|
Book review: 'On Michael Jackson'
01/16/2006 6:59 AM, Reuters Gregory Mcnamee
The year is 1972. Five
young men are boosting the ratings of any one of the dozen-odd
variety shows on which they appear regularly, laying down a
mainstream-safe version of soul music, closer to Bobby Sherman
than Stagolee and Stax. At their head, not yet the quintet's
leader but clearly the main draw, is a just-minted adolescent.
He is short, dark-skinned, a little husky, with a nimbus of
tight-curled hair forming a halo around him. He works the stage
as if he has lived there all his life -- which is just as it
is.
Fast forward 10 years. The young man is now tall and thin,
his hair elegantly oiled and groomed. He wears a tux, he is
very handsome, and he has grown still more popular as a solo
artist. He soon will release what will become the best-selling
album of all time.
Fast forward another 10 years. The young man has gone from
slender to gaunt. His hair is long and slack, hanging into his
eyes; his costume now tends to found art from Pepperland.
Strangely, his skin color is now very light, and his facial
features have changed markedly. He is recognizable, but only
just.
Thus the transformation of Michael Jackson, the subject of
"On Michael Jackson," New York Times critic Margo Jefferson's
sometimes elegiac, sometimes exasperated cultural autopsy of
the man who once reigned as the King of Pop.
In Jefferson's chronology, something quite mysterious and
profound seems to have happened to Jackson along about the late
1970s, when he finally was old enough to separate himself from
his "scary family." His psyche changed: "Think of his mind as a
funhouse," Jefferson instructs, a place populated by Elvis Presley, Diana Ross, Elizabeth Taylor, his parents, James Brown, and, more than anyone else, P. T. Barnum, who well knew
the rewards that can come from putting on a good freak show.
Yes, Phineas T. Barnum. By Jefferson's account, Michael
Jackson discovered Barnum's autobiography about that time. He
read it fervently and repeatedly, giving copies to his staff
with the remark, "I want my career to be the greatest show on
Earth." Soon afterward, he started making news regularly, not
for musical achievement but for doing such things as sleeping
in a hyperbaric chamber, wearing a surgical mask in public,
spending millions to turn his home into an amusement park, and
-- well, we all know the rest.
The greatest show on Earth turned out to be too much for
the world to handle. "By the mid-1980s he had a lot of us
paying more attention to the freak than the artist," writes
Jefferson, and Jackson knew it. Ever mindful of his public, he
spent much time over the next two decades doing damage control
for all the collateral damage he was doing, going on talk shows
to explain that his ever-lightening complexion was the result
of a rare disease, to deny having had cosmetic surgery, to
insist that there was nothing wrong with sleeping with
children.
Why these tremendous changes? Why the behavior that led
Jackson to star in the ongoing drama of a California courtroom,
from which he emerged victorious but fallen? And what of him
now?
Jefferson poses many questions as she ventures a few
answers, all of them provocative. Hers is one of those rare
books that would have benefited from going on a few dozen pages
longer; what we have is a smart, empathetic and just a little
sorrowful forensic analysis of a phenomenon, and a cultural
moment, gone awry.
Style is knowing what play you're in, John Gielgud once
remarked, to which Jefferson rejoins, "Rarely does Michael
Jackson seem to know this any more." The audience for the
artist seems to be disappearing. As for the audience for the
freak show, only time will tell.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
|