Houston Bodyguard Box Office Grammy

Houston Bodyguard Box Office Grammy---The Bodyguard was the Whitney Houston's first acting role as the star of the feature film and the film's original soundtrack won the 1994 Box office Grammy Award for Album of the Year.

The Bodyguard, the soundtrack from Houston, an American recording artist, actress, producer, and model, film debut, was released in November 1992.

The album contains tracks by other recording artists but is considered a Whitney Houston album by the Billboard and the RIAA.

The album was certified 17× Platinum in the United States and sold over 44 million copies worldwide, becoming the best-selling soundtrack album ever and one of the top 5 best-selling albums
of all time.

The lead single from the soundtrack, I Will Always Love You, topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart for a then-record-breaking fourteen weeks and was certified 4× Platinum by the RIAA, making her the first and only female artist to reach the level before the digital single era.

In 2009, the Guinness World Records cited Whitney Houston as the most-awarded female act of all-time.

Houston's 1985 debut album Whitney Houston became the best-selling debut album by a female act at the time of its release. The album was named Rolling Stone's best album of 1986, and was ranked at number 254 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.

Her second studio album Whitney (1987) became the first album by a female artist to debut at number one on the Billboard 200 albums chart.

Whitney is one of pop music's best-selling music artists of all-time, with more than 170 million combined albums, singles, and videos sold worldwide.

In February 1991, Houston released The Star Spangled Banner performance from Super Bowl XXV as a single, and made it Top 20 hit, which was the first and only rendition of the US national anthem to achieve that feat since 1958 when the Billboard Hot 100 chart was first released.

On February 11, 2012, Houston was found dead in her guest room at the Beverly Hilton Hotel, in Beverly Hills, California, of causes not immediately known.

News of her death, the day before and after the 2012 Grammy Awards, featured prominently in American and international media.