Madonna Pays Tribute to Michael Jackson In Concert
The reigning queen of pop paid her respects to the late King of Pop Saturday night with a musical tribute to the star.
Madonna performed in the O2 in London, the same arena where Michael Jackson was set to stage his "This is it" tour on July 13.
As Madonna sang "Holiday" during her "Sticky and Sweet" tour, a Michael Jackson impersonator took the stage, sporting a sequin-embellished jacket, a Jackson-esque white glove, white socks and a white t-shirt. An image of Jackson as a child appeared in the background.
The impersonator then danced to Jackson's "Wanna Be Starting Something" and even took on the music legend's iconic moonwalk.
After Madonna shouted "Let's give it up for one of the greatest artists the world has ever known," the pop star and her dancers wore jeweled gloves on their right hands to honor Jackson in their last dance.
Madonna wasn't the only mega-star that paid tribute to Jackson since his death. U2 gave respects to the musical prodigy at their opening concert in Barcelona when they sang "Angel of Harlem". Bono threw in some lyrics to some of Jackson's greatest hits.
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Be there as the world says goodbye to the King of Pop. Watch The Michael Jackson Memorial on Tuesday at 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT, live on E! and E! Online
Rise 'n' Shine: U2 Gets In On the M.J. Tribute Action
• U2 kicked off their 360 tour this week at Barcelona's Camp Nou stadium. Before a crowd of nearly 90,000, he bled the end of "Angel in Harlem" into a Michael Jackson tribute, including the choruses of "Man in the Mirror" and "Don't Stop." We expect Bono and friends are giving us a taste of what will be a trend throughout the summer concert season.
• Mamma Mia! Supposedly, promoters are trying to woo Abba into reuniting and filling the void in London's O2 schedule since M.J. won't be playing there anytime soon.
• Leonardo DiCaprio's on-again, off-again hottie gal pal, Bar Refaeli, takes nearly two minutes to show you her tan lines (and then some).
• MTV reality show spoilers! Erin Lucas? Gone from The City! Joey with the tattoos? Gone from Real World: Cancun! Paris Hilton? Still looking for a BFF.
• Kim Kardashian doesn't bother with a garage sale. She puts her gently-used goods on eBay for charity!
• Dear Mischa Barton: Enough of this already. We're ready for you to start living The Beautiful Life. Love, Rise 'n' Shine
Kendra Wilkinson sure looked lovely on her wedding day, didn't she? Relive her love life in Kendra & Hank's Romantic Timeline gallery!
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Is a Whole Week of U2 on Letterman Too Much U2?
Why is U2 performing on Letterman for the entire week? One night is good enough for most people to swallow.
—Lisi, via Twitter
OMG, you did not just diss the MOST HUGEST BAND on this undeserving planet—the band that Jesus would probably be playing in if he were here right now? The band that just got a street named after it?
Apparently U2 doesn't do a ton of talk show appearances, and talk show producers consider them to be a huge get. And here you thought the Jonas Brothers were the biggest band in the world. U2 has appeared on Letterman's show only twice before this week.
Do celebrities—even the B and C-list ones—fly first class? Can the C-listers afford it?
—BB
Bono: Even More New U2 Music Coming Soon
Turns out there's even more on U2's horizon.
Still in the thralls of a virtually unprecedented publicity blitz to hype yesterday's release of No Line on the Horizon, the Irish rockers have announced they are already planning to drop another album of new material later this year.
The sister work is titled Songs of Ascent and is described as having a mellower vibe.
"We're making a kind of heartbreaker, a meditative, reflective piece of work, but not indulgent," Bono says in a new Rolling Stone interview. "It will have a clear mood, like [Miles Davis' masterpiece] Kind of Blue. Or [John Coltrane's seminal] A Love Supreme would be a point of reference, for the space it occupies in people's lives, which is to say, with that album, I almost take my shoes off to listen to it."
U2-Powered Spider-Man Musical Gets Premiere Date
Broadway's Spidey senses are tingling.
Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark, the hyped stage musical directed by Julie Taymor (The Lion King) with music and lyrics courtesy of U2's Bono and The Edge, will kick off what its producers hope will be an amazing run along the Great White Way beginning with previews on Jan. 16, 2010, and a Feb. 18, 2010, opening night.
The $40 million effort, reportedly the most expensive Broadway production ever, will make its debut in the Hilton Theatre, the only venue big enough to allow the superhero room to spin his way around the sprawling skyscraper sets while duking it out with various bad guys.
U2's Horizon Already in Plain View
Objects on the Horizon are closer than they appear.
Despite U2's best efforts to keep their 12th studio album, No Line on the Horizon, under wraps until its March 3 release...it's out there, baby, and has been downloaded about 100,000 times.
The pirates were kept at bay, however. In these fileshare-happy times of ours, it was actually Universal Music Group mate Universal Australia that accidentally made the album available for download earlier this week. The label remedied its mistake a few hours later but, by then, enough fans around the globe—including the fan blog U2log.com—had snatched it up for $19.98 to turn a leak into a flood.
Letterman Residency on Horizon for U2
And the No. 1 reason for U2 fans to stay up late...
David Letterman has just signed up the band for a week-long stint at the home office
Bono and the boys are scheduled as Late Show musical guests on five consecutive nights, from March 2-6, as part of a massive publicity push for their new album, No Line on the Horizon. The Irish rockers' 12th studio effort is scheduled to drop March 3.
The five-night booking, a first for Letterman, comes on the heels of U2's rollicking performance of the single "Get On Your Boots" at last Sunday's Grammy Awards.
The last Late Show appearance for the Rock and Roll Hall of Famers was back in 2001 when U2 was making the promotional rounds for All That You Can't Leave Behind.
We Want U2 Get Your Thoughts On
Hello, hello. Unless you're suffering vertigo, you probably already know about U2's 12th studio album, No Line on the Horizon, hitting stores on March 3.
Either way, here's your first taste with the single, "Get On Your Boots."
Bono and friends have clearly taken a somewhat different path than 2005's Grammy-winning How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb, but what do you think? Does it knock your boots off, or have no effect on you whatsoever?
HBO Enlists Bono, Beyoncé, the Boss to Honor Obama
This month, HBO stands for Honoring Barack Obama.
Bono, Bruce Springsteen, Beyoncé and Denzel Washington are among the very bold-faced headliners expected for the pay-cable network's Jan. 18 special We Are One: The Obama Inaugural Celebration at the Lincoln Memorial, one of the nearly 5,000 celebrations taking place across the U.S. leading up to Obama's swearing-in on Jan. 20.
Also confirmed for the smorgasbord of musical performances and historical readings are "Yes We Can" maestro Will.i.am, Usher, Mary J. Blige, Garth Brooks, Stevie Wonder, Shakira, John Legend, Sheryl Crow, Josh Groban, Jamie Foxx, John Mellencamp, Queen Latifah, Herbie Hancock, opera star Renee Fleming and Sugarland's Jennifer Nettles.
The Washington, D.C., show will be free and open to the public. (We suggest getting in line now.)
New U2 on the Horizon
This Horizon is drawing near.
U2 today officially confirmed the title (No Line on the Horizon) and release date (March 3) for the band's hugely anticipated 12th studio album.
Bono and the boys began writing and recording the new disc, the follow-up to 2005's Grammy-winning How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb, in Fez, Morocco. Additional sessions took place in New York, Dublin and London.


