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Thursday, Dec. 26
The Indiana Daily Student

arts

Band member honored at funeral

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. -- During a private funeral service that mixed humor and emotion, Bee Gees member Maurice Gibb was remembered as a man who celebrated life.\nAbout 200 friends and family, including singer Michael Jackson and other celebrities, attended the service Wednesday for the Bee Gees keyboardist and bass player. Gibb, 53, died early Sunday, shocking his bandmate brothers, family, friends and fans of the pop trio best known for '70s hits like "Stayin' Alive" and "More Than A Woman."\nThough Gibb's family has questioned his medical care -- a county medical examiner is reviewing the case and results of an autopsy are expected Friday -- there was no mention of any allegations of wrongdoing during the service, several mourners said.\nRobin Gibb, one of the two surviving Bee Gees, spoke briefly about his love for his twin brother, they said.\n"It was emotional, there was humor … Everybody talked about how this was a man who really celebrated life and so this was a celebration of his life," said family friend Jennifer Valoppi.\nJackson, a longtime friend of the Bee Gees, and Harry Wayne Casey of KC and the Sunshine Band, were among the celebrities who joined Maurice Gibb's wife, Yvonne, his son, Adam, as well as his older brother and Bee Gees partner, Barry Gibb.\nPictures of Maurice and his family hung from the walls, along with the jacket in which he used to play his favorite sport of paintball, Valoppi said.\n"He'd talk to anybody. He was just a genuine real person. You'd never think that he was as big a star as he was," said James Haddaway.\nNat Kipner, who managed the Bee Gees early in their career in Brisbane, Australia, had traveled by coincidence to South Florida on the same day Maurice Gibb died.\n"I heard right away that Maurice had died and I couldn't believe it," he said after the service.\nKipner spoke fondly of his memories of the Bee Gees, who recorded some on his Spin Records label as young teenagers. They decided to return to their native England in 1967, and had asked Kipner to come with them, he said.\n"But I had a business in Australia and I didn't want to go. So I gave them their contract back. One of the dumb things I've done," he joked.\nThe Bee Gees, short for the Brothers Gibb -- Maurice, Robin and older brother Barry -- were a falsetto-voiced disco sensation during the 1970s, with a slew of hits from the movie "Saturday Night Fever," including "Stayin' Alive" and "Night Fever."\nCarol Peters, a spokeswoman for Bee Gees manager, Allen Kovac, said the family hasn't made a decision on whether to cremate or bury Maurice Gibb's remains.

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