Skip navigation

Across the country, a communal remembrance

Thousands of Jackson fans gather to watch memorial in theaters, museums

Image: Hitsville
Carlos Osorio / AP
Tyuawn Brown, a Michael Jackson impersonator, dances Tuesday in front of Hitsville USA in Detroit. Jackson’s recording career began at the studio, the original home of Motown, 40 years ago.
Slideshow
Image:
  World says goodbye
Fans in the United States and around the globe pay tribute to the singer from afar.

more photos

Slideshow
Image: Michael Jackson: The face of change
  The face of change
During his brilliant career, Michael Jackson changed not only music, but also his appearance. See how his looks evolved over the course of his fame.
msnbc.com and NBC News
updated 4:27 p.m. ET July 7, 2009

Thousands of people streamed into movie theaters and museums across the country Tuesday to share a communal experience remembering Michael Jackson.

With the funeral for the pop superstar, who died June 25 at age 50, closed to the public and only 17,000 seats available for the hundreds of thousands of fans who journeyed to Los Angeles for the public memorial and concert, many of Jackson’s fans turned to local gatherings.

Demand from the overflow in Los Angeles threatened to overwhelm the famous Mann Chinese Theater, near Jackson’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. At the request of Los Angeles police, the theater canceled its live feed, b ut in dozens of others theaters and museums across the country, Jackson’s fans joined with kindred spirits to celebrate the life of one of the biggest musical stars of the 20th century.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Three generations of Jackson fans gathered at the Alamo Theater in Austin, Texas.

“My mom’s here; my daughter is here,” said Jackie Westbrook, one of the first people to line up at the theater Tuesday morning. “Basically, everyone in my family would have come, but we don’t live in the same place, so we’re all making a connection by all going to see it at the same time.”

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland opened a Michael Jackson Memorial Wall, featuring never-before-seen memorabilia. It planned a candlelight vigil in the evening for Jackson, a rare two-time inductee — as a solo artist and with his brothers in the Jackson 5.

‘Sad ... to see him again this way’
For many, the memorial was a final chance to say goodbye to an icon they first encountered as star-struck fans decades ago.

In New York, thousands gathered in Harlem to watch the memorial on a giant video screen at the State Office Building, chanting “Michael! Michael!” The celebration took place just a block from the historic Apollo Theater, where Jackson got his big break on Amateur Night.

Video
  Jackson’s impact on pop music
July 7: A look back at Michael Jackson’s impact on pop music and pop culture.

Today show

Moses Harper of Harlem, a Jackson impersonator, teared up and hugged a friend as video of the hearse carrying Jackson’s casket was shown. Minutes later, Harper began dancing to Jackson’s version of “Ease on Down the Road”' from the musical “The Wiz.”
    
Jackson’s fans “miss him,” Harper said. “But there’s a lot to celebrate.”

“I saw him once,” said Marleen Booth, a nursing assistant in Charleston, W.Va., who joined the crowd at Marquee Cinemas. “It’s sad I have to see him again this way.”

Booth recalled that she, her sisters and a bunch of friends from the neighborhood were lucky enough to see the Jackson 5 at the old Charleston Civic Center way back in the 1960s.

“I remember them running on stage,” Booth said. “The place was packed with screaming fans.”

Booth skipped work to attend Tuesday’s showing, even though she said she risked losing her job.

“I could always get another job, if it came to that,” said Booth, who said she was disappointed not to have won one of the scarce tickets to the event itself in Los Angeles.

“It would have been worth it,” she said. “I guess this is the next best thing!”

Family friend throws open his restaurant
About 600 people showed up at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit, while others chose to gather and watch at the historic Hitsville USA building, the original home of Motown Records.

Gloria Rios said she attended the museum showing to take in “the love, the emotions.”

“You can laugh, you can cry, listen to the music, reminisce — a lot of the memories,” she said.

Jean Murriel of Detroit said it was important for her to be other devoted fans at the museum instead of watching the memorial at home.

“I love Michael so much,” she said. “I grew up listening to his music.”

Restaurants and museums were getting in on the jewel-gloved act, too.

Harry O’s, a famous barbecue restaurant in Las Vegas, usually doesn’t open before lunch, but owner “Harry O” Harris threw open his doors Tuesday morning to watch the memorial.

Jackson was “the king,” said Harris, a longtime friend of Jackson’s family.


Sponsored links

Resource guide