AP
A 2001 file photo of Bobby Brown and Whitney Houston. Friends and fans were happy to be specific: they laid Houston's squarely at the feet of Houstons ex-husband Brown, with whom she spent 14 tempestuous years.
London - Whitney Houston’s drugged and drunken death, alone in a hotel bathtub, was as sad as it was tawdry.
Sad, because it left her already- troubled 18-year-old daughter Bobbi without her adored mother. Sad, because it silenced what really was one of the most beautiful voices of our time. And sad because - as evidenced by Whitney’s downward spiral over many years - it was all so achingly predictable.
But among the hundreds who knew her and the millions who admired her, a dignified sadness is apparently too much to expect. Instead, they’re tripping over each other in the rush to find someone to blame.
Fellow star Celine Dion led the charge by saying the tragedy was the fault of “bad people and bad influence”.
Friends and fans were happy to be more specific: they laid it squarely at the feet of Houston’s ex-husband, bad-boy singer Bobby Brown, with whom she spent 14 tempestuous years. One “friend” put it this way: “When they married, Whitney was the biggest singing talent on the planet. By the time they divorced she was broken.”
Amy Winehouse, right, and her husband, Blake Fielder-Civil, in 2007. One British writer brought Houston's death closer to home with an idly obvious comparison: "Like Amy Winehouse with Blake Fielder-Civil, her drug problems were largely down to someone else."
AP
Meanwhile, one British writer brought her death closer to home with an idly obvious comparison: “Like Amy Winehouse with Blake Fielder-Civil, her drug problems were largely down to someone else.”
So now we know: blame anyone, blame everyone - but don’t, whatever you do, suggest that any part of this sorry story was Whitney Houston’s fault.
Falling under the spell of “bad influences” - particularly male bad influences - has become the catch-all excuse for women who go spectacularly off the rails. Three bottles of vodka before breakfast? Pills down the throat, powders up the nose? The automatic reaction is: “Well, she fell in with a bad crowd, the wrong man, didn’t she?”
Far be it for any of us to point out that “she”, whichever female celebrity it might be, had a choice: about which crowd to fall in with, which friends to make, which man to marry. Let alone to point out that she could then choose whether or not to join in with their nasty little habits.
We’ve seen it, and heard it, countless times. About the fears of the family and friends of, for example, Kate Moss when she was “under the influence” of druggie Pete Doherty - but never, once, how exasperated they were (or should have been) that this beauty could have picked almost any man on the planet but chose, instead, a gormless, talentless lout.
Waves of sympathy washed over the memory of Paula Yates when she died after abandoning four children for the greater pleasures of a heroin cocktail. It wasn’t her fault, they said; it all dated back to when she hooked up with that demon Michael Hutchence.
A 1969 file photo of Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor.
AP
Really? I’d say it was entirely her fault that she left her irascible but doting partner and father of her children, Bob Geldof, for the well-known dangers of Hutchence.
I slightly knew, and rather liked, Debbie Raymond, heiress to Paul “King of Soho” Raymond”s £650-million fortune.
But again, when she died of a cocktail similar to Yates’s, all fingers pointed to her companion on the night of her death. No one took into account that Debbie chose to leave her children at home, the younger only ten months old, and head off for a narcotic night on the town with a man she barely knew. Her risk; her choice.
The list goes on. Courtney Love chose her drugs, her alcohol and her Kurt Cobain. He didn’t tie her down and force the poisons into her; they came as a package and it was a package she freely bought.
She, by the way, is currently “mentoring” fellow off-the-rails star Lindsay Lohan; for some reason, I’m not holding my breath for radical reform. In either case.
Popular mythology has it that the giddy world of showbusiness forces these women into lifestyles fraught with wickedness and temptation and thus robs them of any normal capacity to choose. This is nonsense. The truth is that the average unemployed, unmarried mother in a council house is the one without a lot of choice. This glitzy crowd, with their money and their hangers-on, do have a choice; usually, quite simply, to say yes or no.
I have seen, indeed, participated in, the backstage shenanigans, the after-show parties and the elite members-only nightclubs in London, Los Angeles and New York, and it is quite true that a lot of drink, drugs and bedevilment are close to hand. But it is also true that for every woman who deliberately chooses to embrace the dark side, kidding themselves that debauchery is actually risque-chic, a dozen others equally deliberately exercise the choice not to linger.
Consider these two, for example: Denise Van Outen and Danniella Westbrook were born within months of each other, both to decent families. Both went to the same stage school, both hit the big time: Denise on The Big Breakfast, Danniella in EastEnders.
Both of them would have had exactly the same opportunities and access to booze and cocaine. Denise chose a career. Danniella, famously, opted for an excess so severe that it destroyed her nose. “Poor Danniella!” went the cry. “A victim!” Indeed she was. But only a victim of her own choice.
The infuriating thing about this urge to diagnose victimhood is that it is only, ever, applied to women. Men who go off the rails tend, instead, to be called hell-raisers - and not without a tinge of admiration, either.
Can you imagine anyone (other than, perhaps, their mothers) blaming the behaviour of Oliver Reed, George Best or, latterly, Charlie Sheen upon “falling in with the wrong crowd”?
Elizabeth Taylor was no stranger to a drop of the hard stuff or potent prescriptions; it is nevertheless inconceivable that anyone might say: “Oh, if only dear Richard Burton hadn’t fallen in with that Taylor woman...”
So there we have it. Men, even - perhaps especially - the naughty ones, determine their own fate. Women fall at their feet, unable to resist the lure of whatever killer substances the man decrees.
Is that, really, here in 2012, the best we can do? Is that, really, what decades of demands for equality have come to?
To her credit, that wasn’t the legacy Whitney wanted. She had endlessly protested that Bobby Brown was not responsible for her choices.
“We were partners,” she said. “The biggest devil is me. I’m either my best friend or my worst enemy.”
It was an admirable insight. So it’s even more of a pity that no sooner did she die than the rent-a-quote mob insisted upon casting her, like all the rest, as a “victim”.
Because what I think Whitney knew, and what I think she was trying to say - albeit through self-induced brain damage - is that we have no equality worth the name until we recognise a woman’s equal right to be held to account for her own choices.
And for her own mistakes. - Daily Mail
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Isabella, wrote
A very poignant and true statement of affairs. Addicts do have a struggle with making the right choices, but there is always a choice albeit a very hard one. Amazing how like you say women still are portrayed as not having a will of her own. Very well written article and food for thought.
doccon, wrote
Anonymous, wrote
And it does not end there. When a woman contracts HIVAIDS many times,fingers get pointed at the man
Joe, wrote
Thank you very much.Our daughters must grow up and accept responsibilties for their mistakes.We train them and spent equally on them like our boys so act brave.From a proud father.
Michael Steane, wrote
This is just a reflection of the wider trend. The majority of domsestic violence is reciprocal. Of the one way violence a slight majority is perpetrated by men according to statistics which don't include DV against children of which mothers are far and away the greatest perpetrators. And yet the public image is that DV is a male on female issue.
Robin K. Reed, wrote
Elizabeth Taylor has been blamed for many things that went wrong, as perceived by other people, in Richard Burton's life. From turning him from a serious stage actor to a "celebrity", from assisting him into becoming an alcoholic, and from breaking up his marriage to his first wife. Many women have gotten the blame for a man's downwall beginning with Eve and on through Delilah and Cleopatra to Elizabeth Taylor and Courtney Love.
Arlene, wrote
This article is so unlike the bull that's been said about her death.She shared the blame and said it herself.It's not like Bobby held gun to her head.Well done, this article is spot on!
adrian, wrote
Excellent article, the other question that begs asking is where are the managers, helpers, accountants,lawyers, family members and general aan-hangers when these stars go off the rails. Excess doesnt happen over night, it takes months and years yet it goes on unchecked. Suddden death is a consequence of fast living, sad but true.
JP, wrote
Good article. The world always looks for someone to blame. Husbands, doctors, anyone but the person who was quite willingly drinking, snorting, etc. We need to take responsibility for our own actions.
Madhuri , wrote
What a loss to the music industry! She chose to live this way, which is very sad, as Whitney has left a heartbroken family behind. My heart goes out to her dear daughter, who has lost a dear mother. You die the way you live, I suppose ! may her dear soul now rest in peace :(
Luke, wrote
lifelove, wrote
I doubt the writer participated in those parties as a famous person. Big difference to watch and judge then.
CL, wrote
Strangely enough it has become the norm in todays society to ALWAYS portray the woman as the victim. When something bad happens to a woman there is always something or somebody else to blame,(usually a man). Or there is always some sort of justification for the action. Jo has got it completely right.
BFK, wrote
I guess that since Im a woman I have to agree that we all make our choices and must and will be accountable, regardless how we look at things. However, one cannot dismiss the reality that character is developed through overcoming challenges and hardship. The overcoming process requires support and an understanding that we have the capacity to reach inside and live off the greatness that lives inside each of us. Some don't make it. Some never get to experience the joy of support and battle "alone". Some have the external support but still their souls are "alone". The darkness of another we will never quite understand until we've had the opportunity to walk in their shoes. Maybe we should ask ourselves........how strong am I? Here's my take....You will never know until you're tested and tried. I pray Whitney is in a place where soul peace is her reward.......who knows.....maybe Whitney Houston conquered more demons we're aware of.......maybe more than we will ever face.........maybe it all became too much........Maybe.
LD, wrote
Well articulated. I have no words to dilute this brutally honest article. I wish Dionne Warwick, the Houston family, and the Jacksons could read it. I will heal them very quickly. Could the editor get published in one of the US newspapers.
phodo, wrote
I dont but any of this,did whitneys`~fans and friends expect her to get a non junkie husband while she was a junkie herself?Look its tragic as it is but to lay the blame on her husband door as if he was supposed to be babysitting her is nonsense.This like MJ`s & amy`s case is just looking for a scapegoat.Both were adult who made decision and choices in their respective lives.What did the so called friends and fans do to help her?She was only going into rehab for publicity when she was about to drop a record and now the husband has to take a wrath as if he married a kid
Jo, wrote
I totally agree with this article. I am a woman! I am perfectly capable of making my own choices, whether they turn out to be good choices or monumental mistakes. They are still MY choices and I should be held responsible for the consequences of them. To blame a man or fame or anyone else for the depravity and subsequent deaths of these stars is downright stupid and plays into the hands of female inequality! If we, women, expect equal treatment, then we must accept equal blame for our own stuff-ups.
Nzwana, wrote
This is the best article I've read this week, something different from the usual daily diet of the same thing. Indeed, we are all victims of our own choices, whether male or female!
Goro, wrote
Me, i know women like to play their roles, but i swear that men are the wrong stuff to intercat with!
Anonymous, wrote
It's the same as wen there's infidelity everyone including the wife blame the "other woman" and then proceed to make the man to be the victim and the woman the villian and make the man to be the consolation prize and yet we are all reasonably intelligent enough to do the 'maths"
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