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People Magazine: STAR BLIGHT
submitted by: Lisa (webmaster)
date: April 17, 2000
source: People
Magazine
Her reputation marred by a series of missed performances and strange appearances,
Whitney Houston faces a fresh round of rumors
By the time Whitney Houston showed up for her photo shoot for the May
cover of Jane magazine, she had kept staffers at the New York City-based
monthly cooling their heals for four hours. "She was acting really strange,"
says the magazine's editor, Jane Pratt, who was at the shoot. "She was
singing to herself. Then she would pretend to play the piano, like an
air piano. Her eyes were very heavy-lidded." Houston blamed her tardiness
on a visit to the dentist to deal with a cracked tooth, but, says Pratt,
"novocaine doesn't make you act that way. Everyone there thought she was
on something." Yet, "in the midst of all this really bizarre behavior,"
Pratt says, Houston "gave one of the best cover shoots ever. She's a consummate
performer."
That is, when she wants to be. Since Houston's flameout at the Academy
Awards on March 26, gossip has swirled about the velvet-throated pop diva.
Long dogged by rumors that (a) her marriage to singer Bobby Brown, 33,
is on the rocks, (b) Brown is abusive, (c) Brown is a womanizer, and (d)
Houston is gay, the scuttlebutt dujour is that (e) Houston, 36, has a
drug problem that is destroying her singing voice. Never mind that Houston
has denied all of these rumors many times, including such explicit statements
as "I'm not gay, I'm not lesbian" and "I'm not a drug addict." Says someone
close to Houston: "There are really serious concerns about her condition.
It's a total problem. Dionne [Warwick], and Natalie [Cole] were going
to talk to Whitney about her problem. Natalie is really a voice of authority
on this because of what she's been through with drugs. But they didn't
talk to her, I don't know why. It might have helped." While Cole declined
comment, Newsweek reported last week that Arista Records president Clive
Davis, the impresario who signed Houston to a Arista at age 19 and has
steered her career ever since, approached Houston's family "to do an intervention."
The outcome is unknown.
More clear is the impression of the last three months have been a nightmare
for the silky beauty once saluted as the Prom Queen Of Soul. Consider
the Jane photo shoot and interview: She referred to a jeweler as "this
Jew guy on Diamond Row in New York" and compared the President to a junkie
in that "they're just men, you dig?" (Her publicist, Nancy Seltzer, denies
any odd behavior and claims the story was "not an accurate representation
of the Whitney Houston I know.") Other recent incidents have raised eyebrows
as well. On Jan. 11, Houston was stopped at Hawaii's Keahole-Kona International
Airport by security officers who said they spotted 15.2 grams of marijuana
in her pocketbook. Houston eluded detention by leaving her bag with guards,
boarding a plane and being airborne by the time police arrived. And on
March 6 she failed to appear at The Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame ceremony
in New York City, where she was to serenade inductee Clive Davis. "There's
a lot of denial from the people around Whitney," says a source close to
the singer. "They just chalk it up to her being a diva." Why is no one
reading her the riot act? "She's a financial source for all of them. They
don't want to cross her." (Houston declined to be interviewed.)
With precision bad timing, Houston continued her downward spiral three
weeks later before the Academy Awards. Scheduled to perform in a medley
with Garth Brooks, Ray Charles, Isaac Hayes, Queen Latifah, and Dionne
Warwick, Houston was removed from the lineup 48 hours before showtime.
"The poor lady couldn't sing," says Oscar spokeswoman Jane LaBonte. "Her
throat was in trouble." Music director Burt Bacharach put it differently
to PEOPLE: "Whitney's chronic condition is very sad."
But on Oscar night, as Faith Hill took the stage in Houston's place (a
co-producer of the show, Lili Fini Zanuck, quickly persuaded country's
It girl to pinch-hit), rumors swirled that pop's lost-It girl had been
fired for flubbing the lyrics to "Over the Rainbow." "She just kind of
moved her mouth a little bit," says someone who attended rehearsals. Adds
another onlooker: "She missed her entire cue." Says Garth Brooks: "Um,
I can only say this about Whitney: she came in, she rehearsed, she tried
her best, but she was so sick, and we'll just leave it at that." One TV
producer who has worked with Houston was less tactful. "When this Oscar
thing happened, it did not surprise me," he says. "She has a reputation
for being a flake and no-showing, and it's dangerous to book her because
until she walks on that stage, there's no guarantee she's going to show
up."
Still, it didn't take long for Houston to devolve into celebrity-joke
fodder. At an April 3 Broadway cares benefit tribute to Elton John, actor
Nathan Lane drew huge laughs when he quipped to his cohost, actress Christine
Baranski, "Thanks so much for filling in at the last minute for Whitney
Houston." Seizing the moment, Baranski then pinched the end of her microphone
and sniffed it, a pantomime strongly suggestive of snorting drugs.
The avalanche of bad press has diverted attention from the Grammy Houston
took home on Feb. 23 for her dance hit single "It's Not Right But It's
Okay." With her sixth Grammy and her first since 1993, Houston has maintained
enviable sales despite her woes; her latest album My Love Is Your Love,
sold 9 million worldwide. From the podium she gushed to her hubby, "Honey
this is for you, the original R&B king. I love you." According to Jamie
Foster Brown, a friend, not a relative, of the couple's, "This meant a
lot to Bobby." Brown, whose last album, Forever, sold fewer then 53,000
copies, seemed unfazed that his wife had won for a song about a woman
who dumps her philandering husband and proclaims, "Close the door behind
you, leave your key/I'd rather be alone than unhappy."
Rumors of Bobby's womanizing -- and by extension Houston's decline --
have persisted almost from the day in July 1992 that Houston walked down
the aisle in a $40,000 Marc Bouwer wedding gown and, before a star-studded
crowd of 800 guests, exchanged vows with Brown on the grounds of her five-acre,
$11 million New Jersey mansion. Brown brought to the marriage his three
children -- Landon, now 13; Laprincia, 10; and Bobby Jr., 8 -- by two
former girlfriends. Eight months later, Houston delivered daughter Bobbi
Kristina, now 7 and their only child to date. Like Whitney, says Foster
Brown, "Bobby is a great parent. They spend a lot of time with the kids."
By 1995, the year he was treated at the Betty Ford Center for alcohol
abuse, Brown was facing a paternity suite involving a little girl born
since the wedding, and drawing press attention for making out publicly
with an unidentified woman. In 1998, Houston told Ebony magazine that
she and Brown had separated for about a month the previous year and that
she made Bobby "court me, call me, work his way back." In a follow-up
interview nine months later, she sounded more certain of the union: "They
say nay, I say yeah. I'm still married and I'm still in love."
Paralleling reports of Brown's roving eye has been the persistent gossip
that Houston is gay. She has repeatedly been linked to her long time friend
and executive assistant Robyn Crawford, whom she describes as "the sister
I never had." Both women strongly deny the rumor. "Some things still sting
very badly," she told New York's Daily News last July. "Look, I'm not
married and have some kind of double life with some man or woman. I couldn't
live that way. I was raised in the church and I care about morality."
At the time, Houston was on her first concert tour in five years. Asked
by the Los Angeles Times what the biggest misconceptions were about her
life, she answered, "That I'm gay, that my husband is a womanizer, that
he's a wife-beater." To Redbook she offered, "I do the hitting, he doesn't."
Undeniably, much of the controversy surrounding Houston has been self-inflicted.
Beginning around 1994, she began to develop a reputation for canceling
performances. She went into overdrive last summer when, during her tour
in support of My Love Is Your Love, she canceled five of her 24 scheduled
concerts. In Concord, Calif., where she pulled out just 15 minutes before
curtain time at the 12,500-seat Chronicle Pavilion, officials are attempting
to recoup from Houston's management $104,000 worth of marketing and other
expenses. "I have never had something like this happen," says Pavilion
director Mark Deven. He adds that he would "think long and hard" before
extending another invitation to Houston. For her part, Houston has attributed
her no-shows to chronic bronchitis.
Inexplicably, Houston has pulled diva stunts even in situations that would
have burnished her image. When she was invited to sing at a '94 White
House state dinner honoring then-South African President Nelson Mandela,
she showed up nearly two hours late. When her admirable work on behalf
of assorted charities -- among them the United Negro College Fund, St.
Jude's Children's Research Hospital and her own Whitney Houston Foundation
For Children -- was to be saluted with a 1997 Triumphant Spirit Award,
she failed to show at the Madison Square Garden event. "They said she
was in Florida but they couldn't find her, " says someone involved with
the production. "Her mother ended up accepting the award on her behalf.
It was terribly weird and devastating." That was also the year drug rumors
began to gather steam after Whitney, just 45 minutes before airtime, pulled
out of an appearance on The Rosie O'Donnell Show to promote her forthcoming
TV movie Cinderella. "I hope she's very ill," an unrosy O'Donnell cracked.
Few would have predicted such behavior back in the early '80's, when Houston
started out in Manhattan's clubs singing backup for her mother, gospel
great Cissy Houston, before her parents divorced. Though she seemed to
the mike born -- Dionne Warwick is a cousin; friend Aretha Franklin is
known in the Houston family as Aunt Ree; Houston's father, John, 79, was
a music manager-the gangly Houston was a meek, unassuming presence onstage.
Her mother, who has directed the New Hope Baptist Church choir in Newark,
N.J., for more then 40 years, resisted Whitney's career aspirations until
she heard the youngest of her three children perform a psalm Cissy had
set to music. "There was something in her voice that no one, not even
I, could teach her," Cissy, 66, told PEOPLE in '98.
Cissy kept her only daughter on a tight rein until she was 18. Then it
all happened very quickly. Her 1985 debut album, Whitney Houston, sold
13 million copies, one of the biggest-selling debuts by a solo artist,
and helped earn Houston a Grammy. She had three albums under her belt
by the time she became a screen star in 1992 with the release of her first
film, The Bodyguard, opposite Kevin Costner, which grossed $400 million;
its hit single, "I Will Always Love You," topped the pop chart for 14
weeks. Two films followed, 1995's moderately successful Waiting To Exhale,
and The Preachers Wife, costarring Denzel Washington, which bombed at
the box office the following year but gave Houston another victory: It
became the best-selling soundtrack album in chart history. But some believe
that her future as an entertainer is jeopardized by her precarious reputation.
"She shows up on her own time, she's rude, she doesn't come to rehearsal,"
says an L.A. producer who has worked with Houston. "It saddens me that
a person who has everything in the world going for her is screwing it
up."
Not always. At the trendy Miyagi's restaurant in West Hollywood, she recently
dazzled diners with an impromptu karaoke performance. "She was really
polite, a really nice customer," says Patti Frasch, one of two waitresses
who served Houston's party of 20. Don Cornelius, producer of the annual
Soul Train Music Awards, says that Houston has "never failed in at least
a half dozen appearances." He points out that a star of Houston's caliber
is "never more then a record away from being on top." Indeed her much
anticipated Whitney's Greatest Hits will hit stores in May, and this week
she is scheduled to tape a tribute to Arista Records' Clive Davis for
NBC. "We expect her to be there," says Barry Adelman, the shows coproducer.
Perhaps the person who will make Houston reevaluate her life is her daughter
Bobbi Kristina, whom she calls Krissi. "Whitney's a doting mother," says
pal Foster Brown. "When Bobbi Kris was younger, Whitney would have a bus
just for her family to be with her." Now when Houston and Brown are on
the road, says Foster Brown, Krissi is attended by an aunt and a nanny.
During last summer's tour, Krissi joined Houston onstage. "You can always
tell a singer by the way they hold a microphone, and she holds that mike
with confidence," a proud Houston told the Los Angeles Times. "She's a
little diva-in-training." If that's true, Houston will need to be in top
shape if she hopes to give Krissi the same solid musical grounding that
Whitney got from her own mother.
--Jim Smolowe
--Bob Meadows, Cynthia Wang and Sue Miller in New York City
and Tom Cunneff, Michael Fleeman, Lyndon Stambler and Pamela Warrick in
Los Angeles
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