ALSO BY J. RANDY TARABORRELLI
   THE SECRET LIFE OF MARILYN MONROE
   ELIZABETH
   JACKIE, ETHEL, JOAN:
   Women of Camelot
   ONCE UPON A TIME:
   Behind the Fairy Tale of Princess Grace and Prince Ranier
   Copyright
   First published in 1991 by Birch Lane Press.
   A revised, expanded, and updated hardcover edition published in 2003 by Sidgwick & Jackson, an imprint of Pan Macmillan.
   An updated paperback edition published in 2004 by Pan Books, an imprint of Pan Macmillan Ltd.
   Copyright © 1991, 2003, 2004, 2009 by J. Randy Taraborrelli
   All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
   Grand Central Publishing Edition
   Grand Central Publishing
   Hachette Book Group
   237 Park Avenue
   New York, NY 10017
   Visit our website at www.HachetteBookGroup.com.
   www.twitter.com/grandcentralpub
   First eBook Edition: August 2009
   Grand Central Publishing is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc.
   The Grand Central Publishing name and logo is a trademark of Hachette Book Group, Inc.
   ISBN: 978-0-446-56568-4
   This book is dedicated
   to the memory of
   Michael Joseph Jackson
   1958–2009
   Why not just tell people I’m an alien from Mars. Tell them I eat live chickens and do a voodoo dance at midnight. They’ll believe anything you say, because you’re a reporter. But if I, Michael Jackson, were to say, ‘I’m an alien from Mars and I eat live chickens and do a voodoo dance at midnight,’ people would say, ‘Oh, man, that Michael Jackson is nuts. He’s cracked up. You can’t believe a damn word that comes out of his mouth.’
   Michael Jackson to J. Randy Taraborrelli, September 1995
   Contents
   Copyright
   Also by J. Randy Taraborrelli
   Prologue
   PART ONE
   Introduction
   Joseph and Katherine
   Early Days
   Joseph Hits Michael
   Climbing Mountains
   ‘My poor, poor family’
   Rebbie Marries
   The First Record Deal
   The Jacksons Sign with Motown
   ‘Hollywood Livin'’
   Creating The Jackson 5's First Hit
   Michael Moves in with Diana
   Success!
   PART TWO
   ‘ABC’ and ‘The Love You Save’
   ‘It just kept gettin' better…’
   Joseph and Katherine Buy an Estate
   Michael's First Solo Record
   Growing Up in the Public Eye
   Tito Marries
   Groupies
   ‘Rockin' Robin’ and ‘Ben’
   Katherine Files for Divorce
   The Downslide
   Jermaine Falls for the Boss's Daughter
   PART THREE
   Jermaine's and Hazel's Wedding
   Las Vegas
   Jackie Marries
   Michael's Private Meeting with Berry
   CBS Offers the Jacksons a ‘Sweet Deal’
   Joseph to Jermaine: ‘Sign It!’
   What's in a Name?
   The Jacksons Leave Motown
   Jackson Family Values
   Losing to Motown
   PART FOUR
   Tatum
   ‘Why do people think I'm gay?’
   Michael and Joseph Meet with CBS
   The Wiz
   A Rendezvous with Destiny
   The Wiz is a Flop
   Transition
   Off the Wall
   Michael Turns Twenty-one… and Gets His Own Lawyer
   Joseph's Secret
   Katherine is Pushed Too Far
   Jane Fonda
   PART FIVE
   The First ‘Nose Job’… and Other Freedoms
   An Indirect Conversation
   Katherine Tells Joseph to ‘Get Out!’
   Did Michael Get His Way?
   Thriller is a… Thriller
   Hayvenhurst
   Michael Meets with Berry, Again
   Yesterday, Today and Forever
   The Man and the Moon
   ‘Billie Jean’ and ‘Beat It’ Videos
   Managerial Trouble
   Son vs. Father
   Putting Pressure on Michael
   Another Bombastic, Attention-getting Melodrama?
   PART SIX
   Michael Gets Burned by Pepsi-Cola
   ‘I never smile when I dance’
   The Grammys
   ‘Believe me, trouble's ahead’
   Another Nose Job, and Katherine's Party
   Michael Meets the President
   ‘Their last shot’
   The Misery of the Victory Tour
   Jackson vs. Jackson on the Road
   Janet Elopes
   ‘Michael is not gay’
   PART SEVEN
   Michael Buys the Beatles' Songs
   ‘We Are the World’
   A Prank That Didn't Work
   More Plastic Surgery
   Duets Gone ‘Bad’
   The Hyperbaric Chamber
   The Elephant Man's Bones
   Jackie, Jermaine and Janet
   How ‘Bad’ Can It Get?
   The White Man Won't Let Him…
   Buying Neverland
   PART EIGHT
   Enter the Moonies
   ‘But what about Michael?’
   ‘Attack him – with love’
   LaToya Gets Naked
   A Million-dollar Bounty on Michael’s Head
   Michael Fires Frank Dileo
   Michael’s Mother Gets the Reward Money
   LaToya’s Drama
   ‘I want more money than anyone else…’
   David Geffen Influences Michael
   The Still-Struggling Jacksons
   Losing Count of the Plastic Surgeries
   A Maddening Decade, An Uncertain Future
   PART NINE
   Michael Meets Jordie Chandler
   Have You Seen His Childhood?
   ‘A place where boys have rights’
   ‘Never do that again, Jordie’
   Either Jordie’s Mom Trusts Michael… or She Doesn’t
   Michael Meets Jordie’s Father
   Dirty Minds
   The Secret Tape Recording
   Michael Feels Betrayed
   Jordie’s Confession
   PART TEN
   Michael Meets with his Accusers
   Unsuccessful Negotiations
   Jordie Sees a Psychiatrist
   ‘Jordie will never forgive me…’
   The News is Out
   Enter: Lisa Marie Presley
   Elizabeth Taylor to the Rescue
   Michael Proposes to Lisa Marie
   ‘You’ll all be fired’
   Chaos and Rehab
   Michael Stands Naked
   LaToya in Madrid
   Michael Pays Up
   The Last Word on the Matter
   PART ELEVEN
   Michael and Lisa Marie Become Lovers
   Michael and Lisa Marie: Happily Ever After?
   Going Public
   Lisa Marie Wants to Know Why Michael is ‘So Selfish’
   Michael Goes on the Record
   Enter: Debbie Rowe
   Lisa Marie Confronts Michael in Hospital
   Debbie is Pregnant
   Michael’s New Family
   Lisa Marie has a Change of Heart
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   Lost Love
   The Martin Bashir Documentary
   HIStory, Blood on the Dance Floor & Invincible
   Justin and Britney
   ‘Everyone wants to be crazy’
   Fathers and Sons
   Michael’s World Caves In… Again
   Explaining Away His Pain
   The Way He Wants It
   Michael’s Latest Accuser
   Denials All Around
   Booze, Naked Women… and Michael Jackson?
   Family Dysfunction
   Jesus Juice and Jesus Blood
   The Time Line
   ‘Not Debbie too.’
   Coda
   THE FINAL YEARS
   What If?
   Memories of Santa Maria
   ‘I don’t recall seein’ any head lickin’’
   Debbie Rowe’s Testimony
   An Odd Defence
   The Verdict
   Aftermath
   Turning Fifty
   Gone Too Soon
   The Man in the Mirror
   Illustration
   Personal Acknowledgements
   Source Notes
   Bibliography
   Prologue
   I first met Michael Jackson when we were both children. The Jackson 5 had just appeared at the Philadelphia Convention Center on Saturday evening, 2 May 1970, their first performance subsequent to signing with Motown Records. It was a heady time for the boys; Michael was a very young eleven-year-old trying to come to terms with it all. I remember him then being happy, so full of life. Something happened along the way, though… we both grew up, but in very different ways.
   When I moved to Los Angeles at the age of eighteen to begin my career as a writer, I regularly interviewed Michael for magazine features. I clearly remember the day I wrote ‘Michael Jackson Turns 21.’ Then, there was ‘Michael Jackson Turns 25.’ ‘Michael Jackson Turns 30,’ and so many other articles about him in celebration of milestones along the way, and those of his talented family members. As he grew older, I watched with mounting concern and confusion as Michael transformed himself from a cute little black kid to… what he is, today. As a journalist and frequent chronicler of Michael's life, I had somehow to make sense of what was happening, putting the pieces of the puzzle together to see how they fit in with the Michael I had known of yesteryear. Thanks to my many encounters with him, I am able to quote at first hand his intimate reactions to so much of what has taken place during his life and career.
   In 1977, when I was at the Jackson home in Encino, California, to interview the family, Michael wandered into the room with bandages on his face; he was nineteen at the time. I remember being dismayed. I thought then that rumours his father, Joseph, was beating him might be true, and that bothered me for many years. Actually, as I later learned, he had just had the second of many plastic surgeries.
   In another interview, conducted after Michael had just returned from making The Wiz in New York in 1978, he mentioned to me that he had certain ‘secrets’ he didn't wish to reveal to me, adding that ‘everybody has deep, dark secrets’. I never forgot his words, especially as the years went by and he became stranger, his behaviour more opaque and incomprehensible to many people.
   Why are we still so fascinated by Michael Jackson after all of this time? Is it because of his awe-inspiring talent? Of course, that's part of it. The voice is instantly recognizable, and the dance moves are his and his alone. Just as he had been influenced by trailblazers before him, such as Jackie Wilson and James Brown, he has influenced a generation of entertainers. When you watch Justin Timberlake perform, does he remind you of anyone else?
   Michael is also an important touchstone for many of us, personally. Since he's been famous for more than thirty years, some of us can mark moments in our lives by certain achievements in his. Many of us are old enough to remember how impossibly adorable and prodigious he was as lead singer of The Jackson 5, and we can remember where we were at when the brothers first became famous. We may recall the first time we saw him glide across a stage or screen doing the magical ‘Moonwalk’; we remember the day we first saw the ‘We are the World’ video, in which he led an all-star cast in the first charitable effort of its kind in the United States; we remember his amazing concert appearances and groundbreaking videos.
   To say that Michael has succeeded spectacularly in his career is to state the obvious. However, as record-breaking and historical as his artistry has been, it is his private life that has kept many of us on tenterhooks.
   We probably also remember the first time we saw each of his new physical ‘looks’, and wondered what on earth that boy was doing to his face.
   Did you ever wonder if he was straight? Or gay? Or asexual?
   What did you think when you first heard that he had been accused of being a paedophile?
   Do you remember seeing the emotional speech from Neverland, during which he spoke of the police having photographed ‘my body, including my penis, my buttocks, my lower torso, thighs and any other areas they wanted’?
   And what of Lisa Marie Presley and Debbie Rowe, his mysterious ex-wives? Have you ever speculated about the true nature of their relationships with him?
   Now, he has children and makes them wear masks in public.
   ‘How does it feel when you're alone, and you're cold inside?’ Michael asked in his song ‘Stranger in Moscow’. Indeed, how in the world, we wonder, did he turn out as he has?
   Of course, fame twists everything. It's a strange phenomenon that no one but the famous can truly understand. However, ask yourself: if your entire life had been played out under heavy and unyielding scrutiny, made even more torturous by an abusive father, what would you be like? What if you were infantilized by an adoring public who celebrated you primarily as a talented youngster? Do you think you might, over time, be compelled to infantilize yourself? Out of frustration and desperation, might you revolt and begin to do whatever you wished without considering the logic of your decisions, the common sense of your choices, or the propriety of your behaviour?
   What if you also had an inordinate amount of wealth, giving you the power to redress your deepest insecurities and desires by any means at your disposal, no matter how extreme, and with no one around daring to challenge you? Don't like the colour of your skin? Fade it away. Never had a real childhood? Say hello to Neverland. Want to sleep in the same bed with boys? No problem, there. Don't like how you look? Change your face. Still don't like it? Change it to another face, and another and another.
   Why can't he see what's happening to himself? we ask about Michael. Why doesn't he understand? How does he see himself, anyway? As the King of Pop, a trailblazing, misunderstood musical genius whose career spans an entire lifetime? Or an insecure, basically unhappy adult with enough money and power to do whatever he likes and get away with it? Perhaps only one thing is certain: if you were an unfettered combination of both, chances are you would be like… Michael Jackson.
   PART ONE
   Introduction
   The bucolic town of Los Olivos in Santa Barbara County is a little more than a hundred years old. If a visitor wants a sense of the local history, Mattei's Tavern, built in 1886, is the place to go. One of many monuments to a by-gone era, it was a stagecoach stop where guests stayed overnight during their journeys, back when the only mode of transportation was horse-drawn carriage. It also became a stop-off point for the Pacific Coast Railway narrow gauge line, constructed in the 1880s when travel by land along the coast ranged from difficult to impossible. At its zenith, it stretched over seventy-five miles from what was once called Harford Wharf on San Luis Bay, south to Los Olivos. Passengers spent the night at Mattei's before taking the stagecoach to Santa Barbara, the next day. Today, the Carriage Museum is on this site, providing a visual history of the region. The original watering hole is now a charming eatery called Brothers Restaurant at Mattei's Tavern.
   One recent day, a strange-looking man came through the Museum with a boy, a girl and an infant. He was accompanied by two wo
men, senior citizens who tended to the youngsters, maybe nursemaids, one cradling the baby in a blanket. Also present was a male assistant who appeared to be in his early twenties. His eyes darted about, as if he was on high alert, vigilantly aware of his surroundings, of what others were doing in his presence.
   The older man, wearing a deep-purple, silk surgical mask, a fedora over ink-jet black hair and over-sized sunglasses, stood before one of the photographic displays. ‘Prince! Paris!’ he called out. ‘Come here. Look at this.’ The tots ran to his side. He pointed to the picture with one chalky, spindly finger – at the tip of which was wrapped a band-aid – and read the accompanying description, his high-pitched voice sounding instructive. In the middle of his reading, he admonished the boy to pay closer attention, insisting that ‘this is important’. The group moved from one display to the next, the masked man reading each narrative, beseeching the children to listen, carefully.
   After the day's lesson, the small group enjoyed a bite to eat in the restaurant. While there, they laughed among themselves, sharing private jokes, yet seeming closed off from their environment, never acknowledging the existence of anyone outside their miniature world. The masked man fed himself by lifting his disguise just a tad, rather than take it off. The locals tried to ignore the odd contingent. However, it was difficult not to stare, particularly since the children had been wearing masks, too – not surgical, though… just Halloween. They took them off to eat, and then put them back on, once again hiding their faces.
   In the early 1900s, a major new rail line was built thirty miles closer to the Pacific coast. Because Los Olivos had been bypassed by it, the population of the once-thriving town dwindled. However, it has since been rediscovered, thanks to an influx of tourists in the last twenty years. Now, there is an Indian reservation and gambling casino, as well as a number of spas and New Age healing centres. Small and locally owned art galleries, antique stores, gift shops, boutiques and wineries flourish in restored western-themed buildings.
   One afternoon, the masked man visited one of the art galleries. ‘Now, this one would be just perfect in the bedroom, wouldn't it?’ he said to his young assistant. He held up a small oil painting of two angels floating ethereally above a sleeping child. The assistant nodded. ‘Yoo-hoo,’ called out the masked man. ‘How much for this one?’ He and the curator conferred, privately. Then the man in the disguise walked over to his assistant and whispered into his ear. ‘Okay, very good,’ he finally said to the store-owner. ‘I'll take it.’
   
 
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