Oprah Under Fire as Whitney Houston’s Friend Slams Claim Singer Was ‘High’ During Talk Show

Oprah Winfrey is facing criticism after saying Whitney Houston was high during her final appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show, with Houston’s estate now challenging that account and insisting the singer was not under the influence when she fell off the stage.

Winfrey made the remarks while accepting the LionHeart Award at Cannes Lions this week, revisiting Houston’s 2009 two-part sit-down, which was tied to the release of the singer’s final studio album, I Look to You. The interview remains one of the most closely watched moments of Houston’s late-career comeback and featured both a candid conversation about her struggles and a performance in front of a studio audience.

During her speech, Winfrey said Houston had relapsed before the performance and recalled a moment when the singer fell off the stage. She also said she asked audience members not to share photos or details of what they had seen.

“I knew that if the story got out… she would be destroyed by that,” Winfrey said of her decision at the time.

Houston’s estate quickly pushed back, saying the fall did happen but disputing any suggestion that drugs were involved.

“Whitney absolutely fell off the stage, but it was during a sound check, and it was due to the darkness of the area and her unfamiliarity with the stage. She was absolutely not high,” the estate said in a statement.

The estate added that Houston’s appearance should not be reduced to a single moment or to assumptions about her personal struggles.

“Like many people, she faced personal battles, but it is inaccurate and unfair to attach that struggle to every performance or every chapter of her life,” the statement continued.

“What the studio audience witnessed on stage was the result of discipline, talent and commitment not the assumptions others project.”

Pat Houston, the singer’s longtime manager and sister-in-law, also responded on Instagram and reiterated that the fall happened during a sound check rather than the televised interview. She said it was caused by the darkness of the stage area and Houston’s unfamiliarity with the setup.

She further wrote that the moment reflected Houston’s professionalism rather than a relapse, saying the singer was “absolutely not high” and that the audience saw “discipline, talent, and commitment not the assumptions others project.”

Houston’s 2009 appearance came near the end of a difficult period in her life, but it also marked a public return for a singer whose career had been defined by both extraordinary success and years of scrutiny over addiction and her marriage to Bobby Brown. The interview aired as part of a special episode and included Houston speaking openly about fame, pressure, and recovery.

The original 2009 broadcast also featured the singer performing “I Didn’t Know My Own Strength” in the studio.

While the estate and Winfrey are now sharply divided over what happened backstage, both sides agree that Houston fell at some point during the production. The dispute centers on whether the incident occurred during a televised performance while the singer was using drugs, or during a separate sound check caused by a poorly lit stage.

Winfrey’s comments have sparked broader debate online over Houston’s legacy, the ethics of sharing posthumous stories about addiction, and whether the anecdote should have been aired publicly at all.

Whitney Houston’s estate and Oprah Winfrey have been approached for comment.