackson had suffered the same
problem two decades earlier with a woman claiming Michael was a father
of one of her fraternal twins, a story from which his memorable hit "Billie
Jean" was derived.
Skin color.
Although Jackson's skin color was that of an African American for the
entire duration of his youth, his skin has lightened gradually since
1982, and is today a pale melanin devoid color. Jackson has attributed
his changing skin color to vitiligo, a skin disease in which the body
develops antibodies against its own melanin, a body pigment, resulting
in light patches and an eventual loss of all pigment. The public finally
got to know of Jackson's condition when he first revealed it in an interview
with Oprah Winfrey in 1993. Several members of the media refused to believe
Jackson has vitiligo and believe that Jackson bleaches his skin, an allegation
which Jackson denies. Jackson's family members backed up his claim, with
Joseph Jackson stating that his own father (Michael Jackson's grandfather)
had also suffered from vitiligo. During court depositions in 1994, both
Jackson's dermatologist and his nurse (later his wife) confirmed the
diagnosis.
After going to a hospital, Jackson claims he finally received the news
when his doctor diagnosed him with the disease in 1981. Ever since then,
Jackson has regularly worn long-sleeved shirts and pants under an umbrella
while in public to hide from the sun, which he says he's allergic to
because of his condition.
Plastic surgery.
Jackson has allegedly used extensive plastic surgery to modify his appearance,
although he claims to have had only three operations: two rhinoplastic
surgeries - the first of which he claims was to repair a broken
nose resulting from a dancing accident in 1978, and the second to correct
imperfections in the first surgery - and the surgical creation
of a cleft in his chin. When listing his cosmetic surgery, Jackson often
omits mentioning the cleft; however, he confirmed this surgery in his
1988 autobiography, Moon Walk.
Jackson's use of plastic surgery has caused increased concerns of a
possible cartilage and nose collapse. Surgeons interviewed for various
tabloid articles agree that Jackson's nose structure could easily collapse
during an altercation.
In 2000, Jackson reportedly had his collapsed nose corrected by a new
plastic surgeon, who used cartilage taken from one of his ears to rebuild
the nose's structure. This tabloid report was never confirmed.
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