More than an hour after sundown in Buenos Aires on Wednesday, a red van backed up to a side door of the four-star CasaSur Palermo Hotel to remove the body of former One Direction band member Liam Payne from the premises.
Payne, 31, had died earlier in the day after falling from the third floor of the hotel, according to a statement from Buenos Aires police. As fans started to gather outside the hotel, building a vigil to the popular musician, the circumstances surrounding his death were still unclear.
Hotel staff had requested urgent police assistance shortly before Payne fell, according to a 911 call obtained by CNN’s local affiliate Todo Noticias. “We have a guest who is overwhelmed with drugs and alcohol,” the hotel manager said on the call. “He breaks things up. He is tearing the whole room apart.”
The manager said they needed “someone to be sent to us urgently,” as staff didn’t know “if the guest’s life is at risk.”
Hotel staff could not enter the room, where the guest had been staying “for two or three days,” the manager said on the call.
Pablo Policicchio, communications director for the Buenos Aires Security Ministry, said in a statement to The Associated Press that Payne “had jumped from the balcony of his room.” Police rushed to the hotel in response to an emergency call just after 5 p.m. local time, he said, warning of an “aggressive man who could be under the influence of drugs or alcohol.”
Photos of Payne’s hotel room, released by Buenos Aires police, showed a smashed television. Authorities are now investigating the circumstances of his death and conducting an autopsy, Alberto Crescenti, head of the state emergency medical system, told Todo Noticias.
“We are heartbroken. Liam will forever live in our hearts and we’ll remember him for his kind, funny and brave soul,” Payne’s family said in a statement to CNN. “We are supporting each other the best we can as a family and ask for privacy and space at this awful time.”
With hordes of onlookers and press assembled on the street outside the hotel, a fire department van parked as close to the exit door as possible, seemingly to prevent others from viewing the scene as responders worked. In death, Payne was afforded privacy he was rarely given in life.
One Direction was famously assembled by producer Simon Cowell after he saw Payne and four other talented young men – Harry Styles, Zayn Malik, Louis Tomlinson and Niall Horan – audition for the UK’s version of “The X-Factor.” Individually, they weren’t good enough, Cowell thought.
Together, it turned out, they were a sensation.
Called 1D by their fans, they became a global phenomenon as the first group to have its first four albums debut at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. Their massive fanbase, nicknamed Directioners, propelled the pop group to more than 50 million records sold before the members parted ways to pursue solo careers. They were known for songs like “What Makes You Beautiful,” “Best Song Ever,” and “Story of My Life.”
Payne has spoken previously about the mental weight of fame.
“I don’t think I struggle in the sense of what you would naturally think of when I’m walking down the street with every person stopping me,” he told Esquire Middle East in 2019. “I mean, it happens sometimes but it’s mainly mentally where you struggle with it. It’s the getting ready and always knowing that you might be photographed.”
Malik was the first to depart the band in 2015. The others followed suit.
CNN has reached out to Payne’s former bandmates and Cowell for comment. As of Thursday morning, none had made a public statement.
In the hours after news of his death, tributes poured in from people who had known Payne since the start of his teenage stardom.
“I remember him as a 14 year old turning up to audition on The X Factor, and blowing us away singing Sinatra,” wrote former “X-Factor” presenter Dermot O’Leary on Instagram, sharing a photo of himself and a young Payne on stage. “He just loved to sing. He was always a joy, had time for everyone, polite, grateful, and was always humble.”
Anne Twist, the mother of former bandmate Styles, posted a broken-hearted emoji on Instagram, writing: “Just a boy…”
Fans across social media expressed their shock and grief at losing what many described as an iconic figure in their youth – reminiscing on their years as fervent fans.
“(One Direction) meant a lot to me because I was at a stage (in my life) where I wanted to form part of something bigger, and One Direction and being a Directioner was that for me,” said Yamila Zacarias, a 25-year-old fan at the vigil outside Payne’s hotel in Buenos Aires.
Behind her, mourning fans lit candles and sang the One Direction song “Infinity.”
Fellow artists also voiced their grief and condolences, including producer Zedd and singer-songwriter Charlie Puth.
“I am in shock right now,” Puth wrote on Instagram. “Liam was always so kind to me. He was one of the first major artists I got to work with. I can not believe he is gone.”
Payne had shared undated pictures from Argentina to his social media accounts in recent days. He was also seen attending his former bandmate Horan’s concert in Buenos Aires on October 2, according to videos posted on social media from the show.
Payne released his first solo album in 2019 titled “LP1.” Last year, he announced plans for a new album and tour that were later postponed after Payne suffered a kidney infection.
He had been open about past struggles with substance abuse and talked about being six months sober in a video shared on YouTube in summer 2023.
“It’s good to be in this position,” he said at the time. “I definitely don’t need those things anymore. The party’s over.”
He also thanked his former partner Cheryl Cole, with whom he had a 7-year-old son named Bear, for giving him the “freedom” and support to get well at the time.
Last spring, Payne released the song “Teardrops.”
“I always think in pictures as much as I think in sounds when I’m making music,” Payne said in a video of him recording the song. “The feelings that these chords and different things give me, everyone of these songs is a story from my life.”
This story has been updated with additional information. CNN’s Mauricio Torres, Stefano Pozzebon and Edward Szekeres contributed reporting.
Editor’s Note: Help is available if you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts or mental health matters.
In the US: Call or text 988, the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.
Globally: The International Association for Suicide Prevention and Befrienders Worldwide have contact information for crisis centers around the world.