Between February 12 and 19, 1985, Houston made her debut as a headliner at Sweetwaters in downtown Manhattan, where she premiered songs from her debut. The Sweetwaters gigs began Houston's trek across the country where she performed at various
rock nightclubs and small venues such as
Park West and the
Roxy Theatre during the first couple of months after the album's release. On April 5, 1985, Houston made her debut on
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, singing "You Give Good Love". The performance was considered a breakthrough since younger black artists rarely got on
late-night talk shows. Shortly after this performance, Houston began her first promotional tour of
Europe, where she appeared on various programs in the Netherlands, France and Switzerland. One particular show, the Dutch TV show,
Show Van de Maand, Houston appeared on April 19, where she sang "On the Other Side of the Hill" (or "Aan de Andere Kant Van de Heuvels" in native Dutch) with Dutch singer
Liesbeth List, who recorded the hit single originally in 1971. Prior to Houston's arrival, List announced her as one of "the best upcoming singers of 1985". After a brief interview, Houston performed "Greatest Love of All". On April 20, she returned to the United States where she appeared on the popular urban dance show,
Soul Train, performing "You Give Good Love" and "How Will I Know". Nine days later, on April 29, she returned to
The Merv Griffin Show where she performed "How Will I Know" and "You Give Good Love". During the performance of "How Will I Know", Houston nearly had a wardrobe malfunction when parts of her blouse came undone, nearly exposing her breast. Houston quickly fixed her blouse and finished the performance but not without playfully screaming at the cameras about the near-mishap. On August 28, 1985, just as "
Saving All My Love for You" was being released to radio, Houston performed the song on her first appearance of
Late Night with David Letterman. A month later, on September 15, Houston appeared in a guest cameo spot on the sitcom
Silver Spoons in the episode "Head Over Heels", where she appeared opposite
Franklyn Seales' character Dexter Stuffins, who falls "head over heels" for Houston and follows her to
L.A. During the episode, she sang a
g-rated version of "Saving All My Love You", changing the lyric "making love the whole night through" to "holding each other the whole night through" to avoid
censors. It was the singer's first acting role since appearing as Rita in an episode of
Gimme a Break! in March 1984. On December 4, 1985, shortly after the release of "How Will I Know", Houston returned to
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson performing "Saving All My Love for You" and is interviewed by the show's guest host of the night,
Joan Rivers. Houston would make her awards show debut at the
1986 American Music Awards, where she performed "How Will I Know" after being introduced by host
Diana Ross as "the most promising female vocalist". Despite an early problem with the sound system, Houston gives a command performance of the song, which ends with cheers and applause. Houston would later win two awards out of six nominations that night, including Favorite Soul/R&B Single for "You Give Good Love". A month later, on February 25, Houston appeared at the
28th Annual Grammy Awards where she performed a captivating rendition of "Saving All My Love for You". Not too long after her performance, she wins her first Grammy for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance and was presented the award by
Julian Lennon and cousin
Dionne Warwick, who famously cheered Houston's name upon opening the envelope. After singing "Saving All My Love for You", Houston was brought by presenter
Michel Drucker over to the couch where she sat next to acclaimed French artist
Serge Gainsbourg, who was visibly drunk. Gainsbourg then said to Houston in heavily accented English, "I want to f**k you". Houston was visibly stunned by the singer's crude display of appreciation, but stayed nonetheless and later sang a duet with Gainsbourg before the end of the show. On the Fourth of July 1986 during
Liberty Weekend, Houston gave a memorable performance at the Americana music concert at
Liberty State Park, performing "
America the Beautiful" and "Greatest Love of All", performing the latter during heavy periods of wind. On September 5, Houston appeared at the
1986 MTV Video Music Awards at the
Universal Amphitheatre in
Universal City, California, performing "How Will I Know" and "Greatest Love of All" and later winning the MTV Video Music Award for
Best Female Video. On January 26, 1987, Houston performed "All at Once" at the
1987 American Music Awards; at the time, the ballad was being promoted mainly to AC radio in the United States where it was successful. Later that night, Houston would win five of the seven AMAs she was nominated for including Favorite Pop/Rock Female Artist and Favorite Soul/R&B Female Artist, while the album won Favorite Album in both the pop and soul categories. During her accepting the AMA for Favorite Soul/R&B Female Artist, the singer wept as the audience, which included mother Cissy Houston, stood up to give the singer a
standing ovation. A month later, Houston gave performances at the
Sanremo Music Festival and
Brit Awards; on the former, she sang "All at Once". Her performance was received so well by the predominantly Italian audience that she returned on the show to perform it again, the first time this had occurred in the festival's history. At the Brit Awards, Houston performed "How Will I Know". That same month, she performed "Greatest Love of All" at the
29th Annual Grammy Awards. In March, she performed at the
inaugural Soul Train Music Awards, singing "You Give Good Love" more than two years after its release and later joined fellow soul artists
Luther Vandross,
Stevie Wonder and
Dionne Warwick to perform a rendition of the latter's hit, "
That's What Friends Are For".
Tours at
Wantagh, New York was one of the first stops of Houston's first headlining world tour,
The Greatest Love World Tour. Starting on June 3, 1985, Houston began opening for fellow
R&B singer
Jeffrey Osborne, the artist who helped to pen Houston's European hit, "
All at Once" on the album, starting off what would become her first tour, the
US Tour. According to some concert reviews, the then 21-year-old singer, whose "
You Give Good Love" had become a hit, stole the show from the more seasoned Osborne. On some dates, Houston opened a few shows for longtime friend,
Luther Vandross, at bigger venues such as
The Summit, which was taped with several performances being shown online and in the 2018 documentary,
Whitney. Starting with two shows at Humphrey's by the Bay in
San Diego on August 28 as her album was now climbing up the top twenty on the pop album charts, Houston began headlining her own concerts, culminating in her opening at
Carnegie Hall on October 28, two days after "Saving All My Love for You" topped the
Billboard Hot 100. The tour officially ended at the Universal Amphitheatre on December 1. During the tour, Houston performed virtually most of the songs on the album and added covers of other tunes such as
Lionel Richie's "Love Will Find a Way" and "
I Am Changing" from
Dreamgirls, which generated the most rousing cheers and ovation for Houston. On her second stop at Carnegie Hall on November 20, Houston opened the show with Vandross' "
A Brand New Day" and joined mother
Cissy and half-brother
Gary Garland to perform the songs "When I First Saw You" and "Family" from
Dreamgirls. In all, Houston performed 58 dates during the seven-month tour. On July 26, 1986, Houston launched her first headlining tour, the
Greatest Love World Tour at the
Merriweather Post Pavilion in
Columbia, Maryland, which kept much of the same set list but added "
Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'" by
Michael Jackson, one of her earlier songs, "Eternal Love", from her 1983 collaboration with
Paul Jabara, her 1984 hit "
Hold Me", "Take Good Care of My Heart", "
Heart to Heart" by
Kenny Loggins, her first gospel cover, "He/I Believe", and a full version of "Greatest Love of All". Later on in the tour, Houston performed two songs from her then-upcoming sophomore album,
Whitney — "
Didn't We Almost Have It All" and "
I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me)". The concert tour took the artist to four continents including North America, Europe, Oceania and Asia. Houston performed a total of 37 mostly sold-out dates in North America. In the continent of Europe, Houston performed at three countries including Belgium, Netherlands and the United Kingdom, where she gave out four back-to-back sold-out performances at
London's
Wembley Arena. Houston only performed in Japan during the Asian leg of the tour, including two sold-out gigs at the
Festival Hall, Osaka in
Osaka and three sold-out gigs at the
Nippon Budokan in
Tokyo. Houston ended the tour at the
Blaisdell Arena in
Honolulu on December 1. In total, Houston performed a total of 55 dates on the five-month tour and generated a reported $5 million from less than half of the dates that were calculated. ==Legacy==