Bad (tour)

Bad was the first solo concert tour by American singer Michael Jackson, launched in support of his seventh studio album Bad (1987). Sponsored by Pepsi and spanning 16 months, the tour included 123 concerts for over 4 million fans across 15 countries. It grossed a total of $125 million, making it the second highest-grossing tour of the 1980s after Pink Floyd's Momentary Lapse of Reason tour, and earning two new entries in the Guinness World Records for the largest grossing tour in history and the tour with the largest attended audience.[2] It was nominated for "Tour of the Year 1988" at the inaugural International Rock Awards.[3]

Bad
Tour by Michael Jackson
Promotional poster for the tour
Associated albumBad
Start dateSeptember 12, 1987
End dateJanuary 27, 1989
Legs7
No. of shows123
Attendance4,400,000
Box office$125 million ($298.15 million in 2021 dollars)[1]
Michael Jackson concert chronology

At the end of the Bad tour, Jackson made a public statement that he intended for it to be his last as a touring artist, as he had plans to transition to filmmaking;[4] however, it was followed by the Dangerous World Tour in 1992–1993 and the HIStory World Tour in 1996–1997.

History

First leg (1987)

On June 29, 1987, Jackson's manager Frank DiLeo announced the singer's plan to embark on his first solo world concert tour.[5] Sponsored by Pepsi,[6] the tour began in large stadiums in Japan, marking Jackson's first performances in the country since 1973 as part of the Jackson 5.[7] The first nine scheduled concerts that began on September 12 sold out within hours, and five more were added due to high demand.[8] Over 600 journalists, cameramen and fans waited for Jackson's arrival to the country at Tokyo's Narita International Airport.[9] His pet chimpanzee Bubbles, who took a separate flight, was greeted by more than 300 people.[9] A chartered jumbo jet was used to carry 22 truckloads of equipment, along with Jackson's entourage of 132 for the tour.[10] The stage set used 700 lights, 100 speakers, 40 lasers, three mirrors, and two 24-by-18 foot screens. Performers wore 70 costumes, four of which were attached with fiber optic lights.[11]

While in Tokyo, Australian pop music critic Ian "Molly" Meldrum conducted an exclusive interview with Jackson and DiLeo that was featured on 60 Minutes in the United States and Australia.[9] On September 18, Jackson was handed the Key to the Osaka Castle by Yasushi Oshima, the mayor of Osaka. He was accompanied by Bubbles, who was the first animal allowed inside the city's town hall. Jackson dedicated his Japanese concerts to Yoshiaki Hagiwara, a five-year-old boy who was kidnapped and murdered, and gave ¥1,614,701 (around $15,017) to the parents of Hagiwara.[12] Attendance figures for the first 14 dates in Japan totaled a record-breaking 450,000.[8] Crowds of 200,000 were what past performers could manage to draw for a single tour.[13] Nippon Television was a co-sponsor with Pepsi for the Japanese dates.[8]

Jackson performed five concerts in Melbourne, Sydney, and Brisbane in Australia in November. While off stage, he spent time visiting sick children at their homes in the Sydney suburbs.[9]

Second leg (1988–1989)

Bad Tour logo

Rehearsals for the tour's 1988 leg took place at the Pensacola Civic Center in Pensacola, Florida from January 22 to February 18, 1988.[14] Vincent Paterson, who had worked with Jackson on several videos, was brought in to choreograph and co-direct the tour with Michael. On the last day of preparation, Jackson allowed 420 school pupils to watch him perform a full dress rehearsal after the children made him a rap music video in his honor.[15] The first performances were to begin in Atlanta, yet Pepsi officials objected as the city was home to rival drinks company Coca-Cola.[16] For both Atlanta shows, Jackson gave 100 tickets to the Children's Wish Foundation for terminally ill children.[17] The first of three concerts at Madison Square Garden in New York City in March served as a benefit to raise $500,000 to the United Negro College Fund.[18] Jackson presented a check of $600,000 to the fund.[19] On March 2, 1988, Jackson performed at the 30th Annual Grammy Awards, receiving an enormous standing ovation after performing "The Way You Make Me Feel" and "Man in the Mirror". Jackson's album, Bad was also nominated for Album of the Year at the ceremony. Jackson began his European tour in Rome at the Flaminio Stadium on May 23, 1988. Police and security guards rescued hundreds of fans from being crushed in the crowd of 35,000.[20] Police reported 130 women fainted at the concert in Vienna on June 2.[21] On June 17, Jackson travelled to the town of Vevey to meet Oona O'Neill, the widow of comic actor Charlie Chaplin. "I have fulfilled my biggest childhood dream", said Jackson after the visit.[22] The most successful of the European dates were those in London at Wembley Stadium. Ticket demand for the five July dates exceeded 1.5 million, enough to fill the 72,000 capacity venue 20 times.[23] Jackson performed seven sold-out shows, beating the previous record held by Madonna, Bruce Springsteen and Genesis. More shows could have been added, but the venue had reached its quota for live performances.[23] The third concert on July 16 was attended by Diana, Princess of Wales and Prince Charles.[24] On September 8, Jackson was entered into the Guinness World Records, the first of three times from the tour alone. The Wembley shows were attended by a record 504,000 people. Management also presented him with a special award.[25] On July 30, NBC aired Michael Jackson Around the World, a 90-minute special documenting the singer on tour.[26] On August 29, after a birthday performance in Leeds, Jackson donated $130,000 to Give For Life.[25] The final European show was held in Liverpool on September 11, staged at Aintree Racecourse. 1,550 fans were reported injured among the crowd of 125,000.[25][27]

Between September 1988 and January 1989, Jackson toured the United States for the second time. This would be the last time he toured his native country, aside from two shows in Hawaii during the HIStory Tour and a handful of one-off appearances in 2001 and 2002.

On October 23, 1988, he donated $125,000, the net proceeds of the first show in Auburn Hills, to the city's Motown Museum.[28] The American tour alone grossed a total of $20.3 million, the sixth largest of the year.[2] The tour was planned to end in Tokyo, but Jackson suffered from swollen vocal cords after the first of six concerts in Los Angeles in November. The remaining five were rescheduled for January 1989. Due to this rescheduling, Greg Phillinganes had to disembark from the tour in early January, having already made commitments to tour with Eric Clapton. Studio musician John Barnes would be hired to take Phillinganes' place during these shows.[29]

During the December 9 or 11 show in Tokyo, nine-year-old Ayana Takada was selected to receive a certificate by Jackson to commemorate the four millionth person to attend the tour.[30]

Five performances in Los Angeles were held to conclude the tour on January 27, 1989. In 16 months, Jackson performed 132 concerts in 15 countries to an audience of 4.5 million for a total gross of $125 million.[2][31] The American tour alone grossed a total of $20.3 million, the sixth largest of the year.[2] Guinness World Records recognized the tour as the largest grossing in history and the tour to play to the most people ever.[2] In April 1989, the tour was nominated for "Tour of the Year 1988" at the inaugural International Rock Awards. It lost to Amnesty International.[32]

Concert film and other recordings

A live album and DVD of the July 16, 1988 concert in London titled Live at Wembley July 16, 1988 was released along with the special edition reissue of the Bad album titled Bad 25 on September 18, 2012, as well as a stand-alone DVD.[33] Video of the September 26, 1987 Concert in Yokohama, Japan, was broadcast on Nippon Television and is available on YouTube. A number of amateur-shot concerts and short snippets were leaked on YouTube a few years later. Half-show footage of Rome (May 23, 1988) and Brisbane (November 28, 1987), and a high-quality 30-minute segment of live footage of Tokyo (December 9, 1988), as well as full low-quality leaks of Tokyo (September 12 & 13, 1987) and Osaka (October 10, 1987) are also available online. Audio recordings of the final Los Angeles (January 27, 1989) concert have been crowdfunded and released on YouTube. Audio recordings from the rehearsal at Pensacola, Florida (February 18, 1988) have also been released as well. Atlanta (April 13, 1988), Auburn Hills (October 24, 1988) have been leaked.

Opening acts

  • Kim Wilde (Europe)[34]
  • Taylor Dayne (Europe - August 5 - 23, 1988)[35]

Setlist

1987
  1. "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'"
  2. "Things I Do for You"
  3. "Off the Wall"
  4. "Human Nature"
  5. "This Place Hotel"
  6. "She's Out of My Life"
  7. The Jackson 5 Medley – "I Want You Back" / "The Love You Save" / "I'll Be There"
  8. "Rock with You"
  9. "Lovely One"
  10. "Bad Groove" (Musical Interlude) Oct. 12 - whole tour
  11. "Workin' Day and Night"
  12. "Beat It"
  13. "Billie Jean"
  14. "Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground)"
  15. "Thriller"
  16. "I Just Can't Stop Loving You"
  17. "Bad"
1988–1989[36]
  1. "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'"
  2. "This Place Hotel"
  3. "Another Part of Me"
  4. "Human Nature"
  5. "Smooth Criminal"
  6. "I Just Can't Stop Loving You" (with Sheryl Crow)
  7. "She's Out of My Life"
  8. The Jackson 5 Medley – "I Want You Back" / "The Love You Save" / "I'll Be There"
  9. "Rock with You"
  10. "Dirty Diana" (Kansas City – Feb. 23, 1988) – (Los Angeles – Nov. 13, 1988 only)
  11. "Thriller"
  12. "Bad Groove" (Musical Interlude)
  13. "Workin' Day and Night"
  14. "Beat It"
  15. "Billie Jean"
  16. "Bad"
Encore
  1. "The Way You Make Me Feel"
  2. (selected dates only)
  3. "Man in the Mirror" (selected dates only)
Notes
  • "Speed Demon" and "Liberian Girl" were rehearsed for the 1988-89 leg, but were ultimately left off the setlist.
  • "Human Nature" and "Smooth Criminal" were performed after "Rock With You" during the European dates of the tour.
  • "The Way You Make Me Feel" was occasionally taken out of the setlist.
  • "Dirty Diana" was removed from the setlist after the first Tokyo show on December 9, 1988.

Show dates, cancelled dates, and rehearsal dates

Jackson performing in Cardiff on July 26, 1988
List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, tickets sold, number of available tickets and amount of gross revenue
Date City Country Venue Attendance Revenue
Asia
September 12, 1987 Tokyo Japan Korakuen Stadium 135,000 / 135,000
September 13, 1987
September 14, 1987
September 19, 1987 Nishinomiya Hankyu Nishinomiya Stadium 120,000 / 120,000
September 20, 1987
September 21, 1987
September 25, 1987 Yokohama Yokohama Stadium 288,000 / 288,000
September 26, 1987
September 27, 1987
October 3, 1987
October 4, 1987
October 10, 1987 Osaka Osaka Stadium 120,000 / 120,000
October 11, 1987
October 12, 1987
Oceania
November 13, 1987 Melbourne Australia Olympic Park Stadium 45,000 / 45,000
November 20, 1987 Sydney Parramatta Stadium 90,000 / 90,000
November 21, 1987
November 27, 1987[lower-alpha 1] Brisbane Brisbane Entertainment Centre 27,000 / 27,000
November 28, 1987[37][lower-alpha 1]
North America[38][39][40][41][42]
February 23, 1988 Kansas City United States Kemper Arena 50,877 / 50,877 $963,137
February 24, 1988
March 3, 1988 New York City Madison Square Garden 57,000 / 57,000 $1,800,000
March 5, 1988
March 6, 1988
March 13, 1988 St. Louis St. Louis Arena 19,000 / 19,000
March 18, 1988 Indianapolis Market Square Arena 34,000 / 34,000
March 19, 1988
March 20, 1988 Louisville Freedom Hall 19,000 / 19,000
March 24, 1988 Denver McNichols Sports Arena 40,251 / 40,251 $842,918
March 25, 1988
March 26, 1988
March 30, 1988 Hartford Hartford Civic Center 45,188 / 45,188 $1,071,148
March 31, 1988
April 1, 1988
April 8, 1988 Houston The Summit 51,000 / 51,000
April 9, 1988
April 10, 1988
April 13, 1988 Atlanta Omni Coliseum 51,000 / 51,000
April 14, 1988
April 15, 1988
April 19, 1988 Rosemont Rosemont Horizon 40,000 / 40,000
April 20, 1988
April 21, 1988
April 25, 1988 Dallas Reunion Arena 57,000 / 57,000
April 26, 1988
April 27, 1988
May 4, 1988 Minneapolis Met Center 50,662 / 50,662 $1,139,895
May 5, 1988
May 6, 1988
Europe
May 23, 1988 Rome Italy Stadio Flaminio 80,000 / 80,000
May 24, 1988
May 29, 1988[lower-alpha 2] Turin Stadio Comunale 60,000 / 60,000
June 2, 1988 Vienna Austria Praterstadion 55,000 / 55,000
June 5, 1988 Rotterdam Netherlands Stadion Feijenoord 145,200 / 145,200
June 6, 1988
June 7, 1988
June 11, 1988 Gothenburg Sweden Eriksberg 106,000 / 106,000
June 12, 1988
June 16, 1988 Basel Switzerland St. Jakob Stadium 50,000 / 50,000
June 19, 1988 West Berlin West Germany Platz der Republik 43,000 / 43,000
June 27, 1988 Paris France Parc des Princes 63,000 / 63,000
June 28, 1988
July 1, 1988 Hamburg West Germany Volksparkstadion 50,000 / 50,000
July 3, 1988 Cologne Müngersdorfer Stadion 70,000 / 70,000
July 8, 1988 Munich Olympiastadion 72,000 / 72,000
July 10, 1988[lower-alpha 3] Hockenheim Hockenheimring 80,000 / 80,000
July 14, 1988 London England Wembley Stadium 504,000 / 504,000[lower-alpha 4]
July 15, 1988
July 16, 1988
July 22, 1988
July 23, 1988
July 26, 1988 Cardiff Wales Cardiff Arms Park 55,000 / 55,000
July 30, 1988[43] Cork Ireland Páirc Uí Chaoimh 130,000 / 130,000
July 31, 1988
August 5, 1988 Marbella Spain Estadio Municipal de Marbella 28,000 / 28,000
August 7, 1988 Madrid Vicente Calderón Stadium 60,000 / 60,000
August 9, 1988[44] Barcelona Camp Nou 95,000 / 95,000
August 12, 1988[lower-alpha 5] Montpellier France Stade Richter 35,000 / 35,000
August 14, 1988 Nice Stade Charles-Ehrmann 35,000 / 35,000
August 19, 1988 Lausanne Switzerland Stade olympique de la Pontaise 45,000 / 45,000
August 21, 1988[lower-alpha 6] Würzburg West Germany Talavera Mainwiesen 43,000 / 43,000
August 23, 1988 Werchter Belgium Werchter Festivalpark 55,000 / 55,000
August 26, 1988 London England Wembley Stadium [lower-alpha 4]
August 27, 1988
August 29, 1988 Leeds Roundhay Park 90,000 / 90,000
September 2, 1988 Hannover West Germany Niedersachsenstadion 40,000 / 40,000
September 4, 1988 Gelsenkirchen Parkstadion 52,000 / 52,000
September 6, 1988 Linz Austria Linzer Stadion 40,000 / 40,000
September 10, 1988 Milton Keynes England Milton Keynes Bowl 60,000 / 60,000
September 11, 1988 Liverpool Aintree Racecourse 125,000 / 125,000
North America[45][46][47][48]
September 26, 1988 Pittsburgh United States Civic Arena 48,694 / 48,694 $1,144,917
September 27, 1988
September 28, 1988
October 3, 1988 East Rutherford Brendan Byrne Arena 61,061 / 61,061 $1,600,755
October 4, 1988
October 5, 1988
October 10, 1988[49] Richfield Richfield Coliseum 38,000 / 38,000
October 11, 1988
October 13, 1988 Landover Capital Centre 69,883 / 69,883 $1,747,075
October 17, 1988
October 18, 1988
October 19, 1988
October 24, 1988 Auburn Hills The Palace of Auburn Hills 50,010 / 50,010
October 25, 1988
October 26, 1988
November 7, 1988 Irvine Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre 45,000 / 45,000
November 8, 1988
November 9, 1988
November 13, 1988 Los Angeles Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena 93,198 / 93,198[lower-alpha 7] $2,423,603[lower-alpha 7]
Asia
December 9, 1988 Tokyo Japan Tokyo Dome 540,000 / 540,000
December 10, 1988
December 11, 1988
December 17, 1988
December 18, 1988
December 19, 1988
December 24, 1988
December 25, 1988[50]
December 26, 1988
North America[lower-alpha 8]
January 16, 1989 Los Angeles United States Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena [lower-alpha 7] [lower-alpha 7]
January 17, 1989
January 18, 1989
January 26, 1989
January 27, 1989
Total 4,559,065 / 4,559,065 (100%) $11,212,402

Cancelled shows

List of cancelled concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, and reason for cancellation
Date City Country Venue Reason
November 3, 1987 Perth Australia WACA Ground Permission to perform was denied
November 8, 1987 Adelaide Thebarton Oval
November 14, 1987[51] Melbourne Olympic Park Stadium Originally scheduled as second show, now a rain date
December 2, 1987 Wellington New Zealand Athletic Park Permission to perform was denied
December 6, 1987 Auckland Mount Smart Stadium
March 14, 1988 St. Louis United States St. Louis Arena Laryngitis
June 23, 1988 Lyon France Stade de Gerland Low ticket sales
October 31, 1988 Tacoma United States Tacoma Dome Laryngitis[52]
November 1, 1988
November 2, 1988

Known rehearsal dates

List of known rehearsals showing dates, showing city, country, and venue
Date City Country Venue
August 1987 Universal City United States Universal Studios
September 12, 1987[53] Tokyo Japan Korakuen Stadium
November 12, 1987 Melbourne Australia Olympic Park Stadium
November 19, 1987 Sydney Parramatta Stadium
January 22, 1988 Pensacola United States Pensacola Civic Center
January 23, 1988
January 24, 1988
January 25, 1988
January 26, 1988
January 27, 1988
January 28, 1988
January 29, 1988
January 30, 1988
January 31, 1988
February 10, 1988
February 11, 1988
February 17, 1988
February 18, 1988
May 20, 1988 Rome Italy Stadio Flaminio
August 8, 1988 Barcelona Spain Camp Nou
December 8, 1988 Tokyo Japan Tokyo Dome

Personnel

See also

  • List of highest-grossing concert tours

References

Notes

  1. Both shows were originally scheduled at Queen Elizabeth II Stadium on November 25 and November 28, 1987, but the venue was changed due to scheduling conflicts.
  2. Originally there were two shows planned at San Siro in Milan in June 1988, but due to the stadium being renovated, they were moved to one night in Turin.
  3. Originally scheduled to take place at Maimarktgelände in Mannheim.
  4. Attendance combined with the attendance from July 14–16, and 22-23, and August 26–27, 1988.
  5. Originally scheduled for August 9, 1988.
  6. Originally scheduled to take place in Darmstadt.
  7. Boxscore combined with the boxscore from November 13, 1988, and January 16–18 and 26-27, 1989.
  8. The final North American leg was originally scheduled for November 1988, but was rescheduled to January 1989.

Citations

  1. 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved April 16, 2022.
  2. Campbell 1993, p. 236.
  3. Halstead, Craig; Cadman, Chris (July 2003). Michael Jackson The Solo Years. England: New Generation Publishing. p. 85. ISBN 978-0755200917.
  4. "Why Michael Jackson Stopped Performing at His Peak? | the detail". YouTube.
  5. "Jackson sets solo world tour". The Miami News. June 30, 1987. Retrieved October 1, 2010.
  6. Campbell 1993, p. 186.
  7. "Michael Jackson's new tour to start in Japan". Manila Standard. July 2, 1987. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
  8. Campbell 1993, p. 208.
  9. Bad Tour Programme (1988), Far East Report
  10. Geraldine Hosier (1987). "TheMichaelJacksonArchives – Bad Japan Tour 1987". News of the World. Archived from the original on 2008-09-24.
  11. "Michael Jackson craze hits Japan". New Straits Times. September 12, 1987. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
  12. "TheMichaelJacksonArchives – Bad Japan Tour 1987". Archived from the original on 2008-09-24.
  13. Richard Harrington (January 12, 1988). "Jackson to Make First Solo U.S. Tour". The Washington Post.
  14. Snider, Eric (January 15, 1988). "'Bad' tour: Pensacola is southern limit". St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved December 11, 2009.
  15. "Jackson entertains kids". The Dispatch. Lexington, North Carolina. February 20, 1988. p. 2. Retrieved June 28, 2014.
  16. Campbell 1993, p. 212.
  17. Campbell 1993, p. 213.
  18. Decurtis, Anthony (February 10, 1988). "Michael Jackson plans U.S., European tours". Anchorage Daily News. Retrieved September 30, 2010.
  19. Campbell 1993, p. 189.
  20. "Michael Jackson". Gettysburg Times. May 25, 1988. Retrieved September 30, 2010.
  21. "130 fans faint at Jackson concert". The Telegraph. June 4, 1988. Retrieved September 30, 2010.
  22. "Michael Jackson Oona Chaplin". Gettysburg Times. June 20, 1988. Retrieved September 30, 2010.
  23. Campbell 1993, p. 216.
  24. Campbell 1993, p. 217.
  25. Halstead 2003, p. 80.
  26. "Stay up tonight to catch Michael Jackson on tour". Boca Raton News. July 30, 1988. Retrieved October 2, 2010.
  27. "1,550 injured at Jackson concert". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. September 12, 1988. Retrieved September 30, 2010.
  28. "Michael Jackson Donates $125,000 to Motown Museum". The Argus-Press. October 24, 1988. Retrieved October 2, 2010.
  29. "Michael Jackson | BAD Tour LIVE in Los Angeles 1989 (Soundboard Audio) FULL SHOW". YouTube.
  30. "Jackson greets 4 millionth fan". Anchorage Daily News. December 12, 1988. Retrieved September 30, 2010.
  31. "Michael's Last Tour". Ebony. Johnson Publishing Company. April 1989. pp. 142–153. Retrieved October 2, 2010.
  32. Halstead 2003, p. 85.
  33. "25th Anniversary of Michael Jackson's Landmark Album Bad Celebrated With September 18 Release Of New Bad 25 Packages". Sony Music. michaeljackson.com. Retrieved 2012-05-31.
  34. John Peel (2009-06-28). "John Peel on Michael Jackson's 'Bad' show at Wembley | Music | The Observer". London: Guardian. Retrieved 2012-12-28.
  35. "Taylor Dayne – AskMen". Uk.askmen.com. 1962-03-07. Archived from the original on 2016-08-15. Retrieved 2012-12-28.
  36. Halstead 2003, p. 79.
  37. Stevie Wonder appears on stage during the song “Bad” with Michael.
  38. "Billboard Boxscore" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 100, no. 11. March 12, 1988. p. 22. ISSN 0006-2510.
  39. "Billboard Boxscore" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 100, no. 12. March 19, 1988. p. 37. ISSN 0006-2510.
  40. "Billboard Boxscore" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 100, no. 15. April 9, 1988. p. 46. ISSN 0006-2510.
  41. "Billboard Boxscore" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 100, no. 17. April 23, 1988. p. 23. ISSN 0006-2510.
  42. "Billboard Boxscore" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 100, no. 22. May 28, 1988. p. 44. ISSN 0006-2510.
  43. Originally scheduled to take place in Liverpool at Aintree Racecourse.
  44. Originally suppose to take place in Montpellier.
  45. "Billboard Boxscore" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 100, no. 42. October 15, 1988. p. 24. ISSN 0006-2510.
  46. "Billboard Boxscore" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 100, no. 43. October 22, 1988. p. 46. ISSN 0006-2510.
  47. "Billboard Boxscore" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 100, no. 45. November 5, 1988. p. 46. ISSN 0006-2510.
  48. "Billboard Boxscore" (PDF). Billboard. Vol. 101, no. 6. February 11, 1989. p. 32. ISSN 0006-2510.
  49. "RARE VINTAGE MICHAEL JACKSON ORIGINAL CREW ITINERARY US TOUR 88 ORIGINAL". WorthPoint.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  50. Michael brought his chimpanzee Bubbles on stage while performing Bad.
  51. "Michael Jackson Australia Concert Tour 1987 Crew Itinerary Booklet 38 pages | #3936548268". Worthpoint. Retrieved 2022-11-02.
  52. Barnes, Brooks (June 26, 2009). "Michael Jackson: A thrilling pop icon, a troubled soul". Seattle Times. Retrieved August 30, 2018. He was scheduled to appear at the Tacoma Dome in October 1988—selling more than 70,000 tickets over three nights—but canceled the day before the opening show, due to the flu.
  53. This rehearsal was originally scheduled for September 11 and was rescheduled to September 12 due to rain.
  54. Saulnier, Jason (23 July 2008). "Jennifer Batten Interview". Music Legends. Retrieved 3 July 2013.

Sources

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