POSTAGE IS

$16 worldwide


all GRADED AS EX 


Amazing items of Michael Jackson. You will receive all items pictured.


1. Three unused stick-on backstage passes from the 1997 History World Tour all in EX condition


2. Michael Jackson "King of Pop" History Tour Collector Magazine from the UK in full colour, great photo's size is 29x21CM and has approx 40 pages with also a poster inside. in EX condition.


3. Very very rare History Tour wave glove in unused condition. Special item from the tour to wave of course, or sit on it during waiting time. This is a unique concert item and not available anymore, size is 43x36CM, in EX condition.


4. Michael Jackson - 2001 - 30th Anniversary Celebration / New / Size XL T-shirt. Armpit to armpit 55CM / Top-down 68CM


The Michael Jackson: 30th Anniversary Celebration was a 2001 concert show and television special by Michael Jackson. It was staged in Madison Square Garden in New York City on September 7 and 10, 2001.


In late November 2001, the CBS television network aired the concerts as a two-hour special in honor of Jackson's thirtieth year as a solo entertainer (his first solo single, "Got to Be There", was recorded 


in 1971). The show was edited from footage of the two performances. The show was watched by 30 million viewers on CBS when it aired later the same year.


The shows sold out in 2 hours. Ticket prices were among the most expensive ever for an event; the best seats cost $10,000 and included a dinner with Jackson and a signed poster. The show was choreographed by Glenn Douglas Packard and Brian Thomas, who were nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Choreography. 


It was presented by David Gest, World Events LLC, and Clear Channel Entertainment. Jackson reportedly earned $7.5 million for each of the two concerts. The concert's official box-office taking was $10,072,105 

for both concerts.


To some fans, Jackson appeared more disoriented in the first concert, as he only did one short moonwalk and improvised the ending of the "Billie Jean" performance. In 2011, presenter David Gest claimed that Jackson was on drugs during the concerts in the documentary Michael Jackson: The Life of an Icon; however, 


Jackson himself explained that he merely had not rehearsed for the first concert. Contradictorily, in his book You Are Not Alone: Michael Through a Brother's Eyes, brother Jermaine Jackson said that during 

this time Michael was taking Demerol, a pain-relieving medicine with psychotropic effects. The show attracted numerous celebrities, including basketball players, actors, and other musicians. The two concerts were the only times Jackson performed any song from his album Invincible live.


Items will be shipped by registrated mail.