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Family, fans say goodbye to Jenni Rivera

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Jenni Rivera was remembered in death the same way she was celebrated in life: on an illuminated stage, with thousands of fans chanting her name.

The singer, who was killed in a plane crash earlier this month, was honored Wednesday with what her family called a “celestial graduation,” a musical memorial that packed the Gibson Amphitheatre with 6,100 people and drew hundreds more outside.

The more than two-hour farewell could have been mistaken for a concert, if not for the crowd’s tears and the ruby-red casket on stage. In front of it was a cluster of white roses, the type of flower Rivera’s family asked fans to bring. Behind it was a single microphone, left unused.

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Family members — clad head-to-toe in white — praised Rivera as a “perfectly imperfect” mother and a guerrera, Spanish for “female warrior.” Her father, Pedro Rivera, a noted singer of the Mexican ballads known as corridos, said goodbye by performing a song he wrote about her, “La Diva de la Banda.”

Rivera’s 11-year-old son, Johnny Lopez, addressed the sea of mourners in a white suit and red bow tie. His father died a few years ago.

“Mama, I’ve been crying so much these last few days. I miss you so much,” he said, his voice breaking. “I hope you’re taking care of my dad and I hope he’s taking care of you, too.”

He added: “I want to thank everyone for loving my mom.”

Rivera, a Long Beach native, first gained fame via her banda music, a Mexican regional style heavy on machismo and brass instruments. A rare woman in the genre, Rivera often sang — in Spanish and English — about her chaotic personal life: three husbands, five children and struggles with her weight and domestic violence.

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Rivera sold more than 20 million albums and, in recent years, had started to expand her business empire. She had a weekly radio program, clothing and cosmetics lines and a hand in several reality shows, including “I Love Jenni.”

She and six others were killed Dec. 9 when a private jet that had departed Monterrey, Mexico, nose-dived 28,000 feet in 30 seconds and smashed into mountainous terrain. Rivera was 43.

“My sister, Jenni, died in a plane accident, but it was not an accident,” Pedro Rivera Jr., a pastor and Rivera’s brother, told the crowd in Spanish. “God has a purpose for all of us and God let us borrow her for 43 years and enjoy her.”

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It was clear how deeply Rivera had touched her legion of fans.

At the memorial, several well-known Latino singers performed, including Ana Gabriel, Olga Tanon and Joan Sebastian.

Outside, her fan base arrived early, blasting her music from cars decorated with tributes: “Jenni, we love you” and “We are going to miss you.” They wore Jenni Rivera T-shirts and Jenni Rivera pins and waved handmade posters. One woman said Rivera was now performing “in a concert with God.”

Lidia Farrias and her husband, Jose, drove three hours from Santa Maria. They didn’t have tickets — the event sold out within minutes — so they shivered outside, eyes fixed on two jumbo screens streaming the memorial. Farrias said Rivera’s frank lyrics had encouraged her to be a stronger woman.

“Whenever I listened to her songs, I felt like I could tackle anything,” she said.

Denise Montalvo, 15, had left San Diego at 1 a.m. with her mother, aunt and two family friends. She admired Rivera for striving to obtain a better life, just like Denise’s family. The teenager said Rivera wanted her funeral to be a celebration, reflecting her song “Cuando Muere una Dama” — “When a Lady Dies.”

“We’re trying not to be sad,” she said.

That was hard for fans, particularly as the memorial wound down. One by one, each of Rivera’s family members placed a white rose on her casket. Some whispered to it. Some kissed it. Then they walked away.

ruben.vives@latimes.com

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adolfo.flores@latimes.com

Times staff writer Ashley Powers contributed to this report.

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