Michael Joseph Jackson was born on August 29, 1958, in Gary, Indiana, the seventh of ten children in a working-class family. His father Joseph Jackson, a steel mill worker who had harbored his own musical ambitions, recognized exceptional talent in his sons and assembled the Jackson 5 in 1964, with Michael as the group's young lead vocalist. Under Joseph's strict and sometimes harsh discipline, Michael performed with his brothers from age five, developing his extraordinary vocal and performance abilities through relentless practice and natural genius. By age eleven, he was performing on national television with a showmanship that seemed impossible for a child.
The Jackson 5 signed with Motown Records in 1969 and immediately charted four consecutive number-one singles, with Michael's precocious talent drawing particular attention. The group's success brought Michael to national prominence, but behind the glittering performances was a childhood increasingly sacrificed to show business. Michael later described missing the ordinary experiences of childhood — playing, attending school, forming friendships — as one of the deepest losses of his life. These deprivations would shape his adult sensibility: his love for children's innocence, his Neverland Ranch, his lifelong longing for the childhood he never had.
Michael's 1979 solo album Off the Wall and then 1982's Thriller transformed him from a successful artist into an unprecedented cultural phenomenon. Thriller became the best-selling album of all time, producing seven top-ten singles and establishing Michael as not merely a music star but a definitive figure of 20th-century popular culture. His performances were elaborately theatrical, his music videos cinematic short films, his dance innovations — the moonwalk, the robot, the anti-gravity lean — instantly iconic. He was simultaneously the most accessible and the most otherworldly entertainer of his generation.
Michael Jackson's later decades were marked by extraordinary artistic achievement — Bad, Dangerous, HIStory — alongside deepening personal turmoil. His appearance changed dramatically over the years; he faced child sexual abuse allegations that he denied and that were settled or dismissed; his relationship to fame became increasingly complex and painful. He died on June 25, 2009, of acute propofol and benzodiazepine intoxication administered by his personal physician, at age fifty. His legacy remains both celebrated and contested — his music and performances widely acknowledged as artistically extraordinary, his personal life subject to ongoing scrutiny and reappraisal.