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Michael Jackson: Beyond the music
The "King of Pop" had been topping music charts long before he
ever pulled on that white-sequined glove, made the moonwalk a
household move and sent screaming fans into a frenzy.
But the spotlight that followed Michael Jackson, earned him
headlines and made him a tabloid favorite as an adult, often had
little to do with the artistry.
While filming a commercial for Pepsi in 1984, a pyrotechnic
accident set his hair ablaze, leaving him with second-degree
burns on his scalp and igniting what would eventually became an
odyssey of reconstructive work.
Rumors about his face, the ever-changing nose and lightening
skin fueled the "Wacko Jacko" persona, a moniker he'd be given
later and seem to embrace. There was, for instance, Bubbles, a
chimpanzee he adopted, befriended and allowed to share his
toilet.
Jackson didn't fight and even perpetuated claims, even though
they weren't true, that he'd bought the remains of The Elephant
Man and slept in a hyperbaric chamber -- although he would deny
both years later during an interview with Oprah Winfrey.
It was then, in that 1993 interview, that he also shot down
rumors that he was dying his skin to make it lighter. Instead,
he spoke for the first time about having vitiligo, a skin
pigmentation disorder.
Meantime, he had designed his dream home, the Neverland Ranch in
Santa Ynez, California, as if he were the Peter Pan he so
admired. Replete with a zoo, his own amusement park and the bevy
of children who surrounded, played and sometimes slept over with
him, he proudly set out to recapture the childhood he publicly
said he'd never had.
Allegations of what went on privately, however, landed him in a
big-boy pool of legal hot water. He was accused of sexually
abusing a 13-year-old boy, and the fashion icon showed up in
court leaning on others while wearing pajama bottoms. Soon after
came talk about his addiction to prescription drugs.
He settled the civil lawsuit with the accusing family in 1994
and was never charged criminally. Then came the shocking, albeit
relatively short-lived, marriage to Lisa Marie Presley -- a move
that set off a whole new round of speculations.
Did he tie the knot to fight the child abuse speculations that
dogged him? Was this eccentric "King" aspiring to be the
son-in-law of "The King," Elvis Presley? Or could it have been
true love?
Despite this two-year marriage, and the reported relationships
he'd had earlier with Tatum O'Neal, Stephanie Mills and Brooke
Shields, Jackson remained sexually ambiguous and, in many
people's eyes, sexless altogether.
He'd later marry once more for several years, this time a nurse
named Debbie Rowe. People debated whether they consummated that
marriage or if artificial insemination played a role, but
Jackson left in 1999 with custody of two children, a son known
as Prince Michael and a daughter named Paris. For years when
they appeared in public, the children wore veils or masks.
Prince Michael II was born in 2002. An unidentified woman gave
birth after reportedly being artificially inseminated with
Jackson's sperm. His second son was semi-revealed to the public
in Berlin, Germany, when Jackson momentarily dangled the baby,
his face hidden beneath a blanket, over a balcony four stories
above the ground and a mass of fans.
It was yet another move that spawned talk and accusations, and
it was one he'd apologize for later.
In recent years there was yet another child sexual abuse
accusation, one Jackson was acquitted of in May 2005, and
financial problems to deal with.
But in spite of all of this, Jackson's draw remained strong.
More than 25 years after the release of his epic album,
"Thriller," it was being celebrated again. He was scheduled to
start what he described at a March press conference as his
"final curtain call" concert tour, which had recently been
postponed to next year.
What Jackson would have brought to the stage then, and to the
headlines before and after, will never be known. What is certain
is that he's one who'll always be remembered.
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