Paris Jackson ‘confused’ by childhood veils, masks

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Michael Jackson’s daughter Paris was “really confused” by having to wear a veil or a mask when she was a young girl in public with the late pop star, but says she now understands why her father insisted on the disguise.

Paris Jackson, 14, tells Oprah Winfrey in a TV interview to be broadcast tomorrow, that the “Thriller” singer wanted his three kids to have the normal childhood that he had missed as a child star.

Jackson, who died in June 2009, was famous for keeping his three children covered with veils and other masks when they were very young. Paris and her brothers Prince, 15, and Prince Michael II, 10, who is popularly known as Blanket, now attend regular schools in the Los Angeles area and make public appearances at commemorative events for the King of Pop.

“I was really confused,” Jackson told Winfrey according to an advance excerpt of the interview. “I didn’t get why I was wearing a mask. But I understand it now, why my dad would want our faces to be covered. When we went out without him, we wouldn’t be recognized.

“He told us that when he was younger, he didn’t really have a childhood,” she said. “He would always be stuck in the studio singing while the kids were out playing. He wanted us to have that.

“We had a normal childhood – including trips to the children’s arcade and restaurant Chuck E. Cheese’s,” she said.

As the third anniversary approaches of Jackson’s death at age 50 from an overdose of the anaesthetic propofol, Paris said the loss of her father “never gets easier.”

She is trying to launch her own career as an actress, and is due to star in a fantasy movie Lundon’s Bridge and the Three Keys, which is in development by independent producers.

The full interview with Winfrey will be broadcast tomorrow on the Oprah Winfrey Channel cable channel OWN.