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Prince fans headed to Paisley Park five years after death

Photo of the exterior of Paisley Park.
Photo of the exterior of Paisley Park.Photo courtesy of Paisley Park NPG Records

by The Associated Press

April 21, 2021

Paisley Park, where Prince lived and worked, will welcome back a select 1,400 fans Wednesday to mark the fifth anniversary of his death from inside his creative sanctuary.

The sprawling studio's atrium will be opened to those who rushed for one of the free reservations, while other fans can leave flowers and mementos in front of a statue erected outside the front doors in the shape of his famous purple Love Symbol.

Listen The Current honoring Prince all day
Prince Prince: his life and music (MPR News)
Prince Features collection (The Current)

A custom-made ceramic urn shaped like Paisley Park with Prince's symbol on top was originally placed in the middle of the atrium when the pop legend's 65,000-square-foot studio in suburban Minneapolis first opened as a museum in October 2016. At the request of Prince's family, the ashes were moved to a less prominent spot in the atrium and eventually removed entirely from public view, disappointing the superstar's legions of fans.

This is the first time the urn has returned to the atrium for display to the public.

Prince died April 21, 2016, of an accidental fentanyl overdose at age 57, shocking fans and setting off waves of grief around the world. Since then, Paisley Park was turned into a museum and paid tours were created. Tours were shut down for the day to mark the fifth anniversary.

"We celebrate his life and legacy every day at Paisley Park, a place that Prince wanted to share with the world," Paisley Park executive director Alan Seiffert said in a statement. "So, on this day especially, we acknowledge the incredible force and inspiration Prince is in people's lives and open up our doors for them to pay their respects."

Paisley Park will also post an online memorial at Paisleypark.com.

Pepe Willie, Prince's uncle and an early music mentor, still tears up when he thinks of the lost star.

"It was devastating," he recently told The Associated Press of the moment he learned the news. "I'm standing in the living room with my underwear on watching the TV. I couldn't go anywhere, I couldn't do anything. I was just in so much shock. It was unbelievable."

Known as the "godfather of the Minneapolis sound," he met Prince as a young musical prodigy after marrying his aunt. The pair developed a bond through music, with Prince soaking up his knowledge about the music business and playing for Willie in a recording studio.

"I cried for him so hard," Willie said. "I didn't even cry at my father's funeral."

This story originally published on the MPR News website.

Prince at the 2007 Super Bowl
Prince performing at halftime during Super Bowl XLI between the Indianapolis Colts and Chicago Bears at Dolphins Stadium in Miami on February 4, 2007.
Theo Wargo/Getty Images