MICHAEL JACKSON fans around the world lit candles yesterday to mark the death one year ago of the controversial pop star, whose posthumous popularity has returned him to a pedestal and made him a billion-dollar man.
Fans in Hanoi, Vietnam, held a night of performances of Jackson’s songs while 50 Japanese admirers – one for each year of his life – were picked from 10,000 people to spend a night at Tokyo Tower among the singer’s possessions in the Neverland Collection, the only official Michael Jackson exhibition.
“The idea may sound a bit odd to Western cultures, but in Japan, the tradition of being with the remains and possessions of passed loved ones on the anniversary of their passing is an important ritual,” said Hiroyuki Takamura of the Tokyo Tower.
Jackson’s sudden death at age 50 on June 25th last year in Los Angeles sparked an outpouring of grief internationally for the former child star, who was rehearsing for a series of concerts aimed at reviving a career shattered by bizarre events as an adult and acquittal on charges of molesting a 13-year-old boy.
One year on, Jackson is again idolised and his debts a burden of the past. Hollywood trade paper Billboard estimated Jackson’s earnings in the past year have hit $1 billion, including album sales generating about $383 million and revenue from the film This Is It hitting nearly $400 million.
The Official Charts Company, which compiles record sales in Britain, said Jackson sold more records than any other artist in the last 12 months.
His sales of 2.77 million albums outstripped Michael Bublé's 2 million. Including singles, Jackson's sales in Britain reached 4.31 million for the year since his death. Man in the Mirrortopped singles sales, followed by Billie Jean.
In death, though, as in life, controversy continued to plague the star, with his personal doctor awaiting trial on a criminal charge of causing his death by giving him a powerful anaesthetic as a sleep aid and his sister LaToya claiming he was murdered for his back catalogue.
Jackson’s estate is also taking issue with a documentary, King of Pop, set to debut in Japan yesterday as the estate said the film’s promotion “misled Michael Jackson’s fans by making it appear as if this was an authorised film”.
“This movie cannot legally use any of Michael’s songs or recordings in its soundtrack,” the estate said. “Michael’s fans should also know that none of the proceeds earned by this movie will be paid to his estate which, in keeping with Michael’s stated wishes, strives to make sure his artistic legacy benefits his three children, his mother and the charitable causes that he cared about.”
There were no major tributes planned yesterday by the official Michael Jackson estate, which now controls rights to the Beat Itsinger's music, likeness and other memorabilia.
In the family hometown of Gary, Indiana, matriarch Katherine Jackson will unveil a monument outside the humble house where the legendary Jackson 5 began their singing career half a century ago.
A memorial and candlelight vigil will follow, ending with the song We are the World. Jackson’s children – Prince Michael, Paris and Blanket – are expected to mark the anniversary privately in Gary. – (Reuters)