tv Nightline ABC April 22, 2016 12:37am-1:06am EDT
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this is a special edition of "nightline." prince, death of a legend. >> tonight the farewell to rock royalty, prince, dead at 57. ♪ >> "purple rain" turned to tears tonight. remembering the jgenius, his sounds, life, and legacy. tonight, what killed the music legend. stunned fans and fellow artists he inspired throughout the world. reverberations of world. in minneapolis tonight, and what we never knew about this intentionally private artist until now. >> this special edition of night
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we are joined from minneapolis where the artist grew up and spent his last moments this morning. dan. >> reporter: good evening to you from downtown minneapolis where thousands of people have come out for a massive street party in honor of a native son who became pop music royalty, prince. as i said, thousands of people here. they have shut the streets down. they're blaring prince music and people are singing along and when this winds down, the action will move inside the first avenue club, an iconic club here in downtown minneapolis. a place where prince played many times. in fact, it was a backdrop to some of the scenes in that classic movie "purple rain". there will be an all night dance party inside there tonight. there is celebration as you can see. there is also, however, an under current of sadness. people all over the world and all over this country loved prince. but perhaps nowhere is the for
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ver stronger than his hometown of minneapolis. a lot of people say they feel greatful and proud that he never left. they used to see him in the local supermarkets. outside of him home tonight, the place where he recorded his music and also lived, paisley park studios, people are showing up with purple balloons and purple flowers. and one sign that said your music, prince, will live forever. back to you. >> thanks, dan. prince stood just 52. and by every music measure, he was a giant. >> dearly beloved, we are gathered here today to get through this thing called life. >> prolific, pioneering. a star so big the world knew him simply by his first name, prince. ♪ >> but now the world in mourning. >> i need a paramedic on paisley park.
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>> at 9:43 this morning, an ambulance was dispatched to paisley park just outside of minneapolis where the music legend was found unreimportancive in an elevator. paramedics weren't able to revive him. he was pronounced dead. he was 57. just last week on this atlanta stage, prince performed what would be his last show. ♪ ♪ purple rain, purple rain . >> hours later, a moment of crisis. his private plane made an emergency landing in mo lean illinois so the singer could be rushed to the hospital. his spokesperson saying he was battling the flu. he had cancelled two shows earlier this month. soon he was home and tweeted this, i am transformed. the next day he hosted a party
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at his house where he showed off his new purple pea napiano and guitar. >> he was in good spirits. he said when you hear something, give it a couple days before you have prayers. >> tearful friends gathers outside paisley park. this evening his sister came out to be with supporters. >> thank you for loving him. he loved each and every one of you. >> all across the country, it's all prince all night. ♪ >> even spike lee hosting a prince dance party in brooklyn. online an outpouring of grief for music's biggest stars. madonna saying he changed the world, a true visionary. what a loss. i am devastated. on the on apollo theater, nothing compares to you. born prince rogers nelson 1958
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in minneapolis. he took his father's name, his parent's talent. he was called skipper as a boy and played basketball even though he was just 5'2". soon music called him writing his first song at 7. his first album at 19. >> this is a fantastically successful album. ladies and gentlemen, here is prince. >> making one of his first television appearances at 21 on american bandstand. always a bold performer he said his style was a product of overcoming hardship. in a rare admission saying he suffered from epilepsy as a child. >> from that point on i've been having to deal with a lot of things. getting teased a lot in school. early in my career i tried to compensate for that by being as flashy as i could. >> as he told arsenio hall, music was the only thing he
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thought he was good at. >> when i was 16, i was completely broke and needed to get a job. i got the yellow pages out and i couldn't find one thing that i wanted to do, so i decided i was going to push as hard as i could to be a musician and win at it. >> and win he did. his hits, endless. >> prince was not content with one kind of music. that's the legacy. you can make funk, dance music, rock and roll, pop, and do it all on the same songs at the same time. >> creating more albums than his years as an artist and winning seven grammys. >> prince. prince. >> a golden globe. more than 100 million records sold worldwide. but it was his 1984 appearance on the silver screen in "purple rain" that propelled him to mega
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stardom. ♪ >> the sound track would earn him an academy award. >> i could never imagine this in my wildest dreams. >> his talent seemed limitless. known to have played every instrument, and sung every line. >> prince could play everything, and play it well. he would always say attack the instrument. he would like be like you have to really -- and he made playing an instrument very physical. >> transcending race beyond gender and even a name, changing it to a symbol and becoming the artist formally known as prince. >> most people don't get famous with one name and then change it. right? what's the story of that, by the way? >> i had searched deep within my heart and spirit, and i wanted to make a change and move to a new plateau in my life, and one of the ways that i did that was
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changing my name. it sort of divorced me from the past and the hangups that go along with it. >> when he made that transition to the artist formerly known as prince. it was a moment where something overshadowed the music. and for some people the music never came back to center stage. unless you saw prince live in the early 2000s, it was easy to forget how great he was. >> he was flamboyant, but he always had a woman on his arm. during the 80s and 90ings, he was wing with models and even madonna. images like on the back of the motel in "purple rain". he eventually married one of his backup singers in 1997. the two had a child together, a boy named gregory who was born with a rare genetic condition and died days later. prince's major soon ended as well. >> his ex-wife said she is
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devastated, and in many ways he was really the love of her life. >> and not long after this hit -- ♪ tonight i'm going to party like it's 199 ♪ . >> he returned to the name prince. he became a jaehovah witness. >> he maintained a sense of mystery throughout his career. he loved making music, and being a public figure was secondary to that. ♪ >> despite becoming a global superstar, prince chose to stay close to his roots settling down just outside his hometown of minneapolis. he was an active part of the community, performing at the 1991 special olympics. ♪ >> he was often seen supporting local teams like the minnesota timber wolves. ♪ >> based on the way he flashed upon the world stage, some
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presumed he would die young. instead, he lived young. forever sleek, stylish. ♪ >> a real star with real talent, the private prince kept the world at a distance, but prince the performer embraced us all with his music. >> tonight we've learned that an autopsy will be performed friday. when we come back, more on the magical life of prince. proof of less joint pain.his is a body of proof. and clearer skin. this is my body of proof that i can fight psoriatic arthritis ...with humira. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to both joint and skin symptoms. it's proven to help relieve pain, stop further joint damage and clear skin in many adults. humira is the #1 prescribed biologic for psoriatic arthritis.
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now to the echoes of this artistic loss. he was known as a supporter of the rights and talents of fellow writers and musicians. more now from abc's chris conley. >> reporter: he was a star. on the concert stage where his shows became legend. ♪ >> reporter: in the unmistakable music videos. ♪ >> reporter: and through the storm at the super bowl halftime show. if you're wondering what made prince special, the answer is everything. >> we know you as a very mysterious man. you don't do a lot of interviews. you're very sweet but very much to yourself, and shy?
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>> i wouldn't say shy. >> reporter: he wouldn't say much at all, in public at least. but when he sang, when he played, his breathe taking command of funk, soul, and rock and roll, and that dancing made him sexy, sensational, and utterly electrifying. ♪ i just want your extra time and your kiss ♪ >> he set the bar so high that even michael jackson at certain points you could feel wanted to keep up with prince. >> reporter: he was a prolific creative musical visionary, always pushing limits, and in total control of his ground breaking look and sound. and he never backed away from kicking up controversy. his drenched in sex approach and those explicit lyrics left some listene listen aperpletic.
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lyrics leading to the parental advisory warning. he was a provocateur with his sound and style from his band to his rear window jump suit. the mt v vmas to the oscars. he helped mike sheila e a star. and he collaborated with the likes of she na easton. >> he was the physical imbodiment of pure music. so he couldn't stop. >> i don't know what artist wouldn't want to work with him. if he wanted to work with you, you couldn't turn that down. >> reporter: his compositions were smashes for other artists. manic monday he wrote for the
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bangles. and then "nothing compares". >> he has the ability to then make other people great. >> reporter: if his hits grew less frequent, his musician and stage craft remained impeccable and respected by contemporary stars. every award show appearance earning an immediate standing ovation. >> albums still matter. like books and black lives, albums still matter. tonight and always. ♪ don't need experience >> reporter: contemporary stars playing some imagine. that sound of justin similar of adam levine and justin timberlake eerily similar. >> there's something about a
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falseto that women go crazy for. if you hit that high note, they go crazy. so thanks, prince. >> reporter: to prince, it was always about the music, but to viewers he transcended a cultural force in his own right, lovingly set up on saturday night live. and by david chapell on his show. the backdrop of our favorite movies. hi his songs so disdistinct, even h julia robert's rendition. he wrote about the rainfall strife in the city of baltimore and continued to play live gigging at private homes including the white house, and always an advocate for the artists, refusing to allow his songs to appear on most streaming services.
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>> let's talk about titles. your favorite title in the prince catalog, what's your favorite song, turns you on every time you do it? >> i usually answer by saying the next one. >> reporter: part of the anguish of prince's death is that there will be no next one. though within his vaults may yet reside a treasure-trove of music. >> i heard that you have a vault of hundreds of unreleased songs? are you ever going to release them and let us hear? >> one day someone will release them. i don't know that i'll get to release them. >> we'll be hearing new things he left us that are starred in the vaults. he turned himself inside out to bring us music, and that's so sad. i mean, it's so sad. >> reporter: for those who spent decades enthralled with his music, his royal badness will never be dethroned. the grieving tonight mixed with gratitude. the creative he brought to the every day. >> i think more than anything, music matters to prince.
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