Difficulties and resurgence in the life of Janet Jackson
Good news for Janet Jackson's fans in Europe. Her Together Again Tour, which started in 2022 to 33 cities in the USA, continued in 2023 to other countries in America and Japan and will arrive in Europe in the fall of 2024.
In addition, her net worth increased considerably in 2024, rising 7% according to Assets magazine. Reaching $380 million so far in 2024.
It seems ages ago that Janet Jackson rose to the top of the charts with songs like 'What Have You Done for Me Lately' and 'Miss You Much.' The singer is already in her fifties!
In January 2022, Jackson had released a documentary about her life. The program, 'JANET JACKSON' on Lifetime and A&E, describes Janet Jackson's early life in the successful but troubled Jackson family.
It also details her relationship with older brother Michael Jackson, whom she still defends against molestation charges; and the wardrobe incident at the 2004 Super Bowl halftime show that made a dent in her career.
Overall, however, the documentary shows Janet Jackson as a very private person. While she promised to tell 'her story' in the program, she revealed very little about her life that other media had not already uncovered.
Let’s go over the singer’s tumultuous biography.
Janet Damita Jo Jackson was born on May 16, 1966 in Gary, Indiana as the youngest of ten children. Her mother, Katherine, was a Jehova's Witness who raised her children according to her religion. Her father, Joe, trained his sons and daughters from a young age to become famous pop singers and entertainers.
As her brothers became pop stars with the Jackson 5, Janet Jackson performed for the first time when she was 7 years old. According to the Washington Post, she did two shows a night in Las Vegas at that age. Later, in 1976, Janet appeared in the television show 'The Jacksons'. She was just 10 years old.
Joe (Joseph) Jackson, the patriarch of the Jackson 5, has been said to be very controlling and even abusive of his children. The Guardian even reports in his obituary that Jackson would physically harm his children if they let him down.
In the documentary, Janet Jackson recalls "stories about my mother allowing my brothers and sisters to play outside, and then they'd see my father's car coming down the street and run into the house and pick up their instruments and start playing like they were rehearsing all along." She added that the kids would yell: "Joseph's coming, Joseph's coming!"
When the Jackson 5 became famous, the family moved from Indiana to Los Angeles and worked on their music constantly. "I don’t ever remember being asked" to become a performer, Janet Jackson says in the documentary. She was simply "put into" show business.
However, Janet Jackson denies in the documentary that her father was a "tyrant." She defends her parents by saying: "They just wanted us to be the best that we could possibly be."
Although she had a good singing voice and was part of a famous entertainers' family, Janet Jackson reveals in the documentary that she had actually had other plans: "I wanted to go to college and study business law," she recalls. "And [my father] said, 'That's not gonna happen'... What parent doesn't want you to go to college? But he said, 'No, you're gonna sing.'"
In 1982, at age 16, Janet Jackson signed her first contract as a solo singer. It would pave the way for her to become a pop icon of the 1980s. Her dad was involved in her music for a few years, but she fired him in 1986 and became truly independent.
Janet Jackson married for the first time with musician James DeBarge. They started dating when she was 16 and were briefly married from 1984 to 1985. According to her documentary, DeBarge struggled with substance abuse and that’s why they broke it off again.
In the 1980s, Janet Jackson became one of the faces of MTV. She was known for her R&B, funk and dance music, which she performed with an impressive choreography. Her many hits of the 80s included the songs ‘Nasty’ and ‘Rhythm Nation.’
Jackson's Rhythm Nation World Tour in 1990, her first, became the most successful debut tour in history. She had been inspired by Michael Jackson's Bad tour in 1988, US Weekly reports.
By the 1990s, Janet Jackson had it all. She signed an record-breaking contract with Virgin, making millions and becoming one of the highest-paid artists in the music industry.
(Image: Janet and Whitney Houston at an Oscars' afterparty in 1999)
Janet Jackson also played in movies. She starred alongside Tupac Shakur in 'Poetic Justice' in 1993, and next to Eddie Murphy in 'The Nutty Professor' in 2000 (photo).
In those years, Janet Jackson released some of her most popular albums: 'Janet' in 1993, 'The Velvet Rope' in 1997, and 'All for You' in 2001. Releasing hits like 'That’s the Way Love Goes' and 'Together Again,' she consolidated her reputation as a sensual performer and a talented dancer.
Jackson's love life was a bit bumpy. The superstar married the Mexican choreographer René Elizondo Jr. (photo) in 1991, but they divorced in 2000. Then, she started a relationship with Jermain Dupri in 2002, which ended in 2009.
More generally, Janet Jackson had a number of very difficult episodes in her life. It started with family issues - especially the negative publicity around her brother Michael - and continued with a fateful concert at the 2004 Super Bowl. And then, Michael Jackson suddenly died.
Michael Jackson was accused of inappropriate behavior with children on his Neverland ranch in 1993, and then again in 2003. According to the documentary 'JANET JACKSON,' it hurt Janet's chances of sponsor contracts (like Coca-Cola in the 1990s), but she never lost faith in her brother's innocence.
Janet openly supported her brother by making the song 'Scream' with him. The video, from 1995, shows how angry the two stars were about the negative publicity and the harassment they experienced by the media.
Michael Jackson suddenly passed away in 2009, after having gone through a number of court cases involving his alleged abuses. His sister Janet has continued to support him, though, to this very day. "I know my brother," she said in the 2022 documentary. "He didn't have that in him."
Another major setback for Janet Jackson was the 'wardrobe malfunction' that caused her breast to be exposed on live television during the 2004 Super Bowl halftime show. Jackson was performing together with Justin Timberlake. During one of their dance moves as a duo, a part of her costume came off.
The Super Bowl is one of the most viewed tv programs of the year, and the accidental showing of skin was a complete disaster. In the documentary, Janet's sister describes the incident as "horrible." She says her two children saw Janet crying as she was leaving the stage.
Janet Jackson faced a storm of criticism in the aftermath of the Super Bowl. She was "disinvited to the Grammys," she recalls in the documentary, and a music and media boycott caused her to get less airplay on the radio and lower album sales in the years that followed the scandal.
As the Hollywood Reporter claims, music fans and critics have argued that Justin Timberlake should have stood up for Janet Jackson. But as the documentary reveals in 2022, Jackson explicitly told Timberlake to keep quiet. "I said, ‘Listen, I don’t want any drama for you. They’re aiming all of this at me... If I were you, I wouldn’t say anything," she told Timberlake at the time.
She adds that she is not angry at him for the incident at all. But when he invited her to perform at the 2018 Super Bowl with him a second time, she said no. It would have been "stretching out the past, reliving something that happened over 10 years ago," she said in the documentary.
Over time, Janet Jackson recovered from the scandal. She started her own record label and produced her music independently. In addition, people recognized that she had been treated unfairly after the incident at the Super Bowl. CNN reports, for example, that some see the yearly sports event as 'Janet Jackson Appreciation Day' now.
Janet Jackson's successes became the topic of conversation again, and not her infamous 'wardrobe malfunction'. The singer holds several world records, including the highest number (18) consecutive top-ten entries in the US Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. The magazine also declared her to be the seventh All-Time Top Artist in 2008.
Janet Jackson also has numerous awards, including 5 Grammys, and in 2019 she was honored with a spot in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Meanwhile, Janet Jackson married for the third time. In 2010, the Qatari businessman Wissam Al Mana put a ring on her finger. And this time, she also had a baby boy in the marriage. Eissa Al Mana, her first child, was born in early 2017.
Although the marriage with Al Mana didn't last, and Janet Jackson's documentary continues to be secretive about this last episode in the singer's private life, it seems like she is in a good place. Let's hope that, in her mid-50s, Janet Jackson has reached a more peaceful chapter of her life.
Follow Showbizz Daily to stay informed and enjoy more content!