Kevin Costner 'Knew'...
ABC News: Costner on Houston's New Album: 'I Knew This Day Was Coming'
Kevin Costner and
Whitney Houston Made Movie Magic in 'The Bodyguard'
By MICHELLE MAJOR
July 28, 2009
Whitney Houston, the
beauty with the megawatt voice, and Kevin Costner, Hollywood's iconic
superstar actor, made screen history in "The Bodyguard." 17 years later,
Costner still remembers the decision to cast Houston in the film.
"I remember Whitney before
she was in the movie," Costner said. "And I just looked at her and I said,
'Oh man, this girl really -- she just really has it.'"
Their on-screen chemistry and Costner's vision for how Houston's singing
would thread the film together led to a movie that made an indelible mark
and to the most successful film soundtrack of all time.
Costner calls Houston "a true beauty, and such a musical instrument."
"It wasn't really a mystery to me when Whitney ended up in 'The Bodyguard,'"
he said, laughing. "I really wanted her. And there was a moment in time
where it was -- could have maybe been somebody else. And I said, 'No, I want
to wait. I want to wait for Whitney.'"
The film's screenwriter
Larry Kasdan, producer Jim Wilson and studio Warner Brothers agreed.
"We postponed the movie for a year to wait for Whitney," Costner said.
"That's the game you play a lot of times with movies. Could somebody else
play that role? Of course, somebody could have. But, nobody better."
Houston's version of the Dolly Parton-penned song "I Will Always Love You,"
became the movie's iconic anthem, but Costner said it wasn't even supposed
to be in the film. The song they planned to include, "What Becomes of a
Broken Heart," appeared in another film that year.
"I didn't want to
duplicate that," Costner said. "Dolly's song just was a song that I'd always
really, really loved."
When there was concern that a country song performed a cappella wouldn't get
enough radio support, Costner recalled saying, "I don't really care. … But I
wouldn't be too sure about that."
The song choice wasn't the only long shot. There was also the question of
how mainstream audiences would react to a mixed race romance.
"When Whitney was cast there was talk about, well, should we make mention of
it, you know, in a scene," he said. "And all parties really looked at each
other and we said, 'No ... let's not do that. This is a woman. This is not
race."
Costner on Kissing Houston
When the characters kissed
in the movie, Costner said it "was just about good old fashioned chemistry.
Boy-girl stuff."
"That kiss was all about
that," he said. "That was about a man and a woman saying thank you to each
other."
Costner joked that "I kissed her once for everybody in America, and I kissed
her once for myself."
There's something else you might not know about the man who kissed Whitney
Houston for America. The actor, filmmaker, husband and father is on stage in
a surprising new role -- lead singer for his own rock-and-roll band, Modern
West.
"I, you know, ultimately love to perform," he said. "When I'm on stage
playing live is when I actually feel the best. And my wife, for that matter,
says that's when I -- she thinks I'm more myself than any other place."
It may be the same for Whitney Houston. As the world looks to the release of
her first new album in seven years on Aug. 31, Costner says we'll be glad
she's back.
"That kiss was all about that," he said. "That was about a man and a woman
saying thank you to each other."
Costner joked that "I kissed her once for everybody in America, and I kissed
her once for myself."
There's something else you might not know about the man who kissed Whitney
Houston for America. The actor, filmmaker, husband and father is on stage in
a surprising new role -- lead singer for his own rock-and-roll band, Modern
West.
"I, you know, ultimately love to perform," he said. "When I'm on stage
playing live is when I actually feel the best. And my wife, for that matter,
says that's when I -- she thinks I'm more myself than any other place."
It may be the same for Whitney Houston. As the world looks to the release of
her first new album in seven years on Aug. 31, Costner says we'll be glad
she's back.
Legendary producer Clive
Davis told "Good Morning America" that one song on the new album called "I
Didn't Know My Own Strength" speaks to Houston's resilience. Costner also
pointed to his former co-star's ability to bounce back.
"Everybody who's watching, everybody who's done this business, we've all
been broken a little bit," Costner said. "We've all been bruised. And life
has taken, you know, some big bites out of all of us. But, you know, Whitney
Houston has taken some big bites out of life. And we've all been the better
for it."
Houston will perform live on "GMA" on Sept. 2. Stay tuned to "GMA" and
abcnews.com/gma for more information, and CLICK HERE to visit Whitney
Houston's official Web site.
NEWSFILE:
28 JULY 2009
|