Toronto Star

Pop star George Michael dead at 53

Singer who shot to stardom in the ’80s with Wham! had tumultuous personal life

- NEKESA MUMBI MOODY AND GREGORY KATZ

LONDON— George Michael, the singer who rocketed to stardom with Wham! and went on to enjoy a long and celebrated solo career lined with controvers­ies, has died, his publicist said on Christmas Day. He was 53.

Michael died at his home in Goring, England. His publicist, Cindi Berger, said he had not been ill. No other details were released. Police say the death is unexplaine­d, but doesn’t appear to be suspicious, according to the BBC.

Born Georgios Panayiotou in London, he enjoyed immense popularity early in his career as a teenyboppe­r idol, delivering hits such as “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go,” “Young Guns (Go for It),” “Last Christmas” and “Freedom.”

As a solo artist, he developed into a more serious singer and songwriter, lauded by critics for his tremendous vocal range. He sold well over 100 million albums globally, earned numerous Grammy and American Music Awards, and recorded duets with legends such as Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, and Elton John.

Throughout his career, his drug use and taste for risky sex brought him into frequent brushes with the law, most famously in 1998 when he was arrested for public lewdness in Los Angeles.

Yet, he managed to turn the incident into fodder for a popular song that poked fun at his behaviour, and his acknowledg­ment of his homosexual­ity at that time made him even more popular with his fans.

Michael, with startling good looks and an easy stage manner, formed the boy band Wham! with his school friend Andrew Ridgeley in the early 1980s. Helped by MTV, which was an emerging music industry force at the time, the cheerful duo easily crossed the Atlantic to become popular in North America with Michael, as lead singer, usually the focal point.

He started his solo career shortly before Wham! split, with the release of the megahit single “Careless Whisper,” making a seamless transition. Critics generally viewed his Wham! songs as catchy but disposable pop and gave his solo efforts far higher marks.

His first solo album, 1987’s Faith, sold more than 20 million copies, and he enjoyed several hit singles including the raunchy “I Want Your Sex,” which was helped immeasurab­ly by a provocativ­e video that received wide airplay on MTV.

The song was controvers­ial not only because of its explicit nature, but also because it was seen as encouragin­g casual sex and promiscuit­y at a time when the AIDS epidemic was deepening. Michael and his management tried to tamp down this point of view by having the singer write “Explore Monogamy” on the leg and back of a model in the video.

At the time, Michael had not disclosed his homosexual­ity, and much of his chart success was based on his sex appeal to young women. His look was raw and provocativ­e, with tight jeans, tight T-shirts, black leather jackets and designer stubble, and his videos pushed the accepted limits with many lingerie-clad models vying for his attentions on screen.

His situation changed abruptly in 1998 when he was arrested for lewd conduct in a public toilet in Los Angeles after being spotted by a male undercover police officer. The arrest received internatio­nal media attention, and seemed for a brief time to jeopardize Michael’s stature as a top recording artist.

But instead of making excuses for his behaviour, he went on to release a single and video, “Outside,” that made light of the charges against him and mocked the Los Angeles police who had arrested him. Like all of his efforts at the time, it sold in prodigious numbers, helping him put the incident behind him.

These years represente­d the height of Michael’s commercial success, which at times was marred by a protracted legal dispute with his record company, Sony.

He remained a strong musical force throughout his career, releasing dozens of records and touring to adoring crowds despite a growing number of run-ins with police, many of them stemming from a series of drivingund­er-the-influence-of-drugs incidents, including several crashes.

His driver’s licence was finally revoked for five years in 2010 after Michael drove his Land Rover into the side of a photo shop with so much force that his vehicle dented the wall. A passerby, rememberin­g Michael’s early career, wrote the word WHAM on the spot his SUV had hit.

He was also arrested a second time in public toilets — this time in North London in 2008 for drug use, an incident that prompted him to apologize to his fans and promise to get his life in order. He also offered an apol- ogy to “everybody else, just for boring them.”

A year earlier, he had told a television interviewe­r that his problems stemmed from a self-destructiv­e streak and his attention-seeking nature. He said at a news conference in 2011 that he felt he had let young people down with his misbehavio­ur and had made it easier for others to denigrate gay people.

Michael was active in a number of charities and helped raise money to combat AIDS, help needy children and support gay rights.

He had a long-term relationsh­ip with Kenny Goss, but announced in 2011that the two had broken up. That same year, Michael made headlines once again with a performanc­e of Stevie Wonder’s “You and I,” released online as a gift to Prince William and Kate Middleton on the occasion of their wedding.

Also in 2011, he was hospitaliz­ed for pneumonia after postponing a series of concerts. In a tearful appearance outside his London home he said it was “touch and go” for a while.

Michael performed at the closing ceremony of the 2012 Summer Olympic Games in London, singing “Freedom! ’90” and “White Light.”

In May 2013, the two-time Grammy winner was airlifted to a hospital in London after being involved in an accident on the M1motorway. With files from Hina Alam

 ?? PAUL BATES/REUTERS FILE PHOTO ?? George Michael, shown performing in 2000 at London’s Wembley Stadium, sold more than 100 million albums.
PAUL BATES/REUTERS FILE PHOTO George Michael, shown performing in 2000 at London’s Wembley Stadium, sold more than 100 million albums.
 ??  ?? George Michael was a 1980s teen idol as the lead singer of Wham!
George Michael was a 1980s teen idol as the lead singer of Wham!

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