Community Corner

Madison Music Icon Recalls Friendship With Whitney Houston

Tony Martell remembers former Mendham resident who died Saturday.

Madison resident Tony Martell, himself a legendary producer in the music business, recalled his relationship with pop diva and New Jersey native Whitney Houston, the who died Saturday at the age of 48.

“Whitney Houston and I were friends but we never worked together," Martell said in a statement to Patch. "I met her several years ago and we developed a mutual friendship. To me, she was one of the finest singers of all time and she will be sorely missed.”

Martell experienced his share of family tragedy when his son T.J. died of leukemia at the age of 19. Martell founded the T.J. Martell Foundation in 1975 to help raise money to fund cancer research.

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Hundreds gathered at the New Hope Baptist Church in Newark early Sunday to , who began her public singing career as a member of the church's junior gospel choir at age 11.

Houston also was remembered closer to home. She and her family lived in for the better part of two decades, and during that period the pop icon spent her down time like many residents would. She shopped in Chester and had local doctors help her through her pregnancy. 

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Melinda Bass worked at the in Chester after classes let out at and during summer break when she was home from Ithaca College. While not much of that time by the soft serve may be memorable, working  on a cake for Whitney Houston and her family was something few would forget.

“She used to come in all the time,” Bass said. “Usually when I wasn’t there. I met her daughter and decorated a cake for Bobby Brown’s father.”

Her co-workers at the ice cream shop all regarded Houston well. “Everyone agreed she was so nice and so humble,” Bass said. “This is so sad.”

Livingston native Martha Ackermann saw Houston through a different lens, the one of expectant mother. “When I was pregnant with my daughter, Jill, my doctor was her back-up doctor at St. Barnabas,” Ackermann said. “Everyone said she was so nice and she was just like any other mother.”

At New Hope Baptist Church in Newark on Sunday morning, many said they were there to show their support for the Houston family, including her mother, Cissy, who is an active member of the congregation.

"I heard her sing in this church, many times. It was awesome," said longtime parishioner Karen Winfield of West Orange, who referred to the singer's "impetuous smile."

Parishioner Daneen Grayson said Houston's battle against drug abuse "were her struggles, that was between her and God," a sentiment heard often this morning by worshipers filing past a gaggle of reporters into the church.

Sunday's 6:45 a.m. service was an opportunity for the New Hope community to mourn one of its own and to offer support for Houston's mother and other members of the family, who remain active with the century-old congregation.

"We ask for everyone to continue to lift up the Houston family with your prayers," Pastor Joseph Carter told reporters outside the church Sunday morning. "The family shared Whitney with the world but Whitney was a mother, daughter, sister, and that is the focus we want to maintain."

Carter also said he had "no word" on funeral arrangements.

Mourners left flowers in the metal railing of the fence outside the church. A large crowd of reporters and TV crews were kept at a distance from the entrance. Reporters were not allowed inside for the service.

The public address system played a medley of the singer's hit songs.

Houston was found dead in her room at the Beverly Hilton Hotel Saturday afternoon. She was 48.

The service at New Hope Baptist was dedicated to the Newark native, whose family later moved to East Orange after the 1967 Newark riots.

Newark Mayor Cory Booker called Houston a "deep part our pride and collective heart."

"A legend has died. As the world mourns the loss of one of the all-time greats, we in Newark feel an especially deep sadness," he said in a written statement. "She will be missed. Our prayers are with her family.”

Information from Mendham-Chester editor Russ Crespolini was added to this story.


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