Whitney Elizabeth Houston (born August 9 1963) is an American R&B pop singer, songwriter, actress, film producer, and former model. Houston debuted in 1985 with the release of her self-titled album, and later released a record seven consecutive number-one hits on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart. She was also one of a few African-American artists who received heavy rotation on early MTV in the 1980's. Houston continued her success in the 1990s with the release of several films and soundtracks, particularly The Bodyguard (1992), which became one of the best-selling albums of all time, and spawned her highly successful signature song "I Will Always Love You" (a remake of Dolly Parton's original). Her record sales during the next decade were modest, and her personal life became the subject of controversy due to allegations of drug abuse.
Houston has sold over 120 million albums and 50 million singles worldwide* and is the only female artist to have two entries in the top thirty-five of the best selling albums in the U.S. She has influenced a generation of singers and has won twenty-one American Music Awards (a record for a solo artist).
Houston's mother, first cousin (Dionne Warwick) and godmother (Aretha Franklin) were all established Gospel/R&B/Soul singers, and at the age of eleven Houston started performing as a soloist in the junior gospel choir at the New Hope Baptist church in Newark, New Jersey, and would later go on to accompanying her mother in concert. After singing background on her mother's 1978 album Think It Over, she started as a back up singer for many other established acts, such as Chaka Khan, Jermaine Jackson, and Lou Rawls.
She was featured as the lead vocalist on the Michael Zager Band's single "Life's a Party" in 1978, and Zager was so impressed that he offered to obtain her a record deal but she declined. In the early-1980s, she started appearing as a model in various magazine advertisements and snagged the cover of Seventeen magazine. During these modeling years, she also continued to balance her burgeoning singing career by working with producers Michael Bienhorn, Bill Laswell and Martin Bisi on an album they were spearheading called One Down, credited to the group Material. It was planned to contain eight songs, each one featuring a different lead vocalist. Houston contributed the ballad "Memories," which received favorable reviews from the Village Voice when the album debuted.
Houston's self-titled 1985 debut album initially had a slow rise up the album chart until the success of its single "You Give Good Love", which gave Houston her first top five hit on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100. Follow-up singles "Saving All My Love for You", "How Will I Know" and "Greatest Love of All" all went to number one on the pop charts, and Whitney Houston eventually topped the album charts. The album went on to sell twenty-four million copies worldwide (with over thirteen million copies being sold in the U.S. alone), making it the best-selling debut album by a female artist at the time (Britney Spears a decade after broke this record with her debut album Baby One More Time which sold 25 Million world-wide). Houston received a "Best Female Pop Vocal Performance" Grammy Award for "Saving All My Love for You" and an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety Program on TV", and her first worldwide tour, "The Greatest Love Tour", took place in 1986.
Houston's second album Whitney (1987) debuted at number one in the U.S. and the UK, the first album by a female artist to do so, and it eventually went on to sell over nineteen million copies worldwide (with over nine million copies being sold in the U.S. alone). the singles "I Wanna Dance with Somebody", "Didn't We Almost Have It All", "So Emotional" and "Where Do Broken Hearts Go" brought her total of consecutive Hot 100 number-one hits to seven, breaking a record previously shared by The Beatles and The Bee Gees (with six). Houston embarked on the worldwide "The Moment of Truth" tour and won the "Best Female Pop Vocal Performance" Grammy for "I Wanna Dance with Somebody", as well as several American Music Awards. During the 1988 Olympics event, her single "One Moment in Time" peaked in the U.S. top five and reached number one in the UK.
Houston's third album I'm Your Baby Tonight (1990) featured collaborations with Stevie Wonder and Luther Vandross and reached number three on the U.S. Billboard 200. It did not sell as highly as her first two albums, with twelve million copies sold worldwide (four million of those in the U.S.). The first two singles, "I'm Your Baby Tonight" and "All the Man That I Need" went to number one in the U.S., but "Miracle", "My Name Is Not Susan" and "I Belong to You" were less successful. Houston embarked on the "I'm Your Baby Tonight" world tour, and afterwards received four Billboard Music Awards. Her performance of "The Star-Spangled Banner" at Super Bowl XXV in January 1991 was released as a single and reached the U.S. top twenty chart, and all proceeds went to the American Red Cross. Her concert at Norfolk, Virginia as she welcomed back U.S. troops returning from the Gulf War received high ratings on the HBO network.
On March 4 1993 she gave birth to her first and only child, Bobbi Kristina Houston Brown. During this period she and her husband Bobby wrote the song "Something in Common", which reached the UK top twenty on release. Houston won numerous awards following The Bodyguard, including Grammy Awards for "Best Female Pop Vocal Performance", "Record of the Year" and "Album of the Year", a record eleven Billboard Music Awards in 1993 and a record eight American Music Awards in 1994. That year she became the first American singer to perform in post-apartheid South Africa, and her concerts raised money to aid South Africa's children.
Houston starred alongside Angela Bassett in the 1995 film Waiting to Exhale, on which she served as executive producer. The film was another success in the U.S., grossing over $70 million, but it made just $10 million elsewhere. One of three songs Houston recorded for its soundtrack, "Exhale (Shoop Shoop)", debuted at number one on the Hot 100 and became the single with the longest time spent at number two in music history. "Count on Me" (a duet with CeCe Winans) was another top ten hit, though "Why Does It Hurt So Bad" only reached the top forty. Houston won three NAACP Image Awards for "Outstanding Female Artist", "Album of the Year" and "Best Soundtrack Album", two American Music Awards for "Favorite Adult Contemporary Artist" and "Favorite Soundtrack" and a Soul Train Music Award for "Best Female R&B/Soul Single".
The 1996 film The Preacher's Wife had Houston star along Denzel Washington. It grossed nearly $50 million in the U.S., and the soundtrack saw Houston returning to gospel music. Songs like "I Believe in You and Me", the Annie Lennox-penned "Step by Step", and "You Were Loved" were popular, and the soundtrack eventually became the biggest selling gospel album of all-time with over five million copies sold worldwide. The film and soundtrack won three NAACP Image Awards in 1997 for "Best Actress" (Houston), "Album of the Year" and "Gospel Artist of the Year" (Houston). During that year, she teamed up with Brandy Norwood, Jason Alexander, Whoopi Goldberg, and Bernadette Peters for a made-for-television remake of Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella. Released in November 1997 to the American Broadcasting Company, the film attracted a record-breaking television audience of over sixty million U.S. viewers, won an Emmy Award and has become the best-selling video ever of a made-for-TV film.
Shortly before the release of the CD and DVD The Greatest Hits in April 2000, airport security discovered several grams of marijuana in Houston and husband Bobby Brown's luggage at a Hawaiian airport, but they boarded the plane and departed before police could arrive. Charges were later dropped against her and Brown but other rumors about drug use developed around the couple, and Houston also became infamous in the industry for cancelling appearances. In a statement Houston explained that a number of tour dates were cancelled due to air pollution, which had a negative effect on her vocal cords. 'Whitney: The Greatest Hits' was a success, selling over eleven million copies worldwide and spending two weeks at number one on the UK chart. The compilation included duets with Enrique Iglesias ("Could I Have This Kiss Forever"), George Michael ("If I Told You That") and Deborah Cox ("Same Script, Different Cast"). In August 2001 Houston signed what was reportedly the biggest record deal in history with Arista/BMG: she renewed her contract (worth an estimated $100 million) to deliver six new albums on which she would earn royalties. Two months later, she re-released her version of "The Star Spangled Banner" after the September 11th attacks; it reached the U.S. top ten, and its platinum sales were donated to a relief fund. 2001 also saw Houston receive the "First Annual Lifetime Achievement" at the BET Awards and she undertook her first major film producing assignment: the Disney comedy The Princess Diaries starring Anne Hathaway and Dame Julie Andrews. The film grossed over $100 million at the U.S. box office, and her production company Brownhouse received a percentage of the profits.
Shortly before the December 2002 release of her fifth studio album Just Whitney, Houston gave an interview with Diane Sawyer (where she discussed drug allegations and marriage issues) that became the highest rated television interview in history according to Nielsen Ratings. Houston denied using crack cocaine when questioned by Sawyer, stating that "Crack is wack". Just Whitney received lukewarm reviews and, although it reached the top ten on the Billboard 200, it failed to reach the top seventy-five in the UK and sold just three million copies worldwide (less than a million of which were in the U.S.). The singles "Whatchulookinat" (co-written by Houston), "One of Those Days" and "Try It on My Own" failed to reach the top forty on the U.S. Hot 100, and "Try It on My Own" and "Love That Man" only achieved substantial success on the Dance/Club Play Chart.
Subsequent news outlets reported that Houston is again fighting drug addiction. The National Enquirer published pictures of a bathroom (puportedly Houston's) littered with drug paraphernalia, and credited the pictures to Tina Brown (Bobby Brown's sister). Tina Brown also said that there were holes drilled in the walls of her apartment so Houston could see if anyone was entering. The story has received substantial coverage in the media,http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/2006/04/12/whitney_houston/index.html http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2006140354,00.html http://www.azcentral.com/ent/celeb/articles/0420houston.html http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,189581,00.html Fox News and in April 2006 it was rumored that Houston had returned to drug rehabilitation for the third time, but in an interview with S2S Magazine Houston's friend (1980s star Cherelle) denied the story. Cherelle stated that Houston has been rehabilitated for a long time now and merely went to LA to stay with friends Mel Gibson and Denzel Washington. It has also been reported that Houston was suffering from a brain tumour; however, Houston's website issued the following statement: "Please note that reports on Whitney's health circulating in the media at present are not true and totally unfounded."http://www.whitneyhouston.com/news/
A source told In Touch magazine that Bobby Brown could have cheated on Houston with America's Next Top Model: Cycle 4 contestant Tiffany Richardson while he was doing some showshttp://www.eurweb.com/story/eur27010.cfm. The eyewitness said that both were spotted at 4:30 the next morning of one of his shows emerging from the elevator and going into Bobby's cabin. According to the witness, they were seen together for the next few days in the casino and the dining room. When Tiffany was asked how she thought Bobby's wife Houston might feel about her hanging around with him, she said: "She's not here".
Pictures are rumored to be swirling over the internet. There has been offical news that a divorce could actually be proceeding at the very moment. Sources quoted Houston as saying: "Bobby has put me, my life, my career through 100% hell, and I took the shit for to long. My image has been taurnished and I'm trying to make a breakthrough and I will, but Bobby Brown will not be on my arm. I've been betrayed, lied and cheated on, enough is enough. It's about time I comeback and show Hollywood who the real "Queen of Pop" is".
1963 births | Living people | African-American actors | American film actors | New Jersey actors | African American musicians | American female singers | American pop singers | Rhythmic Top 40 acts | Grammy Award winners | MTV Music Award Winners | New Jersey musicians | Newarkers | American rhythm and blues singers | American record producers | Worst Actress Razzie nominees | Whitney Houston | World record holders | Arista Records musicians | Kids' Choice Awards winners | People treated for drug addiction | Baptists
Whitney Houston | Whitney Houston | Whitney Houston | ویتنی هوستون | Whitney Houston | Whitney Houston | Whitney Houston | ויטני יוסטון | Whitney Houston | ホイットニー・ヒューストン | Whitney Houston | Whitney Houston | Whitney Houston | Whitney Houston
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Whitney Houston".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world