Itâs been a stunning 25 years since âThe Bodyguardâ turned up in our cinemas, proved Whitney Houston was just as charismatic on screen as she was on stage, continued Kevin Costnerâs impressive run at the box office and spawned a soundtrack, famous for many things, including that one glass-shattering note.
But while the film has proved an enduring classic, with its simple tale of a bodyguard assigned to protect a beautiful young superstar from a would-be assassin, there are still some behind-the-scenes tales that arenât so well known.
For example...
Whitneyâs stunning debut
Whitney Houston was so nervous about taking such a big role in her debut film feature, it took her a whole two years to agree to taking part in the film. Kevin Costner had to persuade her.
Dollyâs song was Plan B
The main theme song, Whitneyâs cover of Dolly Partonâs song âI Will Always Love Youâ wasnât meant to be in the film. Producers had intended to use Jimmy Ruffinâs âWhat Becomes Of The Broken-Heartedâ, but they changed their minds at the last minute, and it was Kevin Costner who loved Dollyâs song and brought it producersâ attention. The soundtrack went on to become the best-selling of all time.
Pipped
Although âI Will Always Love Youâ went on to become Whitneyâs biggest ever hit, it was two other songs from the film that went on to be Oscar-nominated, âRun to Youâ and âI Have Nothingâ. Neither won that year, both pipped by âA Whole New Worldâ from Aladdin.
Not the first
The film had originally been proposed as far back as 1976, with Steve McQueen and Diana ross in the lead roles, but the project stalled.
Or the second...
It was proposed again in 1979, with Ryan OâNeal proposed for the role of the bodyguard, and Diana Ross once again mooted for the role of the targeted star.
Inspired
Kevin Costner revealed that he based the physicality of his role of Frank Farmer on his memories of Steve McQueen.
Location
The huge mansion used in the film, described as belonging to Rachel Marron, was also featured in the film âThe Godfatherâ. It was used for the memorable âhorseâs head in the bedâ scene.
The sequel
After the success of the film, which took an astonishing $400million at the box office, Kevin Costner was able to persuade Princess Diana to be the subject of a sequel. After she agreed, he even had a script drafted, which was completed just the day before she died in 1997.