Though the world knows A.J. as the tattooed, flirtatious bad boy of the hit-making heartthrobs, his mother tells Connie Chung on ABCNEWS' 20/20 that she knows him as "gentle" and "insecure" Alex.
As the Backstreet Boys achieved immense fame, Denise McLean says, Alex retreated into the A.J. persona, in part to escape his insecurities and emotional distress.
Though it stunned fans, A.J.'s decision to enter treatment was a great relief for Denise. It was the beginning of what she hopes will be a homecoming for her son Alex.
"'Mom, you've got your son back,'" Denise says her son recently told her.
Alex's relationship with his mother was not his only relationship that was strained by his success. He seemed to attract people who were intoxicated by his fame and there was little substance to many of his new friendships, his mother says.
Connie Chung's interview with Denise McLean airs on 20/20 on Friday, Aug. 10. (ABCNEWS.com)
"I think people started coming around that really were not interested in Alex anymore," Denise says. "They were interested in what the Backstreet Boy could do for them. ... It was not about him, it was about them."
Instead of eschewing these people, her son would embrace the A.J. caricature, Denise says.
"He, wanting to please, would be the, the big guy � he would turn into A.J., and he would take them out, and he would pay for [them], and he would be the big shot."
The private Alex was giving way to the public A.J., and he often went out drinking and carousing at night, she says.
"He wanted to sleep all day," his mother says. "He wanted to just go out and party at night."
Connie said AJ's mom believes his problems began at a young age.
When he was about six, he began to have a sort of war of
personalities that was fought between AJ, the performer, and Alex,
the real boy. "Alex, Denise says, is the most insecure person she
knows," Connie told us. That insecurity -- aggravated further by
the death of his grandmother and his father's reappearance in his
life after a 19-year absence -- left a lot for AJ to overcome. The
day that AJ called his mom and said, "I can't cope anymore," was a
relief to Denise. She had always known something was wrong with
her son.
Denise does have faith that AJ will make it. Just two days into
rehab, Denise spoke to AJ. Connie said that even then Denise could
already hear a calm in his voice. That was about a month ago and
AJ has now been out of rehab for a few days. He's transitioning
back into normalcy now, and everyone, including all of his
bandmates, are pulling for him and backing him 100% in whatever
he needs to do to get well.
Ultimately, Connie sees Denise's story as one that is typical for
every mother out there. "You connect with this woman because
you know she's a real mom, and she's a down-to-earth mom."
Brian Thomas Littrell ~ The Golden Voiced Backstreet Boy
- Established Jan 1999 -