When Brandy Norwood sat down to write her memoir, Phases due out March 31 she knew one chapter would be the hardest to put into words. That chapter belongs to Whitney Houston.
The R&B singer and actress has now shared details from the book about the final hours she spent in Houston’s orbit, painting an intimate portrait of a friendship rooted in music, mentorship and mutual understanding. For Brandy, who grew up idolizing Houston, the relationship was one of the most defining of her life and its ending, one of the most devastating.
The rehearsal that brought them together one last time
In February 2012, Brandy and fellow artist Monica were in the middle of rehearsals for Clive Davis’ annual pre-Grammy gala when Houston made an unexpected appearance. She wanted to hear the duo run through their iconic collaboration, The Boy Is Mine, and her arrival immediately shifted the energy in the room.
At the time, Houston was navigating a very public and painful chapter of her own life, facing scrutiny over her struggles with substance abuse. When she returned to the rehearsal later that evening accompanied by her daughter, Bobbi Kristina Brown the atmosphere grew tense. Those present took notice, and Brandy felt the weight of the moment acutely, caught between her admiration for Houston and the discomfort of what she was witnessing.
Before the night was over, Houston quietly handed Brandy a note during a stretch of press interviews a small, private gesture that opened the door to something much bigger.
3 hours that meant everything
That evening, Brandy called Houston, and what followed was a conversation that lasted three hours. The two women talked about their careers, their personal struggles, and the particular pressures that came with being who they were in the music industry. Houston offered Brandy guidance with the kind of clarity that can only come from lived experience generous, direct and completely free of judgment.
One question Houston posed stayed with Brandy long after the call ended: what did she hope people would say about her and her music in 10 or 20 years? It was the kind of question that cuts through noise and forces real reflection, and for Brandy, it landed hard.
As the conversation wound down, Houston spoke about wanting to turn a corner to come back stronger and reclaim her place. She framed the difficult period she was going through as a season, not a permanent state. It was both reassuring and, in retrospect, heartbreaking.
The morning that changed everything
Hours after that phone call, on Feb. 11, 2012, Houston was found unresponsive in her room at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif. She was 48. The cause of death was accidental drowning, with heart disease and cocaine use listed as contributing factors.
The news blindsided Brandy, as it did so many who had been close to Houston. Yet despite the grief, she and Monica made the decision to attend the Davis gala that night a choice rooted in respect for everything Houston had meant to the music world and to the event itself.
Holding on to what was left behind
In Phases, Brandy writes about the comfort she found in Monica’s words in the aftermath of Houston’s death. Her friend reminded her that loss can also be a kind of gift that the people we love don’t simply disappear but continue to move through us and shape us.
For Brandy, that idea has held. Houston’s mentorship, her questions, her honesty and her warmth are woven into how Brandy thinks about her own artistry and legacy. The memoir is, in many ways, an attempt to honor that to trace the thread of influence and say, out loud, how much it mattered.
Phases arrives March 31.

