Kevin Costner and Whitney Houston gave the world The Bodyguard in 1992 and in doing so gave it something that the film industry had not quite produced before and has not quite managed to replicate since — a pairing so completely, so electrically, so almost unbearably right that the audience watching it felt not that they were observing a performance but that they were witnessing something real, two people whose chemistry existed in a register that the script could gesture toward but could never fully account for and that the cameras captured without ever fully explaining. The film became one of the highest-grossing of its era.
The soundtrack became the best-selling of all time. And the question of what actually existed between Kevin Costner and Whitney Houston during the making of it became one of Hollywood’s most quietly persistent and most carefully unanswered questions — present in every interview either of them gave about the film, visible in the specific warmth that was different from the standard co-star warmth, and always carrying the weight of something being held just out of reach by two people who understood what saying it fully would mean. Whitney Houston died on February 11, 2012, at forty-eight years old — and Kevin Costner’s eulogy at her funeral, delivered with a grief so raw and so complete that the people watching it understood immediately that what they were seeing went beyond professional loss, gave the world its clearest and most unguarded glimpse yet of what she had actually meant to him. At 69, with the distance of more than thirty years from the film and more than a decade from her death, Kevin Costner has finally spoken about his love for Whitney Houston during The Bodyguard with the completeness and the honesty that both of them deserved from the beginning — putting into words what the eulogy began and what the thirty years since have given him enough perspective and enough courage to finally finish saying.