GEORGE
MICHAEL

Georgios
Kyriatou Panayioutou (George Michael) achieved fame in the
duo Wham! in his native U.K. in 1982. Through 1986, he and
his partner, Andrew Ridgeley, scored hit after hit in a variety
of styles from rap to up-tempo pop to slow ballads. As songwriter
and lead singer, Michael gradually overshadowed the group,
and by the time they split, he was ready for a massively successful
solo career. This began with the 1987 album Faith, which featured
a series of chart-topping hit singles and sold more than seven
million copies. That Michael had not achieved a similar critical
success was evident from the title of his follow-up album,
Listen Without Prejudice, Vol. 1, which must be considered
a major commercial disappointment even though it sold a million
copies, included two Top Ten hits, and hit number two. With
Vol. 2 apparently shelved, Michael contributed several songs
to the charity album Red Hot + Dance in 1992, and one of them, "Too
Funky," reached the Top 20.
After the failure of Listen Without Prejudice, Michael engaged
in a bitter legal battle with his record company, accusing
them of not properly promoting the album and asking them to
release him from his contract; he stated that he would refuse
to release any records if he lost the lawsuit. He lost. After
losing an appeal, Michael bought his way out of his Columbia
contract and signed with the music division of Dreamworks,
a fledgling entertainment corporation founded by Steven Spielberg,
Jeffrey Katzenberg, and David Geffen. In 1996, he released
Older, its sales clearly hampered by his long hiatus away from
performing. In 1998, Michael made tabloid headlines when he
was arrested for lewd conduct in a men's public restroom at
a park near his Beverly Hills home; following the incident,
the singer appeared on CNN and publicly revealed his homosexuality.
The covers collection Songs From the Last Century followed
in late 1999.