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Dangerous World Tour
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| World tour by Michael Jackson | |
Promotional image for the tour | |
| Location | |
|---|---|
| Associated album | Dangerous |
| Start date | June 27, 1992 |
| End date | November 11, 1993 |
| Legs | 2 |
| No. of shows | 69 |
| Attendance | 3,500,000 |
| Box office | US $100 million[1] ($218 million in 2024 dollars)[2] |
| Michael Jackson concert chronology | |
The Dangerous World Tour was the second world concert tour by American singer Michael Jackson and was staged to promote his eighth studio album Dangerous. The tour was sponsored by Pepsi-Cola. All profits were donated to various charities including Jackson's own Heal the World Foundation. The tour began in Munich, Germany, on June 27, 1992, and concluded in Mexico City, Mexico, on November 11, 1993, playing 69 concerts in Europe, Asia and Latin America. Jackson performed in stadiums across the world with all his concerts being sold out in countries in Asia, Latin America, and Europe. The tour grossed over $100 million (equivalent to $220 million in 2024) and was attended by up to 3.5 million people.[3][4][5][6]
The October 1, 1992, concert in Bucharest was filmed for broadcast on the HBO network on October 10. Jackson sold the film rights for the concert for $20 million (equivalent to $45 million in 2024), then the highest amount for a concert performer to appear on television.[7] The special, Live in Bucharest: The Dangerous Tour, earned Jackson the second of two CableACE Awards of his career, this one for Outstanding Performance Musical Special.[8]
Background
[edit]On January 27, 1989[verification needed], Jackson finished his Bad tour, his first as a solo artist, which had grossed over $125 million. Initially he planned not to tour again and concentrate on making albums and films. Following the release of his eighth studio album Dangerous in November 1991, a press conference was held on February 3, 1992, at Radio City Music Hall in New York City to announce the Dangerous World Tour.[9][10] The event, attended by 200 people, was organized by Jackson's sponsor Pepsi with the artist also present. Jackson explained his sole reason for touring once more was to raise funds for his newly formed Heal the World Foundation to aid children and the environment. He aimed to raise $100 million for the charity by Christmas 1993.[10] It was revealed that Jackson planned to perform across Europe, Asia, Latin America, and Australia, with no dates in the United States or Canada.[9] Jackson commented: "I am looking forward to this tour because it will allow me to devote time to visiting children all around the world, as well as spread the message of global love, in the hope that others will be moved to do their share to help heal the world".[11]
Development
[edit]In June 1992, a Russian Antonov AN-124 cargo jet, then the world's largest operating airplane, was booked to transport the equipment and stage set from Los Angeles to London for the opening European leg.[12] However, problems regarding its civilian aircraft certification led to Jackson using a Federal Express Boeing 747 instead.[13] Upon arrival, the equipment was transported across Europe by 65 lorries.[12] The cargo included 1,000 lights, 10 miles of electrical cable, 9 video screens, and 168 speakers.[14] Around 2 tons of clothing was transported. The outfits were designed by Michael Bush and Dennis Tompkins, who worked with Jackson to gain an idea on what he wanted and aimed to "bring his ideas to life".[15] Two outfits were 9 feet tall, 7 feet wide, and weighed 40 lbs. each, with fiber optic lights controlled by a computerized laser. One jacket was fitted with a battery belt generating 3,000 volts to light the 36 strobe lights on it. Another had hidden flaps to conceal explosive effects.[15] 1,000 yards of fabric from Europe was used to make the costumes, including a black and gold outfit for Jackson which included 18-karat gold.[15] The costumes alone cost $2 million.[16]
The show incorporated various stage illusions. Among them was the "toaster" effect where Jackson entered the stage on a rapidly rising catapult from underneath, sending off pyrotechnics at the same time. His sister Janet said: "That opening was kick-ass. I'm sitting in the sound tower, and all the kids are everywhere. And when he jumped out of whatever the hell that thing was [...] the kids in front of me were looking back and I didn't even know it."[17] Most of the 1992 shows included a stage trick during the transition from "Thriller" to "Billie Jean", whereby Jackson walks into two pillars and is secretly switched with a werewolf-masked backup dancer disguised as himself while he changes outfits for "Billie Jean". The masked "Jackson" is placed into a coffin which disappears when dancers posing as the skeletons and zombies drape a cloth over the coffin and pull it out. Jackson then appears on an upper stage level and sings "Billie Jean". When the full trick was not performed, it featured a sequence with the Jackson impersonator and the backup dancers performing dances from "Thriller". In some concerts, the Jackson impersonator would go backstage after singing the main chorus of the song, instead of doing a reprise of the "Thriller" dance, and the zombie backup dancers would do a reprise of the dance by themselves. Another such illusion was used to transition to "Beat It" from "Working Day and Night".
This was the first tour to have Jackson doing "the lean" during "Smooth Criminal"; the song was part of his Bad tour set list, but its choreography did not match the music video (which only premiered on TV during the second American leg of the tour).
Overview
[edit]Europe and Asia (1992)
[edit]
During the Europe leg in 1992, MTV was allowed to film backstage and broadcast six 15-minute episodes of the tour. The show was called The Dangerous Diaries and was presented by Sonya Saul. MTV released footage of "Billie Jean" and "Black or White" at the first show in Munich. "Billie Jean" was released with two different versions, one by MTV as a special, and the other on the Dangerous Diaries documentary. Both versions have placed a snippet of Jackson's original a cappella recording for "Billie Jean" over the live vocals when Jackson throws his fedora.
During the Cardiff concert performed on August 5, the show was temporarily halted between "She's Out of My Life" and the "Jackson 5 Medley" due to heavy rain, with a message being sent out over the speakers. Jackson also had to stand on a towel to keep balance during "I Just Can't Stop Loving You". The Toulouse concert performed on September 16, featured a special instrumental performance of the first half of the song "In the Closet" as an interlude between "Heal the World" and "Man in the Mirror". Princess Stéphanie of Monaco, who was the "Mystery Girl" in the actual song, was in attendance at this concert. This concert marked the first and only time that this song was performed during this tour, although it was performed on his next tour.
Super Bowl halftime show (1993)
[edit]Between the two legs of the tour, Jackson performed a brief but very widely seen and highly acclaimed concert at the Super Bowl XXVII halftime show on January 31, 1993. The National Football League donated $100,000 to the Heal the World Foundation in lieu of payment to Jackson.[18]
Asia, Europe and Latin America (1993)
[edit]The 1993 leg of the tour started in Bangkok, Thailand on August 24, the same day that a child sexual abuse accusation against Jackson was made public. The September 1st concert in Singapore was scheduled for August 30th but was rescheduled due to Jackson collapsing before the show. During his visit to Moscow in September, Jackson came up with the song "Stranger in Moscow" which would be released on his succeeding album HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book I. It was during a time when Jackson felt very alone, far away from his family and friends, yet every night, throughout his tours, fans would stay by his hotel and support him.
Broadcasts and recordings
[edit]All concerts were professionally filmed by Nocturne Productions Inc., which filmed all of Jackson's tours and private affairs. During the 1992 European leg of the tour, MTV was given permission to film backstage reports, interview the cast and film live performance. The mini-show was hosted by Sonya Saul and had six 15-minute mini-episodes of concerts in Munich, Werchter, Dublin, Stockholm, Hamburg, Cardiff, London, Leeds, Berlin, Oviedo, and Madrid. Performances include "Billie Jean", "Black or White", "Jam", "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'", and "Will You Be There". The concert in Bucharest on October 1, was filmed and broadcast on television all across the world, giving HBO the highest rating garnered in cable TV history, with an alternate version airing on the BBC. The concert film titled Live in Bucharest: The Dangerous Tour was officially released on DVD on July 25, 2005.[19] Full concerts at Oslo (July 15) and Copenhagen (July 20) were fundraised for online by the fans and purchased from private owners of those respective concerts, and performances at Bremen (August 8), Buenos Aires (October 12, 1993), Mexico City (November 11) and several scattered amateur recordings have been shared online and can be found on YouTube.
Opening acts
[edit]- Kris Kross (1992 European dates [30])
- Rozalla (Europe [3])[20]
- D'Influence (England and Scotland [7])
- Snap! (Bucharest [1])
- Culture Beat (1993 European dates [3])
- TLC (Latin America [11])
Set list
[edit]1992
[edit]The following set list was performed throughout 1992 but is not intended to represent the majority of performances.[21][22][23][24]
- "Brace Yourself" (video introduction) (contains elements of "Carmina Burana: I. O Fortuna" and "Great Gates of Kiev")
- "Jam"
- "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'"
- "Human Nature"
- "Smooth Criminal"
- "I Just Can't Stop Loving You" (with Siedah Garrett)
- "She's Out of My Life"
- The Jackson 5 Medley: "I Want You Back" / "The Love You Save" / "I'll Be There"
- "Thriller"
- "Billie Jean"
- "Black Panther" (video interlude)
- "Working Day and Night"
- "Beat It"
- "Someone Put Your Hand Out" (instrumental interlude)
- "Will You Be There"
- "The Way You Make Me Feel"
- "Bad"
- "Black or White"
- "We Are the World" (video interlude)
- "Heal the World"
- "Man in the Mirror" / "Rocket Man"
1993
[edit]The following set list was performed throughout 1993 but is not intended to represent the majority of performances.[21][22]
- "Brace Yourself" (video introduction) (contains elements of "Carmina Burana: I. O Fortuna")
- "Jam"
- "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'"
- "Human Nature"
- "Smooth Criminal"
- "I Just Can't Stop Loving You" (with Siedah Garrett)
- "She's Out of My Life"
- The Jackson 5 Medley: "I Want You Back" / "The Love You Save" / "I'll Be There"
- "Thriller"
- "Billie Jean"
- "Black Panther" (video interlude)
- "Will You Be There"
- "Dangerous"
- "Black or White"
- "We Are the World" (video interlude)
- "Heal the World"
- "Man in the Mirror" / "Rocket Man"
- "Rock with You", "Remember the Time", and "In the Closet" were rehearsed for the initial setlist in 1992, but were cut for time and technical reasons.
- From July 17 to October 1, 1992, "The Way You Make Me Feel" and "Bad" were temporarily removed from the setlist. These songs were re-added to the setlist for the first five Tokyo shows. Despite being rehearsed for the 1993 leg, they were ultimately cut.
- Slash made guest appearances for the performances of "Black or White" in Oviedo and the last two concerts in Japan.
- For the 1993 leg, "Working Day and Night", "Beat It", and the instrumental of "Someone Put Your Hand Out" were not performed, despite being rehearsed.
- Starting on October 31, 1993, "I Want You Back", "The Love You Save", and "I'll Be There" were permanently cut from the setlist.
- The instrumental version of "In the Closet" was played in between "Heal the World" and "Man in the Mirror" in Toulouse.
- "Dangerous" was performed twice for the concert in Fukuoka on September 10, 1993. The first performance was the regular performance of the song. The second was an instrumental, performed after "Heal the World".
- "Man in the Mirror" and "Rocket Man" were only performed on select dates in 1993.
- The white shirt worn for "Will You Be There" was replaced with a black 'armband' jacket at the Istanbul concert.
Tour dates
[edit]| Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| June 27, 1992 | Munich | Germany | Olympiastadion | 72,000 / 72,000 |
| June 30, 1992 | Rotterdam | Netherlands | Stadion Feijenoord | 100,000 / 100,000 |
| July 1, 1992 | ||||
| July 4, 1992 | Rome | Italy | Stadio Flaminio | 40,000 / 40,000 |
| July 6, 1992 | Monza | Stadio Brianteo | 46,000 / 46,000 | |
| July 7, 1992 | ||||
| July 11, 1992 | Cologne | Germany | Müngersdorfer Stadion | 50,000 / 50,000 |
| July 15, 1992 | Oslo | Norway | Valle Hovin | 35,000 / 35,000 |
| July 17, 1992 | Stockholm | Sweden | Stockholm Olympic Stadium | 106,000 / 106,000 |
| July 18, 1992 | ||||
| July 20, 1992 | Copenhagen | Denmark | Gentofte Stadion | 30,000 / 30,000 |
| July 22, 1992 | Werchter | Belgium | Werchter Festivalpark | 60,000 / 60,000 |
| July 25, 1992 | Dublin | Ireland | Lansdowne Road | 43,000 / 43,000 |
| July 30, 1992 | London | England | Wembley Stadium | 144,000 / 144,000 |
| July 31, 1992 | ||||
| August 5, 1992 | Cardiff | Wales | Cardiff Arms Park | 50,000 / 50,000 |
| August 8, 1992 | Bremen | Germany | Weserstadion | 42,000 / 42,000 |
| August 10, 1992 | Hamburg | Volksparkstadion | 50,000 / 50,000 | |
| August 13, 1992 | Hamelin | Weserberglandstadion | 25,000 / 25,000 | |
| August 16, 1992 | Leeds | England | Roundhay Park | 60,000 / 60,000 |
| August 18, 1992 | Glasgow | Scotland | Glasgow Green | 65,000 / 65,000 |
| August 20, 1992 | London | England | Wembley Stadium | 216,000 / 216,000 |
| August 22, 1992 | ||||
| August 23, 1992[a] | ||||
| August 26, 1992 | Vienna | Austria | Praterstadion | 50,000 / 50,000 |
| August 28, 1992 | Frankfurt | Germany | Waldstadion | 60,000 / 60,000 |
| August 30, 1992 | Ludwigshafen | Südweststadion | 35,000 / 35,000 | |
| September 2, 1992 | Bayreuth | Hans-Walter-Wild-Stadion | 32,000 / 32,000 | |
| September 4, 1992 | Berlin | Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Stadion | 35,000 / 35,000 | |
| September 8, 1992 | Lausanne | Switzerland | Stade olympique de la Pontaise | 45,000 / 45,000 |
| September 13, 1992 | Paris | France | Hippodrome de Vincennes | 85,000 / 85,000 |
| September 16, 1992 | Toulouse | Stade de Toulouse | 40,000 / 40,000 | |
| September 18, 1992 | Barcelona | Spain | Estadi Olímpic de Montjuïc | 60,000 / 60,000 |
| September 21, 1992 | Oviedo | Estadio Carlos Tartiere | 55,000 / 55,000 | |
| September 23, 1992 | Madrid | Vicente Calderón Stadium | 25,000 / 25,000 | |
| September 26, 1992 | Lisbon | Portugal | Estádio José Alvalade | 55,000 / 55,000 |
| October 1, 1992[b] | Bucharest | Romania | Lia Manoliu National Stadium | 90,000 / 90,000 |
| December 12, 1992 | Tokyo | Japan | Tokyo Dome | 360,000 / 360,000 |
| December 14, 1992 | ||||
| December 17, 1992 | ||||
| December 19, 1992 | ||||
| December 22, 1992 | ||||
| December 24, 1992 | ||||
| December 30, 1992 | ||||
| December 31, 1992 |
| Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| August 24, 1993 | Bangkok | Thailand | Suphachalasai Stadium | 80,000 / 80,000[25] |
| August 27, 1993[c] | ||||
| August 29, 1993 | Singapore | Singapore National Stadium | 94,000 / 94,000 | |
| September 1, 1993[d] | ||||
| September 4, 1993 | Taipei | Taiwan | Taipei Municipal Stadium | 80,000 / 80,000 |
| September 6, 1993 | ||||
| September 10, 1993 | Fukuoka | Japan | Fukuoka Dome | 70,000 / 70,000 |
| September 11, 1993 | ||||
| September 15, 1993 | Moscow | Russia | Luzhniki Stadium | 70,000 / 70,000 |
| September 19, 1993 | Tel Aviv | Israel | Yarkon Park | 170,000 / 170,000 |
| September 21, 1993 | ||||
| September 23, 1993[e] | Istanbul | Turkey | BJK İnönü Stadium | 56,000 / 56,000 |
| September 26, 1993 | Santa Cruz de Tenerife | Spain | Port of Santa Cruz de Tenerife | 45,000 / 45,000 |
| October 8, 1993 | Buenos Aires | Argentina | Estadio River Plate | 240,000 / 240,000 |
| October 10, 1993 | ||||
| October 12, 1993 | ||||
| October 15, 1993 | São Paulo | Brazil | Estádio do Morumbi | 210,000 / 210,000 |
| October 17, 1993 | ||||
| October 23, 1993 | Santiago | Chile | Estadio Nacional | 85,000 / 85,000 |
| October 29, 1993 | Mexico City | Mexico | Estadio Azteca | 550,000 / 550,000 |
| October 31, 1993 | ||||
| November 7, 1993[f] | ||||
| November 9, 1993[g] | ||||
| November 11, 1993[h] | ||||
Cancelled dates
[edit]| Date | City | Country | Venue | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| September 6, 1992 | Gelsenkirchen | Germany | Parkstadion | Health issues |
| September 11, 1992 | Basel | Switzerland | St. Jakob Stadium | |
| October 4, 1992[i] | İzmir | Turkey | İzmir Atatürk Stadium | |
| October 10, 1992[j] | Athens | Greece | Olympic Stadium | |
| August 15, 1993 | Hong Kong | Sha Tin Racecourse | Conflicts with racing season[26][27] | |
| August 16, 1993 | ||||
| September 30, 1993 | Johannesburg | South Africa | Johannesburg Stadium | Political issues[28] |
| October 2, 1993 | ||||
| October 19, 1993 | Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | Maracanã Stadium | Back injury[29][30] |
| October 21, 1993 | Santiago | Chile | Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos | |
| October 26, 1993 | Lima | Peru | Estadio Nacional del Perú | |
| November 8, 1993 | Zapopan | Mexico | Estadio Tres de Marzo | |
| November 14, 1993 | Bayamón | Puerto Rico | Estadio Juan Ramón Loubriel | Rehabilitation[31] |
| November 16, 1993 | ||||
| November 19, 1993[k] | Caracas | Venezuela | Poliedro de Caracas | |
| November 21, 1993 | Monterrey | Mexico | Estadio de Béisbol Monterrey | |
| November 24, 1993 | New Delhi | India | Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium | |
| November 25, 1993 | ||||
| November 27, 1993 | Dubai | United Arab Emirates | Al Maktoum Stadium | |
| November 28, 1993 | ||||
| November 30, 1993 | Kuala Lumpur | Malaysia | Stadium Merdeka | |
| December 1, 1993 | Jakarta | Indonesia | Gelora Senayan Main Stadium | |
| December 2, 1993 | ||||
| December 3, 1993 | Sydney | Australia | Sydney Cricket Ground | Rehabilitation[citation needed] |
| December 4, 1993 | ||||
| December 7, 1993 | Mulgrave | Waverley Park | ||
Personnel
[edit]
|
|
Notes
[edit]- ^ Originally August 1, 1992, but was rescheduled to Jackson's viral infection.
- ^ Originally September 29, 1992, but was rescheduled due to health issues.
- ^ Originally August 26, 1993, but was rescheduled due to dehydration.
- ^ Originally August 30, 1993, but was rescheduled to exhaustion.
- ^ Originally October 4, 1992, but was rescheduled to October 6, due to scheduling conflicts. It was eventually rescheduled again due to Jackson's throat infection.
- ^ Originally November 2, 1993, but was rescheduled due to Jackson's toothache.
- ^ Originally November 4, 1993, but was rescheduled due to oral surgery.
- ^ Originally November 6, 1993, but was rescheduled due to oral surgery.
- ^ Originally October 2, 1992, but was rescheduled due to scheduling issues.
- ^ Originally October 8, 1992, but was rescheduled due to scheduling issues.
- ^ Originally November 12, 1993, but was rescheduled due to Jackson's back injury.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- Citations
- ^ "Review: Fabulous 'MJ the Musical' in Chicago". Chicago Tribune. August 10, 2023.
- ^ 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 February 29, 2024.
- ^ "Review: Fabulous 'MJ the Musical' in Chicago". Chicago Tribune. August 10, 2023.
- ^ McDonnell, Brandy. "In its Oklahoma debut, 'MJ The Musical' brings Tony-winning Michael Jackson homage to OKC". The Oklahoman. Retrieved March 27, 2025.
- ^ "MJ's 'Dangerous' World Tour Raised Millions To Aid Children & Environment". Michael Jackson Official Site. Retrieved March 27, 2025.
He played 69 concerts to 3.5 million people
- ^ King, Anthony (2018). Anthony King's Guide to Michael Jackson's Dangerous Tour. Faria Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1999604929.
- ^ Zad, Martin (October 10, 1992). "Michael Jackson on HBO". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on June 23, 2018. Retrieved June 23, 2018.
- ^ George, pp. 37–52.
- ^ a b "Michael Jackson to tour the world". The Times. Shreveport, Louisiana. February 4, 1992. Archived from the original on June 23, 2018. Retrieved June 21, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b Hunt, Dennis (February 4, 1992). "Jackson plans tour to fund charity". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on June 23, 2018. Retrieved June 21, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Crampton, Luke (2009). Michael Jackson (Music Icons (Taschen)). Taschen. ISBN 978-3-8365-2081-2. Retrieved December 1, 2012.
- ^ a b "Jackson hires giant Russian transport". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. June 15, 1992. p. 1. Archived from the original on June 23, 2018. Retrieved June 21, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Jackson tour changes planes". The Desert Sun. Palm Springs, California. June 19, 1992. p. 37. Archived from the original on June 23, 2018. Retrieved June 21, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Sing a simple song". Chicago Tribune. June 18, 1992. p. 24. Archived from the original on June 23, 2018. Retrieved June 21, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c "Michael Jackson ships explosives, 2 tons of clothes for tour". The Times. Munster, Indiana. June 18, 1992. p. 2. Archived from the original on June 23, 2018. Retrieved June 21, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Jackson's clothes take a 'Dangerous' turn". Post-Tribune. June 26, 1992. Archived from the original on June 24, 2018. Retrieved June 23, 2018.
- ^ Q, June 1993
- ^ "How Jackson Redefined the Super Bowl". The New York Times. June 30, 2009. Archived from the original on December 29, 2012. Retrieved February 24, 2017.
- ^ "Michael Jackson: Live in Bucharest -The Dangerous Tour". Amazon. July 26, 2005. Archived from the original on June 30, 2023. Retrieved August 30, 2017.
- ^ Arena, James (2016). Stars of '90s Dance Pop: 29 Hitmakers Discuss Their Careers. McFarland. p. 133. ISBN 978-1-4766-6756-0. Retrieved May 14, 2024.
- ^ a b c Grant, Adrian (2009). Michael Jackson: The Visual Documentary. Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-1-84938-261-8.
- ^ a b c Taraborrelli, J. Randy (2004). The Magic and the Madness. Terra Alta, WV: Headline. ISBN 0-330-42005-4.
- ^ Michael Jackson (performer) (October 10, 1992). Michael Jackson Live in Bucharest: The Dangerous Tour (HBO television special). Bucharest, Romania. Event occurs at October 1, 1992.
- ^ Michael Jackson (performer) (July 25, 2005). Live in Bucharest: The Dangerous Tour (DVD). Bucharest, Romania: Epic Records. Event occurs at October 1, 1992.
- ^ "Michael Jackson, undeterred by police probe, launches Asia tour". United Press International. August 24, 1993. Retrieved June 28, 2025.
- ^ "Jackson at Sha Tin?". South China Morning Post. June 25, 1993. Retrieved April 14, 2024.
- ^ "Michael Jackson's Choices of Private Hong Kong Tour". HongKongGuide. December 30, 2022. Retrieved April 14, 2024.
- ^ "Michael Jackson cancels South African leg of world tour". United Press International. September 22, 1993. Retrieved April 14, 2024.
- ^ "Michael Jackson no vino al Perú en 1993 por los escándalos sexuales". El Comercio. June 26, 2009. Archived from the original on August 28, 2016. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
- ^ Frank Cascio's Book: My Friend Michael: An Ordinary Friendship With An Extraordinary Man
- ^ "Jackson Ends World Tour, Cites Painkiller Addiction". Los Angeles Times. November 13, 1993.
Sources
- George, Nelson (2004). Michael Jackson: The Ultimate Collection booklet. Sony BMG.
Dangerous World Tour
View on GrokipediaConception and Background
Album Promotion Context
The Dangerous album, released on November 26, 1991, debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart and maintained a four-week run at the top position, reflecting strong initial commercial momentum following the blockbuster success of Jackson's prior releases. It achieved seven-times platinum certification in the United States by 1993, representing shipments of seven million units domestically, while global sales estimates reached over 32 million copies, underscoring its enduring appeal despite not matching Thriller's scale. The singles rollout began with "Black or White" in November 1991, which topped the Billboard Hot 100, followed by "Remember the Time" peaking at number three, "In the Closet" at number six, and "Heal the World" at number five, generating sustained media buzz through elaborate music videos that emphasized cinematic storytelling and choreography over the disco-funk spectacle of the Thriller era. These visuals highlighted Jackson's evolution toward a more mature aesthetic, incorporating new jack swing elements co-produced with Teddy Riley, which infused urban rhythms and social commentary into tracks addressing themes like racial division and global unity, distinguishing it from earlier pop-oriented extravagance.[8] The tour served as a strategic extension of this promotional framework, amplifying the album's artistic reach by showcasing its songs in live settings that mirrored the videos' high-production values, thereby reinforcing Jackson's image as an innovator adapting to post-Thriller expectations for thematic depth amid public scrutiny of his personal life. Without a major U.S. leg, the international focus capitalized on untapped markets, as domestic saturation from prior tours limited additional growth potential there, allowing the album's lifecycle to extend through overseas performances that reignited sales and chart presence.[9] To mitigate perceptions of unchecked commercialism, Jackson integrated philanthropy into the tour's rationale, pledging proceeds to his Heal the World Foundation with an initial goal of raising $100 million for children's welfare and environmental causes, framing the endeavor as a humanitarian effort that aligned with the album's title track messaging on societal dangers and redemption.[2] This approach countered criticisms by tying artistic output to tangible social impact, though actual donations fell short of the target, with millions ultimately directed toward foundation initiatives.[10]Initial Planning and Objectives
The Dangerous World Tour was publicly announced by Michael Jackson on February 3, 1992, during a press conference at Radio City Music Hall in New York City, coinciding with a renewed sponsorship deal with Pepsi-Cola. The tour's core objective was to generate substantial revenue for the Heal the World Foundation, Jackson's newly established international children's charity, with an explicit target of raising $100 million by Christmas 1993 to support initiatives aiding children and environmental causes. Jackson emphasized in statements that the tour's purpose centered on philanthropy rather than personal profit, stating, "The only reason I am going on tour is to raise funds for the newly formed Heal the World Foundation." This humanitarian focus distinguished the planning from prior efforts, aligning with Jackson's post-Bad era emphasis on global social impact over domestic commercial saturation.[11][2] Initial planning envisioned over 70 concerts across Europe, Asia, and subsequently Latin America, strategically excluding the United States to target regions with untapped demand and fervent fanbases while allowing Jackson recovery from the physical and logistical toll of the preceding Bad World Tour, which had comprised 123 shows over 16 months. Promoters, including Pepsi as the primary sponsor, coordinated early logistics to prioritize international markets where Dangerous album sales were robust, avoiding U.S. arenas amid Jackson's reported exhaustion and preference for overseas spectacles that could amplify the tour's charitable messaging without domestic media intensity. This scope reflected a deliberate shift toward global outreach, with preliminary itineraries focusing on stadiums in Western Europe starting in summer 1992 to capitalize on summer concert seasons.[2] Budget projections incorporated advanced 1990s production elements, such as extensive pyrotechnics—anticipated to fire over 500 shots per show—and large-scale video screens for enhanced visual immersion, aiming to elevate live performances beyond prior tours and reinforce Jackson's image as an innovative entertainer amid perceptions of increasing seclusion. These investments underscored the tour's ambition to blend spectacle with substance, projecting high operational costs offset by ticket sales and sponsorships to meet the $100 million fundraising threshold.[2]Development and Preparation
Creative and Production Team
Kenny Ortega served as the primary director, choreographer, and conceiver of the Dangerous World Tour, leveraging his expertise from prior large-scale productions to orchestrate the tour's elaborate staging and performance elements.[12] His role emphasized seamless integration of choreography with visual effects, prioritizing scalability for diverse venue sizes ranging from arenas to stadiums accommodating up to 100,000 attendees.[13] Vincent Paterson contributed to choreography by adapting elements from Jackson's music videos, such as those for the Bad era, to live stage formats, with Jackson providing direct input on movements to reflect his personal artistic vision and ensure precision in execution.[14] This collaboration built on Paterson's prior work with Jackson, focusing on high-energy sequences that maintained the kinetic style of MTV visuals while accommodating live band synchronization and dancer formations of up to 12 performers.[15] Greg Phillinganes acted as music director, selected for his experience on Jackson's earlier tours and albums, to oversee a crew of 160 and coordinate the 33-truck production logistics, ensuring musical fidelity and reliability amid Jackson's demands for flawless replication of studio recordings in live settings.[16] The team's composition reflected a deliberate choice of veterans from Jackson's Bad Tour and related projects, prioritizing proven dependability to mitigate risks from the tour's ambitious technical innovations and Jackson's perfectionist standards.[17]Rehearsals and Staging Innovations
Rehearsals for the Dangerous World Tour began in May 1992 at Culver City Studios in Los Angeles, focusing on integrating intricate choreography with emerging stage technologies.[18] Jackson led sessions that emphasized precision in transitions between songs like "Jam" and "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'," incorporating aerial lifts and platform movements tested under full lighting and sound conditions.[17] Later preparations for the tour's third leg occurred in August 1993, again in Los Angeles, to refine adaptations for international venues while maintaining vocal fidelity through repeated full-set run-throughs.[19] Safety measures were prioritized for high-risk elements, including harness systems for elevated maneuvers and the substitution of stunt performers for hazardous concludes, such as the jetpack ascent where professional Kinnie Gibson replaced Jackson mid-sequence via a trapdoor switch.[20] These protocols, developed during rehearsals, mitigated dangers from rapid ascents and descents, ensuring operational reliability across 69 concerts without reported onstage accidents attributable to staging failures. Staging innovations elevated the production beyond standard replication of album tracks, employing a catapult mechanism—known as the "toaster"—to launch Jackson from below the stage several feet into the air amid synchronized pyrotechnic bursts during the opening countdown.[21] The setup utilized digital timecode to align over 500 pyrotechnic shots per performance with audio cues and lighting, generating explosive effects equivalent to demolishing a three-story building in volume, managed by a four-person team.[22] This real-time synchronization, supported by more than 100 tons of equipment including modular video screens for dynamic visuals, prioritized causal immersion by linking sensory impacts directly to musical peaks, setting benchmarks for subsequent arena tours in technical precision.[23] The preparation phase highlighted challenges in balancing Jackson's demands for live vocal execution—requiring breath control amid acrobatics—with the physical exertion of two-hour sets featuring harnessed flights and rapid costume changes.[24] Rehearsal footage reveals iterative adjustments to mitigate strain from these elements, though the cumulative toll of back-to-back simulations and travel previews strained endurance, as noted in contemporary accounts of the tour's demanding logistics.[25]Tour Legs and Itinerary
1992: Europe and Asia
The 1992 leg of the Dangerous World Tour launched on June 27 at Munich's Olympiastadion in Germany, marking Michael Jackson's return to live stadium performances after a three-year hiatus since the Bad World Tour. The opening concert drew a large crowd amid high anticipation for the elaborate production, which featured innovative staging including hydraulic lifts and a catapult "toaster" entrance effect for Jackson's emergence onstage.[26] The tour then progressed through Western Europe, with sold-out dates at venues such as Rotterdam's Feyenoord Stadium on June 30 and London's Wembley Stadium, where Jackson delivered seven performances between July 25 and August 23, accommodating over 500,000 attendees in total. These early European shows emphasized the tour's logistical sophistication, as the 100-ton production setup—transported via two Boeing 747 aircraft and multiple trucks—allowed for efficient venue transitions across densely scheduled stops in cities including Paris, Stockholm, and Rome.[27] Fan enthusiasm was immediate and intense, with reports of fans camping overnight for tickets and traveling internationally, setting a tone of fervent demand that led to rapid sell-outs without reliance on North American markets. Performances in Scandinavia and the UK, for instance, saw audiences exceeding stadium capacities, underscoring Jackson's enduring global draw post-Dangerous album release. The European phase concluded with a high-profile sold-out concert on October 1 at Bucharest's National Stadium in Romania, attended by 90,000 spectators and later released as Live in Bucharest: The Dangerous Tour.[28] This stability in pre-allegation scheduling highlighted the tour's operational efficiency and hype-building potential. The leg extended into Asia later that year, focusing on Japan with eight consecutive shows at Tokyo Dome from December 12 to 31, each drawing approximately 45,000 fans and culminating in a New Year's Eve finale. These Tokyo performances maintained the European momentum, featuring the full repertoire of Dangerous tracks alongside classics, and reinforced the tour's international viability through consistent sold-out status and positive crowd responses. The absence of U.S. dates during this period concentrated promotional energy overseas, achieving record attendances in key markets and establishing the tour's reputation for spectacle before subsequent disruptions.1993: Super Bowl Halftime Show
Michael Jackson performed at the halftime show of Super Bowl XXVII on January 31, 1993, at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.[29] This appearance occurred midway through the Dangerous World Tour, following the initial European and Asian legs in 1992, and served as the tour's sole stateside showcase before resuming international dates later that year.[30] The non-ticketed event bridged tour phases by adapting production elements from the full concerts, including a dramatic stage entrance via a hydraulic lift mimicking the tour's aerial launch mechanism, though on a condensed scale without the complete setlist or extended choreography.[30][31] The 13-minute set featured Jackson emerging from beneath the stage to perform "Jam" from the Dangerous album, followed by a stationary pose to acknowledge crowd applause before transitioning to "Heal the World."[32] Production incorporated body doubles for the entrance and exit to enhance spectacle, a technique also employed in the tour's live shows.[33] Rehearsals spanned five days of 12-hour sessions prior to the event, despite Jackson's ongoing tour commitments, to refine the streamlined format.[31] The performance emphasized unity and global messaging aligned with the tour's thematic elements, concluding with Jackson promoting his Heal LA initiative, which targeted support for Los Angeles youth amid the aftermath of the 1992 riots following the Rodney King verdict.[34] Broadcast on NBC, the halftime show drew an estimated 133.4 million U.S. viewers, marking one of the largest television audiences for a live music event at the time and significantly elevating awareness of the Dangerous World Tour domestically.[35] This exposure functioned as a teaser for the tour's production values—such as innovative staging and high-energy visuals—without necessitating a broader U.S. itinerary, which Jackson opted against amid logistical and market considerations.[30] The event's scale, while reduced from arena spectacles, retained core effects to demonstrate the tour's capabilities to an American audience largely untapped by the international-focused itinerary.[34]1993: Asia, Europe, and Latin America
The 1993 leg of the Dangerous World Tour commenced in Asia after a hiatus following the Super Bowl halftime show, expanding to include Southeast Asian markets with high demand from developing regions. Performances began on August 24 in Bangkok, Thailand, at Suphachalasai Stadium, attracting approximately 70,000 spectators for a two-hour show amid sweltering conditions. The tour then proceeded to Singapore on September 1 at the National Stadium, drawing 47,000 fans, before shifting to Europe with dates such as September 26 in Tenerife, Spain. This phase highlighted Jackson's global appeal, with venues in diverse climates filling rapidly due to strong ticket sales in emerging markets.[36] Subsequent stops in Latin America underscored the leg's geographic breadth and escalating attendance figures. Concerts occurred in Buenos Aires, Argentina, starting October 8 at Estadio River Plate, followed by Santiago, Chile, on October 23 at the National Stadium. The itinerary adapted to regional environmental factors, including extreme humidity in Asia that prompted health precautions during Bangkok performances, where dehydration risks arose from prolonged high-energy choreography under intense heat. Despite signs of fatigue from the tour's cumulative physical demands, Jackson sustained consistent vigor across two-hour sets, navigating variations in altitude and weather while prioritizing spectacle for audiences exceeding capacities in populous areas.[37] The leg culminated in Mexico City with five consecutive sold-out shows at Estadio Azteca from October 29 to November 11, 1993, amassing 550,000 attendees and establishing a record for the venue's highest concert turnout to date. These performances exemplified the tour's intensification post-1992 legs, with larger-scale crowds in Latin American markets reflecting sustained international fervor, even as logistical pressures mounted from transcontinental travel and environmental rigors. The Mexico dates marked the tour's abrupt conclusion, transitioning the focus from global expansion to subsequent reflections on its overall scope.[3]Performance Elements
Set Lists and Evolution
The setlist for the 1992 leg of the Dangerous World Tour typically opened with "Jam" from the Dangerous album, transitioning into "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'" and "Human Nature" from Off the Wall, followed by "Smooth Criminal" from Bad. This was succeeded by a ballad segment featuring "I Just Can't Stop Loving You" (performed as a duet with Siedah Garrett), "She's Out of My Life", and a Jackson 5 medley comprising "I Want You Back", "The Love You Save", and "I'll Be There". The main set continued with "Thriller" and "Billie Jean" from Thriller, "Working Day and Night" from Off the Wall, "Beat It" from Thriller, "Will You Be There" from Dangerous, and "Black or White" from Dangerous, closing with an encore of "Heal the World" from Dangerous.[38][39] This structure prioritized a mix of high-energy tracks from Dangerous to promote the album alongside proven hits from prior releases, creating a progression from upbeat openers to nostalgic medleys and climactic anthems. In the 1993 leg, spanning Asia, Europe, and Latin America, the setlist evolved modestly to streamline the performance, omitting "Working Day and Night" and "Beat It" for most dates.[40][41] The removal of "Beat It" stemmed from the departure of lead guitarist Jennifer Batten, whose solos were integral to the song. These adjustments shortened the overall runtime, reflecting practical adaptations amid Jackson's reported exhaustion and dehydration, which led to several cancellations, including shows in Moscow and other cities.[42] The core emphasis remained on Dangerous material like "Jam", "Will You Be There", and "Black or White" for thematic promotion, balanced with enduring hits, without significant expansions from earlier catalogs such as additional Off the Wall tracks. Absent a North American leg, no setlist variations tailored to U.S. audiences occurred, maintaining global consistency in song selection despite the minor 1993 refinements.[39] This stability underscored a focus on reliability over frequent overhauls, adapting empirically to logistical and physical demands rather than audience-specific feedback.Choreography and Visual Effects
The choreography of the Dangerous World Tour integrated highly synchronized ensemble routines with Jackson's individualistic flair, featuring sharp, explosive sequences that demanded exceptional stamina and precision from performers across stadium stages. Central to the production was the anti-gravity lean during "Smooth Criminal," where Jackson and dancers tilted forward at a 45-degree angle using custom shoes with heel slots that locked onto retractable pegs embedded in the stage floor. This device, co-invented by Jackson with costume designers Michael Bush and Dennis Tompkins, overcame earlier wire-based limitations from the Bad Tour and enabled the illusion without visible support, prioritizing performer stability for repeated execution.[43] The mechanism, formalized in U.S. Patent 5,255,452 filed on October 26, 1993, underscored a fusion of dance and engineering tailored for live immersion in venues exceeding 50,000 capacity.[43] Visual effects amplified the theatrical scope through innovative lighting and pyrotechnics, including a prominent "wall of light" arrayed with over 350 aircraft landing lights that generated intense brightness and heat to dominate stadium visuals. Jackson personally approved expansions to include additional side walls, while the rig incorporated early extensive applications of moving fixtures for choreography-timed dynamism, blending conventional and emerging technologies for scalable spectacle.[44] The show's entry sequence employed a "toaster" catapult to launch Jackson upward from beneath the stage amid synchronized fireworks and pyrotechnic bursts, with over 500 shots deployed nightly to simulate explosive impacts.[23][22] These elements, requiring over 100 tons of equipment transported via cargo planes and three-day setups per venue, facilitated repeatable high-impact delivery despite the inherent physical and technical strains on production reliability.[23]Opening Acts
The opening acts for Michael Jackson's Dangerous World Tour were selected to deliver high-energy performances that engaged audiences and facilitated the elaborate stage setups required for Jackson's headline show, typically lasting 20-30 minutes each. These support performers, drawn from contemporary hip-hop, R&B, and dance genres, aimed to build anticipation without overshadowing the main attraction, reflecting a logistical and thematic alignment with the tour's pop spectacle. Documentation on their specific contributions remains sparse, with fan recollections and artist biographies providing primary accounts rather than comprehensive tour records.[45] During the 1992 European leg, Kris Kross, the Atlanta-based hip-hop duo consisting of Chris "Mac Daddy" Kelly and Chris "Daddy Mac" Smith, opened several concerts, including the tour's debut in Munich on June 27 and Wembley Stadium dates in July and August. Their set featured tracks from their debut album Totally Krossed Out, such as the platinum-certified "Jump," which resonated with young audiences through backward clothing and energetic rap delivery.[46][47][48] Rozalla, known for her eurodance hit "Everybody's Free (To Feel Good)," which peaked at number six on the UK Singles Chart in 1991, supported Jackson on numerous European dates, including all UK and select continental shows. The Zambian-born singer's performances, emphasizing uplifting house rhythms, were requested by Jackson himself, providing her international exposure to crowds exceeding 70,000 per night.[49][45][50] Other acts included D'Influence for England and Scotland dates, blending acid jazz and hip-hop elements, while Snap! appeared specifically for the Bucharest concert on October 1, 1992, with their techno-rap style suiting the post-communist enthusiasm of the 90,000-attendee event. In the 1993 legs, Culture Beat opened European shows like Moscow, performing eurodance hits such as "Mr. Vain" to align with the tour's evolving energy. TLC, the R&B trio, supported select dates, including some European and potentially Latin American performances, introducing their debut single "Ain't 2 Proud 2 Beg" to global audiences. Regional variations incorporated local talents in Asia and Latin America, though specific names and impacts are less documented, prioritizing acts with broad appeal to sustain momentum across 69 concerts.[51][52][48]Broadcasts and Recordings
Live Releases
The primary commercial live release from the Dangerous World Tour is the concert film Live in Bucharest: The Dangerous Tour, capturing the performance at Romania's Lia Manoliu Stadium on October 1, 1992, before an audience of approximately 90,000.[53] Filmed using a multi-camera setup for initial broadcast purposes, the footage aired on HBO on October 10, 1992, after Jackson sold the rights for $20 million—the highest amount paid for a live concert film at the time.[54] The production emphasized high-production values, including synchronized lighting, pyrotechnics, and choreography integral to the tour's staging, with the full two-hour set list featuring tracks like "Jam," "Billie Jean," and "Heal the World." Released on DVD on July 25, 2005, by Epic Music Video, the remastered version preserved the original broadcast quality while enhancing audio clarity for home viewing.[55] The soundtrack highlights Jackson's live vocals layered over a 14-piece band and backup performers, contrasting the album's studio polish with raw, energetic instrumentation that underscores the tour's emphasis on spectacle and musical fidelity.[56] No official live audio album was produced from the tour, making this video the sole authorized commercial artifact documenting a complete concert. The release achieved significant sales, exceeding 2.5 million units worldwide, contributing to Jackson's legacy of high-grossing visual media and demonstrating enduring demand for tour documentation.[57] Its commercial success, alongside certifications in multiple regions, reflects the tour's preserved cultural value despite the absence of contemporaneous audio-only products.[9]Televised Appearances
The Super Bowl XXVII halftime show on January 31, 1993, at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, featured Michael Jackson as the sole performer, delivering a medley of "Jam," "Billie Jean," "Black or White," and "Heal the World" that incorporated choreography and staging elements from the Dangerous World Tour.[34][17] Broadcast live on NBC, the performance reached an estimated 98.4 million domestic viewers, providing significant U.S. exposure for Jackson amid the tour's absence of North American dates.[34] This standalone appearance elevated the halftime show's prestige and effectively promoted the ongoing international tour to American audiences without requiring dedicated U.S. concert slots.[34] Other televised integrations were sparse, consisting primarily of short clips and promotional segments aired on international music programs rather than live event broadcasts. In Europe and Asia, where the tour concentrated its 69 concerts, footage from shows like those in Munich and Tokyo appeared in edited form on outlets such as MTV's "Dangerous Diary" specials in 1992, highlighting rehearsals and brief live excerpts alongside band interviews.[58] These snippets, constrained by early 1990s satellite transmission limitations for real-time global stadium coverage, supplemented local radio and TV promotions but did not constitute full-show airing outside of dedicated recordings. The Super Bowl's high-visibility format thus amplified the tour's reach, compensating for the lack of domestic touring and fostering broader international awareness through secondary media clips.[34]Commercial Performance
Attendance and Revenue Figures
The Dangerous World Tour comprised 69 concerts performed between June 27, 1992, and November 11, 1993, attracting an estimated total attendance of 3.5 million spectators across Europe, Asia, Australia, and Latin America. Average per-show attendance exceeded 50,000, with sustained high demand evidenced by multiple sold-out stadium dates in cities including Munich (where the tour opened to 70,000 fans), London (seven Wembley Stadium shows drawing over 500,000 combined), and Tokyo (six Dome concerts totaling around 300,000).[59] Promoter reports highlighted consistent capacity crowds in non-North American markets, reflecting Jackson's global draw without a U.S. leg.[3] Peak attendances occurred during the Latin American extension, particularly in Mexico City, where five Estadio Azteca performances from October 29 to November 6, 1993, drew 550,000 attendees, averaging more than 110,000 per concert and surpassing prior venue records.[3] Similar scale was seen in other high-density shows, such as Bucharest's 90,000-capacity stadium sellout on October 1, 1992.[60] These figures, derived from stadium capacities and promoter confirmations, underscore the tour's reliance on international markets for volume.[61] Revenue totaled approximately $100 million from ticket sales, equivalent to about $177 million in 2019 dollars adjusted for inflation, generated primarily through stadium pricing in the $30–$100 range depending on seating and market.[62] Additional earnings from merchandise and concessions contributed modestly, though exact breakdowns remain undisclosed by promoters; the gross fell short of the Bad World Tour's $125 million due to the absence of North American dates and higher operational costs in overseas logistics.[63] International dominance was evident in per-show averages rivaling or exceeding Bad tour metrics in comparable regions, with Mexico's leg alone yielding promoter-estimated highs from sheer volume.[3]Records and Achievements
The Dangerous World Tour grossed over $100 million from 69 concerts exclusively in international markets, marking it as the first pop concert series to achieve this revenue milestone without U.S. performances and highlighting the unparalleled global demand for Jackson's live shows at the time.[2] This figure, equivalent to approximately $220 million in 2024 dollars when adjusted for inflation, reflected the tour's massive production scale, with investments in stadium-level staging, pyrotechnics, and multimedia elements that enabled attendance of up to 3.5 million fans across Europe, Asia, Latin America, and Australia.[10] In terms of philanthropic impact, the tour served as a benchmark for artist-driven global aid initiatives, with all profits directed to charities including Jackson's Heal the World Foundation, ultimately channeling over $100 million toward children's welfare programs and environmental causes.[2][10] These funds supported empirical efforts such as orphanages, medical aid for underprivileged youth, and community health projects in host countries, demonstrating a causal link between the tour's commercial success and tangible humanitarian outcomes verified through foundation reports.[64] The tour's technical achievements, including the deployment of eight audio mixing consoles for a "wall of sound" effect and large-scale video projections, established production standards that prioritized immersive audience experiences, paving the way for similar high-tech integrations in future arena tours by emphasizing reliability and spectacle over prior limitations in live amplification and visuals.[5]Reception
Critical Reviews
Critics lauded the Dangerous World Tour for its groundbreaking production values and Jackson's commanding stage charisma, which elevated the concerts beyond mere musical events into multimedia spectacles. In a review of the October 1, 1992, Bucharest performance, Variety praised the event as "a spectacle of epic proportions," emphasizing the mammoth stage setup, precision lighting effects, and illusions that supported tightly choreographed sequences such as the opener "Jam."[65] This aligned with broader press recognition of the tour's technical ambition, including over 100 tons of equipment transported globally, which Q Magazine described as "the biggest, most lavish, most expensive stage production ever attempted."[66] Certain UK-based and international outlets critiqued the heavy reliance on visual and pyrotechnic elements, arguing that overproduction sometimes obscured vocal inconsistencies or strain evident in Jackson's delivery during high-energy segments. For instance, retrospective analyses informed by contemporary observations noted that the tour's demanding physical choreography and schedule contributed to audible raspiness in later 1992 shows, a point echoed in discussions of performances like those in Copenhagen, though primary press at the time focused more on spectacle than outright condemnation.[67] Such views reflected a media tendency to prioritize stylistic excess over the performer's undiluted artistic execution, potentially undervaluing Jackson's ability to integrate dance, visuals, and song into cohesive live experiences. Framings of the tour as a "freak show" in some coverage were dismissed as ad hominem distractions from performance merits, substituting personal sensationalism for evaluation of empirical elements like crowd synchronization and set evolution. Despite these critiques, the tour's commercial draw—evidenced by sold-out arenas and sustained revenue—highlighted a causal disconnect between selective press skepticism and audience validation of the production's substantive impact.[68] Mainstream outlets, often influenced by institutional biases favoring narrative-driven reporting over raw data, underrepresented this public-grounded success in favor of spectacle-versus-substance dichotomies.Public and Fan Response
The Dangerous World Tour generated extraordinary public excitement, with fans exhibiting physical overwhelm such as fainting from sheer anticipation and visual presence of Michael Jackson. At the September 1, 1992, concert in Bucharest, Romania, Jackson's routine of standing motionless on stage for approximately 1.5 to 3 minutes—accompanied by crowd chants and screams—prompted several attendees to faint, necessitating security intervention to carry them away; this incident exemplified the tour's capacity to evoke hysteria through minimal provocation.[69] [70] Such reactions were recurrent across performances, where hundreds of fans reportedly collapsed amid the emotional intensity, underscoring Jackson's unparalleled draw akin to mass adoration seen in prior musical eras but amplified by global scale and multimedia exposure.[69] [71] Fan fervor varied regionally, peaking in Latin America where Jackson's October-November 1993 Mexico City shows set attendance benchmarks with five consecutive sell-outs at Estadio Azteca, reflecting deep local devotion.[3] In Asia, including stops like Singapore in 1993, audiences described an electrifying atmosphere despite logistical challenges, sustaining high engagement throughout the tour's eastern leg.[72] Although the relentless playlist of hits raised occasional speculation of audience saturation among observers, empirical indicators like consistent sell-outs and persistent physical manifestations of zeal demonstrated enduring demand without evident decline.[73]Cultural and Industry Impact
The Dangerous World Tour advanced concert production standards through its use of sophisticated pyrotechnics, dynamic staging, and large-scale choreography, elements that choreographers from the tour later applied to high-grossing spectacles like Cirque du Soleil's Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour, which ranked among the top-earning tours ever.[74] These innovations contributed to the 1990s shift toward arena-filling visual extravaganzas, influencing industry norms for technical integration in live events.[8] By conducting 69 concerts across Europe, Asia, Australia, and other regions—reaching nearly 4 million attendees without initial North American dates—the tour validated the profitability of global itineraries emphasizing emerging markets, a strategy that later enabled acts to build international fanbases independently of U.S. dominance.[2] This model demonstrated causal pathways from targeted overseas promotion to sustained revenue streams, as evidenced by the tour's $100 million-plus gross from non-domestic venues.[75] The tour's "Heal the World" segments linked performances to the Heal the World Foundation, channeling proceeds toward children's welfare, drug education, and humanitarian aid, including 46 tons of supplies airlifted to Sarajevo; these efforts raised millions toward a $100 million goal, providing an empirical template for artists to merge entertainment with verifiable fundraising and awareness campaigns.[2][76] Such integrations empirically boosted donations and global visibility for causes, predating similar cause-driven tours while highlighting scalable philanthropy without relying on unverified self-reporting.[64] Although subsequent media narratives prioritized scandals over achievements, the tour's documented production feats and charitable outputs marked a zenith in Jackson's influence on touring economics and cultural philanthropy, sustaining his legacy in industry practices despite biased coverage in mainstream outlets.[77]Controversies and Challenges
Health Incidents and Addiction Claims
In August 1993, during shows in Bangkok, Thailand, Jackson canceled his second concert scheduled for August 25, citing acute dehydration exacerbated by extreme heat and humidity, according to his physician Stuart Finkelstein.[37] The performer had completed the initial Bangkok date on August 24 despite emerging reports of physical strain from the tour's demanding 100-minute sets involving high-energy choreography and pyrotechnics.[78] Later that month in Singapore, Jackson collapsed onstage during preparations for a concert on August 30, suffering from severe dehydration and a migraine that caused vomiting and headache, prompting the cancellation of the August 31 performance.[79] Finkelstein, who treated Jackson on tour, later testified that these episodes reflected underlying physical toll from overexertion, with no comparable breakdowns in Jackson's prior tours of lesser intensity.[80] By November 12, 1993, Jackson publicly admitted dependency on prescription painkillers such as Demerol, stating in a taped message that the addiction stemmed from medications prescribed for chronic pain, including peptic ulcers aggravated by tour stress and rehearsal injuries.[81][82] This led to the abrupt termination of the remaining tour dates and his admission to a rehabilitation facility in the United States for treatment.[83] Finkelstein confirmed administering painkillers during the Asian leg to manage such conditions, noting Jackson's increasing reliance as a factor in halting performances.[80] The incidents underscored the physiological limits of sustaining high-stakes shows without adequate recovery, as Jackson's regimen lacked precedents in his earlier, shorter tours.[84]Child Molestation Allegations
In August 1993, as the Dangerous World Tour neared its conclusion, 13-year-old Jordan Chandler accused Michael Jackson of molesting him on multiple occasions, including during sleepovers at Jackson's residences in Los Angeles and near Las Vegas.[85] The claims, reported to authorities by Jordan's father, Evan Chandler—a dentist and screenwriter—alleged that Jackson had engaged in fondling and other sexual acts with the boy starting in 1992.[86] Evan Chandler had earlier approached Jackson's associates in July 1993 seeking a business deal or financial support, and a secretly recorded phone conversation captured him discussing a strategy to leverage abuse allegations for a substantial payout, stating, "If I go through with this, I win big-time. There's no way I lose."[85][87] Jackson vehemently denied the accusations, asserting in a public statement on November 16, 1993, that they were fabricated for extortion and that his friendships with children, including shared beds during innocent sleepovers, stemmed from his own deprived childhood rather than any sexual intent.[85] He emphasized the absence of prior complaints from the many children who had visited his homes and framed the claims as motivated by his wealth and fame.[86] Los Angeles police launched an investigation, conducting searches of Jackson's Neverland Ranch on August 30, 1993, and Neverland Valley on September 13, 1993, while requiring Jackson to submit to a body examination; the probe uncovered no physical evidence of abuse and relied heavily on Jordan's descriptions, which later showed inconsistencies regarding Jackson's genitalia when compared to photographs.[85] The Chandlers filed a civil lawsuit in September 1993 seeking damages for battery and emotional distress. On January 25, 1994, Jackson reached an out-of-court settlement totaling approximately $23 million, including $15.3 million placed in a trust for Jordan Chandler payable at age 18, with the remainder allocated to Evan and Jordan's mother; the agreement explicitly stated that Jackson admitted no wrongdoing and retained the right to defend his innocence.[85] Prosecutors dropped the criminal case on September 19, 1994, citing Jordan's refusal to testify as a key factor, amid reports of family disputes and Jordan's expressed reluctance to pursue the matter further.[86] During Jackson's 2005 criminal trial on unrelated allegations, testimony revisited the 1993 case, highlighting Evan Chandler's history of strained relations with his son—including prior threats of harm—and the lack of contemporaneous corroboration from other witnesses, though the Chandlers maintained their narrative without Jordan testifying.[87]Cancellations and Tour Termination
The Dangerous World Tour faced multiple cancellations and postponements throughout its run, primarily attributed to Jackson's reported health complications. Early instances included the cancellation of two scheduled performances in Bangkok on September 10 and 12, 1992, due to dehydration, and the postponement of a Singapore date following Jackson's onstage collapse from exhaustion.[82] Additional delays occurred in various locations, such as rescheduling from viral infections and other unspecified health issues, contributing to over 20 affected dates across planned legs in regions including Asia and Europe.[88] The tour's final shows took place in Mexico City at Estadio Azteca on October 29–30 and November 6–7 and 11, 1993, drawing a total attendance of approximately 550,000 fans and marking the highest concert attendance records for the venue at the time.[3] On November 13, 1993, Jackson announced the abrupt termination of all remaining dates, including shelved extensions to Australia, Russia, and other territories, stating that his dependency on painkillers necessitated immediate recovery over continuing performances.[6] This decision halted the tour at 69 completed concerts out of an originally projected longer itinerary that extended into late 1993.[88] Promoters incurred significant financial repercussions from the cancellations, prompting refunds to ticket holders and insurance-related settlements in some markets. In one prominent case, the tour's worldwide promoter filed a $20 million lawsuit against Jackson in December 1993, alleging fraud and breach of contract over the unfulfilled dates and associated lost revenue.[7] Jackson's public statement accompanying the termination emphasized prioritizing his health restoration, apologizing to fans for the disruptions while underscoring the necessity of the halt to avoid further risks.[89] The move forwent an estimated $20 million or more in potential gross earnings from the abandoned legs.[7]Personnel
Musical and Production Staff
Greg Phillinganes served as musical director for the Dangerous World Tour, responsible for translating Michael Jackson's studio recordings into live arrangements suitable for the stage.[16] He adapted tracks by extending instrumental sections to accommodate extended dance routines while preserving a raw, live musical edge, relying on a click track for percussion synchronization rather than full sequencing.[16] Phillinganes performed keyboards, including piano, strings, and horns, using equipment such as a Yamaha KX88 controller, Korg 01W Pro, and various modules like the Akai S1100 for sampled elements handled in collaboration with Brad Buxer.[16] Peter Morse designed and directed the tour's lighting, incorporating early use of automated moving fixtures—comprising about 20% of the rig—alongside conventional instruments to adapt to diverse venue sizes and create dynamic visual effects synchronized with performances.[90][91] The tour's sound production emphasized high-fidelity adaptation to large venues, exemplified by the deployment of eight dedicated audio trucks to manage the extensive system at Wembley Stadium during the 1992 European leg.[5] No significant alterations to the core musical or production staff occurred between the 1992 and 1993 legs, maintaining consistency in audio-visual execution across 69 concerts.[16]Dancers and Support Crew
The Dangerous World Tour featured a core group of backup dancers who performed intricate, synchronized choreography designed by LaVelle Smith Jr., emphasizing precision and high-energy movements to complement Jackson's stage presence.[92] These performers were selected for their technical skill and endurance, undergoing intensive rehearsals to master routines that demanded exact timing and physical agility across the tour's demanding schedule of 69 concerts.[17] Backup dancers were maintained to substitute for any injuries or exhaustion, reflecting the toll of repetitive high-impact performances that paralleled Jackson's own experiences with dehydration and physical strain during the tour.[6] The support crew, numbering around 160 permanent members, included roadies, stage technicians, and logistics specialists who managed the tour's extensive production requirements.[16] This team handled transportation of over 100 tons of equipment, loaded onto 33 trucks and supported by 13 tour buses, enabling the setup of complex elements like hydraulic stages and elaborate lighting for venues worldwide.[16] [23] Their role ensured seamless operations across the global itinerary, adapting to diverse international logistics without overlap into musical or creative production duties.Tour Schedule
Completed Dates
The Dangerous World Tour comprised 69 completed concerts across multiple legs, primarily in Europe, Asia, and Latin America, drawing an estimated total attendance of over 3 million spectators. The first leg focused on Europe from June 27 to September 26, 1992, followed by a standalone performance in Bucharest on October 1, 1992, and seven shows in Japan during December 1992. The second leg ran from August 24 to November 11, 1993, covering parts of Asia, Eurasia, and Latin America.[36][93] Key metrics by leg are summarized below, with capacities reflecting venue standards and verified attendance where documented. Shows were held in stadiums and domes with typical capacities ranging from 25,000 to over 100,000, often selling out due to high demand.| Leg | Date Range | Number of Shows | Primary Cities and Venues | Notable Capacities/Attendance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Europe (1st Leg) | June 27 – September 26, 1992 | 39 | Munich (Olympiastadion), London (Wembley Stadium, multiple dates), Paris (Hippodrome de Vincennes), Rome (Stadio Flaminio) | 70,000–72,000 per show at major venues like Wembley and Olympiastadion; e.g., Munich opener: 72,000[36] |
| Bucharest | October 1, 1992 | 1 | Bucharest (Lia Manoliu National Stadium) | ~90,000 capacity, sold out[36] |
| Japan | December 12–31, 1992 | 7 | Tokyo (Tokyo Dome, all dates) | ~55,000 per show at Tokyo Dome[94] |
| Asia/Eurasia/Latin America (2nd Leg) | August 24 – November 11, 1993 | 22 | Bangkok (Suphachalasai Stadium), Singapore (National Stadium), Mexico City (Estadio Azteca, five dates), Buenos Aires (Estadio Más Monumental, three dates) | 80,000–114,000 per show at larger venues; Mexico City: 550,000 total for five shows, breaking local records[3] |
Cancelled and Postponed Dates
Several concerts during the Dangerous World Tour were postponed or cancelled due to health-related issues affecting Michael Jackson. On August 1, 1992, the scheduled performance at Wembley Stadium in London was cancelled because of Jackson's laryngitis and throat infection, though subsequent Wembley dates proceeded after recovery.[95] Later, the August 30, 1993, show in Singapore was postponed to September 1 after Jackson collapsed from exhaustion prior to the original date. In August 1993, two planned concerts in Bangkok, Thailand—originally set amid emerging child molestation allegations—were cancelled, with Jackson citing severe dehydration as the cause, though the stress from the scandal contributed to his physical strain.[6] The tour's European leg concluded prematurely after 37 of 42 scheduled dates, primarily due to Jackson's deteriorating health requiring rest before resuming in Asia and Latin America.[96] By late 1993, following the final shows in Mexico City on November 8–11, Jackson announced the tour's termination on November 13, attributing it to an addiction to painkillers prescribed for exhaustion and an inflamed vertebrae, which necessitated hospitalization and rehabilitation.[6][42] This abrupt end halted unfulfilled plans for additional markets, including Australia, South Africa, Chile, and Peru, forgoing a broader Latin American extension and potential North American leg that had been in preliminary discussions.[6][97]| Date | Location | Status | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| August 1, 1992 | Wembley Stadium, London, UK | Cancelled | Laryngitis and throat infection[95] |
| August 23–24, 1993 | Bangkok, Thailand | Cancelled | Dehydration amid allegations-related stress[6] |
| August 30, 1993 | Singapore | Postponed to September 1 | Collapse from exhaustion |
| Late 1993 (planned) | Australia, South Africa, Chile, Peru | Cancelled | Painkiller addiction and hospitalization[6][42] |
