Janet Jackson doc offers skin-deep account of superstar’s rise
A new Janet Jackson documentary out Jan. 28 offers a narrow glimpse into the fiercely private superstar's early life and rise to fame. But rather than the juicy tell-all the series was billed as, "Janet Jackson" offers a retelling of her story dictated by the "Rhythm Nation" star herself, and so far stops short of revelation.
The first half of the four-hour series, which aired on the U.S. network Lifetime, sees Jackson, 55, discuss her complex relationships with her father and brother Michael, her reticence to join the entertainment industry and her early marriages.
The documentary, which Jackson and her brother Randy executive produced, features home movie footage made public for the first time, along with interviews with stars including Tyler Perry, Samuel L. Jackson and Missy Elliott.
It begins with Jackson and Randy visiting their small childhood home in Gary, Indiana, which serves as the backdrop as she recounts the rise of the Jackson 5. She recalls the "tough" love of her father Joe, who for years was accused of physically and emotionally abusing his children. Jackson doesn't explicitly deny abuse but instead says her father's "discipline" was out of his desire for his children to succeed, and she says she owes her career to him.
The Grammy winner, whose "Control" album came to define 1980s dance music and served as a model for artists to come, details growing up as a child star, talking about later wanting to attend college and study business.
Her father, who died in 2018 at age 89, said no, according to Jackson, pushing her further into a show business career."It has opened a great deal of doors for me...having that name," she says at one point. "[But] I wanted my own identity." She said she married young -- eloping with...
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