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Whitney Houston!: The Spectacular Rise and Tragic Fall of the Woman Whose Voice Inspired a Generation Read online




  WHITNEY HOUSTON!

  The Spectacular Rise and Tragic Fall of the Woman

  Whose Voice Inspired A Generation

  WHITNEY HOUSTON!

  The Spectacular Rise and Tragic Fall of the Woman

  Whose Voice Inspired a Generation

  MARK BEGO

  Skyhorse Publishing

  Copyright © 2012 by Mark Bego

  All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without the express written consent of the publisher, except in the case of brief excerpts in critical reviews or articles. All inquiries should be addressed to Skyhorse Publishing, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018.

  Skyhorse Publishing books may be purchased in bulk at special discounts for sales promotion, corporate gifts, fund-raising, or educational purposes. Special editions can also be created to specifications. For details, contact the Special Sales Department, Skyhorse Publishing, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018 or [email protected].

  Skyhorse® and Skyhorse Publishing® are registered trademarks of

  Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.®, a Delaware corporation.

  Visit our website at www.skyhorsepublishing.com.

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available on file.

  ISBN: 978-1-62087-254-3

  Printed in the United States of America

  DEDICATION

  To Susan Gilbert—

  Thank you for coming to my rescue so many times!

  CONTENTS

  Acknowledgments

  Prologue: “Grammy Eve, Saturday, February 11, 2012”

  Introduction: “Didn’t She Used to Have It All?”

  CHAPTER ONE: “Whitney’s Famous Family”

  CHAPTER TWO: “A Charmed Childhood”

  CHAPTER THREE: “The Teenage Years”

  CHAPTER FOUR: “Enter: Clive Davis”

  CHAPTER FIVE: “Her Brilliant Career”

  CHAPTER SIX: “The Glamorous Life”

  CHAPTER SEVEN: “Conflicting Rumors”

  CHAPTER EIGHT: “One Tough Diva”

  CHAPTER NINE: “Bobby Brown and The Bodyguard”

  CHAPTER TEN: “Life as a Movie Star”

  CHAPTER ELEVEN: “It Begins to Unravel”

  CHAPTER TWELVE: “I Fought the Law”

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN: “Whatchulookinat?”

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN: “Whitney: Her Dramatic Fall”

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN: “Like I Never Left”

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN: “Heartbreak Hotel”

  Quote Sources

  Whitney Houston: Discography

  Awards

  About the Author

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  The author would like to thank the following people for their help and encouragement with this book:

  Kirsten Borchardt Luke Nicola

  Angela Bowie Mark & Bonnie Olson

  Tom Cuddy David Perel

  Dan DeFilippo Pipeline Management

  Jerry George Kenneth Reynolds

  Michael Glenn David Salidor

  Frances Grill Tony Seidl

  Isiah James Barbara Shelley

  Bashiri Johnson Andrew Skurow

  John Klinger Marsha Stern

  Monika Koch Derek Storm

  Dave Marken Val Virga

  Nick Mayer George Vissichelli

  Walter McBride Sharon Weisz

  Scott Mendel Beth Wernick

  Charles Moniz Mary Wilson

  Ruth Mueller Patrick Wood

  PROLOGUE

  “GRAMMY EVE, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2012”

  It was the day prior to the fifty-fourth annual Grammy Awards presentation in Los Angeles. Without a doubt, this is the most exciting and dramatic weekend of the year in the music business. All week, musicians, technicians, and superstars had been converging on the City of Angels for the parties, the celebrations, and the awards themselves.

  With the Grammy Awards presentation set to take place on February 12 at The Staples Center in downtown L.A., master record executive Clive Davis was amidst plans for his own annual celebration at The Beverly Hills Hilton Hotel: his exclusive pre-Grammys party which draws the A–list of music business heavy hitters, and a glittering roster of guest star performers every year. This year was going to feature an elite crowd including Tony Bennett, Jane Fonda, Joni Mitchell, Tom Hanks, Richard Branson, Sean “Diddy” Combs, John Fogerty, Kim Kardashian, Serena Williams, Neil Young, Britney Spears, Brandy, Monica, Alicia Keys, Swizz Beats, Adam Lambert, Ray Davies of The Kinks, and Sly Stone. Also expected at the event was Clive Davis’s prized star and dear friend: Whitney Houston.

  So that she could have a room right on the site of Clive’s party, Whitney Houston took a suite at The Beverly Hills Hilton Hotel. That way she could be in the middle of all the action, and when it came time for her to arrive at the gala party she could simply sweep down on the elevator and make a grand entrance.

  On Thursday night, February 9, Whitney was in town, and showed up for a performance by her friend Kelly Price at a local nightclub. The event was billed as: “Kelly Price and Friends Unplugged: For the Love of R&B Grammy Party at Tru Hollywood.”

  In the middle of Kelly’s show, Whitney briefly got up on stage and together she and Price sang part of the song “Jesus Loves Me.” The video footage from the event depicts a sweaty and slightly-disheveled Houston in a simple black dress, looking like she was enjoying an evening with friends, and “letting her hair down.” No one could have guessed at the time that this would go down in history as Houston’s final public singing performance.

  On Saturday, February 11, Whitney was at The Beverly Hilton Hotel, which is located at the intersection of Santa Monica Boulevard and Wilshire Boulevard. She had made herself right at home there on the luxurious fourth floor. She had taken a spacious corner suite: room number 434.

  Usually she was surrounded by members of her personal entourage. This evening, however, she was left alone for a while, and she had decided to take a relaxing bath before the party.

  According to the Beverly Hills police reports, it was a member of her entourage and two bodyguards who discovered Whitney Houston’s lifeless body in the bathtub. She was unconscious and unresponsive to their efforts to rouse her. The entourage member telephoned “911” for help at 3:43 PM, Pacific Standard Time. Fortunately, the Beverly Hills Police Department and Fire Department were already on the premises, and they responded immediately. The emergency response personnel were completely unable to revive her, and Whitney Houston was officially pronounced dead at 3:55 PM.

  INTRODUCTION

  “DIDN’T SHE USED TO HAVE IT ALL?”

  There are few people in the world of show business who have achieved the kind of career heights that Whitney Houston had attained. She is one of the top recording artists in the history of popular music, having reached her creative high point in 1992 with the phenomenal international Number One hit “I Will Always Love You.” At her peak, she was personified as having beauty and talent, and she was one of the most successful women ever to sing and act. She won countless awards, and amassed a vast fortune. She also had one of the longest and deepest falls from grace ever chronicled.

  After Whitney married former singing star Bobby Brown in 1992 she began a twenty-year streak of bad luck and self-destructive behavior. Houston had one of the longest career and personal meltdowns ever recorded in the press.

  Since the ye
ar 2000, every album and every career move she made was viewed as a new “comeback.” However, it seemed that for Whitney, every great career resurrection was directly followed by another misstep or another personal tragedy.

  Thanks to her 2009 album I Look to You, which hit Number One on the charts, Whitney Houston had one of the greatest temporary career revivals ever staged. It was no easy feat, but—for a short period of time—she seemed to pull off an incredible return to form with newfound strength, style, and flair.

  However, by the time her 2009–2010 world concert tour came to an end, scathing press reports of lackluster performances, poor voice, no voice, and even no-shows, signaled the true beginning of the end of Whitney Houston’s once glorious singing career, as well as her role as a concert performer.

  From 2010 to 2012, Whitney Houston’s life became a harrowing roller coaster of temporary triumphs, and of deep disappointments. In 2011 she made one last attempt at rehabilitation for her drug dependencies, and she filmed a role in the remake of the hit ’70s musical movie Sparkle. However, for Whitney, 2012 began with press rumors that she was about to go broke, and that her drug abuses were worse than ever. Her sudden and tragic death on February 11, 2012 was especially sad and disappointing for her millions of worldwide fans, because she had fallen from such an extreme height of achievement. Since her 1980s debut on the music charts, she had become a recording star, a movie star, and a glamorous show business icon. She had all of the trappings of stardom and success, and still they did not always bring her happiness. What happened? Where did it go wrong? Didn’t she used to have it all?

  Without a doubt, Whitney Houston had one of the most carefully plotted and planned music careers on record. She was literally born into the music business. Her cousin is the incredibly successful pop icon, Dionne Warwick. Her mother is Cissy Houston, the gifted lead singer of 1960s girl group The Sweet Inspirations, whose background singing has been heard behind such legends as Aretha Franklin and Luther Vandross. Whitney’s own career was the carefully-executed dream of music business magician, Clive Davis. Yes, Whitney had the looks and the pristine voice as a teenager, but it was Davis who worked for two years finding the right songs and the right producers to show off her natural attributes.

  Her first album, 1985’s Whitney Houston, hit Number One, and sold an astonishing 22 million copies worldwide. It produced one international hit single after another, and is still acknowledged as the best-selling debut album of all time. Her sophomore release, 1987’s Whitney, repeated the same alchemy, becoming the first album by a female performer to debut on the Billboard album charts at Number One. Her third album, 1990’s I’m Your Baby Tonight sold 10 million copies.

  For the first eleven years of her once-successful singing and acting career she was known around the world as a charming, beautiful, self-confident, and gifted performer with a glorious voice. She wore clothes stylishly, always appeared in public glamorously coiffed, and masterfully headlined prestigious venues like Carnegie Hall.

  Whitney Houston placed eleven hits in the Number One position in the United States, including: “Saving All My Love For You,” “How Will I Know,” “Greatest Love of All,” “I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me),” “Didn’t We Almost Have it All,” “So Emotional,” “Where Do Broken Hearts Go,” “I’m Your Baby Tonight,” “All the Man I Need,” and “Exhale (Shoop, Shoop).” She won six Grammy Awards, twenty-one American Music Awards, an Emmy Award, and Germany’s prestigious Bambi Award for excellence as “The Best International Artist.” It appeared that there was nothing she could not accomplish.

  In 1992 Houston became a movie star, sharing the silver screen with Kevin Costner in the box-office hit The Bodyguard. The soundtrack album featured Whitney’s all-time greatest hit, “I Will Always Love You,” which went on to sell an astonishing 34 million copies worldwide. The soundtrack album for her second film, Waiting to Exhale became the singularly most-nominated album in Grammy Award history. And, the soundtrack album for her third film, The Preacher’s Wife, at 5 million copies sold, became the biggest-selling gospel album ever released. For the time-being, everything Houston touched turned to million-selling Gold. She was the embodiment of a real-life Cinderella.

  Upon Whitney’s insistence, for her 1998 album, My Love is Your Love, she shifted gears into hip-hop soul, and created a new harder-edged image for herself. Although it was less successful than her past releases, she still managed to find an international audience. In the year 2000, Whitney released a two disk Greatest Hits album which sold another 10 million copies. It would mark her last collaboration with Clive Davis for several years. Many of her critics claimed that this marked the beginning of the end of her musical and performing career. It was the start of seven years of extremely bad luck.

  During the years that Whitney was married to Bobby Brown, she dramatically transformed herself into an unpredictable and desperate woman whose life seemed to spin out of control. The effervescent and appealing Whitney the world fell in love with in the 1980s and early 1990s changed into someone the public no longer recognized.

  Starting in the year 2001, it all seemed to unravel for her. Piece by piece, Whitney, herself, seemed to sabotage her own carefully crafted and meticulously planned public image. By 2005, around the time that the disastrous TV reality series Being Bobby Brown was on the air, Whitney Houston was portrayed in the press as an arrogant, unreliable, substance-abusing, and paranoid person who had eroded both her looks and her voice. Even her once strong fan base seemed to abandon her.

  Marriage to talented but trouble-prone “bad boy” Bobby Brown, marked a huge change in her life. It ushered in highly publicized drug use, canceled concerts, public rudeness to fans, problems with the law, and eventually a shockingly thin and dissipated look for Whitney. Her name on a recording used to guarantee a multi-million-selling hit. Suddenly she found herself ignored by radio programmers and the music-buying public as well.

  Bobby Brown originally found fame as a former member of the 1980s R&B group The New Edition. Since then he is most commonly known for his drunken public fights, physical battles with Whitney in public, and for his notorious womanizing. He has several out-of-wedlock children in addition to his daughter with Houston. Characteristically, one of his biggest solo hits is a song called “Humpin’ Around.” His influence drove away her family, her friends, and her fans.

  While under Brown’s spell, in 2002 Whitney Houston released a dull and misguided album called Just Whitney. It sold a dismal 3 million copies globally. The first single from the album was a defensive and paranoid song called “Whatulookinat?” It fell flat on the charts. Instead of lovingly gazing at her once-classic beauty, the public viewed Ms. Houston with same kind of horror and awe one would have watching a train wreck in progress.

  Few performers have risen to the show business stature that Houston’s career has attained, and few have fallen so far so quickly. Whitney was once heralded as one of the most beloved, heavenly-voiced and cherished singers and actresses of the twentieth century. However since the year 2000, Whitney’s life sunk into a quicksand of “tabloid headline hell.” She publicly complained that the tabloid papers were doing her in, and “dirtying up” her name. However it was she who was creating the shocking headlines!

  She was publicly perceived as being a drug addicted, unpredictable, undependable, unbankable, and haughty has-been of a star. After three very successful Hollywood theatrical films, suddenly no one in the movie business wanted to touch her as an actress. There is also the much-talked-about fact that people had been whispering for years about Houston’s marriage to Brown being for “show” only, and that she is in actuality a lesbian.

  Whitney Houston’s career disintegration had as much to do with her gaunt and tired looks, as it did with the fact that she could no longer hit the musical high notes which had once effortlessly flowed from her throat. Had Whitney Houston fallen under the dark influence of her criminal bad boy husband? Or, was she merely showing us her true colo
rs? The absolute low point in her career was her appearance on the shocking American reality show entitled Being Bobby Brown. The notorious duo was seen as an obnoxious pair of substance-abusing desperate characters, who brought each other to newfound depths.

  Finally, in 2007 Whitney officially divorced Bobby Brown and she almost instantly began her resurrection. Once Bobby was out of the picture, it marked the return of the one man who always believed in her, and who first made her into an international singing star: Clive Davis. He made it his personal goal to restore Houston to her former glory.

  The public loves a success story. What they love even more is to see someone fall apart and then return even stronger and more determined than before. With the 2009 album that Clive fashioned for Whitney—I Look To You—she instantly returned to incredible prominence as a survivor, and as a shining superstar. There is no one in show business who has done that better, or more successfully, than Whitney.

  At the beginning of her career, Whitney astonished the world with her talent, her looks, and her expressive voice. She became a one-of-a-kind singer, and an award-winning movie star as well. When she lost favor, and everything seemed to fall apart for her, it was uncertain where fate would take her.

  When her 2009 album, I Look to You hit the top of the charts, and her song “I Didn’t Know My Own Strength” became a hit, it looked like she might relive the dream. For a short period of time it seemed that she was starting a new and successful chapter of her career.

  However, her disastrous world tour of 2009–2010 demonstrated that she was incomparably undependable, in horrible voice, and in fragile health. She “bombed” in Australia, and she had audiences leaving the concerts mid-show. She began the European leg of her tour by instantly postponing concerts in Paris, France; Manchester, England; and Glasgow, Scotland. Although she sent out a press release claiming to have illness-caused health problems, several sources claimed that it was actually her continued substance abuse that was to blame. After that, American tour promoters were both unwilling and uninterested in taking a chance on booking her for live performances.