Whitney Houston: Difference between revisions
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Whitney Houston used to have a good voice. Now she's just a crack addict. |
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{{Infobox musical artist 2 |
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|Name = Whitney Houston |
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|Img = Whouston.jpg |
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|Img_capt = |
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|Background = solo_singer |
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|Birth_name = Whitney Elizabeth Houston |
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|Born = [[August 9]] [[1963]] |
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|Died = |
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|Origin = [[East Orange, New Jersey|East Orange]], [[New Jersey]], [[United States]] |
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|Genre = [[Pop music|Pop]], [[Rhythm and blues|R&B]], [[Gospel music|gospel]] |
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|Occupation = [[Singer-songwriter]], [[Actor|actress]], [[film producer]], [[Model (person)|fashion model]] |
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|Years_active = 1984–present |
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|Label = [[Sony BMG Music Entertainment|SonyBMG]]/[[Arista Records|Arista]] |
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|URL = [http://www.whitneyhouston.com/ WhitneyHouston.com] |
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}} |
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That's pretty much the jist of it it. |
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'''Whitney Elizabeth Houston''' (born [[August 9]] [[1963]]) is an iconic [[United States|American]] [[Pop music|pop]] and [[Rhythm and blues|R&B]] [[singer]], [[Actor|actress]], [[film producer]], occasional [[songwriter]] and former [[Model (person)|fashion model]]. Houston's debut album was released in 1985 to considerable critical and commercial success, and within the next three years she released a record seven consecutive number-one hits on the U.S. [[Billboard Hot 100]] chart. She was one of a few [[African-American]] artists whose videos were put into heavy rotation on [[MTV]] during the mid to late 1980s. |
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Houston continued her success in the 1990s with the release of several films and their corresponding soundtrack albums, the most popular of which was ''[[The Bodyguard (soundtrack)|The Bodyguard]]'' (1992), which became one of the best-selling albums of all time and produced her hit [[signature song]] "[[I Will Always Love You]]" (a cover of [[Dolly Parton]]'s original). Her record sales during the next decade were modest, and her personal life became the subject of controversy because of allegations of drug abuse. Houston has sold over 160 million albums and 70 million singles worldwide totaling 130 million records, and she is one of the best selling female singers of all time.<ref>[http://www.whitneyhouston.com/bio/]</ref> She has won twenty-one [[American Music Awards]] (a record for a solo artist). |
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==Biography== |
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===Early years=== |
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Houston was born in [[East Orange, New Jersey]] to John and [[Cissy Houston]]. Although she was a [[Baptist]], she attended a [[Catholic]] high school. |
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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 music|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]]. |
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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 fashion model in various magazine advertisements and snagged the cover of ''[[Seventeen (magazine)|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 (band)|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. |
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===1983–1991: Early music career=== |
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[[Image:WhitneyHoustonAlbumCover.gif|thumb|left|180px|''Whitney Houston'' (1985)]] |
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Houston had been offered record deals previously (from Michael Zager in 1980, and Elektra Records in 1981) and in 1983 an A&R representative from [[Arista Records|Arista]] saw Houston performing with her mother in a nightclub in [[New York City]]. The representative convinced the head of the label, [[Clive Davis]], to take time to see her. Davis was convinced of her talents and offered her a [[worldwide]]-[[contract]], which Houston signed. Her debut album took over two years to complete. Houston's first taste of commercial success was with "Hold Me", a duet with [[Teddy Pendergrass]] (which first appeared on his album, ''Love Language'') which peaked into the top fifty on the U.S. pop chart and the top five of the R&B chart. It was during this time that Houston auditioned for acting roles, including the part of Sondra Huxtable on ''[[The Cosby Show]]'', which was won by [[Sabrina Le Beauf]]. She earned roles on episodes of ''[[Gimme a Break]]'', ''[[Silver Spoons]]'', and a Canada Dry soft drink commercial. |
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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 (album)|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),{{fact}} making it one of best-selling debut albums by a female artist of time worldwide. Houston received a "[[Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance|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. |
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Houston's second album, ''[[Whitney (album)|Whitney]]'' (1987), debuted at number one in the U.S. and the UK, the first album by a female artist to do so. It eventually went on to sell over nineteen million copies worldwide (with over nine million copies being sold in the U.S. alone).{{fact}} 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]]. She recorded the the theme song to [[1988 Summer Olympics|1988 Olympics]], "[[One Moment in Time]]", which peaked at number five in the U.S. and reached number one in the [[United Kingdom|UK]]. |
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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.).{{fact}} The first two singles, "[[I'm Your Baby Tonight (song)|I'm Your Baby Tonight]]" and "[[All the Man That I Need]]" went to number one in the U.S., but "[[Miracle (song)|Miracle]]", "[[My Name Is Not Susan]]" and "[[I Belong to You (Whitney Houston song)|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 top twenty of the U.S. charts, 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 [[HBO]]. |
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===1992–1997: Successful acting career=== |
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[[Image:Whitney Houston- The Bodyguard Cover.jpg|thumb|right|180px|''The Bodyguard Soundtrack'' (1992)]] |
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Houston's debut film, ''[[The Bodyguard]]'' (co-starring [[Kevin Costner]]), was released four months after she married R&B singer [[Bobby Brown]] on [[July 18]] [[1992]]. The film was commercially successful, grossing over $120 million in the U.S. and $410 million worldwide, but reviews were mixed, and Houston received three [[Razzie Award]] nominations. The soundtrack to the film (see [[The Bodyguard (soundtrack)]]) was also very popular; as of July 2006 the RIAA had certified it platinum seventeen times, which made it the biggest selling film soundtrack and female album of all time.{{fact}} Houston's remake of [[Dolly Parton]]'s "[[I Will Always Love You]]" spent a record-breaking fourteen weeks at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and broke numerous chart records all over the world; it also sold over nine million copies worldwide, making it still the best-selling single by a female artist ever and one of the most-played songs of all time. Her next singles—"[[I'm Every Woman (Whitney Houston single)|I'm Every Woman]]" (her remake of [[Chaka Khan]]'s 1978 song), "[[I Have Nothing]]", "[[Run to You (song)|Run to You]]" and "[[Queen of the Night (song)|Queen of the Night]]" (which she co-wrote)—were also radio, chart, and club hits. |
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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", "[[Grammy Award for Record of the Year|Record of the Year]]" and "[[Grammy Award for Album of the Year|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. |
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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". |
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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.{{fact}} 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|Brandy]], [[Jason Alexander]], [[Whoopi Goldberg]], [[Bernadette Peters]], and [[Victor Garber]] for a made-for-television remake of [[Rodgers & Hammerstein]]'s ''[[Cinderella (TV)|Cinderella]]''. Airing in November 1997 via [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]], the film attracted a record-breaking television audience of over sixty million U.S. viewers, won an Emmy Award and holds the record of the highest selling video of of a made-for-TV film. |
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===1997–2002: Career development, controversy, and a mega deal=== |
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<!-- image hidden as copyright status is unclear as of April 10 2006; remove if deleted. [[Image:Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston in March 1999.jpg|left|thumb|225px|Houston performing "[[When You Believe]]" with [[Mariah Carey]] at the [[71st Academy Awards]] in March 1999.]] --> [[Image:Whitney Houston- Just Whitney Cover.jpg|thumb|left|180px|''Just Whitney'' (2002)]] |
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''[[My Love Is Your Love]]'', Houston's fourth studio album, was originally conceived as a greatest hits album with a handful of new tracks, but the recording sessions went more smoothly than expected and produced enough new material for a full-length album. Recorded and mixed in only six weeks, ''My Love Is Your Love'' was released in 1998 and sold over eleven million copies worldwide. Co-produced by Houston, it was more hip-hop and R&B driven and saw her branching out musically with collaborations with producers such as [[Wyclef Jean]], [[Missy Elliott]], [[Lauryn Hill]], and once again Babyface. The song "[[When You Believe]]" (a duet with [[Mariah Carey]] recorded for ''[[The Prince of Egypt]]'' soundtrack) won an [[Academy Award]], while "[[Heartbreak Hotel (Whitney Houston song)|Heartbreak Hotel]]" (with [[Faith Evans]] and Kelly Price), "[[It's Not Right but It's Okay]]", and "[[My Love Is Your Love (song)|My Love Is Your Love]]" all reached the U.S. top five. All but one of the album's singles become number-one dance hits, establishing Houston's presence on the U.S. club scene. After the "My Love Is Your Love Tour", Houston received an MTV Europe Award for "Best R&B Artist", two NAACP Image Awards, a Grammy Award for "[[Grammy Award for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance|Best Female R&B Vocal Performance]]" ("It's Not Right but It's Okay") and a [[Soul Train Music Award]] for "Artist of the Decade". She also performed on the ''VH1 Diva's Live '99'' special with artists such as [[Mary J. Blige]], [[Tina Turner]], [[Cher]], and [[Chaka Khan]]. |
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Shortly before the release of the CD and DVD ''[[Whitney: 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 became well known in the industry for cancelling appearances. ''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 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 11, 2001 attacks|September 11th attacks]]; it reached the U.S. top ten, achieved [[platinum single|platinum]] status and its proceeds 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 [[The Walt Disney Company|Disney]] comedy ''[[The Princess Diaries (film)|The Princess Diaries]]'' starring [[Anne Hathaway (actress)|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. |
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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 marital issues). Houston denied using [[crack cocaine]] when questioned by Sawyer, stating that "...crack is wack" and that she's "too rich to do crack". ''Just Whitney'' received mostly negative 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. |
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===2003–2005: ''One Wish''=== |
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[[Image:Whitney Houston- One Wish Cover.jpg|thumb|right|180px|''One Wish: The Holiday Album'' (2003)]] |
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Houston produced two other projects for Disney: the 2003 television film ''[[The Cheetah Girls (film)|The Cheetah Girls]]'' (starring [[Raven-Symone]]) and the sequel ''[[The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement]]'', which was not as successful as the first film. In November 2003 she delivered her sixth studio album, a Christmas release entitled ''[[One Wish: The Holiday Album]]'' which consisted of covers of Christmas songs. Though the single "One Wish (for Christmas)" (a cover of the [[Freddie Jackson]] song) reached the top twenty on Billboard's [[Adult Contemporary (Billboard chart)|Adult Contemporary chart]], the album itself failed to achieve [[gold album|gold]] status in the U.S.<ref>http://www.riaa.com/</ref> (Houston's first studio album not to do so)<!-- and sold little more than one million copies worldwide -->. After a five-day stay at a drug rehabilitation facility in March 2004 (which was repeated in March 2005 for about two months), Houston embarked on an international "Soul Divas" tour with [[Natalie Cole]] and cousin Dionne Warwick which lasted throughout the summer. In September 2004 she made a surprise performance at the [[World Music Awards]], in tribute to long time friend Clive Davis. During this period she appeared on her husband's television program ''[[Being Bobby Brown]]'', which provided a view into the domestic goings-on in the Brown household. |
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===2006: Currently=== |
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As of May 2006, Houston is executive producing ''[[The Cheetah Girls]]'' sequel ''[[The Cheetah Girls 2: When In Spain]]''. Whitney Houston is also recording a new album which is tentavily titled [[THE EVOLUTION]], although there has been little press interest surrounding the project. In an issue of XXL's ''Hip-Hop Soul'' [[Bryan Michael Cox]] said that they were "making great music. Whitney's going to be a surprise", and predicted a career comeback for Houston on the scale of those staged by Mariah Carey and Mary J. Blige. The album has been in production for over two years and is rumored to feature contributions from [[Jermaine Dupri]], [[Lil Jon]], [[Babyface]], [[Pharrell Williams]], [[Rodney Jerkins]], and [[Missy Elliott]].{{fact}} In 2004 Houston received a trophy at the Womens World Awards in Europe, and she performed live at the [[2006 Winter Olympics]] in [[Turin|Torino]], [[Italy]]. |
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There is a discussion on the talk page about the validity of including the allegations of her crack addiction. Please contribute to it on that page before blanking this section. -- richfife |
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-->Subsequent news outlets reported that Houston is again fighting drug addiction. The ''[[National Enquirer]]'' published pictures of a bathroom (purportedly 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,<ref>http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/2006/04/12/whitney_houston/index.html</ref> <ref>http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2006140354,00.html</ref> <ref>http://www.azcentral.com/ent/celeb/articles/0420houston.html</ref> <ref>http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,189581,00.html Fox News</ref> 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 (singer [[Cherelle]]) denied the story. Cherelle stated that Houston has been rehabilitated for a long time now. 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."<ref>http://www.whitneyhouston.com/news/</ref> |
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In August 2006, it was reported that [[Osama bin Laden]] was apparently "obsessed” with the pop diva. Bin Laden, according to novelist [[Kola Boof]] who claims to have been the terrorist mastermind’s "sex slave,” considered Houston to be "the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen,” and even talked about having her husband (Brown) killed so he could make Houston one of his wives. |
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"He [Bin Laden] said he wanted to give [her] a mansion that he owned in a suburb of Khartoum,” Boof told reporters. "He explained to me that to possess Whitney he would be willing to break his color rule and make her one of his wives.” Bin Laden is apparently "dismissive of black women,” but was taken by Houston’s beauty, even reportedly carried photographs of the singer in his briefcase. |
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==Discography== |
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{{further|[[Whitney Houston discography]]}} |
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===Number-one songs=== |
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''The following songs reached number-one on the U.S. [[Billboard Hot 100]] or Billboard [[Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles and Tracks]] charts.'' |
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*1985: "[[You Give Good Love]]" |
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*1985: "[[Saving All My Love for You]]" |
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*1986: "[[How Will I Know]]" |
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*1986: "[[Greatest Love of All]]" |
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*1987: "[[I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me)]]" |
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*1987: "[[Didn't We Almost Have It All]]" |
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*1988: "[[So Emotional]]" |
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*1988: "[[Where Do Broken Hearts Go]]" |
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*1990: "[[I'm Your Baby Tonight (song)|I'm Your Baby Tonight]]" |
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*1991: "[[All the Man That I Need]]" |
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*1992: "[[I Will Always Love You]]" |
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*1995: "[[Exhale (Shoop Shoop)]]" |
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*1999: "[[Heartbreak Hotel (Whitney Houston song)|Heartbreak Hotel]]" (with [[Faith Evans]] and [[Kelly Price]]) |
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==See also== |
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*[[Whitney Houston chart records and achievements]] |
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*[[List of Whitney Houston awards]] |
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*[[Grammy nominations for Whitney Houston]] |
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*[[List of artists by total number of USA number one singles]] |
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*[[American Music Award nominations for Whitney Houston]] |
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*[[List of best-selling music artists]] |
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*[[List of artists who reached number one on the Hot 100 (U.S.)]] |
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*[[List of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Dance chart]] |
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==References== |
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<references/> |
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== External links == |
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* [http://www.whitneyhouston.com/ Official site] |
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* [http://www.whitney-fan.com/ Fansite] |
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* {{imdb name|id=0001365|name=Whitney Houston}} |
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{{Whitney Houston}} |
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[[Category:1963 births|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:Living people|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:African-American actors|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:African-American singers|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:American actor-singers|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:American female singers|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:American film actors|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:American models|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:American pop singers|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:American record producers|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:American rhythm and blues singers|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:Arista Records artists|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:Baptists|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:Grammy Award winners|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:Kids' Choice Awards winners|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:New Jersey actors|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:New Jersey musicians|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:People from Newark, New Jersey|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:People treated for drug addiction|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:Reality television participants|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:Rhythmic Top 40 acts|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:Whitney Houston|*]] |
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[[Category:Worst Actress Razzie nominees|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[Category:Film actors|Houston, Whitney]] |
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[[he:ויטני יוסטון]] |
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Revision as of 19:58, 31 August 2006
Whitney Houston used to have a good voice. Now she's just a crack addict.
That's pretty much the jist of it it.