Friday, April 24, 2020

Man in the Mirror Alone

Man in the Mirror Alone

City Man, dubbed by King of Pop as 'official substitute,' talks about his muse

 
originally published in the New Britain Herald

  
The late Michael Jackson has probably inspired as many impersonators as Elvis, and the “World's Best Michael Jackson impersonator” (so dubbed by Jackson himself) is Joby Rogers, a 1985 alumnus of New Britain High School who now lives in Meriden. He's been a professional Jackson impersonator since before he finished high school, but now that his muse has passed, what will happen to his career?

“It's been nonstop phone calls, texts and emails since the day of. Literally around the clock. I got calls today to go to the Poconos, a call to go to Chile,” Rogers said in an interview last week in his modest home on a shady, tree-lined street. Despite the many offers coming in, though, Rogers plans to keep his schedule empty for awhile. “I have a performance in California this weekend, a private event in San Francisco. I scheduled it months ago, before this happened. I want the hype to die down before I perform again.”

Ironically, Rogers learned about Jackson's death much later than most of Jackson's fans. “I had slept in late that day, and didn't know until my son came in and said 'I'm sorry about Michael Jackson, Dad.' It was devastating. I didn't realize how devastating it wold be, because it happened so soon.”

Rogers is careful to note that, while he imitates Michael Jackson, he has never parodied him. “I've always been pro-Michael. I got offered to be in 'Scary Movie,' but turned that down because they wouldn't tell me what the part would be.” His instincts were right; the role called for a rather insulting Jackson caricature. “I never take roles like 'pedophile.' … I don't think he was guilty. I think, always being in the spotlight since he was 5 years old, I don't think he knew how average Americans live life. So when he said 'I had boys in my bedroom,' well, he had a two-story bedroom at Neverland, not a little corner room with a twin bed in the corner. I don't think he understood –'What, doesn't everybody have a two-story bedroom?'”

Rogers' belief in Jackson's innocence is based on more than faith. “If you had the FBI investigating you, spending $25 million, looking all over your house, all over your computer, if you did something, they'd find it.”

Rogers started performing as Jackson in 1984. “The first time I performed was at E.C. Goodwin High junior prom. My first paid performance was at Molly Malone's [a former strip club], if you can believe that.” (He gave a solo performance, and did not share the stage with the young ladies who normally worked there.)

While still in high school, he already had a steady job impersonating Jackson. “I worked for a company called the Ballonery, which did kid's parties. Now you might have Barney and such, then he hired me to perform as Michael Jackson.” So Rogers would go to a party, perform a song or two, and leave. “I got $35 a pop, sometimes doing three shows a day. Good money for a high school kid.”

After graduating high school, Rogers plunged into full-time Jackson impersonation. “In New York I did an off-Broadway show called 'Cafe Society,' all drag queens and celebrity impersonators. That's where I learned to do makeup techniques. It taught me a lot about that.” Even now, Rogers supplements his Jackson income by working as a makeup artist, and teaching makeup techniques.

“My transition from this” – he motioned to himself, an ordinary-looking man in blue jeans and a summer shirt – “to being fully done as Michael takes about an hour and a half. When people ask me to do Michael Jackson out of character [and costume], it feels weird.”

Rogers has been married for 10 years. “I met my wife at a show in Wallingford … she likes Michael's music, but she's more of a Keith Urban kind of girl.”

Just inside the front door of Rogers' house is a playroom for his two kids, Jaden, age 8, and Aubree, 4. It's a typical children's playroom, all bright primary colors, except for the two walls dedicated to Jackson and Jackson-impersonator memorabilia: Rogers on Conan O'Brien, Rogers posing with other celebrities, and the centerpiece of the wall display: a framed platinum album, which Jackson gave to Rogers to commemorate the one millionth sale of “Thriller.” There is also a framed affidavit, dated Jan. 1, 2003 and signed by Jackson himself, designating Rogers the best impersonator: “I [Michael Jackson] have been fully furnished … with pictures, video, sound samples, height [and] weight specifications of applicants. After viewing one hundred and sixteen (116) different possible substitutes, it is the decision I [Michael Jackson] have made to have Mr. Joby Rogers … be my official substitute.”

“Michael Jackson has had a great impact on my life. Because of him I've had the chance to travel the world, meet people I never would have met. Coming out of Mount Pleasant, the projects of New Britain, and it's all because of him … Before I had my children, I'd be on the road six or nine months out of the year, but after Jaden was born I went away for a week and I was miserable.”

Rogers believes that ultimately, Jackson will be remembered for his music rather than the tabloid-fodder events of the past two decades. “They had this show about tribes that had never even seen a lightbulb, and asked them what they knew about America. They all said 'Michael Jackson,' even if they didn't know who he was.”

Like most, if not all, Jackson fans, Rogers never expected Jackson's demise to come so soon, though in retrospect, perhaps it wasn't so surprising.

“A friend told me Michael Jackson was trying to be Peter Pan, and Peter Pan is not supposed to be 50 years old.”