• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

FACTBOX: Landmarks in life of Michael Jackson

Tue Jul 14, 2009 11:51am EDT

(Reuters) - The musical legacy of Michael Jackson was celebrated at a public memorial in Los Angeles on Tuesday.

Entertainment  |  Music  |  People

Following are some of the landmark events in Jackson's controversial personal life:

* Jackson has three children -- Prince Michael I, 12, Paris Michael, 11, and Prince Michael II, 7, also known as Blanket. The children have rarely been seen in public without being veiled.

* Jackson married Elvis Presley's only child, Lisa Marie, in 1994, but the couple divorced in 1996. He married Debbie Rowe the same year and had two children before splitting in 1999. The couple never lived together.

* The singer claimed he was beaten and emotionally abused as a child by his strict father, Joe. Jackson's will, drafted in 2002, did not leave anything to his father.

* In 1988, he bought the Neverland Valley Ranch in central California, installed theme park rides and a zoo and named it after the island home of Peter Pan, the fictional boy who never grew up. He abandoned the ranch after his 2005 trial on child sex abuse charges.

* Jackson announced in 1993 he was addicted to painkillers and abruptly canceled a world tour to promote his album "Dangerous."

* The next year Jackson reached a reported $23 million out-of-court settlement with the family of a teen boy who accused him of sexual abuse. In 2005, he went on trial in California accused of molesting another boy and was acquitted.

* In a 2003 TV documentary, Jackson defended sharing his bed with young children and denied any wrongdoing.

* Dubbed "Wacko Jacko" in the late 1980s by British tabloid media after he changed in his skin color and facial features, donned masks and had a chimpanzee called Bubbles.

* Over the years, the pop star struck up friendships with Elizabeth Taylor, Liza Minnelli, Uri Geller, Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, Macaulay Culkin, Diana Ross, Deepak Chopra, Quincy Jones and Paul McCartney.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant)



More from Reuters

An image of U.S. President Barack Obama is seen in an exhibition at the Nobel Peace Centre in Oslo December 9, 2009. Two leading international human rights groups gave Obama mixed reviews on his human rights record on Wednesday, a day before he is slated to accept the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo. Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International urged Obama to use his acceptance speech on Thursday to renew U.S. leadership on human rights after its position was undermined by abuses committed during the Bush administration's war on terrorism. REUTERS/Chris Helgren

Copenhagen: What of Obama?

President Barack Obama’s decision to attend the climate talks in Copenhagen is said to show the White House is serious about pursuing a deal to curb global warming. What should Obama commit to on climate change? Share your views.  Full Article | Related Story 

     Tom Metzold, Vice President of Eaton Vance Management and Senior Portfolio Manager at Eaton Vance, speaks at the Reuters Global Media Summit in New York, December 9, 2009. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

    "Everything's not hunky-dory"

    Did the worst downturn in 70 years leave a permanent scar? Top money managers like Tom Metzold examine how a "new normal" will shape things to come.  Full Article 

    A crown in a file photo. REUTERS/File
    Special Report:

    No longer king of the hill

    When times were good, hedge fund managers could do what they wanted and people still lined up for a piece of the action. What will the post-crash, post-Madoff, post-Galleon hedge fund universe look like?  Full Article