Michael Jackson and other addict’s stars shine brightly. They take risks the rest of us do not.
Sometimes, it takes an addict:
Michael Jackson is not the only star who was likely driven by and succumbed to alcohol and other-drug addiction. Ironically, Jackson kept statues of Elvis Presley and Marilyn Monroe at his Neverland ranch. He bought the publishing rights to the songs of John Lennon’s Beatles. Those whose stars burned brighter after death according to one newspaper report, perhaps because of their early demise, include a whose-who of addicts: “Jimi Hendrix, Kurt Cobain, Roberto Clemente, Steve Prefontaine, Steve McQueen, Judy Garland, Hank Williams and Barbaro.” Except for the great long-distance runner Prefontaine and the horse, Barbaro, they were all addicts.
Although we can’t be certain when Jackson triggered his addiction, we know that alcoholism usually begins during the first drinking episode at an average age of 13. This could explain something that struck Michael Jackson: The Man Behind the Mask co-author Stacy Brown: “His fascination with being recognized as the best and the biggest, the most influential. His primary interest was always Elvis Presley. He was on a mission that he was going to be bigger than Elvis.” He probably succeeded. And that takes an addict.