To honor Prince, Minnesota pol wants to make purple state color

SHARE To honor Prince, Minnesota pol wants to make purple state color
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Flowers on a T-shirt signed by fans of singer Prince at a makeshift memorial place created outside Apollo Theater in New York. AP photo

A state senator in Minnesota is pushing to make the official state color purple in honor of music superstar Prince.

Sen. Karin Housley says she plans to introduce a bill Monday hoping to make that happen.

Housley says she’s a huge Prince fan and that seeing the world lit up in purple makes her proud. She says the suburban Minneapolis musical superstar was special, and “he was ours.”

Housley never met the musician but says she and former NHL hockey player Phil Housley, her fiance at the time, once waited for three hours outside of the downtown Minneapolis club First Avenue to catch a glimpse of Prince after a show.

She says Prince gave the couple a nod and that she was “in heaven” for the rest of her life.

Meanwhile, for the third straight day, Prince fans in Minnesota flocked Saturday to sites made famous by the hometown hero, who was found dead Thursday at the musician’s Paisley Park estate in Chanhassen, Minnnesota, a Minneapolis suburb.

Hundreds have been mourning outside of the compound, leaving purple flowers and balloons along the fence.

Fans were also leaving flowers and balloons beneath Prince’s star at First Avenue, the club where he filmed “Purple Rain” and performed many times. First Avenue was hosting its third all-night dance party beginning Saturday night to honor the singer.

What killed Prince remains a mystery. He talked dirty in song but had a reputation for clean living. But after his death — following a series of canceled shows and an emergency plane landing for medical treatment — questions continue to swirl over whether the music superstar had been hiding serious health problems from his fans.

An autopsy was conducted Friday and the body released to his family. Authorities said it could be weeks before the cause of death is released.

But Carver County Sheriff Jim Olson said Prince’s body had no signs of violence when he was found unresponsive Thursday morning in an elevator at Paisley Park, his estate in Chanhassen, a Minneapolis suburb, and there was nothing to suggest it was suicide. Olson said it appeared Prince had been at the compound alone.

“This is certainly a big event internationally and nationally, and I can tell you that we are going to leave no stone unturned with this and make sure the public knows what happened,” the sheriff said at a news conference.

Olson and a spokeswoman for the medical examiner refused to say whether any prescription drugs were taken from Prince’s home after his death. And they would not comment on a report by the celebrity website TMZ that the “Purple Rain” star had suffered an overdose of a powerful painkiller less than a week before he died.

The sheriff said Prince was last seen alive by an acquaintance who dropped him off at Paisley Park at 8 p.m. Wednesday. He was found by staff members who went to the compound the next morning when they couldn’t reach him by phone.

Emergency crews who answered the 911 call in Chanhassen, about 20 miles outside Minneapolis, couldn’t revive Prince, the sheriff said. He said emergency workers did not administer Narcan, a drug they carry to counteract overdoses.

Prince, born Prince Rogers Nelson, had spoken about struggling with childhood epilepsy, and friends said he had hip trouble. His former percussionist Sheila E. told The Associated Press that Prince suffered the effects from years of jumping off risers and speakers on stage while wearing high heels.

“There was always something kind of bothering him, as it does all of us,” she said. “I hurt every single day. You know we’re like athletes, we train, and we get hurt all the time. We have so many injuries.”

Prince’s cousin Chazz Smith wouldn’t comment on reports about Prince’s health. Nor would he say when he last saw his cousin.

“I can tell you this: What I know is that he was perfectly healthy,” said Smith, who formed a band with Prince when they were kids.

Smith said Prince swore off drugs and alcohol as a kid, and the group they played with saw a lot of music greats fall, so “we decided to never get into that stuff, and no one did.”

TMZ, citing unidentified sources, reported that Prince was treated for an overdose of Percocet while traveling home from concerts in Atlanta last week. The site said his plane made an emergency landing April 15 in Moline, where he was briefly hospitalized.

Asked whether Prince’s flight made such a landing at the Quad City Airport in Moline, public safety manager Jeff Patterson said Friday that a private Falcon 900 plane made a “medical-diversion landing” at 1:17 a.m. that day. He said the plane requested an ambulance at the airport and that someone was taken to the hospital, but he would not identify the patient or the plane’s owner or provide the aircraft’s tail number.

Representatives for Prince did not respond to requests from the AP for comment on the reports.

The singer’s death came two weeks after he canceled concerts in Atlanta, saying he wasn’t feeling well. He then played a pair of makeup shows April 14 in that city, apologizing to the crowd shortly after coming on stage.

At one point early in his first show, he briefly disappeared from the stage without explanation. After about a minute, he returned and apologized, saying he didn’t realize how emotional the songs could be. He played the rest of the show without incident, repeatedly jumping up from the piano and pacing around the stage between songs, and performed three encores.

In the later show, Prince coughed a few times, though the show was again energetic.

Then came the emergency landing en route to Minnesota. The night after that, Prince hosted a dance party at Paisley Park, where some fans said he looked fine and seemed irked by reports of an illness.

“Wait a few days before you waste any prayers,” he said.

By his high-energy standards, it was a subdued appearance. Prince didn’t play except to tap out a few notes on a new purple Yamaha piano, and he lingered only for a few minutes before disappearing.

Prince was slated to perform two surprise “pop-up” shows earlier this week at the Fox Theatre in St. Louis but canceled last week because of health concerns, promoter Steve Litman said.

Prince disclosed in a 2009 interview with Tavis Smiley that he was born an epileptic and had seizures when he was young. It was unclear whether his epilepsy carried into adulthood.

In 2009, Prince, a Jehovah’s Witness, told an interviewer with the Los Angeles Times that he didn’t do drugs, “or I’d give you a joint” to share while they listened to music.

Heather McElhatton, who worked on and off as a set decorator for Prince’s video shoots at Paisley Park from 1988 to 1998, said she never saw him take drugs or drink during her time there.

“But he did have a lot of energy,” McElhatton said. “He could shoot for two days straight. Was it natural energy? Was it augmented energy? I don’t know. I never saw him eat.”

A memorial for Prince is set up on the fence outside his home at Paisley Park Friday in Chanhassen, Minn., outside Minneapolis. Renee Jones Schneider/Star Tribune via AP

A memorial for Prince is set up on the fence outside his home at Paisley Park Friday in Chanhassen, Minn., outside Minneapolis. Renee Jones Schneider/Star Tribune via AP

Sheila E. said: “It’s just like being a football player and a basketball player. You know he really took care of himself. He ate well. He ate better than me.”

She said she hadn’t talked to him for at least six months but tried to reach him after reading reports that he needed emergency medical attention. She said the man who answered told her Prince was sleeping and would let him know she called.

“He said he was good,” she said.

On Friday, the sheriff and Martha Weaver, spokeswoman for the Midwest Medical Examiner’s Office, portrayed Prince as a good citizen in the community and expressed their affection for him and their determination to do a thorough investigation.

“For our generation, he was the songbook and the narrative for some of the greatest moments in our individual lives, much like Elvis Presley and Ira Gershwin before him,” Weaver said. “And this is something that we remember and we take very, very seriously.”

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