Whitney Houston’s bodyguard reveals what HE knows about Oprah stage fall that was blamed on drugs

Whitney Houston’s bodyguard Ray Watson sprang to the late singer’s defense over the time she fell off the stage at The Oprah Winfrey Show.Winfrey, 72, alleged in a recent interview that Houston had relapsed into addiction when she tumbled over in the middle of her 2009 performance on the TV series.The daytime icon claimed to have persuaded her live audience not to leak footage of the incident in order to protect Houston’s career.Houston was 48 when she drowned in the bath with cocaine in her system in her suite at the Beverly Hilton ahead of the 2012 Grammy Awards.However her security man, who found her body, has now insisted she was not under the influence when she plummeted from Winfrey’s stage – a mishap he witnessed.Watson attributed the accident to a visibility problem resulting from a ‘dark spot’ at the edge of a stage unfamiliar to Houston, via TMZ.  Whitney Houston’s bodyguard Ray Watson sprang to the late singer’s defense over the time she fell off the stage at The Oprah Winfrey Show in 2009; Houston pictured that November Watson, who is pictured with Houston and who found her body when she died, has now insisted she was not under the influence when she fell of Winfrey’s stageIn his version of events, Houston ‘was coming toward the front of the stage and it’s the drop-off and there’s sort of like a dark spot there. So when she got to the edge I think somebody told her: “What? Be careful! Watch it!” And then she went down.’Houston ‘made fun’ of the tumble and was ‘laughing’ afterwards, saying: ‘I didn’t even see that!’ according to her bodyguard.He pointed out that ‘she didn’t really know that stage’ and insisted he might have done ‘the same thing’ had he been in her position.Although Watson maintained the I Will Always Love You singer was not high when she fell, he acknowledged that Winfrey ‘might have thought she was. I’m not doubting nobody. I’m just saying that she wasn’t. I would know.’Watson’s recollection of the incident echoes the one given in a furious statement Houston’s family released in response to Winfrey’s allegations.Houston’s sister-in-law Pat, who serves as the head of the singer’s estate, wrote on Instagram that Houston ‘was absolutely not high’ at work on Winfrey’s show.’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,’ Pat wrote.While she acknowledged Houston’s long struggle with addiction and substance abuse, she said that, ‘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.  =Houston’s family has vehemently denied Winfrey’s claims that she once sweet talked her audience into not releasing footage after the singer fell off the stage mid-performance after she had allegedly relapsed on drugs (Houston seen October 2009) Winfrey claimed that she once begged her audience to not release tapes of Houston falling off stage. She’s seen earlier this month’What the studio audience witnessed on stage was the result of discipline, talent, and commitment – not the assumptions others project,’ Pat added.’Whitney’s humanity included triumphs and struggles, but on that day, she showed up as the professional and gifted artist she always worked to be. We owe her the dignity of telling the truth, not repeating myths,’ she concluded.This came after Winfrey had spoken at Cannes Lions, per Deadline, where she said she knew that Houston’s embarrassing tumble could have ended her career so she swooped in to save her from ruin. ‘I had such trust from The Oprah Show audience,’ Winfrey said at Cannes Lions, per Deadline.’The first interview I did with [Houston] … she was clean, but the day she came to perform in front of the audience she was not and she fell off the stage.’Winfrey said she knew Houston would be ‘destroyed’ if the story were to get out. ‘Even though the audience had cameras, I begged them not to put those pictures out because it would ruin her life, and they did not,’ she added. ‘That would not happen today.’The Oprah Winfrey Show ran for 25 seasons from September 1986 to May 2011 and aired 4,561 episodes. However, Houston’s estate furiously disagreed with Oprah’s assessment of the mishap and claimed in a statement on Tuesday that the late singer had not been under the influence at the time of her embarrassing tumble Houston gave a two-part interview with Winfrey in 2009 in what would be one of her last  Winfrey fronted her titular show for 25 seasons from September 1986 to May 2011 Houston, who experienced numerous well-publicized drug battles, died of an accidental drowning in her bathtub at The Beverly Hilton February 11, 2012, aged 48 (pictured 2001)To date, it remains the highest-rated daytime talk show in American television history.Houston, who experienced numerous well-publicized drug battles, died of an accidental drowning in her bathtub at The Beverly Hilton February 11, 2012, aged 48.Before her untimely death, she had been to rehab at least three times – in 2004, 2005 and 2011 – but struggled to stay sober.In 2000, Houston was fired from a planned performance at the Academy Awards because of her erratic behavior during rehearsals.Two years later the singer admitted to having used alcohol, marijuana, cocaine and pills during an interview with Diane Sawyer. But she insisted her troubles were all in the past.Houston appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Show multiple times – in 1998, 1999 and 2009.By 2009, in what would be one of her final interviews, Houston told Winfrey that drug use had been an everyday thing for her since the mid-1990s.Elsewhere during the two-part interview, they discussed the artist’s turbulent marriage to Bobby Brown. Before her untimely death, Houston (pictured in 1999) had been to rehab at least three times – in 2004, 2005 and 2011 – but struggled to stay soberThey also spoke about her struggles with substance abuse and her return to the stage.Talking about her drug use, Houston said: ‘We were lacing our marijuana with base. We weren’t on crack. We weren’t on no crack stuff.’We weren’t buying $20 jumbos. We were paying money. We were buying kilos and ounces and ounces. We would have our stash.’She went onto describe her addiction as ‘painful.”Sometimes you do have a good time,’ she said. ‘But when it gets to the point where you’re sitting in your home and you’re just trying to cover what you don’t want people to know.’It’s painful. And then you want more just so that you don’t let anybody see you cry. Or anybody to see we’re not happy.’