Jackson fans flock to Grammy Museum exhibit

LOS ANGELES -- Jeanne LaCroix gazed with a wistful smile at the images unspooling across two giant screens inside downtown Los Angeles' Grammy Museum: a teenage Michael Jackson surrounded by his brothers as they announced the name of a winner at the 1974 Grammy Awards ceremony.

When the montage shifted to the moment 10 years later when he strode onstage in a knockout blue sequined jacket with blinding gold epaulets to collect the producer of the year trophy he shared with Quincy Jones for their work on “Thriller,” LaCroix's head snapped around to the glass display case immediately behind her.

“Do they have that jacket in there?” the Los Angeles resident said to her 13-year-old daughter, Brianna.

No, but there were four other equally dazzling specimens from Jackson's spectacular wardrobe: the turquoise jacket decorated with Swarovski crystal from the Jacksons' 1984 Victory tour; a midnight blue and gold number he wore to the unveiling of his star on Hollywood Boulevard's Walk of Fame; the blood red jacket with sparkling gold piping he chose for an American Music Awards show; and the red, white, blue and gold model he put on for the United We Stand concert after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

Positioned amid the glitz-heavy jackets and two sequined gloves circa 1988 — both right-hand only — was a simple white Hugo Boss suit. LaCroix and other visitors to the museum Wednesday were momentarily puzzled at the uncharacteristically plain outfit until they recognized it as the one Jackson wore on the cover of the “Thriller” album.

“It's amazing to see these,” said a wide-eyed Michelle Wallace, on vacation in Los Angeles from Waverly, Iowa, with her husband, Scott, and teenage daughters Bailee and Courtney. Michelle wore a black T-shirt with Jackson's image and the words “In Loving Memory — Michael Jackson.”

Scott Wallace said the family's long-planned trip to California had turned, after Jackson's death last week, into a pilgrimage to various Michael Jackson-related points of interest, among them the seven-month-old Grammy Museum and the performer's star outside Grauman's Chinese Theatre.

The Grammy Museum's exhibition has attracted hundreds of visitors in the days after Jackson's death, but it's actually a stripped-down version of the one the institution had had on display since February.

The original exhibit ended its run June 24 and was being dismantled to make room for a Neil Diamond salute when the news of Jackson's death surfaced.

Museum officials quickly assembled a reconfigured display that will remain up “indefinitely,” executive director Bob Santelli said Wednesday. In addition to Jackson's four jackets, two gloves, “Thriller” suit and video footage from his Grammy appearances as a performer or presenter on display on the second floor, the museum is screening the entire 1984 Grammy Awards show in the lobby and a selection of Jackson's videos in its Soundstage theater.

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 Jackson fans flock to Grammy Museum exhibit 
Michelle Wallace, left, and her daughter Bailee, watch a video of Jackson performing at the 1988 Grammy Awards. (Los Angeles Times)

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