Junior Walker Junior Walker performed 30 seconds of his signature hit "
Shotgun". It was performed as a solo; the All-Stars, his long-time group, did not participate.
Lionel Richie / The Commodores Lionel Richie performed his hit "You Mean More to Me" in a pre-taped segment. Appearing with him was Lynette Butler, identified as a "Sickle Cell Poster Child". Richie did not appear with his former group the
Commodores, who appeared without him on a separate live segment of the special, singing "
Brick House", which was led, as on the original recording, by Commodore Walter "Clyde" Orange. The other original Commodores,
William King, Ron LaPread,
Milan Williams, and
Thomas McClary were present and performed on this segment.
Marvin Gaye Marvin Gaye, who had left the label a year before to sign with
Columbia Records and had a current hit with "
Sexual Healing", agreed at the last minute to join the roster of other Motown legends to perform. When he came on, he played the piano and gave the audience a narrative of black music history before he stepped off the piano and sang his classic 1971 hit, "
What's Going On", to thunderous applause. Gaye's performance on the show, following his appearances on February 23, 1983, on the
Grammys and the
NBA All-Star Game, was one of his final national television appearances before
his murder by
his own father on April 1, 1984.
Mary Wells and Martha Reeves The 'first lady of Motown'
Mary Wells and
Vandellas frontwoman
Martha Reeves were each given a 30-second spot, singing their respective hits, "
My Guy" and "
Heatwave". Reeves was a large aspect of what came from Motown in the following decades in the 1960s through the 1970s. Reeves performed without other original Vandellas members. Thus, the impact was strongly present throughout the 1960s due to the types of music being produced during this time. This music had a direct impact on the Civil Rights Movement. "Approximately four months after Martin Luther King Jr. appeared at Detroit’s Great March to Freedom, Malcolm X came to the Motor City. On November 10, 1963, the Nation of Islam’s most famous minister delivered his “Message to the Grass Roots” speech at the city’s Northern Negro Grass Roots Leadership Conference".
The Jackson 5 / Michael Jackson Michael Jackson, who had recently released his worldwide best-selling album
Thriller, was reunited with
his brothers to perform a medley of their hits "
I Want You Back", "
The Love You Save", "
Never Can Say Goodbye", and "
I'll Be There".
Jermaine was also there, finally performing with his brothers for the first time since leaving the group in 1975, and brother
Randy joined the group for the medley as well. Michael initially turned down the opportunity to perform at the show, believing he had appeared too frequently on television at that time; but at Motown founder
Berry Gordy's request, he agreed to perform if he was allotted time for a solo spot, to which Gordy agreed. Widely hailed as his breakthrough performance as a solo artist, Michael's solo performance followed the Jackson 5 performance. Michael danced while
miming to the
studio recording of "
Billie Jean", which at the time was in the middle of a seven-week run atop the
Billboard Hot 100 music charts and was the only non-Motown song performed on the show. This was also the first time he performed what would become his most famous signature move, the
moonwalk. In the years followed, Jackson's concert performances of "Billie Jean" would mirror his appearance at Motown 25, from the opening pose with the fedora, black sequin jacket, and glove, to the moonwalk routine in the song's bridge.
The Miracles This special marked the long-awaited reunion of Motown VP
Smokey Robinson with his original group
the Miracles:
Bobby Rogers,
Pete Moore,
Claudette Robinson (then wife of Smokey), and
Marv Tarplin (who was on stage with them, slightly off-camera to the right, but can be seen in certain shots) for the first time since he left the group 11 years before (in 1972). Original Miracles member
Ronnie White did not participate in the reunion for personal reasons (his wife, Earlyn, died that year). As Motown's first group and the label's first million-selling act, they were first on the show, singing four of their greatest hits, "
Shop Around", "
You've Really Got a Hold on Me", "
The Tears of a Clown", and "
Going to a Go-Go".
Stevie Wonder Stevie Wonder, accompanied by his band and his girl group
Wonderlove sang several of his greatest hits, including "
I Wish", "
Uptight (Everything's Alright)", "
Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours", "
You Are the Sunshine of My Life", "
My Cherie Amour", "
Sir Duke", and also preceded by a vintage clip of Wonder singing his first hit "
Fingertips".
Diana Ross / The Supremes Motown 25 was a showcase for the highly anticipated reunion of
the Supremes:
Diana Ross,
Mary Wilson and Supremes replacement
Cindy Birdsong (original member
Florence Ballard had died in 1976). Four of their greatest hits were to be sung that night in a medley including "
Baby Love" and "
Stop! In the Name of Love", however in rehearsals it was decided to cut the hits medley and sing only "
Someday We'll Be Together".
Richard Pryor opened the segment with a fairy-tale story of 'three maidens from the Projects of Brewster' which was then followed with a montage of various Supremes' video clips. Ross then started down the center aisle of the auditorium with her hit "
Ain't No Mountain High Enough". When Ross finished, she made a brief speech about 'the night that everyone came back' (although some of the surviving artists and musicians had not been invited ). After the beginning chords of "Someday We'll Be Together", Birdsong entered from stage left, and Wilson entered from stage right. Shortly after the first verse, Ross introduced Wilson and Birdsong to the audience while Wilson took over the lead vocals during this segment while Ross introduced Motown labelmates such as Smokey Robinson,
Stevie Wonder, and others as they quickly filled the stage for an impromptu finale. Although producer
Suzanne de Passe had instructed Ross to introduce Gordy after leading the finale (a fact unknown to Mary Wilson), Wilson decided to do the honors by calling Berry down herself. Additionally, earlier in the program, Wilson made a brief tribute to Ballard, and former label mate
Paul Williams of the Temptations. By the time the reunion aired on May 16, Ross/Wilson altercations were widely reported, including an article and pictures in
Us Weekly, and the performance resulted in negative publicity for the group.
The Temptations / Four Tops The Temptations and the
Four Tops competed in a "Battle of the Bands" style event. The only original or "Classic Five" Temptations performing were
Melvin Franklin and
Otis Williams, as
Eddie Kendricks (who left the group in 1971) and
David Ruffin (who left in 1968 and was replaced by
Dennis Edwards) had a falling out with the group. Paul Williams (who also left in 1971) had died in 1973, and
Al Bryant (who left and was replaced by Ruffin in 1964) had died in 1975. Joining Williams and Franklin were then-Temptations
Dennis Edwards,
Richard Street, and
Ron Tyson. All of the original members of the Four Tops performed:
Renaldo "Obie" Benson,
Abdul "Duke" Fakir, and
Lawrence Payton, with
Levi Stubbs providing the lead vocals. The two groups performed "
Reach Out I'll Be There", "
Baby I Need Your Loving", "
Get Ready", "
I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)", "
My Girl" "
Ain't Too Proud to Beg" and "
I Can't Get Next to You", among other numbers. The joint performance was a success, and the Temptations and Four Tops toured together for two years following the special. This "battle" later returned in the TV special
Motown Returns to the Apollo and created a long running tour for the two groups to compete in.
Others While Motown 25 was billed as "Yesterday, Today, Forever", artists from the golden era of Motown, such as
the Marvelettes,
the Vandellas,
the Contours,
Kim Weston,
Brenda Holloway,
Marv Johnson,
Jimmy Ruffin,
Edwin Starr,
Gladys Knight & the Pips,
Rare Earth,
the Isley Brothers, and
the Velvelettes were not included in the special, while newer artists such as
DeBarge,
High Inergy and
José Feliciano (who paid homage to Gordy singing "
Lonely Teardrops") were. (Singers
Nick Ashford and
Valerie Simpson appeared onstage at the end with the other artists, but they did not perform.) Non-Motown artists, such as
Adam Ant (who paid homage to the Supremes singing "
Where Did Our Love Go" with Diana Ross) and
Linda Ronstadt were featured as well. Ronstadt performed "Ooh Baby Baby" and "Tracks of My Tears" with Smokey Robinson. She had hits with both songs and in 1976 her version of
the Miracles' "Tracks of My Tears" even went to No. 12 on the Billboard Country Singles Chart, a first for a Motown song. According to the documentary
Standing in the Shadows of Motown,
James Jamerson, a key player behind the
Motown sound, and member of
the Funk Brothers who recorded many of the backing tracks to the Motown hits, had to buy a
Motown 25 ticket from a scalper and sat at the back of the hall with the general public. In addition, the "Motown Sound", which Motown producer Paul Riser would later credit the Funk Brothers and the musicians at Motown of creating in
Standing in the Shadows of Motown, was crudely trivialized during a segment in Motown 25 where executives and employees at Motown, and even Gordy himself, gave all kind of answers to what the Motown Sound was—with no answer giving credit to the musicians. Additional appearances were made by
Dick Clark,
Howard Hesseman and
Tim Reid (reprising their
WKRP in Cincinnati roles as
disc jockeys), fast-talker
John Moschitta Jr.,
T.G. Sheppard (who recorded for Motown's 1970s country label and had two #1 hits on Billboard's country chart),
Billy Dee Williams, and the
Lester Wilson Dancers. Additionally, clips of
Rick James and The
Mary Jane Girls were featured. ==TV ratings==