Regina Leader-Post

‘Dermatolog­ist to the Stars’ was pioneer of Botox use

- JOHN ANTCZAK AND JOHN ROGERS

Dr. Arnold Klein once said, “Put me next to a patient, give me a needle and I’m really happy.”

To which the man once known as Hollywood’s “Dermatolog­ist to the Stars” might have added: “Make the patient Michael Jackson and I’ll be even happier.”

Klein, who died Oct. 22 in a Rancho Mirage hospital at 70, was a pioneer in the use of Botox and other injectable substances to improve personal appearance. For years, however, he was better known to the public as one of Jackson’s closest friends.

It was a relationsh­ip that helped cement the doctor’s reputation as the go-to guy for stars such as Elizabeth Taylor, Carrie Fisher and others who wanted work to make them look younger.

Jackson’s friendship would ultimately prove a curse for Klein after the King of Pop died of a drug overdose administer­ed by another physician in 2009, and it was revealed that Klein had been regularly injecting Jackson with the powerful painkiller Demerol.

An investigat­ion found no trace of that drug in Jackson’s body when he died and Klein was not implicated in the death, but the revelation permanentl­y stained his reputation as one of Los Angeles’ most prominent celebrity physicians.

So much so that Klein had largely fallen off the paparazzi and gossip tabloid radar until he died.

No cause of death was given by the Riverside County coroner’s office, and no investigat­ion was planned.

Klein’s celebrity client roster once included entertaine­rs such as Dolly Parton and Cher, powerful Hollywood executives, wealthy Beverly Hills socialites and even internatio­nal royalty.

Klein’s favourite patient was clearly Jackson.

He called the entertaine­r “my best friend” in a 2011 interview with The Associated Press, adding that he had joined Jackson and Jackson’s children in celebratin­g the entertaine­r’s last Christmas in 2008.

Rumours persisted over the years that Klein had fathered two of Jackson’s three children with Debbie Rowe, a nurse who had worked for Klein and who had married Jackson. Klein denied it.

Klein met Jackson in 1983 when Klein treated him for a skin rash. He quickly became the entertaine­r’s regular dermatolog­ist, treating him for ailments that included the skin disease vitiligo that causes a patchy whitening of the skin.

Conrad Murray, another doctor who had been providing the powerful anesthetic propofol to help Jackson sleep, was convicted of involuntar­y manslaught­er in Jackson’s death.

During Murray’s trial it was revealed that Klein often provided Jackson with Demerol to ease pain during his friend’s treatments.

Klein told The Associated Press in 2011 that the publicity drove away some of his internatio­nal clients and political bigwigs who didn’t want photograph­ers to see them entering his Beverly Hills clinic. But he insisted his Hollywood clientele stood by him. Fisher for one agreed.

The actress told the AP at the time that Klein was a brilliant and ethical doctor who never would have misused drugs and who helped her immensely with her appearance and self-esteem.

“It’s like he’s a painter but the brush is a needle,” she said at the time.

Informatio­n on survivors was not immediatel­y available.

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Arnold Klein

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