Narrated by renowned actor Robert Hooks, the film opens with the Jackson 5 being greeted by a group of dancers and drummers at the airport. The camera follows Michael Jackson and the family cinema-verité style on their first-ever visit to Africa, including live footage of their visit to an African market, classic live footage of the group spontaneously performing "Hum Along and Dance,” and extraordinary footage of the Jackson 5 performing on stage before a packed SRO audience at the height of their career in the mid-Seventies.
The history of the film is nearly as interesting as the footage itself, explains Jaymes A. Hines, president of Hines Media Group. “It was made by a group of African investors who ran out of money trying to finish the film. In 1982, the owner of this film, an international businessman (who wishes to remain anonymous), bartered with one of the original producers, acquiring a 16mm print of this rare documentary, in exchange for a rough diamond.”
Years later, the film’s owner reached out to Gregory Gates, Executive Producer of ImageNation Cinema Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to progressive media by and about people of color, to help him find a collector/buyer for the never-before-screened work. “The makers of this movie shared of our mission to unite throughout the African Diaspora using film and music,” said Gates. “We are extremely proud to help further their agenda, while honoring Michael Jackson and the Jackson 5.”
Please note the venue has changed to the AT&T Center theater!