This stage isn’t big enough for both of us. Prince leans against the wall backstage at the American Music Awards, arms crossed, staring at Michael Jackson across the corridor. Only one king. The rivalry between the two biggest stars in music has been building for years, fed by media, managers, and egos.
But what Michael whispers back in the next 2 minutes doesn’t just diffuse the tension. It completely reframes how both artists think about success, competition, and legacy. This is the story of how two legends almost destroyed each other and instead created something better. Los Angeles, January 1985, Monday evening, 7:15 p.m. Backstage at the Shrine Auditorium. The American Music Awards are starting in 45 minutes.
Both Michael Jackson and Prince are scheduled to perform. Their dressing rooms on opposite ends of the same hallway. Their teams deliberately kept separate by nervous producers who know that putting these two egos in proximity is like mixing volatile chemicals. Michael Jackson, 26 years old, writing the unprecedented success of Thriller, which has sold 35 million copies in two years, dominated every chart, broken every record, made him the biggest star on the planet.
He’s at the absolute peak, the undisputed king of pop, and everyone knows it. Prince Rogers Nelson, 26 years old, just released Purple Rain, the album that proved he’s not just a musician, but a complete artistic force. 13 million copies sold. Critical acclaim, a movie that grossed $70 million, proving he can do everything Michael can do, but with guitars instead of moonwalks. The rivalry started innocently enough.
Two young black artists breaking barriers in the early 80s. Both brilliant, both revolutionary, both changing what pop music could be. The media loved the narrative. Michael versus Prince, pop versus rock, smooth versus raw, commercial versus artistic, Mottown training versus Minneapolis funk. But somewhere around 1983, it stopped being media narrative, and became personal.
Prince made comments in interviews about Michael’s music being too safe, too calculated. Michael’s team leaked stories about Prince being difficult, unccommercial, too weird for mainstream success. Managers on both sides fed the fire because rivalry sells records, creates buzz, keeps both artists in headlines.
They’ve only met twice before, both times at industry events, both times brief and cold. Handshakes that lasted exactly as long as required. Smiles that never reached their eyes. Careful words that said nothing while implying everything. The unspoken message from both. I’m better than you. I’m more important. I’m the real revolutionary. You’re just pretending. Tonight, they’re both performing, both nominated for awards, both proving their dominance.
The producers scheduled their performances two hours apart to minimize interaction, but backstage is backstage. Hallways are hallways, and at 7:15 p.m., they run into each other. Michael is walking from his dressing room toward the stage for a tech check, accompanied by two assistants. He’s wearing the jacket he’ll perform in, red leather with military details, the iconic look that will define the era. He’s focused in performance mode, mentally preparing.
Prince is leaning against the wall outside his dressing room, wearing purple, always purple, smoking a cigarette, even though it’s not allowed backstage because Prince does what Prince wants. He sees Michael approaching, doesn’t move, stays exactly where he is, forcing Michael to either acknowledge him or walk past, pretending not to see him. Michael stops about 10 ft away. The hallway goes quiet.
Both sets of assistants tense up, sensing the energy shift. This could go several ways, none of them good. Prince speaks first. Michael, not a greeting, just an acknowledgement. The way you’d note a weather condition. Prince Michael’s voice is equally neutral, equally careful. Long pause. They’re both masters of performance, of controlling moments, of using silence as a weapon.
Both waiting to see who will flinch first, who will fill the uncomfortable space. Finally, Prince pushes off the wall, takes a step closer, still casual, still controlled. Big night for you. Thriller still selling. Must feel good being on top. There’s something under the words. Something sharp. Michael hears it, recognizes the challenge. Purple Rains doing well, too.
Michael says, “You’re having a good year.” “A good year,” Prince repeats, tasting the words. “Yeah, a good year.” Another pause. But let’s be honest, there’s only room for one at the very top. This industry, this moment, this stage we’re on. He gestures vaguely toward the auditorium. It isn’t big enough for both of us. The assistants shift uncomfortably. This is the conversation everyone’s been waiting for.
The rivalry made explicit. Only one king. Prince continues, voice quiet but intense. And we both know the media is going to keep pushing us against each other until one of us breaks. Michael is very still. His assistants wait for him to respond with equal aggression, to defend his position, to assert his dominance. That’s what everyone expects, what the rivalry narrative demands.
But instead, Michael does something unexpected. He steps closer, closing the distance between them, close enough that their conversation becomes private, that the assistants can’t quite hear. “You’re right,” Michael says quietly. “The media wants us to destroy each other. They want one of us to fail so they can write the story.” Prince versus Michael. Only one survives.
Great narrative. Sells magazines. Prince watches him carefully, uncertain where this is going. But here’s what I realized. Michael continues, voice still quiet, still calm. They’re wrong. The stage is big enough. The industry is big enough. Success isn’t a fixed pie.
Where your slice makes mine smaller. You doing well doesn’t hurt me. Me doing well doesn’t hurt you. Prince’s expression doesn’t change, but something in his posture shifts slightly. You make rock funk fusion that pushes boundaries in ways I never could. Michael says, “I make pop that reaches audiences.
You’re not trying to reach. We’re not competitors. We’re expanding what’s possible. Both of us winning makes the whole game bigger. That’s easy to say when you’re selling 35 million.” Prince responds defensive now. “Is it Michael asks? You think I don’t feel the pressure? You think I don’t read the articles saying Prince is the real artist. Michael’s just a commercial product.
You think that doesn’t get in my head? Prince is quiet, surprised by the admission. We’re both carrying the weight of being young, black, successful in an industry that wants to control us. Michael continues, “Every move we make gets analyzed, criticized, compared. The media wants us fighting because it’s easier than acknowledging we’re both revolutionary in different ways.
So, what are you saying?” Prince asks, “Genuine curiosity now replacing defensiveness. I’m saying, imagine if we stopped playing their game. Imagine if instead of rivalry, we had respect. Not friendship necessarily. We’re too different for that, but mutual recognition. You do your thing, I do mine, and we both acknowledge that the other is brilliant at what they do.
” Michael pauses, then says something that will change everything. The throne is big enough for both of us. Maybe that’s what scares them. Prince is very still processing. Everything in him has been trained for competition, for proving he’s the best, for winning. But what Michael’s offering is something different, something he’s never considered.
And if we refuse to compete on their terms, Michael continues, “If we both just keep making great music, keep pushing boundaries, keep succeeding, what can they say? They can’t diminish either of us without admitting they were wrong about the rivalry.” Long silence. Prince takes a drag from his cigarette, thinking.
Finally, he speaks, voice different now, guard lowered slightly. You know what the crazy thing is? I’ve spent two years trying to beat you. Trying to make Purple Rain bigger than Thriller. Trying to prove I’m better. And us? Michael asks. And I made the best album of my life. Not because I beat you.
Because competition pushed me to be better than I was. Michael nods slowly. Same thriller exists. Partly because I knew there were artists like you pushing boundaries. You made me raise my game. So maybe Prince says slowly, the rivalry actually worked, just not the way they wanted. Maybe it worked because we let it push us toward excellence instead of toward destroying each other.
Prince drops his cigarette, grinds it out with his heel. The media is still going to compare us, still going to try to make us hate each other. Let them, Michael says. We know the truth. That’s what matters. Prince extends his hand, not the cold, brief handshake of previous meetings. A real handshake, genuine, to the throne being big enough for both of us.
Michael takes it to making them expand the definition of what’s possible. They shake firm grip, looking each other in the eye. The assistants watch in shock. This wasn’t supposed to happen. The rivalry was supposed to continue, escalate, eventually explode. One more thing, Prince says, not letting go of the handshake yet. Your performance tonight. What are you doing? Medley from Thriller.
You Purple Rain full version. Prince grins slightly. Going to be a good show. Yeah, Michael agrees. It is. They release the handshake. Prince heads toward his dressing room. Michael toward the stage for his tech check. The assistants follow, confused, uncertain what just happened, but knowing something fundamental shifted. Later that night, Michael performs his medley. The crowd goes insane.
He’s flawless, the moonwalk perfect, the energy electric. When he finishes, he leaves the stage and instead of going back to his dressing room, he stands in the wings to watch Prince perform. Prince sees him there, gives a barely perceptible nod, then launches into purple rain. It’s stunning. Seven minutes of raw emotion and technical mastery.
When he hits the guitar solo, Michael finds himself moving slightly to the music, caught up in it despite himself. Prince finishes, walks off stage, sees Michael still standing there. They don’t say anything. Michael just nods. Prince nods back. That’s enough. The media writes about that night. Michael and Prince both win at AMAs. They try to create controversy. quote anonymous sources saying the rivalry is worse than ever.
But something’s changed over the next few years. Something shifts in how both artists talk about each other. 1987 interview with Michael and Rolling Stone. Prince is an incredible musician. What he does with instruments, the way he produces, his artistic vision, it’s something I deeply respect. We’re different artists with different approaches and that’s good for music.
1988 Prince interview with Musician magazine. Michael’s impact on pop culture is undeniable. He took performance to another level. We push each other to be better, even without directly competing. That’s a gift. No collaboration ever happens. They’re too different. Their visions too distinct.
But the poison drains from the rivalry. It becomes something healthier. Mutual respect between artists who acknowledge each other’s greatness. 1991. Michael is working on Dangerous, struggling with a particular track. His producer mentions that Prince solved a similar production problem using a specific technique. Michael tries it. It works. He makes a mental note to mention it next time they see each other. 1993.
Prince is asked in an interview who he’d most want to collaborate with. Without hesitation, “Michael, we’ve never worked together. Probably never will. We’re too strong willed. It would be a disaster.” He grins, but I respect what he does more than almost anyone.
2001, Michael’s 30th anniversary concert at Madison Square Garden. Prince isn’t performing, but he’s in the audience in a private box watching. After the show, he sends a message through Michael’s management. Still got it. Respect 2009. Michael dies. Prince is devastated. He refuses to speak publicly about it for weeks. When he finally does a concert, he performs a cover of Don’t Stop Till You Get Enough, his voice breaking during the chorus.
In interviews after, Prince talks about that backstage conversation in 1985. Michael taught me something that night, that I was too young and too competitive to understand at first. He taught me that greatness isn’t about destroying your rivals. It’s about pushing each other toward excellence. We were never enemies. We were brothers, pushing each other to be better.
2016, Prince dies. At his memorial, one of his friends reads a note found in Prince’s personal effects, dated January 1985, written after the AMAs. Talk to Michael tonight. Really talked. He said something that changed how I think about all this. Said, “The throne is big enough for both of us. Maybe he’s right. Maybe I’ve been fighting the wrong battle. Maybe the point isn’t to beat him.
Maybe the point is to be so good that they have to acknowledge we’re both kings, different kingdoms, both legitimate. Note to self, stop reading comparison articles. Start focusing on the music. The note is never published. But the friend tells the story because people need to hear it. That Michael and Prince, the two biggest rivals in music history, figured out something most people never learn. You can compete without destroying.
Who are you treating as your rival right now? Who have you decided is your competition, your threat? What if they’re not your enemy? What if they’re actually pushing you to be better? Prince told Michael only one king in 1985, expecting a fight, Michael whispered back. The throne is big enough for both of us. It didn’t end the rivalry.
Healthy competition remained, but it ended the poison. Both men went on to create decadefining music. Both revolutionized their spaces. Both became legends. Not despite each other, but partly because of each other. The throne was big enough. The stage was big enough. The only thing too small was the narrative people tried to force on them.
Maybe your competition isn’t your enemy. Maybe they’re your catalyst. Maybe the throne is bigger than you think. 2 minutes backstage in 1985. Two legends proving the throne is big enough for everyone who earns their place.
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