cover image Protecting Whitney: The Memoir of Her Bodyguard

Protecting Whitney: The Memoir of Her Bodyguard

David Roberts. Chicago Review, $30 (256p) ISBN 978-0-914090-37-3

Security consultant Roberts debuts with a blunt account of his seven-year stint as Whitney Houston’s bodyguard. After a career in the North Wales Police and the Royal Air Force, Roberts was running a security firm when he was offered the role of security chief for Houston’s Moment of Truth tour in 1988. Skimping on the personal details of his relationship with Houston, Roberts instead provides detailed insight into the workings of Nippy, Inc., the corporation that employed Houston’s support staff. Prone to “knee-jerk, ill-prepared” decisions, the group—mostly comprising friends and intimates—prioritized money over the star’s well-being, Roberts claims, noting that they kept Houston on demanding tour schedules and supplied her with cocaine and marijuana even as her substance use problems worsened. In addition, they failed to offer her options for rehabilitation out of fear it would damage her image, even though the drugs caused so much damage to her vocal chords that a doctor warned Houston that her continued use could mean the end of her singing career. Despite the book’s somewhat stiff prose (“My anger and actual hatred toward all those who had facilitated Whitney’s ability to do this herself was profound”), Roberts offers revealing insights into the simultaneous power and vulnerability of megawatt stars. The result is a captivating behind-the-scenes look at the price of fame. (Jan.)