-40%
GEORGE MICHAEL • Oct.1988 Interview Magazine • 11x14" 'COVER Art' Print •
$ 12.67
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
FROM MY PERSONAL COLLECTIONYou Are Looking At ONE
11x14"
,
High Quality Reproduction Poster / Print
Of The Classic Interview Magazine
COVER ART
For Andy Warhol’s October 1988 Issue -
Featuring GEORGE MICHAEL -
Photographed by Herb Ritts.
PLEASE NOTE
This Listing Is For The 11x14"
COVER ART
Print Only.
IT IS
NOT
FOR THE ORIGINAL FULL 1988 ISSUE
( If You Can Find It )
!!! ONLY ONE ( Full Cover Each ) -Unframed-
11x14" And 16x20"
INTERVIEW COVER POSTER PRINT IS AVAILABLE.
• Printed On Sturdy, Premium 11 Mil Poster Paper!
AS FEATURED
11 x 14”
…..
Unframed
…. $ 24.00
11 x 14”
….….
FRAMED
....... $ 39.00
•
•
•
ALSO AVAILABLE
By Special Request.
16 x 20”
…….
UNFRAMED
....... $ 36.00
16 x 20” …….
FRAMED
....... $ 55.00
S H I P P I N G -
For Ultimate Care and Protection your poster / prints
will be shipped inside heavy corrugated boards.
PLEASE NOTE
11 x 14”, Prints Are
Available FRAMED
With The Clear Lucite
BOX FRAME
Featured.
•••
16 x 20"
,
Prints Are Available FRAMED
With The Lightweight, Black Vinyl & Lucite
POSTER FRAME
Featured.
•
•
•
MESSAGE ME
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN THE
16x20"
OR
THE 'FRAMED' PRINTS
AND I WILL CREATE A SPECIAL RESERVED LISTING
FOR YOU TO COMPLETE YOUR PURCHASE.
OTHER AVAILABLE - INTERVIEW MAGAZINE COVER ART PRINTS
ARE ALSO AVAILABLE BY REQUEST.
INTERNATIONAL BUYERS •
SHIPPING
First Class International ..................
With Customs Trackin
g ........…. $ 34.00
BY REQUEST
Priority Express Registered .....…
With Better Customs Tracking
..…. $ 58.00
Includes Faster Delivery Time & Insurance.
I
Will Notify You With The Exact Shipping Cost For Your Location.
RETURNS
Returns Are Accepted Within 14 Days Of Purchase.
Returns are ONLY accepted carefully packed,
AS RECEIVED
,
in the original packaging with the original protective shipping tube.
Buyer Pays Return Shipping Cost. A full refund, LESS Listing, PayPal & Handling Fees,
will be given ONLY after the item is received, and the original 'Sent' condition is acknowledged.
Poorly Packaged & Damaged Returns Will Not Be Accepted or Refunded.
PLEASE NOTE
For INTERNATIONAL Buyers,
Returns Will NOT Be Accepted For This Item.
All INTERNATIONAL Sales Are Final.
• ABOUT GEORGE MICHAEL •
On Christmas day, George Michael passed away in his home at the age of 53.
After decades in the spotlight, it’s easy to forget just how young Michael was when he started his music career;
he was just 17 when Wham! signed its first record deal, and only 20 when the duo’s first album,
Fantastic, reached number one in the U.K. album charts.
Since Michael’s death, stories have emerged of Michael’s understated philanthropy and kindness:
A 5,000 pound tip to a waitress struggling with student debt; a 50,000 pound donation
to a woman hoping to undergo fertility treatments;
millions of pounds given to the children’s charity Childline.
In the below interview, reprinted from our October 1988 issue,
Michael is 25 years old and fresh off the success of his debut solo album Faith.
It’s 2 o’clock in the afternoon. George Michael is having a club sandwich and a diet cola for lunch.
He’s wearing a black crew-neck t-shirt, slightly worn blue jeans (fashionably torn at the knee),
and black Western-style boots. His hair is perfectly coiffed, and his three-day growth of stubble is carefully groomed.
Unlike so many stars who barely resemble in person their photographic or celluloid images,
George Michael looks very much like, well, George Michael.
I catch up with the British pop star on the third leg of his U.S. tour.
He is about to play three sold-out concerts in New York’s Madison Square Garden and has been on the road
for nearly seven months now. Outwardly, at least, he doesn’t look the worse for wear. I
n fact, as he peers out of his hotel window, 17 floors above Central Park,
he seems quite oblivious to the hoopla surrounding him.
It has been six years since George Michael burst onto the music scene
as one half of the pop duo Wham! In tandem with boyhood friend Andrew Ridgeley,
Michael produced three albums for Wham! The second, Make It Big, spawned several hits on the
British and American carts, including three chart-topping singles. I
t also established Wham! as international pop stars.
The Wham! years were not altogether idyllic for Michael.
Music critics were quite uncharitable, dismissing Wham! as something of a joke,
and Michael as something of a poseur. And at the time, Michael did little to dispel such criticism.
He was perfectly happy to play the teen idol, prancing around in short pants,
singing such sophomoric tunes as “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go.”
The British tabloids were not especially kind to Michael either.
They insinuated that the pop star was gay, a charge
Michael says he will not dignify with a response one way or the other.
They also implied that he was heavily involved with drugs,
and accusation he has since denied.
In 1985, Michael decided to walk away from Wham!
and from partner Ridgeley—who reportedly suffered a nervous breakdown—
to embark upon a solo career. Last year, he released his debut album, Faith,
which became an immediate sensation.
(Sales were helped by the controversy around “I Want Your Sex,”
which was banned by numerous radio stations across the country.) In a year’s time,
the LP has sold more than 10 million copies worldwide. Five consecutive singles from the album
rose to number one on the pop charts, a feat achieved by only one other individual in pop history—
Michael Jackson.
What pleases Michael most about his debut album
is that it silenced critics who questioned his musical integrity.
The LP has been universally praised for its provocativeness, its soulfulness, and its depth.
Faith, says Michael, is merely a reflection of the maturing process
he has undergone as an artist and as a person.
His best work, he says, is still before him.
———