Joseph “Joe” Walter Jackson, the patriarch and architect of the iconic Jackson entertainment family industry, died Wednesday after a battle with cancer. He was 89. News of his death was first reported by TMZ and soon confirmed by the family.
“We are deeply saddened by Mr. Jackson’s passing and extend our heartfelt condolences to Mrs. Katherine Jackson and the family,” John Branca and John McClain, the co-executors of Michael Jackson’s estate, said in a statement. “We had developed a warm relationship with Joe in recent years and will miss him tremendously.”
Jackson had a complicated history overseeing the careers of his children — including superstars Michael and Janet Jackson. He was the prototypical stage father, employing heavy-handed tactics with both outsiders and his children, which eventually led to sometimes strained relationships with his family later in life. Nonetheless, wife Katherine Jackson and several of his children were said to be at his bedside in his final days.
Born in Arkansas, the eldest of five children, Joe Jackson moved to California with his father following his parents’ divorce when he was 12. At age 18, he relocated to East Chicago, Ind., where his mother and siblings lived; there he began pursuing a career as a professional boxer.
After a brief first marriage, he met and married Katherine Scruse. The couple moved to Gary, Ind. Following the birth of their first child, Jackson abandoned his hopes of becoming a professional boxer and instead concentrated on supporting the family by working in a steel mill. The couple would go on to have 10 children, with nine living to adulthood (son Brandon died shortly after birth).
A guitar player who dabbled in a blues band in the early ’50s, Jackson noticed musical aptitude early in his children and began concentrating on developing these talents, starting off with his three oldest sons (Jackie, Tito, and Jermaine) and soon adding younger sons Marlon and Michael to the mix. The group became known as the Jackson 5 and was first signed to a local record label and then the legendary Motown Records in 1969 — eventually leading to massive international success as one of the first black groups to gain a crossover following.
Joe Jackson would also oversee the careers of daughters Rebbie, LaToya, and Janet, as well as youngest son Randy. Joe Jackson had a hand in managing his most successful son, Michael, during his subsequent solo career, but ceased that involvement in the early ’80s.
Jackson’s legacy as his sons’ manager is infamously laced with reports of intense training, including long rehearsals with corporal punishment meted out for mistakes. Son Michael detailed his father’s controversial methods as abusive, but also admitted that they were instrumental to his success. Jackson’s other children have similarly corroborated but also defended him in this regard.
“If you messed up you got hit, sometimes with a switch, sometimes with a belt,” Michael wrote in his 1988 autobiography, Moonwalk. “Dad would make me so mad at him that I’d try to get back at him and get beaten all the more.
“We had a turbulent relationship,” he said, adding, “Most of the time we just rehearsed. We always rehearsed.”
(Excerpt) Read more @ Yahoo Entertainment