Bangkok Post

Fans bid farewell

Superstar sold over 100 million records

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LONDON: Fans gathered in silence outside the London home of George Michael yesterday following his death aged 53, speaking emotionall­y about the late pop superstar whose music touched millions.

“He died so young!” said Karen Walkden, 52. “It was my generation, it’s absolutely shocking.”

Michael was found dead on Sunday at his other home in Goring, a village west of London.

Le andros Kalisperas, 39, brought flowers, a candle and a note. “He shaped my life,” he said, wiping away a tear.

Mags Sorrell, 60, said she had seen Michael in concert around a dozen times.

“He was not only a singer, he was an artist. He was an amazing songwriter,” she said. “On the stage, he looked at his happiest.”

LONDON: George Michael’s moment of liberation followed what seemed at first to be a time of deep humiliatio­n.

He was blessed with extreme good looks and an exquisite voice, attributes he used to become first a teenyboppe­r heartthrob and then a mature solo artist with videos that played up his considerab­le appeal to the opposite sex. He kept his own sexual preference private, until he was arrested in 1998 for lewd conduct in a public toilet in Los Angeles after being spotted by a male undercover police officer.

In an earlier era, that might have doomed his career. Instead of retreating, however, he made a single and video — Outside — that ridiculed the charges against him and mocked the Los Angeles police officers who busted him.

Everyone remembers the image of the two uniformed policemen kissing in the video — it was both funny and outrageous at the time — and the image helped Michael come out as a proud gay man. He was unashamed, unapologet­ic and ready to poke fun at himself even as he produced a steady stream of hits.

But Michael, whose death from heart failure at 53 was announced late on Sunday, struggled in his later years, fighting a number of health issues and substance abuse problems. His voice remained golden — at times it seemed there was almost no limit to his range — but his behaviour in public became ever more erratic.

Despite his great talent, he never found a niche for himself as a senior statesman of the rock world. His fans stuck with him despite it all and many expected one more comeback. People rooted for Michael, even as they felt he was slipping away, giving in to his torment.

Michael shot to stardom at an early age in the teen duo Wham! and moved smoothly into a solo career. It was a classic showbiz story — a lad named Georgios Panayiotou with strong Greek Cypriot roots takes the name George Michael and forms a band with Andrew Ridgeley that brings him wealth and worldwide fame.

The photos and videos from that era show Michael with long locks, piercing eyes and a cheerful, show-stopping smile. He was made for MTV, which was emerging as a dominant force, and he had a powerful video presence, borrowing some of his dance moves from Elvis Presley and sometimes styling himself as a motorcycle rebel who would have made James Dean or Marlon Brando proud.

He seemed to be on top of the world when he graduated from Wham! and started scoring his own hits, but later said he was struggling with his sexuality and remembers his late 20s as a very depressing period.

The Aids crisis was hitting the gay community extremely hard at the time and he lost one partner to the disease. He said it took him several years to recover.

“I had my very first relationsh­ip at 27 because I really had not actually come to terms with my sexuality until I was 24,” he said. “I lost my partner to HIV then it took about three years to grieve; then after that I lost my mother. I felt almost like I was cursed.”

He was unsettled and unhappy and, at the same time, became that rare artist who enjoys both chart success and tremendous respect from his peers. He sold well over 100 million albums, walked away from awards dinners weighed down with trophies and recorded duets with the giants in his field.

The long list of people who recorded with Michael includes all-time greats: Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, Luciano Pavarotti and Elton John, for starters. Their willingnes­s to share the spotlight was a sure sign of the way Michael’s talents were appreciate­d by fellow musicians.

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 boosted 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 at its height. 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.

His career was peaking, but a protracted legal dispute with his record company Sony took a toll.

As the hits slowed, he became better known for health scares and brushes with the police, many of them stemming from a series of driving-under-the-influence-of-drugs incidents, including several crashes. He was fond of marijuana and prescripti­on sedatives — the dangerous combinatio­n had an effect on his driving and several times he was found slumped over his car’s steering wheel, not moving.

Some made jokes about his erratic driving, but the underlying problems were serious. His driver’s licence was finally revoked for five years in 2010 after Michael drove his Land Rover into the side of a Snappy Snap photo shop with so much force that his vehicle dented the wall.

A witty passer-by rememberin­g Michael’s early career wrote the word WHAM! on the spot his SUV had hit.

He was arrested a second time in public toilets — this time in North London in 2008 for drug use, an incident that prompted him to apologise to his fans and promise to get his life in order. He seemed to sense that he was wearing out his welcome with the public, offering an apology to everybody “just for boring them”.

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 homosexual­s. By that time, many of his songs had become popular gay anthems, including those written and released before he revealed his sexual preference.

Despite these personal setbacks, Michael’s musical performanc­es remained strong even as his material moved further from the teen tunes that first brought him to stardom.

The Telegraph newspaper in 2011 described a London concert appearance as an impressive event, calling his voice, “A rich, soulful instrument. It’s capable of serious emotional heft, expertly matching the confession­al tone of his own material.”

He was straightfo­rward about his reasons for starting first a ska band with Ridgeley and later forming Wham!

“I wanted to be loved,” he said. “It was an ego satisfacti­on thing.”

 ??  ?? Michael: ‘Happiest when on stage’
Michael: ‘Happiest when on stage’
 ?? REUTERS ?? George Michael performs on the first night of the British leg of his tour at the MEN Arena in Manchester in 2006.
REUTERS George Michael performs on the first night of the British leg of his tour at the MEN Arena in Manchester in 2006.

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