“It was my time to clean out my closet.” Bobby Brown evolved from New Edition’s resident bad boy to a solo superstar. “Because of the losses I’ve gone through and me trying to get well with myself, it was therapeutic,” he said. In the four-part doc, the “My Prerogative” singer opens up about everything from his tumultuous relationship with Houston and affairs with other pop divas to his sex addiction, substance abuse and the tragic deaths of his children Bobbi Kristina and Bobby Jr.īrown, 53, told The Post that making the documentary was a “healing” process for him. I was new to it, and I guess she had been doing it for a while.” “I think that was when I realized that we had more in common than I thought. It was a shocker to me seeing her sniff for the first time,” he revealed in the new A&E documentary “Biography: Bobby Brown,” which premieres on Monday and Tuesday nights. “I walked in and, um, saw her doing a line of coke. Judge permits Bobbi Kristina Brown biopic to air on TVĪs a newlywed couple, Bobby Brown and Whitney Houston sang about having “Something in Common” on their first duet in 1992.Īnd before his wedding to the late pop superstar on July 18, 1992, the jittery groom - who had been “drinking and smoking, sniffing” in the bathroom - discovered that the two shared even more than their hot music careers. How a Whitney Houston documentary uncovered her tragic sexual abuse Inside Whitney Houston’s secret torment for being gay, falling for a woman Bobby Brown: Bobbi Kristina and Bobby Jr.