Frank DiLeo Speaks about AEG shows and the Day MJ Died

wendy2004

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Thanks to loakim45 on KOP board.

FRANKLY SPEAKING
An exclusive HITS interview with Frank DiLeo

July 30, 2009

Industry vet Frank DiLeo, who was the manager of Michael Jackson from 1984 through 1989, returned to the fold to help guide the superstar through his “This Is It” concerts and presumably beyond, but it was not to be. Here, the industry veteran shares his thoughts with HITS’ own ambulance-chasing Roy Trakin.

This is like Godfather III… Just when you thought you were out, they pull you back in. How did you get involved with Michael again?
Michael first called me a couple of years ago, after he came back from Bahrain, then was in Ireland and Vegas for a while. We chitchatted, he called again and we started communicating about film projects. There were a couple of scripts we wanted to develop and produce. Then he got involved in this concert deal. He called me in March and said, “Frank, I need someone with a little bit of experience. Would you like to manage me again and take care of all this stuff?” And I said, “Yeah, sure.” By the time I came in, everything was signed. Dr. Thome Thome—who is someone I don’t want to talk about in this interview—had miscalculated the scheduling on the dates, which is something I had to take care of, because Michael didn’t want to perform more than twice a week.

Was Michael aware that he was signing for up to 50 individual shows?
Absolutely. I read the contract. I know what the minimum amount of dates were, as well as the maximum number of dates. That contract was read to Michael by three different lawyers, as well as Dr. Thome. He wanted to beat Prince’s record and be in the Guinness Book of World Records. He was the one who picked the number 50. There were enough ticket sales to do 85 shows, but he was zeroed in on 50. That’s what he wanted and that’s what happened. Dr. Thome had him doing three or four shows a week, though. I was adjusting and moving dates to try to make it more palatable for Michael to do.

What had you been doing since managing Michael the first time?
I was in New York with a management company in the ’90s. I retired for a while and spent some time with my son and daughter, seeing them through college. My kids didn’t get a lot of time with me growing up because I was on tour so much, so I felt I owed them that. And that lasted seven years. I did a lot of consulting work. I owned a piece of Tribeca Grill with Robert DeNiro, which did very well. In 2004 I lost my eyesight, and it’s taken six operations to enable me to see. I still have limited vision. It was a diabetic condition that separated the retina. I lost complete sight in one eye and 80% in the other eye. It took two years for them to figure that out. There’s a lot of scar tissue still, and I don’t see well in light. I have to wear dark glasses all the time. I have to move my head to see certain letters because I have a permanent “V” in my vision.

You sat in on most of the rehearsals.
Every single one. He was in good condition. He was working out with Lou Ferrigno. He was dancing over three hours every day after his workout. He was prepared. A lot of times he would watch and direct. These are songs he’s sung his whole life. He didn’t have to go full out every day. The last couple of weeks, he stepped it up. On the night before he died, when he came down after doing 10 or 11 songs, Kenny Ortega was at the bottom of the stairs, we all hugged and Michael put his arm around us and we around him, to walk him to his dressing room. And he said, “Frank, I’m ready. I’m doing all 50 shows. Don’t even think that I’m not.” We talked about possibly doing stadiums after the 50. He said, “Frank, I’ve never been happier. Since you’ve been back, things are going well. I can see the light at the end of the tunnel. We did it once. This is our time to do it again.” And that was the last time I saw him alive.

People were saying Michael was down to 110 pounds and wasn’t in good physical shape.
No, that’s all bullish. He was not down to 110 pounds. He was around 140. At his maximum, he was maybe 155.

You’re telling me this is a very confident guy, ready to take on this challenge.
He knew he was 50 and that the other dancers were young. He built his stamina up to the point where he knew he could do it. Michael’s a competitive guy. I don’t care whether you’re five years old or 40, you’re not going to out-dance Michael Jackson. He’s gonna put it to you sooner or later. And he worked himself up to that.

How did you originally hear about Michael falling ill?
A fan called and said there was an ambulance in front of Michael’s house. I had just sat down to lunch. I called Michael’s assistant and asked what was going on, and I was told there was something wrong and he was on his way over there. So I got in my car and drove over. When I got to the gate, they told me everyone had already left. I turned around and went to UCLA Medical Center, and while I was in the car, Katherine called and I told her she should meet us at the hospital. So we went in the back, and they were working on him in the room. So I thought he was going to be OK. Then the nurse came out, she looked at me and I looked at her… I almost fainted. The look told me it was over, but they would keep working on him until his mother arrived. Meanwhile, the kids were all there, in another room. I had to go in with a doctor and a social worker to tell them what happened. And those are two things I never, ever want to do again. Excuse me a minute, I might cry here. Let me get a sip of water.

What was the children’s reaction?
Exactly what you think it would be: [they] ran up to me, grabbed me, crying and screaming. Finally, Jermaine and LaToya showed up, then Randy… And a social worker started talking to all of them. Meanwhile, I was dealing with the press, trying to keep everybody out, and set up some security. At that point, they said the kids wanted to see their dad. So they moved Michael into a room and covered him. I went in first, got a chance to hug him, kiss him and say goodbye, and 20 minutes later, the kids and the rest of the family got to do the same thing. Everybody forgets. Michael wasn’t just a client to me; he was my friend. I always managed him from that basis. We were friends in the ’80s, and we were friends after he fired me. We were always friends.

Were you aware that Michael had a prescription drug problem?
I didn’t know. I realize it’s come out that he did go to rehab. I asked him in March about it, and he got very indignant. He said, “Frank, do you think I would do something that would jeopardize my kids and leave them alone? Don’t be ridiculous.” So what do you say? Do addicts ever admit they’re doing drugs? No. So, I got to take the man’s word. He’s 50 years old. How far could I push him? I never heard of the stuff he supposedly took [propofol]. When I heard about that on TV, I couldn’t believe it.

Do you have any opinion about the two doctors under investigation, Dr. Arnold Klein and Dr. Conrad Murray?
Michael’s gone to Dr. Klein for years. I don’t know how Michael met Dr. Murray. Michael brought him up to me when he mentioned that part of his contract required AEG to hire him a doctor to be with him in London, and he specified he wanted Dr. Murray, claiming he was his family doctor. The original price he asked for was outrageous. I told Michael I could buy him a whole hospital for that kind of money.

The press reports said AEG was paying him $150k a month.
That’s what I OK’d. What he originally asked for was astronomical. AEG did not hire the doctor. That was Michael’s doctor for months. AEG just advanced him the payment, which was part of the budget. I had one meeting with him, making sure Michael had the right vitamins, what kind of smoothies to make, should it be G2 or Gatorade after the show? He told us he was a cardiologist, and I said, “Michael, this is perfect. Because I’ve already had three heart attacks and I have seven stents in my heart. If I drop over in London, this guy’s right there.”

Dr. Murray was the last man to see Michael Jackson alive.
He was, yes. Nobody knows what happened in that room. We have to wait for the toxicology and the autopsy. I do know the preliminary autopsy said Michael’s organs were in good shape, his liver was good, his heart was strong. They said he did not have a heart attack. It had to be some sort of allergic reaction or something that didn’t blend right. There was some sort of reaction.

Where does that leave you at this point?
There are a few things that have to get cleared up. I have to make sure the estate understands some of the things that I know. I’ve been appointed to the board of Sony/ATV Music Publishing. So I have a role to play there. Michael wrote the letter getting me appointed. After they removed Dr. Thome, they added myself and Joel Katz.

Does it sadden you to see how the family’s inner disagreements are now being aired in public?
It’s sad to the point that there’s a lot of misinformation. The family didn’t know what was going on. They didn’t see Michael every day like I did. He was the closest to his mother and his kids. But I gave him that personal space to be with his family. Some of them are talking about things I don’t think they have the knowledge to talk about. That’s just emotion. They have to face the facts and make some decisions.

What was Michael’s relationship like with his father?
Joe was his father, and that’s what Michael wanted. He didn’t want to know about any business. He just wanted him to be his father. He wanted to be loved as a son, not a commodity.

Did he ever get that?
I don’t know. Watch the Larry King interview with Joe Jackson and you make that determination. It was a train wreck.

You must still be in a state of shock.
Michael created one of the greatest shows ever, a $27 million production. I went through it with him every day. It’s sad that people will never get to see that. But the key thing here is that I lost my friend. That’s what matters to me. All this other stuff is what it is.

Where is your nickname “Tookie” come from?
That’s derived from the name “Tookie.” The chief of police in Pittsburgh came to see my dad when I was born and called me that. Then it became “Tukkie” when I met my wife. Everybody I know from childhood calls me “Tookie.” For everybody after I met my wife, it’s “Tukkie.” We’ve been married for 32 years. I’m the only guy in the record business who’s never had to go to rehab or get a divorce.

http://www.hitsdailydouble.com/news/newsPa...gi?news07696m01
 
” By the time I came in, everything was signed. Dr. Thome Thome—who is someone I don’t want to talk about in this interview—had miscalculated the scheduling on the dates, which is something I had to take care of, because Michael didn’t want to perform more than twice a week.
I've said this already and I'll say it again, why is no one suspicious of Tohme Tohme? That man irks the hell out of me. I remember that pic where Mike had the umbrella and he was standing next to Mike looking back towards the camera. Mike was waving but I was like 'who the f--k is that creepy guy next to Mike?'

Dr. Murray was the last man to see Michael Jackson alive.
He was, yes. Nobody knows what happened in that room. We have to wait for the toxicology and the autopsy. I do know the preliminary autopsy said Michael’s organs were in good shape, his liver was good, his heart was strong. They said he did not have a heart attack. It had to be some sort of allergic reaction or something that didn’t blend right. There was some sort of reaction.
That was one of the theories we had. Remember there was a thread talking about what happened and people were like 'we don't know anything' and 'anything could have happened to Mike'. I remember listing that as a possibility. Other people were talking about that as well.
 
Finally! Someone didn't call Michael a drug addict and didn't imply that he didn't know how much how many shows he was ment to do. It's sounds like Michael. He is a king of pop, for god's sake. He knows how many shows he had to do and no one had the power to decide for him. This is Michael Jackson we know.
 
oh what about him working for aeg now? like um...im gonna go on the record and talk about how im exploiting this...oh wait, is the camera on...
 
That was one of the theories we had. Remember there was a thread talking about what happened and people were like 'we don't know anything' and 'anything could have happened to Mike'. I remember listing that as a possibility. Other people were talking about that as well.[/quote]


good point
 
I believe nothing I read anymore. Everyone wants a piece of the pie. I find it absolutely astounding that this man says he was the one to tell the children. Katherine was on her way there! Sorry, but either he is not being "accurate," or he was entirely out-of-line in not waiting for Katherine to be there and break the news to the children, as family. And yes, it DOES matter who tells the children. I was told of my mother's fatal accident by someone who was NOT family, and that still is a source of pain to me.

So yeah, behind every public statement, by anyone, I look at motive. . . . . . .others may feel differently, but that's my opinion.

carry on,

Vic
 
well if you believe frank, yeah, if you believe others he didn't. its the same with every single detail thats coming out....one person says one thing someone else says the total opposite
 
I've said this already and I'll say it again, why is no one suspicious of Tohme Tohme? That man irks the hell out of me. I remember that pic where Mike had the umbrella and he was standing next to Mike looking back towards the camera. Mike was waving but I was like 'who the f--k is that creepy guy next to Mike?'

I have ALWAYS been suspicious of Tohme, even before the auction fiasco. He is unfindable, pretty much, on the internet as having any sort of business (or medical) presence. He came out of nowhere, and inserted himself closely into Michael's life. Others have done so, and then have eventually been "evicted." That Schmuley Boteach guy was one. Gellar was another, and they are STILL running their mouths. There is a special level of hell for these "cling-ons." IMHO.

In photos, Tohme always seemed to have a scowl and a vise-grip on Michael's arm. His body-language was one of "control," or a desire to control. I never saw an interaction (in vids and photos of "outings") between him and Michael that would indicate closeness or friendship. Interesting how he works for Colony Capital, and now owns the major part of Neverland? Interesting how he "found" five million dollars in cash of Michael's, weeks later? Was there MORE? No way to know. . . . .

And now he's vanished. Has not made any sort of statement. He bears watching, if possible, IMHO.

Vic
 
**throws a grain of salt**

These people are still on AEG's payroll ... or have a vested interest in them.
 
It's just another version of a story. At this point, nobody has credibility, not even Frank, in my eyes.
 
Well one thing that I would think we would eventually get a fact check on is Michael's weight. What Dileo gave is a contradiction of everything else we have been hearing.
 
Yes EC, the man I see in that AEG video does not weigh 140 :no: that is a gross miscalculation. He even told us in this interview that he was BLIND ;)
 
Michael was either:

1. An emaciated drug-addict, too frail to do the concerts.

2. Or, he was fit, healthy, of good weight, "clean," and ready to perform.

3. Or (what is more likely), somewhere in-between those two possibilities.

All this reminds me of the back-stories and plotting behind-the-scenes in the courts of Medieval royalty, where no one cares about "the king," but just how they can profit from that association.

At this point . . . continuing, I'd believe THE FANS and their impressions, before I'd believe anyone else. Of all these individuals and groups, the fans had nothing to gain from Michael except his well-being. In other words, no financial involvement of employment or profits. Think about it?

Do NOT automatically believe the tox-report when it comes out. If there were drugs found in his system, there will be no way of knowing who put them there, and when. Just sayin'. . . .

As I've said from the beginning, "follow-the-money." It's too soon for anyone to cash in life-insurance policies, but when the investigation is more or less resolved. . . watch for who cashes in, and for how much. . . . . .
 
The official reports will be all we have to go by though, sadly enough.
 
I have ALWAYS been suspicious of Tohme, even before the auction fiasco. He is unfindable, pretty much, on the internet as having any sort of business (or medical) presence. He came out of nowhere, and inserted himself closely into Michael's life. Others have done so, and then have eventually been "evicted." That Schmuley Boteach guy was one. Gellar was another, and they are STILL running their mouths. There is a special level of hell for these "cling-ons." IMHO.

In photos, Tohme always seemed to have a scowl and a vise-grip on Michael's arm. His body-language was one of "control," or a desire to control. I never saw an interaction (in vids and photos of "outings") between him and Michael that would indicate closeness or friendship. Interesting how he works for Colony Capital, and now owns the major part of Neverland? Interesting how he "found" five million dollars in cash of Michael's, weeks later? Was there MORE? No way to know. . . . .

And now he's vanished. Has not made any sort of statement. He bears watching, if possible, IMHO.

Vic

I have been suspicious of him this whole time and I too wondered why no info can be found on the internet about him, it's been mentioned he has several alias', but why? -_- I wonder what his access was still to the house? Did he remain close to someone in the house after his termination and was informed by a mole of things happening? Why was he at the hospital with the family if he was no longer employed by Michael? If he's medically trained, does he know how to administer meds and did HE ever give any to Michael? Did he not accept the fact that he was terminated after all the work he did getting Michael back on track, so he was finding ways to hang on? Was he spiteful because he wasn't going to be a part of Michaels comeback?

Alot of suspicion imo. -_-
 
well I didn't really expect him to say:
" Yeah Michael wasn't of good health lately. He didn't eat enough. He couldn't sleep. He was not able to do the concerts. But we all were blinded by our greed and that's why pushing him. We wanted him to make the big money for US. We really couldn't see how bad he felt."

yep... all on AEGs payroll still that's all you can really read out of that interview as a fact.
 
ROLAND S. MARTIN: Marlon, how did you find out about Michael’s death?

MARLON JACKSON: I Talked to Frank Dileo, Michael’s manager. Frank told me that Michael last night was complaining about not feeling well. He called to tell him he wasn’t feeling well. Michael’s doctor went over to see him, and Frank said, ‘Marlon, from last night to this morning, I don’t know what happened.’ When they got to him this morning, he wasn’t breathing. They rushed him to the hospital and couldn’t bring him around. That’s what happened. They don’t know what happened.

Now....

How did you originally hear about Michael falling ill?

A fan called and said there was an ambulance in front of Michael’s house. I had just sat down to lunch. I called Michael’s assistant and asked what was going on, and I was told there was something wrong and he was on his way over there. So I got in my car and drove over. When I got to the gate, they told me everyone had already left. I turned around and went to UCLA Medical Center, and while I was in the car, Katherine called and I told her she should meet us at the hospital. So we went in the back, and they were working on him in the room. So I thought he was going to be OK. Then the nurse came out, she looked at me and I looked at her… I almost fainted. The look told me it was over, but they would keep working on him until his mother arrived. Meanwhile, the kids were all there, in another room. I had to go in with a doctor and a social worker to tell them what happened. And those are two things I never, ever want to do again. Excuse me a minute, I might cry here. Let me get a sip of water.

According to Marlon Jackson, Frank said Michael wasn't feeling well after rehearsals. I would like to know from Frank what Michael was complaining about after rehearsals....

Nothing makes sense anymore. It seems like everyone is covering their asses now.
 
Michael was either:

1. An emaciated drug-addict, too frail to do the concerts.

2. Or, he was fit, healthy, of good weight, "clean," and ready to perform.

3. Or (what is more likely), somewhere in-between those two possibilities.

All this reminds me of the back-stories and plotting behind-the-scenes in the courts of Medieval royalty, where no one cares about "the king," but just how they can profit from that association.

At this point . . . continuing, I'd believe THE FANS and their impressions, before I'd believe anyone else. Of all these individuals and groups, the fans had nothing to gain from Michael except his well-being. In other words, no financial involvement of employment or profits. Think about it?

Do NOT automatically believe the tox-report when it comes out. If there were drugs found in his system, there will be no way of knowing who put them there, and when. Just sayin'. . . .

As I've said from the beginning, "follow-the-money." It's too soon for anyone to cash in life-insurance policies, but when the investigation is more or less resolved. . . watch for who cashes in, and for how much. . . . . .
Somewhere in between is what I believe. People always want easy answers but like I said before and I say it again. If he had been so frail and it was so clear that he would not be able to do it then AEG would not even have been interested even if they were only thinking about money. Why sign someone up for 50 conserts if it is clear that it will never work. The only thing that will happen then is that you loose money. But if it was somewhere in between they might have thought that it is worth the risk.
 
I've said this already and I'll say it again, why is no one suspicious of Tohme Tohme?


YOU AND ME both.

I think everytime I say something, I hear crickets chirping in the background.

I think folks are NOT looking at what transpired 6 months leading up to the KILL.
 
Now....

How did you originally hear about Michael falling ill?



According to Marlon Jackson, Frank said Michael wasn't feeling well after rehearsals. I would like to know from Frank what Michael was complaining about after rehearsals....

Nothing makes sense anymore. It seems like everyone is covering their asses now.


Good catch.


WHY is everybody embellishing, changing their stories or flat out LYING? Am I missing something here?
 
Now....

How did you originally hear about Michael falling ill?



According to Marlon Jackson, Frank said Michael wasn't feeling well after rehearsals. I would like to know from Frank what Michael was complaining about after rehearsals....

Nothing makes sense anymore. It seems like everyone is covering their asses now.

Trish, I think he was answering the question about MJ falling ill ON the day he died. I wish he would have spoken more about the night before Michael died when Michael was supposed to be feeling ill or having chest pains or whatever the situation was. Sometimes I feel like fans need to be questioning these folk cuz we know exactly what questions are important and how to cut thru any crap. This interviewer probably didn't know about MJ complaining of something the night before and didn't ask. That's the number one question I was hoping would get answered. Maybe Frank will go on another show or something so we can get clearer answers.


Edit: And he said Murray was advanced money from AEG, but there was a report that Murray complained to someone that he hadn't been paid yet. And then Randy said Michael never signed off on the paperwork to officially make Murray his doctor. sigh.
 
Where on earth is the truth in all of this? This is getting ridiculous, how much more conflicting can it get.

Tohme has always been a shady character.
 
Now....

How did you originally hear about Michael falling ill?



According to Marlon Jackson, Frank said Michael wasn't feeling well after rehearsals. I would like to know from Frank what Michael was complaining about after rehearsals....

Nothing makes sense anymore. It seems like everyone is covering their asses now.

*sucks teeth*
 
**throws a grain of salt**

These people are still on AEG's payroll ... or have a vested interest in them.


My thoughts exactly! And let us not forget how conviently he tells us in this interview that he's on the Sony/Atv Board.

Is there even a need to say more?
 
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