
George
Michael performing in Poland during his 25 Live Tour.
Background information
Birth name
Georgios-Kyriacos Panayiotou
Also known as
George Michael
Born
June
25, 1963 (1963-06-25)
(age 44)
Origin
London, England
Genre(s)
Pop
Pop
rock
Dance
pop
Blue-eyed
soul
Occupation(s)
Singer,
songwriter
Instrument(s)
Vocals
Piano
Keyboards
Guitar
Bass
guitar
Drums
Percussion
Years active
1982 -
present
Label(s)
Columbia Records, DreamWorks,
Virgin,
Epic,
Sony
Music
Associated
acts
Wham!
Website
www.georgemichael.com
Georgios Kyriacos Panayiotou (Greek:
Γιώργος-Κυριάκος
Παναγιώτου) (born June 25, 1963), better known as George Michael,
is an English
singer-songwriter who performs soul
influenced pop,
and who (as a solo artist and half of the duo Wham!)
has enjoyed massive global success since 1982. His biggest commercial
success to date was in 1987 with his debut solo album Faith
which has sold to date well over the 20 million mark worldwide. George
Michael is one of the world's most successful male artists, selling
over 85 million records globally and encompassing 12 British #1
singles, 9 British #1 albums, 10 US #1 singles and 2 US #1 albums.
|
Contents
- 1 Early
life
- 2 Career
- 2.1 Wham!
- 2.2 Solo
career
- 2.3 Faith
- 2.4 Mega
star
- 2.5 Listen
Without Prejudice Vol.1
- 2.6 Listen
Without Prejudice Vol.2
- 2.7 Five
Live
- 2.8 Future
career
- 3 Personal
life
- 3.1 Sexual
orientation
- 3.2 Drugs
- 3.3 Politics
- 3.4 Residences
- 4 Discography
- 4.1 Number-one
songs
- 4.2 U.S.
number one singles (8)
- 4.3 U.K.
number one singles (7)
- 5 Awards
and Nominations
- 6 See
also
- 7 Footnotes
- 8 External
links
|
Early life
Michael was born Georgios-Kyriacos Panayiotou in East
Finchley, North London. His father was Kyriacos
Panayiotou, a Greek-Cypriot
restaurateur who moved to England in the 1950s and changed his name to "Jack Panos".
Michael's maternal grandfather was from a poor working-class English family
and his maternal grandmother was from a wealthy Jewish family.
Their daughter was Michael's beloved mother, Lesley Angold Harrison, a
former dancer who died of cancer in 1997.
He spent the majority of his childhood in North London living in
the home his parents bought shortly after his birth. In his early
teens, the family moved to Radlett and Michael attended Bushey
Meads School.
He began his career by forming a short-lived ska band
called The Executive with his best friends Andrew
Ridgeley, Paul Ridgeley, Andrew Leaver and David Mortimer (aka
David Austin). George attended Kingsbury
High School, briefly in 1974, as did his sisters Melanie and Yioda.
Career
Wham!
-
It wasn't until he formed the duo Wham! together with
Andrew Ridgeley in 1981 that success came for Michael. The band's first
album, Fantastic!, was released going to n.1 in the
UK and within a year they had released their classic debut single, "Wham Rap! (Enjoy What
You Do?)". Their second single, "Young Guns (Go For It!)",
became the first in a string of Top 10 hits in the UK
singles chart. They followed with titles such as "Bad
Boys", and "Club Tropicana". Their second album Make It
Big was their breakthrough, eventually selling
6 million copies in the U.S. alone and made them international
superstars. Singles from that album included "Wake Me Up Before You
Go-Go", "Freedom", "Last
Christmas/Everything She Wants", and "Careless
Whisper", which was released as a Michael solo effort. "Careless
Whisper", written when Michael was seventeen, became one of the most
played songs of the decade and was voted favourite record of all time
by Londoners in January 1995 in a competition run by the capital's
leading evening newspaper and radio station. He was also voted Best
Male Singer that year by the same radio station's listeners and by the
readers of a national newspaper. George also sang on the original Band
Aid recording of "Do They Know It's
Christmas" and donated the profits from "Last Christmas/Everything She
Wants" to the charity. In addition, he added
background vocals to David Cassidy's 1985 hit "The Last
Kiss," as well as Elton John's 1985 hits "Nikita"
and "Wrap
Her Up."
Wham!'s tour of China in April 1985, the first visit
to China by a Western pop act, generated enormous worldwide media
coverage, much of it centered on Michael. The tour was documented by
celebrated film director Lindsay Anderson and producer Martin
Lewis in their film Foreign Skies: Wham! In China
and contributed to Michael's ever-widening fame.
With the success of his solo releases "Careless
Whisper" (1984) and "A
Different Corner" (1986) stories of an impending Wham!
split intensified, and Wham! separated in the summer of 1986 after a
farewell single, "Edge Of Heaven", an album, plus a
sell-out concert at Wembley Stadium that included
the world premiere of the China film. The Wham! partnership officially
ended with the little-known single "Where Did Your Heart Go?", which
reached a peak position of #50 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart in
November 1986.
Solo career
George Michael desired to create music targeted to a more
sophisticated audience than the duo's primarily teenage fanbase, and
the first step of his solo career, in early 1987, was a duet with soul
music icon Aretha Franklin. The song, "I Knew You Were
Waiting (For Me)" was a one-off project which helped Michael achieve an
ambition by singing with one of his favourite artists, and it reached
number one in both the UK Singles Chart and the Billboard Hot 100 upon
its release. For Michael, it became his third consecutive solo
number-one in the UK from three releases, following 1984's "Careless
Whisper" (though the single was actually from the Wham! album "Make It
Big") and 1986's "A Different Corner". The single
was also the first Michael had recorded as a lead artist which he had
not written himself, with the exception of his turn in the Band Aid
charity project of 1984. The co-writer, Simon Climie, was an unknown at
the time, although he would go on to have success as a performer with
Climie Fisher in 1988. With this song George won the Grammy Awards in
1988 as Best R&B Performance - Duo Or Group with Vocal.
Faith
The first single released from the upcoming album Faith
was "I Want Your Sex", in the summer of
1987. The song was banned by many radio stations in UK and USA, due to
its suggestive lyrics. MTV
would only show the video, featuring celebrity make-up artist Kathy Jeung in basque and suspenders, in
the late night hours due to the music video's implied nudity. The
grounds that the song had been banned upon were completely the opposite
of Michael's intention, as the theme of the video had blatantly been
shown; instead of promiscuous sex, he showed the audience that the act
was a beautiful thing if the sex was monogamous. (Michael even recorded
a brief prologue for the video in which he said "this is song is not
about casual sex.") One of the racier scenes attacked involved Michael
writing the words "explore monogamy" on his partner's back in lipstick.
Many radio stations played a toned-down version of the song, "I Want
Your Love", which was mainly the word "love" replacing "sex". When the
tune reached the US charts, American
Top 40 host Casey Kasem refused the say the song's
title, referring to it only as "the new single by George Michael".
Despite censorship and airplay issues, "I Want Your Sex"
reached #2 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 singles chart on the week of
August 8, 1987. Moreover, the single remained in the Top 10 for six
weeks and the Top 40 for a total of fourteen weeks, becoming one of the
most popular songs of the summer of 1987. The song charted at #3 in
Britain, where the song's reprise maintained an audience for many years
thanks to BBC
Radio 1's breakfast show host Simon Mayo using a looped version as
backing music for his daily feature On This Day In History.
In 2002, several years after the major controversy that followed the
release of the song, the music video was featured at #3 on MTV's
countdown of the most controversial videos in the channel's history.
The second single, "Faith" was released in October 1987,
just a few weeks before the album. "Faith" would go on to become one of his
most popular and enduring songs, as well as being the most simplistic
in its production. "Faith" is just over three minutes long, the first
37 seconds of which is taken up by a straightforward, fade-up organ
introduction (based on the Wham! song "Freedom"). Eventually, a
two-chord guitar progression takes up the song with Michael singing a
basic but meaningful lyric about not being tempted away from his
relationship by an attractive third party. The song reached #1 on the
Billboard Hot 100 in the USA and hit #2 in the UK singles chart. A
famous video was made which provided some definitive images of the
1980s music industry in the process - Michael in shades, leather jacket
and a particularly memorable pair of tight Levis jeans and cowboy
boots, playing a guitar near a classic-design jukebox. "Faith" reached #1 on
December 12, and remained there for four consecutive weeks, easily
becoming the longest running chart-topper of 1987. Altogether, "Faith"
lingered in the Top 10 for nine weeks, the Top 20 for 11 weeks, and the
Top 40 for 15 weeks.
Faith
is George Michael's first solo album, released in October 1987 after
Michael spent the most part of 1987 writing and recording the songs for
his breakthrough project. In addition to playing a large number of
instruments on the album, he wrote and produced every track on the
recording, except for one, which he co-wrote. The album became a
massive success all over the world and the best selling album of 1988
in the United States; it reached #1 in the UK and in several markets
worldwide.
In the United States, the album had also an impressive
staying power, with 51 non-consecutive weeks inside the Billboard 200
Top 10, including an impressive 12 weeks at #1. In 1987-88, Faith
produced an amazing string of hit singles, including six Top 5 hits,
four of which ("Faith", "Father
Figure", "One More Try" and "Monkey") reached
#1.
By the end of 1988 Faith
had 7x platinum status; eventually, it reached Diamond certification by
the RIAA for sales of 10 million in the USA. To date, global sales of
"Faith" are over 20 million.
In 1989, Faith was ranked #84 on
Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 100 greatest albums of the 1980s.
In 2003, the album was ranked number 480 on Rolling Stone magazine's
list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. Faith was ranked 79th in a
2005 survey held by British television's Channel 4 to
determine the 100 greatest albums of all time.
Mega star
George embarked on a massive sold out world tour (The
Faith Tour) in 1988; he put together a spectacular and futuristic show
full of sex-related contents, providing night after night great
performances, sexy dances and his great voice. In the track list of the
show there were a couple of songs from the Wham! era (“Everything
She Wants” and “I'm Your Man”) and some classic as “Lady
Marmalade” or “Play That Funky Music”. In Los
Angeles George was joined on stage by Aretha
Franklin for a duet on "I Knew You Were Waiting".
While on tour, new singles off “Faith” were released picking at n.1 (“One
More Try” , “Monkey”)
and n.5 (“Kissing a Fool”) in the USA,
definitely giving George the mega-star status. The enormous success of “Faith” was
consolidated by a Grammy Award for “Album of the Year” in 1989.
In 1989 he sang backing vocals for his long-time friend
and Wham! bass player Deon Estus on a song titled "Heaven Help
Me". The song was written by both artists, and just missed reaching the
British top 40, but reached #5 in the U.S.
Huge success and megastar status didn't bring George any
happiness; as he says in his film “A Different Story”, he knew that
with “Faith”
he had taken wrong track number 2. Conscious of being a massive
celebrity and possibly a gay man, he started to think there was
something wrong in being a sex idol for milions of teenage girls;
beside that, the whole “Faith” process (promotion, videos, tour,
awards) left him completely exausted, lonely and frustrated for being
so far from who he was as a person, and far from his friends and
family. He clearly had the chance to become the best selling artist of
the world, but he decided that his happiness was more important to him.
That was the turning point, year 1990, when he decided and told Sony he
didn't want to do promotion anymore.
Listen Without Prejudice
Vol.1
"Listen Without
Prejudice Vol. 1" was released in September 1990. Following the massive
worldwide commercial success of his first album, "Faith", this album
found Michael trying to create a new image for himself as a
serious-minded artist: the title is a clear indication of his desire to
be taken more seriously as a songwriter. Michael refused to make any
kind of promotion for this album, including no music videos for the
singles released.
The first single was "Praying
For Time", released in August 1990; it was a dark and sombre reflection
on social ills and injustice; the song was hailed by critics as it
peaked at n. 6 in the UK and then reached n. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100
in the USA despite the absence of a video to promote it. George used an
echoey vocal effect and put the melody in a low enough key to take away
the sunny nature of his regular singing voice. It was the first song of
political motivation he had released as a single since his earliest
days with Wham!.
The second single was “Waiting
For That Day"; the song was an acoustic-heavy, reflective single,
released as an immediate follow-up to the comeback record, "Praying
For Time". However, the corresponding album "Listen Without
Prejudice Vol. 1", had also been released and therefore sales of the
new single were unsurprisingly limited. Waiting For That Day peaked at
n. 27 in the USA and at n.23 in the UK in October 1990.
In September "Listen Without
Prejudice Vol. 1" was released.
The album debuted in the Billboard 200 list at #22 but
quickly the following week climbed to #5, then to #4 and finally
reached his peak position of #2, being blocked from the top spot by MC
Hammer's Please Hammer Don't Hurt Em. From then the album managed to
spent the rest of 1990 inside the Top 10, and a total of 42 week inside
the entire list, not even the half of the 87 weeks spent by the
previous "Faith".
In the UK reaction was quite impressive, the album became
a big seller, even bigger than Faith. "Listen Without
Prejudice Vol. 1" debuted there straight at #1, although only for just
one week. The two following weeks the album was at #2. The album spent
34 debut consecutive weeks inside the Top 20, making in its 24th an
impressive sales increase with a #13-#3 movement. It spent a total of
88 weeks inside the UK albums charts, and was certified 4 times
Platinum by the BPI, in January 2, 1992.
The album produced 5 UK singles, which were released very
quickly (all of them in a 8-month period). They were "Praying
For Time", "Waiting For That Day", "Freedom
'90", "Heal
The Pain" and "Cowboys And Angels"(this last
being the only single ever from George not to get into the UK top 40).
"Freedom '90" was the third single and
the only one from the album to be supported by a music video; the song
was a highly-praised confessional project from George, acknowledging
his fortune and luck from his early days with Wham! - referring
directly to Andrew Ridgeley as his "buddy" - but maintaining that he
was a changed man, with a more cynical and grown-up attitude to the
business he was in. The song also alludes heavily to the struggles of
being a closet homosexual, and acted as a catalyst to his effort to
break free from his publishing contract with Sony Music.
As if to prove the song's sentiment, George refused to
appear in the video, which was directed by David Fincher, and instead
recruited a number of supermodels (including Naomi
Campbell, Linda Evangelista, Christy
Turlington, Tatjana Patitz and Cindy Crawford) to mouth the words.
It also featured the destruction of various symbols of George's past,
including the famous guitar, jukebox, and leather jacket of the Faith
era.
Freedom '90 was six and half minutes
long. The addition of the year to the title was to distinguish the song
from Freedom, a #1 hit for Wham! back in 1984. It had
contrasting fortunes on each side of the Atlantic - a #8 hit on the
Billboard Hot 100 in the USA, but only #28 on the UK singles chart. It
managed to become anyway a real classic in George Michael's catalogue.
The video was badly taken by the American audience who read in the
destruction of the “Faith” icons the refuse by George of his own
success.
The track "Mother's Pride" gained significant
airplay in the United States during the first Gulf War in 1991, often
with radio stations mixing in callers' tributes to soldiers with the
music. It reached n.46 on Billboard Hot 100 only with airplay.
In the end "Listen Without
Prejudice Vol. 1" sold around 7 million copies, but despite high sales,
it was evident that 7 million was a weaker number compared to the
then-16 million for Faith.
The reception was specially poor in the United States, where Faith
became the best-selling album of 1988 and Listen to Without Prejudice
“only” managed to sell 2 million copies.
Listen Without Prejudice
Vol.2
In 1991 George Michael embarked in the “Cover To Cover
Tour”, in England, USA and Brasil where he performed at the “Rock In
Rio” event. In the audience in Rio he saw and then met Anselmo Feleppa,
the man who would become his partner.
The tour was not a proper promotion for “Listen Without
Prejudice Vol.1” but it was more about George singing his favourite
other-artists' songs. Between his favourite song there was "Don't Let The Sun Go
Down On Me" a 1974 song by Elton John; George and Elton had performed
the song together at the Live Aid concert in 1985, and then again on
George's tour at a concert at Wembley Arena, London on March 25, 1991
when Elton John was a surprise guest of George Michael and where the
duet was recorded live for a single release.
The single was released at the end of 1991 and it became a
massive hit on both sides of the Atlantic.
As successful as the 1974 record had been, it was as a
duet with George Michael that "Don't Let The Sun Go
Down On Me" had its greatest success and reached number 1 on the UK
singles chart for two weeks in December 1991 and n.1 on the Billboard
Hot 100 in February 1992. The song was the only #1 single of the modern
era to be recorded at an outdoors venue. The proceeds from the single
were divided among 10 different charities for children, AIDS and
education.
In the meantime the expected following album, “Listen
Without Prejudice Vol. 2”, was scrapped for reasons unknown, although
it could quite possibly be due to Michael frustration with Sony. Among
Michael's complaints was that Sony had not fully supported the release
of his second solo album resulting in its poor performance in the U.S.
compared to "Faith".
Sony responded that Michael had refused to appear in promotional videos
and it was this that had caused the poor response to the album.
George shelved the idea for “Listen Without Prejudice Vol.
2” and donated four songs to the charity project "Red
Hot + Dance", which raised money for AIDS awareness.
Three of the tracks intended for the “volume 2” album
appeared on the charity album while a fourth ("Crazyman Dance") turned
up on the B-side of the single "Too Funky". George donated the "Too Funky"
royalties to the same cause.
"Too
Funky" was released as a single by Epic Records in spring 1992. The
song was lyrically a basic, animalistic plea from George for sexual
activity with an individual and musically it was the most upbeat record
he had released since Faith almost five years previously.
"Too
Funky" was George's final single for his publishing deal with Sony
Music before he started legal action to extricate himself from his
contract. The song didn't appear on any George Michael studio album,
although later it was included on his solo collections "Ladies
& Gentlemen: The Best of George Michael" in 1998 and "Twentyfive" in 2006.
The video featured George (sporadically) as a director
filming a number of supermodels including Linda Evangelista, Tyra
Banks, Beverly Peele, and Nadja Auermann.
"Too
Funky" was another massive hit all around the world reaching n. 4 in
the UK singles chart and n.10 in the Billboard Hot 100, and became
1992's most played record in Europe.
Five Live
George Michael performed at The Freddie Mercury
Tribute Concert for AIDS Awareness on April 20, 1992 at London's
Wembley Stadium. The concert was a tribute to the life of the late Queen
frontman, Freddie Mercury, with all
proceeds going to AIDS research. George Michael stole the show by
delivering a brilliant performance of "Somebody
to Love" sparking speculation of him joining Queen, although the
performance of the song was released on the "Five Live"
EP, a union with Queen never materialised.
Five
Live, released in 1993, features five (in some countries six) tracks
performed by George Michael, Queen and Lisa Stansfield.
"Somebody to Love" and "These Are the Days
of Our Lives" were recorded at the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert . “Killer” “Papa Was
A Rollin Stone” and “Calling You” were all live performances
by George recorded during his “Cover To Cover Tour” from 1991.
All proceeds from the sale of the EP benefited the Mercury
Phoenix Trust.
Sales of the EP were very strong through Europe, where it
debuted at number 1 in the UK and several European countries. Chart
success in the United States was far less spectacular. The EP peaked at
number 40 on the Billboard 200.
Five
Live sold an estimated 5 million copies worldwide.
Some of his other hit singles include "Father
Figure", "Kissing a Fool", "One More
Try", "Monkey", "Freedom 90", "Too Funky", "Fastlove", "Jesus
to a Child", "Don't Let the Sun Go
Down on Me" (a duet with Elton John), 2002's "Freeek!" and the
controversial song and video "Shoot the Dog" which is a
commentary on Tony Blair's partnership with George
Bush in Bush's War on Terror. In 1992 at the Freddie
Mercury Tribute Concert Michael stole the show by delivering a
brilliant performance of "Somebody to Love" sparking
speculation of him joining Queen, although the
performance of the song was released on the Five Live EP, a union with Queen
never materialised.
Michael's work covers a variety of pop styles, from
ballads to funky dance tracks. In a career spanning more than twenty
years, George Michael has been responsible for more than 80 million
record sales, according to his official website.
Michael was involved in a 1993 court case concerning his record contract
after his record company CBS was taken over by Sony. Among Michael's
complaints was that Sony had not fully supported the release of his
second solo album resulting in its poor performance in the U.S.
compared to Faith. Sony responded that Michael had
refused to appear in promotional videos and it was this that had caused
the poor response to the album. The case was heard in London and was
found against Michael. As a consequence, Michael declared he would not
release any new material until he had completed the minimum of his
contractual obligations to Sony.
The reason for Michael's departure from Sony, however, had
little to do with his record contract and more to do with the way he
was treated by then-label president Donnie Ienner. During a phone
conversation between Ienner and George Michael's then-manager Robert
Kahane, Ienner reportedly told Kahane "You tell that fucking faggot
(George Michael)..."
Unbeknownst to Ienner, George was listening in on another phone, and
Michael went ballistic when he heard Ienner's disparaging remarks. As a
result, Michael told Ienner that he would never record for Sony again
and proceeded with his lawsuit against Sony.
After the ordeal with Sony, Michael was signed by David
Geffen's U.S. start-up label Dreamworks SKG. Michael's single release
for "Jesus to a Child" was SKG's first release as well. After a few
years of lackluster domestic sales, Michael returned to Sony for his
new, highly anticipated album Patience.
It was released in March 2004 after two popular singles were released
through Polydor Records. Patience debuted at number
one in the UK album charts and number two in Australia. Globally, it
has performed moderately with 3 million units sold.
During the 2005 event Live 8, George Michael joined Paul
McCartney on stage, harmonizing on the Beatles' classic
"Drive
My Car". Michael did not perform a separate set himself because of a
head cold.
Michael was one of several remixers commissioned in 1990
to work on dance mixes for Bananarama's "Tripping on Your
Love". Bananarama covered "Careless Whisper" for their Exotica album in
2001, the track was also released as a single in France.
George Michael during a concert in Munich in 2006
Michael also released a duet single with ex-Sugababe
Mutya
Buena, "This Is Not Real Love", on 6
November 2006. It peaked at #15 in the UK Charts.
Michael received $3 (£1.5) million for a 1-hour concert in
Moscow for the 300 guests of Russian billionaire Vladimir Potanin for a
concert on the Eve of 2007 Some equipment was damaged in a fire
caused “by badly wired pyrotechnics that went off a few hours after
George Michael's band and crew had left”. This payment is reputed to
have made him the highest paid act in Russian history overtaking the £1
million paid to Christina Aguilera for performing
at the wedding of Russian oligarch Andrei Melnichenko in 2005. The gig
performed by George Michael prior to this highly profitable Moscow
event was a free gig for nurses in north London.
On May
12, 2007 in Coimbra,
Portugal, he began the "25 Live Stadium Tour 2007", which will tour
throughout Europe and will end on August 4, 2007 in Belfast, UK. There are 29 tour dates (as of April 21, 2007) over the whole
of Europe. In July 2007, George was fined £130,000 for overrunning his
show by 13 minutes on June 9, 2007 at Wembley Stadium, London.
Future career
In an interview in 2006 with Michael
Parkinson on Britain's ITV
television channel, Michael announced his intention to tour for the
first time in 15 years. In May 2007 it was announced that Sophie Ellis-Bextor
would be supporting him for the UK leg of the tour.
He also confirmed his intention to form a civil
partnership with long-time partner Kenny Goss. He told Parkinson they
would perform the legal ceremony and then hold a party. He also quipped
that none of them would be donning a dress.
To coincide with the tour, a new greatest hits collection,
Twenty Five,
was released on 9 November 2006, including four new songs. The lead
single, "An Easier Affair", debuted on radio
on May
24, 2006,
and was released by Sony BMG as a download on 19 June and as a CD
release a week later. This new single hit #1 in the UK dance charts and
reached #13 in the UK singles chart upon physical release (download
entered the charts at #74). This will be the fourth "best of" package
of George Michael material after 1986's "The Final", 1997's "If You
Were There" (both Wham! collections), and 1998's solo collection "Ladies
& Gentlemen", a double disc which went double platinum in the
US.
Due to an overwhelming response by fans to his recently
announced tour celebrating 25 years in the music industry, Michael, as
stated by his publicist, is considering a North American tour as well.
It has been revealed that Michael has been contracted to
make a guest appearance in the 2007 Christmas special of The Catherine Tate Show.
Personal life
Sexual orientation
Michael was initially private about his sexual
orientation, with rumours of relationships with high-profile women like
Brooke
Shields, Whoopi Goldberg and backing dancers
common tabloid
fodder during his Wham! career.
These persisted into his solo career, but Michael had
already established a relationship with a male Brazilian dress
designer, Anselmo Feleppa, whom he had met at the 1991 concert "Rock
in Rio". Michael and Feleppa enjoyed a loving relationship,
but Feleppa died of an AIDS-related brain
hemorrhage in 1993.
Michael's single "Jesus to a Child" is a direct
tribute to Feleppa (he consistently dedicates it to him before
performing it live), as is his 1996 album Older.
Questions of his sexual orientation persisted in public,
until April
7, 1998,
when he was arrested for "engaging in a lewd act" in a public toilet
in a park in Beverly Hills, California. He was arrested by an undercover
policeman named Marcelo Rodriguez
- George Michael: "Well, I was followed into
the restroom, and then, this cop – well, I didn't know he was a cop at
the time, obviously – he started playing this game. I think it's called
‘I'll show you mine, you show me yours, and then when you show me
yours, I'm gonna nick you!'"
After pleading "no contest" to the charge, Michael
was fined $810 and sentenced to 80 hours of community
service. Soon afterwards, Michael made a video for his single "Outside" which was
clearly based on the public toilet incident and which featured men
dressed up as policemen kissing.
Rodriguez, the police officer, claimed that this video "mocked" him,
and also that Michael had slandered him in interviews, and in 1999
brought a $10 million court case in California against the singer who
has amassed an estimated personal fortune of 70 million pounds ($100
million).The court dismissed the case on the grounds related to the
officer's status as a public official, but an appeals
court reinstated the case on 3 December 2002.
After that incident he became open about his homosexuality
and became public about his relationship with Kenny Goss, a former
cheerleader coach
and later sports clothing executive originally from Dallas, Texas,
and his partner since June 1996. Goss opened the Goss Gallery
in May 2005 in Dallas, which shows contemporary works of art including
those collected by the couple. They have homes in London and Dallas.
In late November 2005 it was reported that Michael and Goss would
register their relationship as a civil
partnership in the UK,
but due to negative publicity and his upcoming tour, they have
postponed it to a later date.
Drugs
Michael has admitted to problems with depression, which he
has tried to cope with by taking Prozac, smoking cannabis, and
at one time buying a Labrador Retriever, which died in
the Thames.
During 2006, a series of incidents occurred which
suggested he was still in turmoil. On February
26, 2006,
Michael was arrested for possession of Class C drugs, an incident
that he described as "my own stupid fault, as usual." He was cautioned
by the police and released.
On May
15, 2006,
Michael was found slumped over the wheel of his Range
Rover, photographed apparently snoozing at traffic lights in London. He
awoke after a member of the public knocked on his window for five
minutes, and was "sweating heavily and had his iPod on". He drove off
weaving up the road, and then hit a traffic bollard. Later the same
month, he was questioned by police after shunting three cars in the
street in which he lives.
In the early hours of October 1, 2006, Michael was found unconscious in his Mercedes-Benz
S-Class car, causing an obstruction at the junction of Cricklewood Lane
with Hendon Way, in northwest London. Police found Michael slumped in
his seat in a semi-conscious state. He was taken to the Royal Free
Hospital in Hampstead
for checks, and was then booked in at Colindale police station. He was later
cautioned by the police for possession of cannabis, and was released on
bail pending further inquiries on his fitness to drive.
He pleaded guilty on May
8, 2007 to
driving while unfit through drugs.
Michael's long term partner Kenny Goss has also been
treated for dependence on prescription sleeping medication, checking
into an Arizona-based
clinic for two months in June 2004 after encouragement from Michael.
Politics
Michael has often taken a public, socially conscious, and
sometimes political stance. In 1984, he sang as part of Band
Aid on the charity song "Do They Know It's
Christmas?" for famine relief in Ethiopia. This single held the #1
position in the UK music charts over Christmas 1984, holding Michael's
own song, "Last Christmas" by Wham!, at #2.
Michael donated the royalties from "Last Christmas" to Band Aid and
subsequently sang with Elton John at Live Aid (the Band Aid charity concert) in
1985.
In the 1980s during his years with WHAM George Michael was
very critical of Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government and
its cruise
missile alliance with the U.S. George said that he felt bad, since
through his taxes he was paying for these weapons, yet was obliged to
never dodge his tax obligations to his home country.
Michael also wrote "Shoot the Dog," a critical song about
the friendly relationship between the governments of the U.S. and the
UK towards the Iraqi War. In the animated music video for
the song, Tony Blair is depicted as the "dog" that follows his "owner"
(George W. Bush) everywhere. In George's latest tour, an inflatable
British Bulldog doll is seen fellating Bush on stage.
In February 2003 George Michael unexpectedly recorded a
live version of Don McLean's "The Grave" song in protest
against the looming Iraq war. Michael performed the song on numerous
top rated TV shows including "Top of the Pops" and "So Graham Norton".
The video featured extensively on MTV.
He is presently touring the United States with the piano
that John Lennon used to write "Imagine". On the anniversary of Dr
Martin Luther King's death (April 4), he is appearing with the piano at
the National Civil rights museum in Memphis, TN. Further stops are
planned in Oklahoma City, and Waco, Texas.
He devoted his concert in Sofia, Bulgaria from his 25 Tour
to the Bulgarian nurses sued in the HIV
trial in Libya.
Residences
George Michael ranks as Britain's 10th richest musician
with an amassed personal fortune said to be between at 65 million
pounds to over 100 million pounds in assets, real estate and currency.
George owns several homes all over the world, including one in London, one in Texas and one in Goring-on-Thames
in Oxfordshire.
Discography
-
Main article: George Michael discography
Number-one songs
The following singles are recorded and released by George Michael as his solo
artiest. For information on his group Number-one Songs, please see Wham!.
U.S. number one
singles (8)
- 1984: "Careless Whisper"
- 1987: "I Knew You Were
Waiting (For Me)" (with Aretha
Franklin)
- 1987: "Faith"
- 1988: "Father Figure"
- 1988: "One More Try"
- 1988: "Monkey"
- 1990: "Praying For Time"
- 1991: "Don't Let The Sun Go
Down On Me" (with Elton
John)
|
U.K. number one
singles (7)
- 1984: "Careless Whisper"
- 1986: "A Different Corner"
- 1987: "I Knew You Were
Waiting (For Me)" (with Aretha
Franklin)
- 1991: "Don't Let The Sun Go
Down On Me" (with Elton
John)
- 1993: "Five Live (EP)" (with
Queen & Lisa
Stansfield)
- 1996: "Jesus To A Child"
- 1996: "Fastlove"
|
Awards and Nominations
-
Main article: George Michael
awards and nominations
See also
- Wham!
- 25
Live
- George Michael
awards and nominations
- George Michael discography
- Best selling music
artists - World's top selling music artists chart.
- List of
number-one hits (United States)
- List of number-one
singles (UK)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the Hot 100 (U.S.)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the UK Singles Chart
- List
of artists by total number of USA number one singles
- List
of artists by total number of UK number one singles
- List
of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Dance chart
- List
of number-one dance hits (United States)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the Billboard R&B chart
- List of
number-one R&B hits (United States)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Adult Contemporary chart
Studio albums: Faith
• Listen without
Prejudice, Vol. 1 • Older
• Songs from the Last
Century • Patience
Compilations: Ladies
& Gentlemen: The Best of George Michael
• Twenty Five
Other albums: Five
Live EP
Discography • George Michael
awards and nominations • 25 Live • Wham!
Footnotes
-
http://www.advocate.com/currentstory1_w_ektid17437.asp
-
Amazon.com
Listen Without Prejudice, Vol. 1
-
http://www.femail.com.au/snapshotgeorgemichael.htm
-
http://www.jewtastic.com/posts/5056
-
http://www.yogworld.com/archive/lesley.htm
-
"George Michael fined £130,000 for overrunning
Wembley gig", AndhraNews.net.
-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6903105.stm
-
http://gaytoday.badpuppy.com/garchive/people/110998pe.htm
-
http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/ca9/newopinions.nsf/6BEA0A1BA36F0D2A88256C84000643EA/$file/0056923.pdf?openelement
-
http://www.unt.edu/northtexan/archives/f03/cheerextrafb.htm
-
http://www.home.no/cheznobby/id50.htm
-
http://www.prnewswire.co.uk/cgi/news/release?id=146309
-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/4483552.stm
-
http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2004210623,00.html
-
http://articles.news.aol.com/music/article.adp?id=20060227023809990006
-
http://www.cnn.com/2006/SHOWBIZ/Music/02/27/george.slumped.ap/
-
http://www.myvillage.com/pages/celebs-georgemichael.htm
-
http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/articlenews.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-10-02T054737Z_01_L02866398_RTRUKOC_0_UK-MICHAEL.xml
-
http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2006450634,00.html
-
http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,70131-1264521,00.html
-
http://www.planetgeorge.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1016&start=0&postdays=0&postorder=asc&highlight=
-
[1]
External links
George Michael noquotend
-->
Press articles
- Revealing interview with George Michael from
London Independent, in which he discusses his childhood, depression,
sexuality and friendship with Diana
- "George Michael faces $10m lawsuit"
- BBC News article, dated Tuesday, September 14, 1999
- "George Michael video case dismissed"
- BBC News article, by Peter Bowes, dated Thursday, February 17, 2000
- "Officer allowed to sue Michael" -
BBC News article, dated Wednesday, December 4, 2002
- "George Michael refuses to have HIV test
" -holymoly.co.uk
- There was so much death, December
9, 2005
Interview with The Guardian
- Singer Michael says cannabis keeps him sane,
October
21, 2006, Reuters