You're Wrong About - George Michael with Marcus McCann
Episode Date: April 17, 2024He turned a bright spark into a flame.(Part 1 of 2!)You can buy Marcus McCann's book, Park Cruising: What Happens When We Wander Off the Path, here.Content warning: this episode briefly discusses... suicide around minute 13.An extended cut of this episode is available for Patreon and Apple Podcast subscribers.Support You're Wrong About:Bonus Episodes on PatreonBuy cute merchWhere else to find us:Sarah's other show: You Are Good[YWA co-founder] Mike's other show: Maintenance PhaseLinks:https://houseofanansi.com/products/park-cruisinghttps://www.teepublic.com/stores/youre-wrong-abouthttps://www.paypal.com/paypalme/yourewrongaboutpodhttps://www.podpage.com/you-are-goodhttp://maintenancephase.comSupport the show
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If you need to wake someone up before you go go, where are you go going from and why were you there, you know?
Welcome to You're Wrong About. I'm Sarah Marshall and today we are bringing you the first part of a two-part episode on George
Michael.
In my personal opinion, You're Wrong About is often at its best talking about pop stars
and proud sex-havers, and I think this episode is no exception.
Our guest today is Marcus McCann, author of Park Cruising, What Happens When We Wander
Off the Path?
You can find Park Cruising wherever fine books are sold.
If you want to hear a longer version of this episode, we have put one out on Patreon and
Apple Plus subscriptions.
So head over there if you want a director's cut.
A Carolyn's cut, if you will.
Speaking of bonus content, we will be putting out part three of our series on Britney Spears'
memoir, which we're talking about with the irreplaceable Eve Lindley next week.
So if you want to listen to part three of our four-part saga on Britney Spears, head
over to Patreon or Apple Plus subscriptions next week for that, and the week after that
for an extended
cut of George Michael Part 2.
Thank you so much for joining us.
Thank you for being here.
Happy April.
I am excited.
I feel like we're at the start of a fairly epic journey. My relationship to George Michael is similar to so many other peoples,
which is that I like to listen to freedom when I'm feeling sad
and faith when I'm feeling happy.
And he's just knit into the fabric of our lives.
Oh, I love that.
I don't know. George Michael is...
I'll just give you my baggage and then he can give us the story.
It's just someone who, I was born in the late 80s,
so I think he was an absolutely ubiquitous pop star.
The music was there, he was on the radio.
His most shocking moment in rock, I'm pretty sure,
was that he had started off in Wham!,
which had, of course,
one of the most upbeat sounding songs ever recorded,
Wake Me Up Before You Go Go.
What a delight, yes.
He came out at some point as gay, his career continued,
and yet everything he did was regarded as somehow potentially sinister because of that.
I say that like it's a 90s thing, we're still doing it.
This is an incident that does not loom
huge in my memory of the 90s to the point that I forgot I was
very off in my memory of when it happened, but that he was
arrested for solicitation? Question mark?
Public nude, lewdness, yeah.
Public lewdness. And basically for, would it be correct to say
the man was merely cottaging?
Yeah, that's exactly what was happening.
George, from the time he's young, is asked,
are you gay?
In basically every interview, like during his wham years
and afterwards.
And then after the arrest in the bathroom
in Will Rogers Park in Beverly Hills,
for the rest of his life, now they're asking him
about park cruising. They're asking him about cottaging.
You know, we had a general belief, I think,
for a long time that any sex more interesting
than missionary with the intent to have a baby
was somehow a mark of an antisocial personality.
Right? And the question of where public sex fits into...
community life feels important in this.
Yeah, I think that's right. So... fits into community life feels important in this.
Yeah, I think that's right.
So to start with, maybe, can I send you a photo to look at?
Do you know what George Michael looked like
when he was young?
Hmm, not really.
I would love for you to describe what you're looking at.
Oh my God. I'm having a positive maternal response to this photo.
He's just got like this big shaggy bowl cut.
His head looks like a dandelion.
Big glasses, big teeth, just kind of like big features in that way where it's
like you're going to be a pop star later but for now you haven't grown into your face.
I mean yeah that's it exactly right. I also think he's got a bit of an air of androgyny
as so many of us did when we were...
Oh totally.
When we were kids.
With a few alterations this could be a photo of me in the seventh grade. Right?
And me too. Maybe all of us in a way. Yeah. So George Michael was born, Yorgios Kyriakos
Panayatou on June 25th, 1963. He's going to take the stage name George Michael. Actually,
between the release of the first and second Wham
singles, which is a bit odd timing-wise.
Wow.
Well, let's call him George, because that's
how he's known to all of us.
But George's mother, Leslie Harrison,
she's from a working class, North London family.
His father, Jack, is actually born in Cyprus.
And he migrates to the UK in the 1950s.
The story that's told about Jack is that he couldn't afford even a second class ticket to England,
and so he ends up arranging to work on the boat in exchange for passage.
And when he arrives, he's got nothing, basically no money in his pocket. Jack and Leslie meet in 1957 at, I think this is appropriate for our story, they meet at a dance.
We really, you know, you hear about dances in all these stories from this period.
We need to have dances again. This is why the kids aren't meeting. We don't have dances.
Well, I feel like, yeah, this would be a different, it would have a bit of a different tinge if it was like they met at the club.
HEATHER LAUGHS
The life of this family from when George is born
to when he sort of ends his teenage years
is this trajectory of kind of middle-class driving.
When Jack and Leslie are first married,
they live with another
married couple in a rented apartment. Jack's working first as a busboy, and then he works as a
waiter, and then the head of front of house. And by the time George is a teenager, Jack and Leslie
have bought a restaurant, and they're running a restaurant themselves. And you can also see this
kind of with like the musical instruments that George gets when he's a kid.
So when he's really young, he's singing in choir,
which requires no money.
He's playing the lungs.
Yeah, exactly.
By the time he's a teenager, like early teens,
he has a violin.
And like the violin is just the archetypal instrument
of middle-class longing, right?
The migrant story told by thousands of kids
forced to play the violin against their will.
Wow, yeah, that makes me think of an American tale
and how Papa Mauskowitz has a violin
and how then when you think about it at the scale
that a mouse's violin would be,
it would make the most annoying sound in the world.
Oh, like this sort of high-pitched screechy noise?
Yeah, but maybe to a mouse, it sounds perfect.
At the same time, and as he gets older into his teen years,
he gets a drum set.
His living situation is also changing in the same sort of way
over the course of his childhood.
So when he's born, his family's living
in a rented apartment over a laundromat.
And then when he's 12 in 1975,
the family buys a house sort of Northwest of London
and move into this kind of more affluent
middle-class neighborhood.
And like, I mean, I don't want to be too cute about it.
Like that sounds pretty unidirectional,
but I do think that this is a family that has come from kind of stark circumstances.
And the parents are just working really hard.
So Leslie, for example, is working at a fish and chip shop during the day
and at night working in the family restaurant.
And she hates it. She's like, describes her hair smelling like...
like fried oil and fish.
She doesn't have any time for herself.
She's in the chipmines.
She's in the chipmines, yeah, exactly.
And now, of course, we have to deal with the fact that everyone except the super rich seem to be getting poorer.
Well, I mean, that's it exactly.
The idea that somebody who's a waiter could then buy their own restaurant
and buy a house for their family,
that seems naive, right? It seems hopeless today.
Yeah. Good for the George Michaels.
George would later say of this period that he felt ugly and fat.
He would also say that he never received praise from his father.
he would also say that he never received praise from his father, and that he sensed his mother's discomfort with his sensitive side.
He was close to his mother, Leslie, throughout her entire life.
But here's what, you know, in a candid moment he says this,
sometimes I felt that my mom made me feel I wasn't man enough or boy enough when I was growing up.
I mean, it makes me think about like my understanding
of sort of beliefs about parenting at this time
or that like, if you see gay qualities in your child,
you must stifle them immediately so that he grows up normal
and can have a normal life and not be condemned
to living on sex criminal island or whatever, or collecting stamps.
Right. And the irony is that you behaving weirdly around this kid is going to generate the neuroses that's going to prevent them from feeling normal and accepted and loved, right?
and loved, right? Right, and it feels, and especially like,
Americans are horrible too,
and in many, in basically the same ways, right?
Like the apple doesn't fall far from the British tree.
But I feel like learning especially about like
English parenting in the 20th century,
you're just like, wow, they really were afraid
of loving their children.
Especially in the middle classes.
I don't wanna give Leslie a short shrift here
because also she's growing up in a culture
and she may have been thinking in the back of her mind
about her brother, Colin Harrison.
So this is George's uncle.
Colin Harrison was gay, this is her brother,
and was locked in a mental institution
in the 1950s and 60s. And
when when he gets out for a few days to visit his family in 1964, he
overdoses on pills and kills himself. And so George isn't told about this
story when he's a kid, he doesn't he only learns about his gay uncle much
later. Leslie didn't have any control over that. But she has seen really close in her immediate family
the effects of homophobia and how deadly they can be.
Are there things that you feel like could have been
within her reach in that time and place
as ideas that you wish she thought of?
She is giving George the kind of material advantages
that she thinks are important.
The reason is so that they can move from one neighborhood
to a fancier neighborhood to a fancier neighborhood
and go to a middle-class school and have middle-class friends
and George is going to have this middle-class life afterwards, right?
There's nothing wrong with that impulse on its own,
the desire to want to provide materially
for your kid.
But I think like it is a demonstration of affection, but it is not affection on its
own.
Right.
And I feel like it can also create this dynamic, you know, not necessarily in this family,
but certainly in some families of I have sacrificed everything and made one million chips so that you can have this life
and you're not going to cock it up by being gay.
Well, I mean, totally. As... And the family,
as George develops a love for music
and he's trying to get a record contract,
his dad is saying, you know,
you need to think about what happens when your dream fails,
because you're not going to be a pop star.
You have a terrible voice.
No one's gonna listen to you.
You know, parents are almost always right about that,
but some of them are wrong.
HEATHER LAUGHS
Right, but also, would you rather be right,
or would you rather inspire your kids to follow their dreams?
Right. Well, and I feel like there's also this idea,
and maybe this is more an American idea,
that talent is like this big lottery
and either you win big or you don't get anything.
And it's like, no, you, ideally you love the thing you love
and you explore the dimensions of it
and you find a life for yourself
within kind of the wider world of it.
Unless it's something where there's practically
no paying jobs at all, which I realize has happened
to some fields, but you know, so this idea that you either,
you either succeed 100% in the exact dream you had
when you were five or you haven't made any progress
is, we get too well or nothing about it.
When you're a kid or when you're a tween, your parents attitudes toward you or or views are
just so important. Like, there's this moment where George, he's a teenager, he has a demo.
And it's just like snippets of songs. It's not even whole songs. And he slips it into his dad's car. Why does he do that?
It's not like Jack has any influence
over the music industry.
He's not like trying to get discovered by his dad.
He's just trying to get a little bit of approval.
He is trying to get discovered by his dad.
I feel like with like a withholding parent,
you're like, someday they're going to discover me.
They're going to be like, Oh my God, I didn't realize this was my child.
I love them now.
The top of a dish has been taken off. Like,
it's a turkey dinner.
When you make sauerkraut. Yeah, exactly. Oh my God.
We were, we were picturing akraut. Yeah, exactly. Oh my God. We were picturing a different dish.
Yeah, exactly.
Oh, it's emotional.
I mean, like often the task of your adult life
is to be like,
actually I don't need my parents' approval.
Yeah.
Even if my parents don't understand this aspect of me,
I'm succeeding on my own terms, right?
Yeah, I'm really working on it.
It's a whole thing. It's a whole thing.
It is a whole thing. It is a lifelong project.
It's not surprising that George doesn't have those skills when he's 15 years old.
And is music something that's important to his parents, or is he just kind of on his own in that?
Music was important to them, and they put it aside because they're working so hard. Yeah. Like when he's a teenager, he finds this like dusty record player in the garage that he rescues.
And he finds his parents' old records.
And there's not a lot of them, but there's the Supremes and there's Tom Jones and there's Stevie Wonder.
Mm-hmm.
They met at a dance, right?
At one point, they were into pop music.
They were into pop music they were
into what music could make them feel. Yeah. And it's just like such a metaphor that now the
the record player is in the in the garage getting dusty. Yeah, they're too busy to feel.
Yeah. As he gets older, he's a he's like a musical omnivore.
He likes ABBA, he likes the Bee Gees,
he likes the Sex Pistols, he likes Queen.
So he's like, he's taking it from all over the kind of pop spectrum.
He's finding his sound.
Totally, right?
By 1980, he's into the Sugarhill Gang.
Like, he has to get these records imported from the US.
Okay, wait, I feel like
I've gotten ahead of myself a little bit. When he's 11, he moves to this this school in in the nice
neighborhood in Radley. And he enrolls at Bushy Meads School, great name, very British sounding.
And on his first day, he meets Andrew Ridgely. Mmm... Wow.
George is described as being shy and awkward.
He has big glasses. He's developing a unibrow, which is very cool now, but was not cool at the time.
And Andrew, on the other hand, is cool and confident and fashionable.
And they're an odd couple, but they become instant friends.
Andrew and George are going to be inseparable for ten years.
Yeah, and it also feels like as an introverted kid,
you do, you need to find someone who's more extroverted
and sure of themselves, and then it's like you have
a partner in crime for exploring the world,
which you don't feel you have license to do on your own necessarily.
Yeah, 100%.
Or like somebody that you don't have to start at zero
when you're having a conversation.
They form a band called The Executive in 1979.
So George is 16 at the time.
And they record a demo, which leads to nothing.
There's five of them in The Executive.
And as these boys start leaving The Executive, and they record a demo which leads to nothing. There's five of them in the executive.
And as these boys start leaving the executive,
Andrew and George start to discuss a duo.
And that duo will become wham!
George is writing some sort of proto songs
and they're trying to record a demo.
In a way, like this is my favorite time
to think about George.
We think of him as this
wunderkind selling millions of records and touring the world. He's like 19 and 20 years old.
But just before that, from 1979 to 1981, he's holding down a variety of jobs. He works at a car
wash. He works at a construction site, a movie theater. In 1980, his dad gets him
a job DJing at a restaurant. I do think there is something there where he is learning about
how people react to music by DJing at this restaurant. He's also hanging out with Andrew
and Andrew's girlfriend, Shirley Holloman. Shirley has a car and in the summer,
the three of them are like,
they're spending time at the swimming pool,
they're going to McDonald's, they're going tanning,
you know, they're getting ice cream.
They're like cruising around in Shirley's car
and also hanging out at George's house,
listening to music and being stupid teenagers
and making like
choreographed dances to the songs just to be fun.
Yeah, that's so great.
Right. In a way, it's like this is the moment when George is at his most secure.
He's like with his closest people, this like little trio, him and and Andrew and
Shirley, they're 18 and no one can tell them what to do.
Yeah, God, and you know, not to say that that's what's happening here,
but there are definitely like relationships,
maybe more in adolescence and young adulthood than later on,
where, you know, you're like a third wheel in a relationship
and nobody has the language to talk about it,
but you're really kind of like having a three-way in a lot of senses and you're just like,
we're teenagers, we're not gonna talk about it,
but everyone's confused and we like it.
And not that it's like a sexual relationship,
but just where you're like,
you're all kind of intimate and supporting each other
and you like choreograph dances.
Yeah, it's gonna be a part of his sort of
social support network into his 20s.
Like Shirley is going to become a backup dancer in Wham! and you're gonna see her in the Wham!
videos.
Oh my god.
What's his self image like at this point?
Where do we know about that?
How does he feel about himself?
Yeah, he's insecure. In his teen years, he's getting fashion
advice from Andrew and also from his sister Melanie, to like
straighten his hair to pluck his eyebrows to get contact lenses
so he doesn't have the glasses. Simon Napier Bell, who's going
to become his his first manager of Wh! said, George was like so insecure and trying to emulate
the cool and the aesthetic of his best friend.
And that by the time you get to the end of the Wham! years,
the power dynamic has completely swapped.
And George is the international superstar.
But at this moment, I think he's feeling pretty insecure.
He's gonna start going to think he's feeling pretty insecure. He's,
he's going to start going to gay bars and cruising pretty soon. He will say during this
period that he's still dating women. He did have a high school girlfriend, but it seems
to it seems that the most significant relationship in his life at this moment is the one with Andrew and Shirley. Okay. Wham signs with Intervision in 1982 when George is 18 years old.
Wow. Each of them receive 500 pounds as a signing bonus.
George is going to be like reasonably good with money his whole life.
So he doesn't blow it on partying or like buying stuff for himself.
But he does give himself one treat, which is he gets his ear pierced.
Ah, it's gonna be very important, I feel like.
Right?
I mean, iconic, right?
The George Michael pierced ear.
We can see that 500 pounds on him for the rest of his life.
Pretty much exactly that.
Yeah.
The first two Wham singles are not really big successes in Britain and
they're not even released in the US. They're not, they don't chart. In order to promote
their first song, which is called Wham Rap. No.
Oh, yes. Yes, it is. It's called Wham Rap. Like as soon as rap is making its bridging
into popular culture is having its moment, there are white people
doing it too.
And then that's how we make that happen.
Hey, George is going to have an uneasy relationship to race over the course of his musical career,
because his influences, he's influenced by Stevie Wonder and by Prince and by the Supremes.
And some of this music is going to sound, the echoes are certainly there.
They're very strong.
In the early, in the mid eighties, the American Music Awards renames the categories.
Like it used to be hot black singles was the category.
Hot black singles?
Yes. Yes, yes.
Now only for like adult websites.
But yeah, I'm speechless.
It gets renamed R&B Soul Artist, right?
Male R&B Soul Artist.
Which I guess is a bit of a dog whistle
when you think about it.
And George is gonna get nominated and win that category. And when he does, Dianne Warwick and others say, what are you doing nominating this
guy in this category? Right. When there's great music being put out by black artists that are
being ignored. And this is and is this basically like the one category where a black artist can
win something and he's in their category now? Yeah. Well, that's just it, right?
He... Just one more example of his relationship to race.
The Executive, the first band that he was in,
has this kind of like reggae vibe.
It's five white people from suburban London
making this kind of reggae two-tone music.
Who do they think they are, the police?
Well, exactly right.
Sting wasn't affecting a fake Caribbean accent though.
And that's part of what happens with the executive.
So it's good that they, you know,
this is like a bad idea that a group of teenagers have
that goes nowhere.
I'm happy to hear that.
It's great to throw away a first draft, yeah.
So Wham! Rap is the song that they're promoting in 1982.
The phrase Wham! Rap is really great. As distressing as the
implications may be.
It's quite something. I mean, the message I think is pretty
neat. And in the first couple of songs, they have this kind of like anti-authoritarian message.
They're basically like, if you don't like your job, you should quit it and go on the dole.
Why not? Very political. Yeah.
It was very political. And this is, and that's like, that is the first two singles that they're doing.
Anyway, no one is listening to Wham! Rap.
And so what they decide to do is start making appearances at London dance clubs.
Huh.
They basically go in and lip sync.
Andrew would like hold a guitar.
They would do it for like four minutes
and then slip out the back door
and go to their next engagement.
They would do like as many as five of these in one night.
That is a brilliantly insane idea
that only teenagers could come up with.
It's great, right?
And like, they're not just appearing at straight clubs.
One of their first appearances is at Bolts, a gay night at Lazer's.
Wow.
The boys decide they're going to change into these tiny little gym shorts to perform,
like, basically like go-go boys.
That's beautiful.
Well, and it's so the kind of thing that you get in these, you know, kind of teenage performance art
movies too, where it's like, if only they hear us or see us perform, they'll know we're
the real deal.
It's like, it's that, it's not egotism exactly.
It's just sort of like this beautiful childlike confidence in something, some kind of magic.
Like, or like a musical meritocracy.
Yeah, I love that.
I'm happy for the people who got to see those performances.
Totally, right?
And also, as they're doing this around London,
they have backup dancers as well.
So it's Shirley.
Wow.
Andrew's now ex-girlfriend, but still
close friend of the two of them.
And DC Lee, who would later go on
to be in the band Style Council.
You know, so contrary to this idea that if they if they only try hard enough, they're going to get noticed.
It's only because of a last minute cancellation on top of the pops.
Right. And this was a show that like just kind of everybody saw right if you were on top of the pops, like you would just be
known.
100% so like the the second single which is called Young Guns, had stalled out in the
low 40s at around 43 on the billboard chart. And after the appearance, it rockets up to
number three. They then re-released the first single, which hadn't done well, and it does
better because now they've got a fan base.
Because now people know it's cute boys singing and that changes everything.
100%.
Yeah.
The album Fantastic is a number one album in the UK.
Wow.
It peaks at 83 in the US.
So it doesn't have the same, the same cultural reach.
And I literally think that calling an album Fantastic is itself a bit gay coded.
And I wondered if that affected American record buyers.
I love it.
The next album is called Make It Big, which is also maybe gay.
Well, there you go.
That's what she said.
During the filming of this music video,
George comes out to Andrew and Shirley as gay.
How does that go?
He apparently told Shirley first.
And Shirley's like, we have to tell Andrew.
Andrew and Shirley and George talk about it, and they decide not to tell George's parents.
Certainly Andrew's self-recollection and what he will say in later interviews is like, I thought, I don't care.
This is just one thing in the sort of like great potpourri of his life.
And he never expresses like a homophobic attitude
toward George.
I feel like it's part of the kind of upward trajectory
that we like to imagine history is expressing
as it moves forward.
We like to assume that, you know,
there's a straight line of things getting better. And I feel like throughout history,
there have always been friends who have ended friendships
because of homophobia, and there have always been friends
who don't care.
I don't know, they deserve to be celebrated too.
Yeah, I mean, I just think of like,
what a risk for George in that moment.
Yeah.
Like, is he afraid he's rolling the dice?
Which kind of a friend is he gonna get?
And this is his family.
Totally, and it's also like,
they're recording the video for,
that's gonna accompany the release of the album,
the full length album.
Yeah.
Like there's a lot riding on them
continuing to work together and to have chemistry.
It's amazing.
And also it feels like that's a point where you're like,
we can't go any farther forward
without me telling you potentially.
Yeah, he feels like he needs to be honest in that moment.
Rumors about Georgia's sexuality are already brewing.
When he signs with his first agent, the agent gets calls from people being like,
I've seen him in the gay clubs. The guy that you just signed is gay.
In part, as a result of that, the record label starts producing content that shows him dating women. So there's a
manufactured story about him dating Brooke Shields, a woman
who is romantically linked to a number of gay men. Yeah, why
was that her job? Right? It's not her job. She's doing it for
free. Ah, maybe the worst version of it is that the Music Journal number one record sets
George up with Karen Woodward from Banana Rama. And they go on a date. And it's a date with Karen
and George and the reporter.
Wow.
Later on, Karen will meet and fall in love with Andrew Ridgely and get married.
And they stayed together till 2017.
My God.
I really thought the punchline was going to be that Karen is a lesbian and that's why
it's especially egregious.
I was like, banana ram and does sound gay.
True, true, true, true, true.
Cruel summer, very lesbian song.
Love that. It's interesting because everyone is participating, right? Like, true. Cruel Summer, a very lesbian song. I love that.
It's interesting because everyone is participating, right?
Like the music, the reporters are on the one hand reporting rumors that he's gay and also
setting him up with Karen Woodward on this fake date.
Yeah, because I guess both stories are profitable.
Right?
I guess that's the moral of the moral of it.
That's how reality is generated.
He will later say that he wishes that he had been more honest early earlier.
He's getting asked, though, constantly every time he does media, are you gay?
And at first, he's like trying to be cute about it.
He says, like, things like, well, you know, I don't think you should have to answer that.
Anyone should have to answer that question. Or like David Bowie and Mick Jagger were allowed to live in a kind of ambiguous space.
Why am I not allowed to? Later on, he's going to say like he starts saying to reporters who ask, it doesn't matter what I tell you because you're not going to believe me anyway. And all of that sounds very defensive to me.
Right.
You may think so, but I couldn't possibly comment.
Yeah, right. Exactly.
Around this time, they go on tour.
So this is just in the UK for a relatively young band
with only nine songs to their name.
It is a massive event.
It must be a short concert.
Right. They do some covers and they spice it up a little bit. But in order to finance it,
they get an endorsement deal from Fila, the like, athleisure clothing company.
And they wear these tiny matching tennis shorts on the tour. I just sent you a photo if you want
to have a look at it. Oh, shit. I think many people believe this the tour. I just sent you a photo if you wanna have a look at the inbox. Oh, shit.
I think many people believe this as well.
I think basketball really needs to return
to having men wear hot pants.
Oh, yeah, yeah, those are good days.
I don't know why we stopped.
So yeah, so George Michael is wearing
a lemon yellow Fila athleisure suit, I guess, with
yeah, the short shorts.
It's just great, you know, it's just how I think everyone should dress if they feel like
it.
It's so adorable, right?
Yeah.
We think of Wham's music as being kind of like cheerfully neutered, that it's like not sexual.
And these photos, they are in the basically male lingerie.
If you need to wake someone up before you go go, if you're with them in the morning
and you're go going, where you go going from and why were you there, you know?
The music press responds with a kind of bafflement to, to wham and wham success.
Like they can't see these girls who are just losing their mind for Andrew and
George.
For as long as there's been pop culture,
teenage girls have loved a segment of it that everyone else has then acted
confused about. But it's like, I don't know,
I don't think it's ever that confusing.
I think we like to act like we can't see the value
in something because we like to performatively revile
what teenage girls care about,
because as a culture, we think they're stupid.
Yeah, there's something like,
like our culture says it's okay to sexualize teen girls,
but when they're the ones doing the
desiring when it's their desire, that's the moment when we're like, Nope, shut it down. Yeah, whatever
it is that they're desiring isn't serious isn't worthy of our attention. We can only react with,
with surprise or incomprehension. Yeah, it's so frustrating that it's like the only really socially suspect thing you can do with a teenage girl is care about her feelings.
Whoa. Yeah. Or like, listen to what she has to say.
Yeah, we have a lot to do. I mean, I don't I'm a grown up. I like wham. I never stopped liking them. I don't know why it's hard for people. Totally right. Maybe, yeah, maybe it's easier now that teen girls
are into euphoria and like this sort of like extremely dark.
Yeah, we're like, no, do wham again.
Yeah, I mean, it's funny that we're
having this conversation about George at 20,
because his relationship to aging
is going to be very public as he gets older in the 90s.
But for now, you mentioned
make it big. So that's the next thing that happens. They released this album that is
going to be massive in the UK and in the US. It's going to go six times platinum in the
US and sell 10 million records worldwide. My God. It's going to spawn four massive
singles we were talking about Wake Me Up Before You Go Go.
There's also Careless Whisper is on there and Freedom and Everything She Wants.
Yeah, I can't believe Careless Whisper was on that early.
The mythology of Careless Whisper is that he writes it when he's 17, taking the bus
out to that DJ gig.
That's insane.
Yeah, yeah. I find that disheartening.
Like people, I'm sure many people disagree,
but I think Careless Whisper is incredible.
It's a, it's a bop, right?
Like there's a reason that we're still,
we're still singing it.
It's also, so it is on this album,
but when they release it as a single,
they're going to call it a George Michael single.
They're not going to call it a Wham single.
And in some parts of the world, they release it as Wham featuring George Michael.
Oh, okay. And is this like a record company idea or what? What's happening here?
He's sort of like stepping out, stepping out from behind the shadows. He's taking center stage.
Wow.
He also, he records it twice. He records it first in like a very famous studio in Alabama.
And he doesn't like the results. It sure is. Yes. Amazing. When he's he does it when he's
like 19 records it and he doesn't like it. So he re-records it. They like even shot a
music video for it. And they have to like take apart
the music video and use what little pieces they can because his voice is no longer synced
to it.
That's amazing that he was able to do that, honestly.
Totally, right? Are we going to talk about the saxophone on it?
I mean, I feel like we have to. It's like the elephant in the room. Like what's going
on with, yeah, how'd the saxophone get in there?
So, I mean, apparently in the first rendition, there's like a session musician who plays the sax on it and George doesn't like it.
They fly in someone else from New York. George doesn't really like it either.
And then when they're re-recording it, he just like auditions people all day.
And the version of it that gets recorded is recorded on an older
saxophone that doesn't have the high note. Like there's just no you can't play it. And so they
transport transpose the whole thing down a half tone. He plays it, they love it, and they speed
it up a half tone. And that's the version that's on the record. There's a feeling of uncanniness.
It feels a little artificial or plasticky.
And like maybe that is the recording technique,
but also it's literally been sped up.
It's been put into a different key.
Yeah, it's a ghost saxophone.
God, I really love that.
I don't know, pop music is so hard to understand
from the outside because some of it is like so manufactured
and the artist is just kind of, you know,
moved through it as if by peristalsis.
And sometimes you're really looking at an auteur.
And I love that, you know, he was like,
I will find the correct saxophone for this.
And I'm going to get a saxophone audition day and it is
it's I mean I don't know and we've talked about you know recently the
Carpenters and Fleetwood Mac on the show and Sinead O'Connor I think fits less
into this but I think George Michael too like these are these are artists that
are important to me anyway because they made pop music that is pretty
deathless because it just somehow coheres into a perfect
hole that you then can listen to, you know, for the rest of
your life. Like, I'll never... I'll always have a nice few
minutes ahead of me in my life whenever Careless Whisper
comes on the radio.
Like, it's so hard to make something that doesn't feel A nice few minutes ahead of me in my life whenever Careless Whisper comes on the radio.
Like, it's so hard to make something
that doesn't feel heavy and plodding
when you're a perfectionist.
And he does it on this album.
I love it. I love that there's artistic triumph in this story
and that he has, you know, a feeling of agency
within all this.
Totally, right? So he's like, these singles are massive singles. There massive singles. There's one more single in 1984, which
is the Last Christmas song.
Oh my god.
A truly deathless song.
George Michael is going to have an evolving relationship
with monogamy.
By the time we get into the 90s, he's
talking about casual encounters and has a has a relationship to sex and sexuality, which goes well beyond monogamy.
I think that's actually common that people have an evolving understanding of their sexuality and what you want when you're 20 might not be the same thing that you want when you're 40. Oh, yeah.
I feel like in a way young people are a lot more wired for monogamy than older people,
because when you're 20, you can imagine loving the same person forever and only wanting to
have sex with them forever.
And then you're 21 and you're like, oh my God.
Totally, right? you're like, oh my God. Totally right. I also think because the world is just,
it's just serving these pro monogamy tropes
over and over and over again,
that there's only one way to love.
Right.
Where's the great polyamorous romance movie,
the polyamorous approach to polyamory on the Titanic.
Well, I mean, the problem is that it would just be like
one endless house meeting.
It would be like three hours of one conversation.
1984 and 1985 are a whirlwind.
They're making music videos for the singles.
They're touring the album.
The US tour is called Whamerica.
Ha ha ha ha.
I really love that.
Yeah.
So delightful.
And it's like a stadium tour and the music industry is surprised that it's such a big
hit.
And it's the same thing as back in England, thousands and thousands of teen girls and
young women screaming at the top of their lungs, every word of every song. So the teen girl vote is suddenly elevating Wham
and making us all Whamericans, it sounds like.
Totally, yeah.
It's they're Whamerica and we just live here.
Yeah, exactly.
I've always said that.
But that's it.
At the height of their fame, George tells Andrew
he wants out.
And early in 1986, they announce Wham is splitting
up.
Wow, that is a very, so they were only on the scene for like four years.
Yeah, and really less than that. And they were barely making a blip in the United States
until 1984. So really just two or two and a half years of extreme celebrity though,
right? Like he cannot go out in public.
Everywhere he goes, he's mobbed by women and girls.
Listen, girls, I get it.
Just look at him.
But you got to let people go about their day.
He wanted to be the biggest act in the world.
And now he is.
That's the thing too, right?
What do we do with that?
And I feel like fame is fundamentally something that the human brain isn't designed to compute. What George says at the time is that the
kind of clean cut, cheerful image of Wham was Andrew's idea. And it doesn't suit him anymore.
I mean, he says some pretty nasty things like offhandedly about Andrew. Basically, he tells
reporters that Andrew didn't contribute anything to make
it big. And it's not good for his ego. It feels bad for Andrew to get dragged around
like this. And so it's time to split up the band.
What do you think about those statements?
I do think that there is this kind of power reversal that has happened over the course of the years of Wham, where now George is the main guy and Andrew's the sidekick,
whereas it had never been that way.
Andrew is also going to release a solo record.
It's not gonna do anything,
but they are both going to continue making music, obviously.
I will also say, because he announces
that they're going to split months before it's
over, they have an opportunity to do something which I think is kind of nice.
They release a final single which is the Edge of Heaven.
They release a compilation album and they do a big final concert at Wembley City.
And that's it, right?
The lights come up, Wham is over. Wow. George is 23 years old.
Oh my god. I think there is something nice about George being honest with Andrew,
and then giving a lead time, letting everybody have their like, last interactions, doing a final
concert and a final single like that. I think that's nice. Okay, so we're having an ethical we're consciously uncoupling
wham.
That's right. That's right. I mean, he's saying some pretty
nasty things about Andrew at this time. But I do think that
there's a kind of honesty to it that I appreciate. After he
leaves, he goes to a recording studio in Denmark, he spends two
months there and he comes out with the faith album basically in hand. It's a lot of talent for one person to have. I'm kind of shocked by how
much he's producing in such a short period. 100% right. Like and this album is going to have six
big singles on it. It's going to sell 15 million copies at the time. By now it's sold more than 25
million copies. Yeah.
The first single is actually not a number one hit. The first single is I Want Your Sex.
It's kind of like Zac Efron being in that Ted Bundy movie. He's like, I'm a grown up.
Well, right. I think there is this deliberate, he's shifting his image by releasing I Want Your Sex as a single.
As you can imagine, US radio refuses to play it. A lot of radio stations won't. This is
like very tipper gore 1988. On the BBC, they won't play it before 9pm. In the US, a lot of radio
stations bleep out the word sex or overdub it with the word love or something else.
Wow, that's really good.
Well, right, so this is the thing.
The themes of it are also kind of at odds
with the cultural moment.
You're at the height of the AIDS panic.
Like there are gay folks who are recommending
the abandonment of casual sex altogether,
like either through abstinence or through partnering up.
And there's like this kind of mainstream,
I don't know, fear of contagion.
And so in that kind of soup,
George has to respond to allegations
that he is promoting sex like he invented it.
And he leans into one of the lyrics,
which is sex is better when it's one-on-one.
And in the video, he writes on Cathy's body,
explore monogamy. That is not what that song is about,
but he is hedging his bets, you know?
He would later say he regretted not being...
not having the courage of his convictions
to promote his song in an unapologetic way.
So, George Michael is upsetting the moral majority, which is always ideal for a pop star.
Right. And he's also got this kind of like quasi religious imagery that he's using on the album cover.
Right. And the album is called Faith.
The second single is called Faith.
He's got an earring that has a cross on it.
Right. So there is some sort of religious iconography going on as well.
Because like in the like a prayer controversy.
It's like also, I mean, on first blush, you might think that when
he's singing faith, it's like faith in a romantic partner,
right? But he's not saying that at all. He's saying I'm going to
leave my romantic partner who I feel is insufficiently invested
in me. And I'm going to because I have faith
that I will find something bigger and better out there. Yeah. So that like the faith he
has is in himself. Yeah, you feel it is one of those signs that it's hard to be in a bad
mood for as long as it's playing. In 1988, he begins the global tour of faith. And he later says that he thought
he would have a more sophisticated grown up audience.
That back in the Wham days, he had been overwhelmed
by the hormonal teens, you know?
But he goes on the faith tour and it is the same or worse.
Understandably, they're just a few years older.
It's hard to understand George's surprise in a way.
He's like producing the kind of perfect firestorm.
He's doing it on purpose.
And I think you can have both of those feelings
at the same time that like, I wanted this,
and gosh, this is hard.
He's got a personal chef and a personal trainer.
He's working out for four hours a day, some days.
And he wanted to go solo, but now he's really genuinely alone.
His best friends aren't there with him anymore.
Right.
And confronting that as a solo artist rather than part of a unit seems in many ways, McArthur.
He said, here's a quote from him.
He says, the more people you employ,
the more people you have in your life
who can't be honest with you.
And that's what I find most distressing about touring.
Yeah.
On the one hand, we don't have to have
like limitless sympathy for him.
He's doing something that he loves.
He's making bank.
But his feelings about this tour
are going to influence how he behaves over the next 10 years.
In 1990, he begins recording the follow-up album, which is what would become Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1.
The songs come very slowly, fragment by fragment, sometimes only four bars at a time.
And this is going to be how he records music for the rest of his life.
Basically, session musicians will be called to the studio and wait around all day.
And then he'll be like, okay, bass player come in and then he'll hum something for him.
And the bass player will play that and he's like, okay, now go back and wait out in the lobby.
It's like quite a kind of slow tortured method.
Like I appreciate also that he's got he's doing this over the course of months. He's got the kind of studio time that as you were talking to to Carolyn
Kendrick about with respect to rumors, we don't have that today. Like like musicians
don't have that luxury today. But that's how Listen Without Prejudice gets made. The record
does fairly well, but it's not the same massive success as Faith.
If something is that giant, then like culture pivots and if you dominate a moment, it makes
sense that you will be less likely to dominate the next moment.
100% yeah.
And I mean, George isn't going to help himself with this.
When it comes to like the artwork and the promotion of the album, he has a complete
meltdown. He refuses to use his name or image on the cover of the album, he has a complete meltdown. He refuses to use his name or
image on the cover of the album. Well, how are they going to sell it, George?
The compromise is that they're allowed to put a sticker that has his name on it on the record as
the only acknowledgement that it's him. It's very funny to think about this period when
artists had this kind of control because I don't even know how much you could misbehave these days with a record label.
Yeah, I wonder. I don't think that Sony in this period is behaving well either.
He's about to sue to try to get released from his record contract.
But this part of it, the fact that he's not talking
to journalists, he like refuses to go on tour with the album. He doesn't appear in any of
the music videos. He was overwhelmed by what happened, both in the Wham days and in the
first with his first studio album.
Well, and it's like there hasn't been a time to sort of metabolize the last thing, right?
It just keeps being a new thing. So, you know, I don't have to think it's a good response in order to think it makes sense as a response, given what's been going on for the past decade.
100% 100%. I will say, you know, like, in hindsight, you could say this is the moment that his fame kind of plateaus, right? He's a massive star.
But after this period, it's the beginning of the kind of waning of his popularity, especially
in the US.
In the UK, he's going to sell a bajillion more records for decades.
But in the US, this is sort of the last we're going to see of him as a major cultural force.
We don't need to make this distinction like so stark, but there is something about this idea.
Like Americans love celebrities who are very young and very pretty.
And it's cheaper for the industry, for Hollywood or the recording industry, to dispose of those people and find new, broke 20 year olds.
Of which there are 100 million to choose from.
Yeah.
But he's still a big pop star.
He's still at the top of his game in January of 1991 when he plays Rock in Rio.
So Rock in Rio is this sprawling outdoor concert.
Peak audiences are 120,000 people.
So it's huge.
It goes over nine days.
He's scheduled actually to perform twice.
And he has the,
I was just gonna tell you about his Diva rider.
Yeah, no, please do.
In his rider, it says that they are required to source
and put in his dressing room palm trees,
which are to be painted white and baby blue.
Come on.
What are you going to do with those?
He also negotiates that after his performances,
like the organizers are going to pay for him and his friends to stay in Brazil
and party in this resort town of Buzios.
Yeah, more understandable is the demand.
The palm trees, though, just seem like a waste.
At this concert is Anselmo Fallappa.
George would later say that he first laid eyes
on Anselmo from the stage,
that he looks out into this sea of people
and sees Anselmo.
I don't know if that's true.
In other accounts, Anselmo is sitting so far away
from the stage that he has to use binoculars to see George.
But, you know, he saw with his heart's eye.
I believe that he believes it.
I tell myself the same stories. I love that.
Totally, right?
At any rate, by the morning after the last concert,
Anselmo has dragged his friend to have breakfast
in the lobby of the hotel that he
believes that George is staying at. And George comes down into the lobby and they lock eyes.
But George is being whisked off to a car on his way out of town to go to Buzios. And Salmo
isn't having any of it. He figures out where George is going. And by nightfall, he's at the
same nightclub. He's on the same dance floor,
and they're dancing together and flirting.
Yeah.
And they are going to become inseparable,
Anselmo and George.
Anselmo has a kind of like sunny, upbeat way of being in the world,
and George is just spittin'.
Anselmo's like, he's, Anselmo's Brazilian, he's 35,
so he's six or
seven years older than, than George. Prior to meeting, and Salmo has a career in fashion.
He's like, he's lived in Paris, he's lived in New York. He's a worldly man, in addition
to being just this, this sunny and bright personality.
Yeah, I love that. I feel like so often you hear these love stories where you're like,
you know, and he locked eyes with her in the crowd and she was 18 and you're like, oh, that's nice.
George is only going to date age appropriate.
Thank you, George.
And Salmo and George are going to stay together for the rest of the Buzios holiday.
And George is like he leaves, he flies to L.A.
And within a few days, he's sent for Anselmo,
Anselmo comes to live with him in California,
and they're basically together for the rest of Anselmo's life.
And what has George's love life been like to this point?
George has had infatuations.
He's had, he's certainly had sex,
he's had various types of sexual and romantic relationships.
But he's never been in love like this.
The kind of love where you wake up every morning
with the man that you love in bed with you.
He's experiencing that for the first time with Anselmo.
And it's like, I don't know, it's hard to overestimate that feeling.
Yeah. Well, I guess then it feels like
he's had this period of adding up...
like, these kind of mountains of career success, but he hasn't had this before.
And maybe he did have to get to a point where things slowed down a little in order to have this.
Yeah. And it also, he's going to say that it changes his relationship to being gay entirely.
I'm going to send you a quote from George.
He says, it's very hard to be proud of your own sexuality when it hasn't brought you any
joy. But once it's associated with joy and love, it's easy to be proud of who you are.
It's so simple when you put it that way. But like, I don't know.
That's what's brilliant about it is that it makes sense once you hear it.
But you wouldn't have necessarily ever realized it on your own.
Maybe we have a problem, or maybe we don't always recognize
that in order to be loving actors outwardly,
we need to be receiving that love as well.
Yeah, totally.
And again, this feels like maybe an American thing,
because that's the culture I know, but we're...
We have this idea of, like, if you don't love yourself, how the hell are you gonna love anyone else?
And it's like, well, you can't simply ask me
to learn how to love myself all at once and like be done
and then move on to the next thing.
Like you gotta start some stuff simultaneously.
Right, right.
And it's also this idea that it is,
it's okay for it to be an unfinished product,
project that it's not a matter of like,
you tick the box at some point.
You just, you're like, you're done.
I have accepted myself.
Right. Everything's great now.
Which I feel like is kind of one of the themes of Faith 90,
where it's like, you know,
that feels like a song being sung by someone who knows what
it's like to be accepted by an entire stadium of people and knows that that's, that that is
fundamentally a different feeling than having a meaningful connection with just one of them.
Yeah, that's so well put. I'm really happy for him. I, me too. And it's gonna get complicated really fast for him.
Within a few months, the pair learns that Enselmo is HIV positive.
And they both take it really hard.
This is a very different situation in 1991 than a diagnosis today in 2024.
But like, so just to set the scene, there are AIDS drugs in 1991.
AZT was approved by the FDA in March of 1987, but the real breakthrough isn't gonna come
until the beginning of 1996 with the introduction of HART,
which is an acronym for highly active
antiretroviral therapy, HART.
And a year after HART, they get combination therapies,
and we're still using a version
of combination therapies today.
But of course, Anselmo and George Kent,
they don't know that.
It's 1991.
It feels very scary and very bleak.
My brain does this very simple thing,
which I think probably a lot of ours do,
where if I'm reading something about, you know,
people in World War II and like the end of 1944, I'm like something about, you know, people in World War Two and
like the end of 1944, I'm like, oh, you got to hang on. It's just a few months to go.
And it's like, but they don't know that. Like nobody in history knows where they are
in history, generally.
Well, right. We think of the real kind of like, the tragedy, the highest number of deaths
in the US as happening in the 1980s. But it's not true. It's happening in this period, in the early 1990s.
And those peak years are higher than everything else combined.
This is the era where people are going to more than one funeral a week.
A hundred thousand people are going to die in New York City.
I think there's still lots of HIV stigma today.
It persists. The kind of long tail of the memory of HIV stigma today. It persists.
The kind of long tail of the memory of HIV as this boogeyman continues.
But the reality today is, of course, very, very different.
Now people are having basically a normal life expectancy with HIV.
It's like a diagnosis like diabetes.
We also know that if someone's HIV positive, but receiving treatment,
the odds are we can get their viral load down to basically zero
so that they can't transmit the untransmittable.
And at the same time, we also have the introduction of PrEP, right?
In the last 10 years, a drug that HIV negative people take,
which makes it very unlikely to transmit to become HIV positive.
So in the global north now, we have a very different relationship to HIV than George
and Anselmo had toward AIDS in 1991. Maybe I'm saying the obvious point, but it's just
I think it's worth remarking on because this diagnosis is going to be, it's going to dominate
their next two years together.
I think the seemingly obvious is often the thing we need to talk about the most because
if you think you understand something, it can become, you know, you can grow a kind
of callous that allows you to not think about it, but it's a different mentality than it's
easy to access without being asked to remember,
to learn what it felt like a little bit.
Yeah, yeah.
And of course it's not all misery.
So during this period,
George and Insomo are living together,
first in a house in Santa Barbara,
and then George buys this house in Beverly Hills,
tears it down
and replaces it with this like modern glass mansion, balconies, beautiful garden. And he
fills it with orchids. And Salmo, you know, on the phone calling his friends back in Brazil, he says,
he tells them how happy he is, how much he loves George, and how much he loves the house. They get a dog, a golden retriever named Hippie.
That's really cute.
So around this time, so we're now in the fall of 1991.
On the 24th of November, 1991,
Freddie Mercury announces that he has AIDS.
He's bedridden, he's going blind,
and he dies the next day.
Oh my God.
And they call George Michael for a quote.
And here's what he says.
This is his later recollection.
He says, I remember my publicist phoning me
to tell me that Freddie Mercury had died
and they wanted a quote from me.
I remember I was trying to give her the quote and I was crying. I mean, bless him. I was
really sad that Freddie had passed away. But of course I was crying about somebody else
entirely. I mean, I imagine it's like there's this, you know, there's this rising tide and
you're stuck on the beach.
And it's also like if it can get Freddie, it can get anybody.
Yeah.
So that's November 1991.
Queen's surviving members decide they're going to have a giant concert
and it's going to be a fundraiser to raise money for HIV.
And that happens in April of 1992, so about six months later.
So Queen performs as like essentially the backing band,
and it's a parade of vocalists taking Freddie's parts.
He ends up performing three songs.
He sings, These are the Days of Our Lives.
He sings Somebody to Love.
And he comes, the concert ends with Liza Minnelli
singing a completely,
it's wonderful but so strange version
of We Are the Champions.
I love Liza Minnelli to death
and I think she knows exactly how funny she is
or she wouldn't have been so good on Arrested Development
and that's so funny to imagine.
Like, as the concert is ending, she's singing,
we are the champions, George comes out
and grabs her around the shoulders,
and the two are rocking and swaying and singing the song.
It's very sweet.
I love it.
Okay, I'm of two minds here about whether to show you
the quote about what he was thinking
when he was singing first.
Let's do the quote first. If you think you're like dipping your toe in in the shallow end,
I think you're wrong. But here you go. He says, for many months, I was kind of sworn to secrecy by
Anselmo. I went out there knowing I had to do two things.
I had to honor Freddie Mercury and I had to pray for Anselmo.
So it meant so much to me all in that one performance.
I'm so proud of the fact that I held onto that feeling because I wanted to die inside.
It was just overwhelming for me and I think what I did was turn in one of the best performances
of my career.
Wow.
And I agree with him. I do think it is one of the best performances of my career. Wow. And I agree with him.
I do think it is one of the best performances of his career.
It's interesting to think about being this vessel for public mourning, right?
And for a band mourning and for the community, the whole music community, everybody mourning
this person who took so many lives.
And at the same time, he's singing about how he found a somebody to love
and he doesn't know what's gonna happen now.
This is the experience of mourning.
How does one...
In a way, it's like, this is perfectly what Stadium Rock is about.
It is about a shared experience, a communal experience.
To have the sort of Freddie Mercury tribute concert be this thing where there's
a hundred thousand people singing the songs that he sang back at the band, you know?
Sometimes I guess like look at humans and I'm like, I love us. We have to like really savor those moments. We got one of them and it was in April of 1992, okay?
Listen, I don't know what happens when you die.
We know that in the long run our molecules get broken up and go back into the universe.
And what happens to our voice is like, as far as we know, our voice goes silent.
But in this moment, it's almost like Freddie Mercury's voice
has been broken up.
It's in the throat of George Michael and Annie Lennox
and Lord Helper Liza Minnelli as well.
Yeah.
And also in the throats of 100,000 people
enjoying this kind of communal experience of mourning.
Yeah. You can feel people coming together to create something,
you know, that just in terms of the musical power in the room
feels bigger than what it ever could have been otherwise.
It's also this moment of honesty.
Freddie Mercury comes out right before he dies.
And the band has this enormous concert as an AIDS fundraiser.
It's like turning to the camera and saying
what has been going on.
And not to bring Reagan into all of this,
but as I always like to mention, 1987
was a time when,
in America, when the White House had done nothing
to acknowledge AIDS and so a sitcom had to do it.
And you were getting potentially public health information
from Delta Burke and she might've been the best source
available to you.
And so it does fall to artists in times of a moral vacuum.
It's hard to overestimate the failure of American politicians in this moment. $800 million package
is passed by Congress, and it never gets implemented and never gets spent. People were fundraising for research, research that should have been
funded by governments and for hospice care and for treatment, things that should have
been paid for by the institutions, you know, the institutions that we should rightly be
able to depend on. And we were unable to depend on them. In that concert footage, you've got George,
and he's wearing a big old AIDS pen, right? The like red ribbon. And it's not just him. It's also
it's like the biggest stars in the world. It's Elton John and David Bowie. And they're all saying
the same thing. They don't have to they don't the same thing. They don't have to preach,
they don't have to evangelize in that moment.
Their presence is saying,
hey, we gotta get it together on this, you know?
And it is profoundly moving for George as well.
Like after this concert,
he basically cannibalizes the record he's working on,
like what would have been Listen Without Prejudice,
volume two, and he gives the best tracks of it
to AIDS fundraiser compilation albums.
Like his peers are giving remixes
or like previously recorded tracks,
and he's giving his best work,
including the song Too Funky,
which was gonna turn out to be a big hit for him.
And as a result of this,
Listen Without Prejudice, volume two basically dies on the paper.
Instead, he releases an EP called Five Live,
which includes this live version of Somebody to Love,
and These Are the Days of Our Lives,
and is a fundraiser for the Phoenix Mercury Trust,
and is a number one record in England.
Hmm. I love that. And he's gonna be doing work fundraising fundraiser for the Phoenix Mercury Trust and is a number one record in England.
I love that. And he's going to be doing work fundraising around HIV and AIDS for the,
for most of the rest of his life. Uh,
in the year that followed Anselmo got sicker and sicker,
he thinned, he became frail.
He lost mobility on March March 26, 1993, Anselmo has a brain hemorrhage and he dies.
Were they aware that they were in his last days
or did he seem to be holding steady?
He was sick. Like, there's no doubt he was quite sick
in February and March of 1993.
And he's getting treatment in Rio.
He's in Brazil, and George is living mostly in Los Angeles.
And in the, like, they're talking on the phone,
but George doesn't fly down to Rio
to be with him in his last days.
And he's not there when he dies,
and he doesn't attend the funeral.
He's later gonna say he was worried about turning Anselmo's medical care and last days
into a tabloid spectacle.
And what he really wanted was for Anselmo to have peace.
I find that awful to think about having to make that decision based on that.
I don't know.
Yeah, I guess whatever it would add to the grief to have not been able to be there.
It's a lot to be there.
It's a lot to reckon with.
A few days after the funeral, George does fly down.
And he goes privately within Selma's mother to the grave.
The day after he goes to the grave,
he writes a letter to Leslie, his mother, and comes out as gay.
Wow.
Maybe there's something about like time is precious, but I also think there's something about like, I'm hurting so much right now. And the only
way that you can understand why I'm in so much pain is by telling you this thing that
I have been keeping a secret for so long. Yeah, I think he's doing it in part to get
it off his chest and in part because he needs support in that moment. What happens?
Jack and Leslie love and support him throughout his entire life.
They're not estranged. They continue to have a relationship.
Yeah. You know, especially Jack.
Jack had been telling him he was gonna be such a failure
when he was a teenager.
And when Wham is on Whamerica, Wham's tour, Jack
finally says, I was wrong. You are a big success.
It would be really weird to try and keep claiming he wasn't.
It's like for all the rest of us, all it takes is a sold out
stadium tour for your parents to finally be like, okay.
Yeah, but he's like, -"Okay." -"Yeah."
But he's like,
-"When are you gonna be on a stamp?" -"Right?"
After Anselmo's death,
Tony Parsons, who's a former friend and ally of George Michael,
sells the story to the British press.
Mm-hmm.
It's published as a three-part special over three days,
boasting exclusive access to the pop star's personal life. And Salmos described as a good-looking Brazilian
and the great love of his life.
Okay, accurate.
Parsons stops just short of saying that George is gay,
but it's all there on the page.
Heartbreaking, maybe a bit fuzzy.
Sadness, despair, reduced to a
splashy headline.
Yeah. I mean, how long after Anselmo's death is this coming?
There's a break. It's not it's not like immediately in the months, like in the weeks afterwards.
But still, yeah, it's on the one hand, did anyone need to hear that? And on the other
hand, yes, we needed to hear that, but we needed to hear it from George.
Right. And what, I mean, what's his reaction to it?
George is going to dedicate his next album in 1995 to Enselmo.
And he says that the Parsons tabloid special,
plus his dedication to Enselmo in the record sleeve,
is the equivalent of his coming out.
That he understands that to be he is now an out gay celebrity.
I think most of us don't see it that way, but he does.
He feels like he has been out, like basically that the veil has been pulled back.
Does his record label freak out about this? What happens in that respect?
Stay tuned for the second part.
Because in in 1993, he's going to go to court with Sony to try to get out of his
record deal. And one of the things that's going to come to light as part of that
lawsuit is that the senior executives at Sony in America have been referring to George Michael
as that F-bomb client of yours to George's agent.
So it might be time for new management.
For a new record label. Yeah, he's gonna try to get out of it.
And you know what? He looks so hot when he has to testify.
he's gonna try to get out of it. And you know what?
He looks so hot when he has to testify.
There should be like a courtroom looks compilation book
of like, yeah, you know?
Cause it's a whole, it's a whole genre.
It's really hard to succeed within and the lighting,
terrible.
Put him on the cover.
He really knew what he was doing with that.
And that's where we'll leave
George today. He's in a Catholic cemetery on a hill, standing at the grave of his dead
lover, with his lover's mother in Anselmo's hometown of Petropolis in Brazil. So. And that was our episode.
Thank you so much for listening.
Thank you for being with us here today.
Thank you to Marcus McCann, author of Park Cruising, What Happens When We Wander Off
the Path, for being our wonderful guest.
Thank you to Colin Fleming for editing help.
And thank you so much, as always, to Carolyn Kendrick for producing.
Thank you so much for being here.
We'll have part two for you in a couple of weeks.
Now get out there and plant something.
And if you're in the Southern Hemisphere,
you can plant garlic. Music