Barry Manilow (born June 17,
1943) is an American
singer-songwriter, musician, arranger,
producer, conductor, entertainer, and performer, best known
for such recordings as "I Write the
Songs", "Mandy", "Weekend in New England" and "Copacabana".In 1978, five of his
albums were on the best-selling charts simultaneously, a feat
equaled only by
Frank Sinatra,
Michael Jackson and
Johnny Mathis. He has recorded a string of
Billboard hit singles and
multi-platinum albums that have resulted
in his being named Radio & Records number one
Adult Contemporary artist and winning
three straight
American Music
Awards for Favorite Pop/Rock Male Artist. Several well-known
entertainers have given Manilow their "stamp of approval,"
including Sinatra, who was quoted in the 1970s regarding Manilow,
"He's next." In 1988,
Bob Dylan stopped
Manilow at a party, hugged him and said, "Don't stop what you're
doing, man. We're all inspired by you."
Arsenio Hall cited Manilow as a favorite guest
on
The Arsenio Hall
Show and admonished his audience to respect him for his
work..
As well as producing and arranging albums for other artists, such
as
Bette Midler,
Dionne Warwick and
Rosemary Clooney, Manilow has written songs
for musicals, films, and commercials.
Since
February 2005, he has been the headliner at the Las Vegas
Hilton
, and has performed hundreds of shows.
Biography
Barry was born Barry Alan Pincus in a Jewish family of Russian
immigrants, and raised in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn,
attending Brooklyn's Eastern District High School.
After his high school
graduation, Manilow enrolled at The Juilliard School
, while working at CBS to pay his
expenses. At CBS in 1964 Manilow met
Bro Herrod, a director, who asked him to arrange
some
public domain songs for a musical
adaptation of the
melodrama,
The Drunkard. Instead, Manilow
wrote an entire original score. The musical became a success and
ran
Off-Broadway for eight years at the
13th Street Theatre in New
York.
Manilow then earned money by working as a
pianist,
producer,
and
arranger. He has said of that time
that he played piano for anybody: "If the check cleared, I was
there."
Manilow also worked as a commercial
jingle
writer/singer, an activity that continued well into the 1970s. He
penned many of the jingles that he performed, including those for
Bowlene Toilet Cleaner,
State Farm Insurance ("Like a good
neighbor, State Farm is there..."),
Stridex
acne cleanser, and
Band-Aid ("I am stuck on
Band-Aid, 'cause Band-Aid's stuck on me!" sang a jubilant
struggling actor named John Travolta), among others. His
singing-only credits include
Kentucky Fried Chicken,
Pepsi,
Jack in the Box,
Dr Pepper, and the famed
McDonald's "You Deserve a Break Today" campaign.
Manilow won two
Clio Awards in 1976 for
his work for
Tab and
Band-Aid.
By 1967,
Manilow was the musical director for the WCBS-TV
series
Callback. He next conducted and arranged for
Ed Sullivan's production company,
arranging a new theme for
The Late Show, while still
writing, producing, and singing his
radio and
television jingles.
At the same time, he and
Jeanne Lucas performed as a duo
for a two-season run at New York's
Upstairs at the Downstairs
club.
Career
1970s: Success
Manilow's
well-known association with Bette
Midler began at the Continental Baths
in New York
City
. He accompanied her and other artists on the
piano from 1970 to 1971, and Midler chose Manilow to assist with
the production of her first two albums, the Platinum-certified
The Divine Miss M
(1972) and The Gold-plus
Bette
Midler (1973), and act as her musical director on the
The Divine Miss M tour. Manilow worked with Midler for
four years, from 1971 to 1975. In 1974,
Bell Records released Manilow's
first album,
Barry Manilow, which offered an
eclectic mix of piano-driven pop and
guitar-driven
rock
music, including a song that Manilow had composed for the 1972
war drama
Parades. Among other songs on the album were
"Friends," "Cloudburst," and "
Could It
Be Magic" (the latter's music was based on Frédéric Chopin's
Prelude in C Minor, Opus 28, Number 20., and provided Donna Summer
with one of her major hits. It was also covered by
Take That in the 1990s, as an up-beat disco
version of the song.
Take That have since
performed Manilow's original version in their
Beautiful World Tour).
Bette Midler permitted Manilow to sing three of the songs from the
album during the
intermissions in her
show.
As a result of a
corporate
takeover, Bell Records, along with other labels, was merged
into a new entity named
Arista
Records, under the leadership of
Clive
Davis, who seized the opportunity to drop many artists.
However, after seeing Manilow perform as the opening act at a
Dionne Warwick concert, he was
convinced that he had a winner on his hands; a relationship lasting
decades ensued.
The partnership began to gain traction in 1974, with the release of
Manilow's second album,
Barry
Manilow II, on both Bell and Arista, which contained the
breakthrough number-one hit, "
Mandy".
Manilow had not wanted to record "
Mandy," — but the song was included at the
insistence of Clive Davis. Following the success of
Barry
Manilow II, the first Bell Records album release was re-mixed
and re-issued on Arista Records as
Barry Manilow I. When Manilow went on
his first tour, he included in his show "A Very Strange Medley," a
sampling of some of the commercial jingles that he had written or
sung. Beginning with Manilow's March 22, 1975, appearance on
American Bandstand to promote
Barry Manilow II (where he sang "Mandy" and "It's A
Miracle"), a productive friendship with
Dick
Clark started. Numerous appearances by Manilow on Clark's
productions of
Dick Clark's New Year's
Rockin' Eve, singing his original seasonal favorite "It's
Just Another New Year's Eve",
American Bandstand
anniversary shows,
American
Music Awards performances and his 1985 television movie
Copacabana are among their projects together.
"Mandy" was the start of a string of hit singles and albums that
lasted through the rest of the 1970s to the early 1980s, coming
from the multi-platinum and multi-hit albums
Tryin' to Get the Feeling,
This One's
for You,
Even Now and
One Voice.
Despite being a solid
songwriter in his
own right, Manilow has had great success with songs by others.
Among the hits which he did not write are "Mandy," "Tryin’ to Get
the Feeling Again", "
Weekend in
New England," "
Looks Like We
Made It," "
Can't Smile
Without You" and "Ready to Take a Chance Again." Ironically,
one of the songs Manilow did not write was his number one hit
"
I Write The Songs," written by
Bruce Johnston of
The Beach Boys. According to album liner
notes, Manilow did, however, co-
produce them with
Ron
Dante and
arrange them.
Manilow's breakthrough in Britain came with the release of
Manilow Magic - The Best Of Barry Manilow, also known as
Greatest
Hits. On its initial release it was accompanied by a large
television advertising campaign, but the album was only available
by mail order on the "Teledisc" label. In the late 1970s and early
1980s,
ABC aired four
variety
television specials
starring and executive produced by Manilow.
The Barry Manilow
Special with
Penny Marshall as
his guest premiered on March 2, 1977 to an audience of 37 million.
The breakthrough special was nominated for four Emmys and won in
the category of "Outstanding Comedy-Variety or Music Special".
The Second Barry Manilow Special in 1978, with
Ray Charles as his guest, was also nominated for
four Emmys.
Manilow's "Ready To Take a Chance Again" originated in the film
Foul Play, while "Copacabana",
from his 4th studio album "Even Now", was also featured. "Ready To
Take A Chance Again" was nominated that year for the "
Best Original Song" Oscar.
Copacabana would later
take the form of a musical television movie, starring Manilow, and
three musical plays.
On February 11, 1979, a concert from
Manilow's sold-out dates at the Greek
Theater
in Los Angeles, California
was aired on HBO's series
Standing Room
Only, which was the first pay-television show to seriously
challenge network primetime specials in the ratings.
From the
same tour in 1978, a one-hour special from Manilow's sold out
concert at the Royal Albert
Hall
aired in the UK.
On May 23, 1979, ABC aired
The Third Barry Manilow
Special, with
John Denver as his
guest. This special was nominated for two Emmy awards and won for
"Outstanding Achievement in Choreography". Also in 1979, Manilow
produced Dionne Warwick's "comeback" album
Dionne. The Arista album was her
first to go platinum and spawned "
I'll Never Love This Way
Again" and "
Deja
Vu". He also scored a top ten hit of his own in the Fall of
1979 with the song "Ships" from the Album "
One Voice".
1980s
The 1980s gave Manilow the adult contemporary chart-topping hit
songs "The Old Songs," "Somewhere Down The Road," "Read 'Em and
Weep," and a remake of the 1941 Jule Styne and Frank Loesser
standard "
I Don't Want
to Walk Without You." Manilow continued having high radio
airplay throughout the decade.
In the UK
, Manilow had
five sold-out performances at Royal Albert Hall
, for which nearly a half million people vied for
the 21,500 available seats. In the United States, he sold out Radio City
Music Hall
in 1984 for 10 nights and set a box-office sales
record of nearly $2 million, making him the top draw in the then
52-year history of the Music Hall. In 1980, Manilow's
One Voice special, with Dionne Warwick as his guest, was
nominated for an Emmy for "Outstanding Achievement in Music
Direction".
Also in
1980, a concert from Manilow's sold-out shows at England's Wembley Arena
was broadcast while he was on a world tour.
Manilow released the self-titled
Barry (1980), which was his first album
to not reach the top ten in the United States, stopping at #15. The
album contained "I Made It Through The Rain" and "Bermuda
Triangle." "We Still Have Time" was featured in the 1980 drama
Tribute. The album
If I Should Love
Again followed in 1981, containing "The Old Songs", "Let's
Hang On" and "Somewhere Down The Road". This was the first of his
own albums that Manilow produced without Ron Dante, who had
co-produced all the previous albums.
Manilow's sold-out
concert at the Pittsburgh
Civic Arena
in Pittsburgh
, Pennsylvania
was aired nationally on Showtime, and locally on Philadelphia
's now-defunct PRISM (a local sports and movie
channel). In 1982, a concert from his sold out
Royal Albert
Hall
show was broadcast in England. The live
album and video
Barry Live in
Britain also came from his Royal Albert Hall shows.
On August
27, 1983, Manilow performed a landmark open air concert at Blenheim
Palace
in Britain. It was the first such event ever
held at that venue and was attended by a conservative estimate of
40,000 people. This concert was also taped for airing on Showtime.
In December 1983, Manilow was reported to have endowed the music
departments at six major universities in the United States and
Canada. The endowments were part of a continuing endeavor by
Manilow to recognize and encourage new musical talent.
In 1984 Manilow released a collection of original barroom tunes
2:00 AM Paradise
Cafe, a
jazz/
blues album that was recorded in one live take in the
studio. In 1984, Showtime aired a documentary of Manilow recording
the album with a number of jazz legends, such as
Sarah Vaughn and
Mel
Tormé.
In 1984 and 1985, England aired two one-hour
concert specials from his National Exhibition Centre
(NEC) concerts. In 1985, Manilow left Arista
Records for RCA Records. There he released the pop album
Manilow, and began a phase
of international music, as he performed songs and duets in
French,
Spanish,
Portuguese and
Japanese, among other languages. The
Manilow album was a complete about face from the
Paradise Cafe album, containing a number of tracks that
were of a modern uptempo and synthesized quality. In 1985, Japan
aired a concert special Manilow did there where he played "
Sakura" on the
koto.
In his only lead acting role, he portrayed Tony Starr in a 1985
CBS film based on
Copacabana which also featured
Annette O'Toole as Lola Lamarr and
Joseph Bologna as Rico. This was
named one of the top TV specials of the year by
TV Guide
magazine. Manilow penned all the songs for the movie, with lyrics
provided by established collaborators Bruce Sussman and Jack
Feldman. RCA records also released a
soundtrack album of the movie.
In October 1986,
Manilow, along with Bruce Sussman, Tom Scott, and Charlie Fox went to Washington,
D.C.
for two days of meetings with legislators,
including lunch with then Senator Al Gore
(D-TN). They were there to lobby against a copyright bill
put forward by local television broadcasters that would mandate
songwriter-producer source licensing of
theme and
incidental
music on syndicated television show reruns and would disallow
use of the blanket license now in effect. The songwriters said
without the blanket license, artists would have to individually
negotiate up front with producers, without knowing if a series will
be a success. The license now pays according to a per-use formula.
Manilow said that such a bill would act as a precedent for
broadcasters to get rid of the blanket license entirely.
The following year,
McGraw-Hill
published his
autobiography Sweet
Life: Adventures on the Way to Paradise which had taken him
about three years to complete. While promoting his autobiography,
Manilow defended his music in a telephone interview: "I live in
laid-back L.A., but in my heart, I'm an energetic New Yorker and
that's what has always come out of my music. I've always been
surprised when the critics said I made
wimpy little ballads". Manilow
returned to Arista Records in 1987 with the release of
Swing Street. The album contained a
mixture of traditional after-dark and techno jazz. It contained
"Brooklyn Blues", an autobiographical song for Manilow, and "Hey
Mambo" an uptempo Latin style duet with
Kid Creole, produced with the
help of
Emilio Estefan, Jr.,
founder of
Miami Sound
Machine.
In March 1988, CBS aired Manilow's
Big Fun on Swing Street
special that featured songs and special guests from his
Swing
Street and
2:00 AM Paradise Cafe albums including Kid
Creole and the Coconuts,
Phyllis
Hyman,
Stanley Clarke,
Carmen McRae,
Tom Scott,
Gerry Mulligan,
Diane
Schuur, Full Swing, and Uncle Festive, a band within Manilow's
band at the time. The special was nominated for two Emmys in
categories of "Outstanding Lighting Direction (Electronic): For a
Variety/Music or drama series, a miniseries or a special" and won
in the category of "Outstanding Art Direction for a Variety or
Music program". England also aired another NEC one-hour concert
special Manilow did while on his
Big Fun Tour de Force
tour.
In 1988, he performed "Please Don't Be Scared" and "Mandy/Could It
Be Magic" at
That's What
Friends Are For: AIDS Concert '88, a benefit concert for
the Warwick Foundation headed by Dionne Warwick and shown on
Showtime a couple of years later. In the 1988
Walt Disney Pictures animated feature
Oliver & Company
Bette Midler's character sang a new Manilow composition called
"
Perfect Isn't Easy". The 1989
release of
Barry
Manilow, which contained "Please Don't Be Scared", "Keep
Each Other Warm" and "The One That Got Away", ended Manilow's
streak of albums of original self-written material. Except for two
songs, the songs were neither written nor arranged by himself and
was the beginning of a phase of his recording career consisting of
covers and compilations.
In 1989, Manilow put on a show named
Barry Manilow at the
Gershwin from April 18 to June 10, 1989 where he made 44
appearances. By coincidence, the
Gershwin Theatre (formally called the Uris
Theatre) was the same one where
Barry Manilow Live was
recorded in 1976. A bestselling 90-minute video of the same show
was released the following year as
Barry Manilow Live On
Broadway. The Showtime one-hour special
Barry Manilow SRO
On Broadway consisted of edited highlights from this video.
Manilow followed this set of shows with a sold out world tour of
the Broadway show.
1990s
In the 1990s, Manilow released a number of cover tunes. It started
with the 1989 release
Barry Manilow, continued with his
1990 Christmas LP
Because
It's Christmas.
Consequent "event" albums followed
including: Showstoppers, a
collection of Broadway
songs (1991), Singin' with the Big Bands
(1994) and a late 1970s collection Summer of '78 (1996) which included the
hit "I Go Crazy", formerly a hit for Paul Davis in 1978. The
decade ended with Manilow recording a tribute to Frank Sinatra
Manilow Sings Sinatra
(1998) released months after Sinatra's death.
In 1990, Japan aired
National
Eolia Special: Barry Manilow On Broadway where he sang the
title song "Eolia", which was used as a song there in a commercial
for an air conditioner company of the same name, as well as other
songs from his 1989–1990
Live on Broadway tour. In the
early 1990s, Manilow signed on with
Don
Bluth to compose the songs with lyricists
Jack Feldman and Bruce Sussman for
three animated films. He co-wrote the Broadway-style musical scores
for
Thumbelina
(1994) and
The Pebble and
the Penguin (1995). The third film, entitled
Rapunzel, was
shelved after the
poor performance of
Pebble. Manilow was also to be cast as
the voice of a cricket. Manilow also composed the score and wrote
two songs with Bruce Sussman for
Disney
Sing Along Songs: Let's Go To The Circus. But
unfortunately, because of a contract agreed to by both of them,
Andrew Belling and
Domenick Allen were credited as composers,
meaning that no one is supposed to know that a celebrity like
Manilow should be credited in that movie.
On February 19, 1992, Manilow testified before the Subcommittee on
Intellectual Property and Judicial Administration House Committee
in support of H.R. 3204
The Audio Home Recording Act of
1991. The bill was signed into law on October 28, 1992 by
President
George H. W. Bush.
The Act, a historic compromise between the consumer electronics and
music industries, became effective immediately. In 1993,
PBS aired, as a fundraiser,
Barry Manilow: The Best
of Me, which was taped at Wembley Arena in England earlier
that same year. The BBC also played a one-hour version of the same
show including "The Best of Me", sung during the concert, as a
bonus song or "lucky strike extra" as Manilow says, not seen in
The Greatest Hits...and then some, the video release of
the show; however, the song was included on the DVD of the same
title, with Manilow seated in front of a black curtain, lip-syncing
to the recording. Manilow branched out in another direction and,
with long-time lyricist Bruce Sussman, launched
Copacabana, a musical play based
on previous Manilow-related adaptations. They wrote new songs and
it ran for two years on the London West End, and a tour company
formed.
In December 1996,
A&E aired
Barry Manilow: Live By Request, the first of his two
Live By Request
appearances. The broadcast was A&E's most successful music
program, attracting an estimated 2.4 million viewers. The show was
also simulcast on the radio. In March 1997,
VH-1 aired
Barry Manilow: The Summer of '78, a
one-hour special of Manilow solo at the piano being interviewed and
playing his greatest hits as well as songs from
Summer of '78 his latest release at the
time.
In
another collaboration between Manilow and Sussman they co-wrote the
musical Harmony, which previewed October 7 to November 23,
1997 at the La Jolla
Playhouse
in La Jolla, California
. Later in 2003,
Harmony was
originally scheduled for a tryout run in Philadelphia before going
to Broadway, but was canceled after financial difficulties. After a
legal battle with Mark Schwartz, the show's producer, Manilow and
Sussman in 2005 won back the rights to the musical.
On
October 23, 1999, NBC aired the two-hour special
StarSkates Salute to Barry Manilow taped at the Mandalay
Bay Hotel in Las
Vegas
, Nevada
featuring
numerous figure skaters performing to
Manilow's music. Manilow also performed as well.
The 2000s
In the
year 2000, Manilow had two specials, Manilow Country and
Manilow Live!, taped over two consecutive days at the
Tennessee
Performing Arts Center
in Nashville, Tennessee
. On April 11, 2000,
The Nashville Network (TNN) aired the
two-hour
Manilow Country, which featured country stars
Trisha Yearwood,
Neal McCoy,
Deana
Carter,
Jo Dee Messina,
Lorrie Morgan,
Kevin Sharp,
Lila McCann,
Gillian
Welch and
Jaci Velasquez singing
their favorite Manilow hits with a "
country" twist; at which Manilow also
performed. This "special" was TNN's first High Definition (HD)
broadcast and became one of TNN's highest rated concert
specials.
In June 2000,
DirectTV aired the two-hour
concert special
Manilow Live! where Manilow had his band,
a 30-piece orchestra, and a choir. This
HDTV
special documented the concert tour at the time with the greatest
hits of his career and was also released to video. Also that year,
he worked with Monica Mancini on her Concord album
The Dreams
of Johnny Mercer which included seven songs Manilow wrote to
Mercer's lyrics. Meanwhile, Manilow's record contract with Arista
Records was not renewed due to new management.
He then got a
contract at Concord Records, a
jazz-oriented label in California
, and started work on the long-anticipated concept
album, Here at the
Mayflower. The album was another eclectic mix of
styles, almost entirely composed and produced by Manilow himself.
Barry Manilow live in 2008 during a 1960s sketch
While Manilow was at Concord Records, the Barry Manilow Scholarship
was awarded for four consecutive years from 2002 to 2005 to the six
highest-achieving students to reward excellence in the art and
craft of lyric writing. The UCLA Extension course "Writing Lyrics
That Succeed and Endure," taught by long time Manilow collaborator
Marty Panzer and each student received three additional "master
class" advanced sessions as well as a three-hour private,
one-on-one session with Mr. Panzer. Scholarship recipients were
selected by the instructor based on progress made within the
course, lyric writing ability, and the instructor's assessment of
real potential in the field of songwriting. In February 2002,
Manilow's recording career bounced back into the charts when
Arista released a greatest hits album
titled
Ultimate Manilow.
On May 18, 2002, Manilow returned to CBS with
Ultimate
Manilow, his first special at the network since his 1988
Big Fun on Swing Street special.
The special was
filmed in the Kodak
Theatre
in Hollywood
, California
and was nominated for an Emmy in the category of
"Outstanding Music Direction".
Produced by Manilow,
Bette Midler
Sings the Rosemary Clooney Songbook was first released on
September 30, 2003. It was the first time that
Bette Midler had worked with Barry in more than
twenty years. Instantly successful, the album went gold and they
worked together again on a 2005 follow-up album entitled
Bette
Midler Sings the Peggy Lee Songbook. On December 3, 2003,
A&E aired
A Barry Manilow Christmas: Live by Request,
his second of two concerts for the series. The two-hour special had
Manilow taking requests for Christmas songs performed live with a
band and an orchestra. Also on the special were guests
Cyndi Lauper,
Jose
Feliciano, and Bette Midler (Midler, busy preparing her own
tour in LA, appeared only in a pre-taped segment).
2004 brought the release of two albums. These were, consecutively,
a live album,
2 Nights Live!
(BMG Strategic Marketing Group, 2004), and
Scores: Songs from Copacabana &
Harmony, an album of Manilow singing songs from his
musicals.
Scores was the last of Manilow's creative
projects with the Concord label.
Barry Manilow at the keyboard, live in 2008
During his third appearance on
The Oprah Winfrey Show on
September 15, 2004, Winfrey announced that Manilow is one of the
most requested guests of all time on her show. On the show he
promoted his
One Night Live! One Last Time! tour.
It was around this time period where Manilow appeared for the first
time on the mainstream FOX program
American Idol in which his back-up
singer, Debra Byrd, doubles as voice coach on the series. It was
also during this period that many in the media felt the meteoric
rise of
Idol runner-up
Clay
Aiken, helped the revitalization of Manilow's career in the
mainstream with a lot of younger music listeners, by way of the
comparisons of Clay Aiken to Barry. Manilow appeared on Aiken's TV
special,
A Clay Aiken
Christmas.
Las Vegas Hilton executives in a press conference with Manilow on
December 14, 2004 announced his signing to a long-term engagement
as the house show. In March 2006, Manilow's engagement was extended
through 2008.
Manilow returned to Arista Records under the guidance of Davis for
a new album of cover versions released on January 31, 2006 called
The Greatest Songs of the Fifties. Manilow said he was
blown away with the idea, which Davis presented to him when he
visited his Las Vegas show. "When he suggested this idea to me, I
slapped my forehead and said, 'Why hasn't anyone thought of this
idea?'" Manilow said. "But of course there is only one Clive Davis.
I feel honored and terribly fortunate to be working with him again
after all these years. It's like coming home." The album included
classic songs from that decade, like "
Are You Lonesome Tonight?"
and "
Unchained Melody". It was an
unexpected hit, debuting at number one in the
Billboard 200, marking the first time a
Manilow album debuted at the top of the album chart as well as the
first time a Manilow album has reached number one in 29 years. It
was eventually certified Platinum in the U.S., and sold over three
million copies worldwide.
In March 2006, PBS aired
Barry Manilow: Music and Passion,
a Hilton concert taped exclusively for the network's fundraising
drive. Manilow was nominated for two Emmys, winning for "
Outstanding
Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program". A sequel
album to his best-selling fifties tribute album,
The Greatest Songs of the
Sixties was released on October 31, 2006 including songs
such as "
And I Love Her" and
"
Can't Help Falling in
Love". It nearly repeated the success of its predecessor,
debuting at #2 in the Billboard 200.
In
January 2007, Manilow returned to his hometown of New York City for
three shows at Madison Square Garden
. One highlight was the showing onscreen of
Manilow performing in one of his first television appearances while
the "live" Manilow played along onstage. "
The Greatest Songs of the
Seventies", released on September 18, 2007 was a follow-up
album to the record-breaking previous two albums "Greatest Songs of
the Fifties" and "Greatest Songs of the Sixties." Manilow surpassed
any other artist on QVC selling thousands of albums while
performing live during an interview. The album also contained
"Acoustic" versions of several Manilow hits.
Manilow returned to the road in 2007. Several shows were played on
the east coast of the United States in August 2007.
Four more shows in
Uniondale,
New York
, East Rutherford, New Jersey
, Cleveland, Ohio
, and Detroit, Michigan
, took place in December 2007. Manilow launched
another short tour in early 2008, visiting several large venues
including the Xcel
Energy Center
in St. Paul,
MN
.
Barry Manilow: Songs from the Seventies, a PBS concert
special based on "
The Greatest Songs of the
Seventies", was taped in Manilow's home town, Brooklyn, New
York, October 2007. The show aired on PBS December 2007 and was
rebroadcast again New Year's Eve and New Year's Day 2009.
He appeared on American Idol on February 3, 2009 during Hollywood
Week to give advice to the contestants.
In October 2009, Manilow TV, a montly video subscription service,
was launched. Once a month Barry Manilow picks once concert from
his personal archive to show to subscribers. The video changes
monthly. The first month, Episode #1, showed performances from
April 20 & 21, 1996 at Wembley Arena in London.
It is confirmed as of October 7, 2009 that Manilow will be
concluding his Resident show at the Hilton "Ultimate Manilow The
Hits" on December 30, 2009.
[59108]
Newsmaker
Throughout his career, Barry Manilow has made media headlines on
various subjects from his health to crashing his Range Rover.
His mother, Edna Manilow, explained how her son got a scar on his
right cheek near his nose: "How did you notice that? The scar on
his cheek here? Well, when he was little, he had a little
girlfriend, Elizabeth, and she pushed him and he fell and I didn't
pay too much attention to it and then it started infecting — you
know, it got an infection, and I had to take him to the hospital
and it healed. But it stayed, obviously, you all noticed it. He
puts on make-up."
On
October 25, 1978, one hour before his scheduled debut at the
Olympia
Theatre
he fractured his
ankle. Manilow was rushed to a doctor
who taped the injury minutes before he stepped onstage. Manilow
insisted on going on and doing his complete show, which included an
intricate disco dance in the popular "Copacabana" production
number.
In an April 1979
Ladies Home
Journal interview, Manilow admitted to experimenting with
marijuana, stating he lost the taste
for it quickly.
On February 4, 1982 Manilow, who was bedridden in a Paris hotel
with bronchial
pneumonia, had been ordered
by doctors to cancel a nine-concert European tour. He was ordered
to remain in bed for at least a week and would probably return to
his Los Angeles home when he was able to travel, said publicist
Heidi Ellen Robinson. Manilow became ill in Paris earlier that week
after completing a month-long United Kingdom tour.
Manilow
sprained his ankle October 6, 1983 on the stage at London's
Royal
Festival Hall
while performing at a sold-out benefit concert
before the Prince and
Princess of Wales, who
hosted the show. Manilow was treated and released from a
London hospital.
Manilow made headlines when on December 7, 1986 he underwent
emergency oral surgery at the Hospital of the Good Samaritan in Los
Angeles to remove a non-cancerous cyst in his upper jaw that
exploded. Three days later he was released in good condition from
the hospital. During the emergency, he used his friend Elizabeth
Taylor's dental surgeon.
On May
13, 1989 Manilow was rushed to Lenox Hill Hospital
during intermission at Broadway's Gershwin Theater
cancelling the second half of his show. His agent Susan
Dubow said he was "feeling fine" after being forced from the
Broadway stage because of an
adverse reaction to medication
prescribed for a stomach ailment. Dubow also added that Manilow was
ready to return to the stage to complete the run of his concert
show, which was then extended one week to June 3.
In 1989,
Manilow made headlines again when he told Us
Magazine he was hoping for a dinner invitation from his new
Bel-Air
neighbors, Ronald and
Nancy Reagan, but complained they cramp
his style of sunbathing in the
nude. "I thought it was pretty hot,
but there is
Secret
Service all over the place. I always know when they are coming
home because of all the helicopters. If I am out there sunbathing
in the nude, I go, 'S---, the Reagans are coming home.' But, who
knows, maybe they will invite me over for dinner one night."
In 1989 an American tabloid claimed he was engaged to porn star
Robin Byrd. On a June 22, 1989 appearance
on
The
Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, Manilow was asked by
Carson about the headline story. He disputed the story telling
Carson he is just friends with Byrd and an innocent picture was
taken and that there is no truth to them being engaged. After he
met Byrd, his band gave him a videotape of
Debbie Does Dallas as a present for
his birthday. Manilow added to Carson that he can't watch his
friend doing that.
To help
with the aftermath of Hurricane Hugo
in 1989 which affected the Charleston, South Carolina
, area, Manilow held a benefit concert November 12,
1989 at the University of South Carolina's Carolina
Coliseum
in Columbia, where the $10 tickets sold out in
three hours, and asked concertgoers to bring canned food to be
donated to residents in disaster areas. Before his concert,
Mayor T. Patton Adams named that day "Barry Manilow Day" and
Manilow presented the Red Cross and the
Salvation Army with checks of $42,500
each.
On
February 27, 1992, Manilow was the Master of Ceremonies for friend
Elizabeth Taylor's 60th birthday
bash at Disneyland
in Anaheim, California and sang "I Made It Through
the Rain" to Taylor who was accompanied by her eighth husband,
Larry Fortensky.
On
January 15, 1994, three hours before showtime Manilow abruptly
canceled a concert at the Convention
Center
in Atlantic City, New Jersey
, disappointing thousands of fans who had braved
freezing temperatures to see him perform at an Ethnic Pride and
Heritage Festival to benefit the Community Foundation of New Jersey
as well as United Hospitals Medical Center Foundation and Newark Museum
in Newark during the pre-inaugural activities for
then New
Jersey
Governor-elect Christie Whitman. Manilow said
in a statement that he was specifically told in writing the concert
would be part of a non-partisan event.
Donald Trump stepped in and shuffled his
entertainment schedule at Trump Plaza
and dispatched Paul Anka
to substitute for Manilow. The charities went after Manilow
for the $200,000 advance he took for the concert which he refunded
over a month later.
In another headline story, Manilow, on February 8, 1994, sued Los
Angeles radio station
KBIG , seeking $13
million in damages and $15 million in punitive damages because
their ad was causing irreparable damage to his professional
reputation. The ad, a 30-second spot introduced that January 31,
suggested that people listen to KBIG because it does not play
Manilow's music. The lawsuit was filed in Orange County Superior
Court by Manilow's attorney C. Tucker Cheadle of Hastings, Clayton
& Tucker in Los Angeles. Two days later, KBIG/104.3 FM agreed
to drop the commercial poking fun at the singer, but a lawyer
representing his business interests stopped short of agreeing to
withdraw a $28 million lawsuit.
On February 20, 1996, just after noon, Manilow wrecked his 1993
Range Rover in a four-vehicle crash on a
rain-slick interstate in Los Angeles while heading to his Bel-Air
home. No one was injured in the accident. Manilow, who wasn't hurt,
stood on the shoulder of
Interstate 5
signing autographs and posing for snapshots until an aide showed up
and took him home, his spokeswoman Susan Dubow said.
In March 1996, Manilow had
photorefractive keratectomy eye
surgery done on one of his eyes.
People Weekly, in their
June 26, 2000 issue, reported that Manilow had eye surgery done by
Los Angeles doctor Robert K. Maloney, but incorrectly stated it was
LASIK. Manilow is quoted saying he now
connects with the audience instead of "seeing a blur." Manilow
defended his doctor against comedian
Kathy
Griffin, who claims Maloney botched her LASIK eye
surgery.
In October 1996, it was reported that Manilow sold his gated,
Bel-Air home of 17 years with a recording studio for close to its
$2.45 million asking price and was looking to buy another residence
in the Los Angeles area. He had multiple offers on the 1950s home
of with many pathways, a long driveway and city views. It finally
went to a local television producer.
The nearby Hotel Bel-Air
supposedly regularly provided Manilow with room
service.
On June
26, 1997, Manilow was diagnosed with bronchitis before a scheduled performance in
Austin,
Texas
, his spokeswoman Susan Dubow said the following
day. Four other shows also had to be postponed.
Manilow was back on
the road that July 8 in Tulsa, Oklahoma
. Dubow said this is only the second time in
Manilow's career that illness forced him to postpone a
performance.
Arizona Court of Appeals
Judge Philip Espinosa, in another notable headline story, sued
Manilow over the volume of a December 23, 1993 concert he attended
with his wife. The judge said in a lawsuit he has had a constant
ringing in his ears and nearly blew his ears out. Espinosa sought
unspecified damages, and the trial was set for September 23, 1997.
The suit
also names Manilow's production company, an Arizona concert
promoter and the city of Tucson
, which
runs the convention center
where the concert was held. In July
1997, to settle the suit it was reported that Manilow donated
$5,000 to American Tinnitus Association, an ear-disorder
association.
On May 22, 1999, Manilow was rushed to a Los Angeles hospital after
suffering an
adverse reaction
to dental surgery. According to Manilow's spokesperson Susan
Dubow, he spent two days in the hospital with an infected mouth and
then was "resting comfortably at home." Since the initial operation
in 1986 when Manilow had a benign tumor removed from the roof of
his mouth he has had to have minor dental surgery several times
over the years. It was following such a procedure that Manilow's
mouth became infected, Dubow explained.
In October 2001, Manilow visited
Ground Zero in
New York City.
On May 28, 2003, Manilow injured his
nose
in the middle of night when he awoke disoriented and walked into a
wall when he returned to his Palm Springs home after spending two
weeks in Malibu working on longtime friend Bette Midler's upcoming
Rosemary Clooney tribute album. He passed out for four hours after
the accident but was OK, his manager said.
On July 29, 2003, Manilow had a complete upper and lower
facelift, which includes the removal of
drooping skin from the eyelids and the general tightening of facial
skin. Manilow was photographed after the surgery with what looked
like a surgical wrap under his chin while leaving a
plastic surgeon's office wearing a disguise
of dark glasses and a blonde wig in the streets of Beverly Hills,
California in an effort to escape without recognition.
On January 31, 2004, Manilow was treated for stress-related chest
pains during a 24-hour stay at the Desert Regional Medical Center
in Palm Springs, California. Manilow was rushed to the hospital
after two days of arbitration in a lawsuit where he was fighting to
win back the rights to the original stage musical "Harmony" from
producer Mark Schwartz. Manilow was diagnosed with an
atrial fibrillation. After his heart
rate returned to normal, doctors permitted him to return
home.
In what is called a "Platinum Package," Manilow offers fans a
pre-concert
meet-and-greet,
champagne and
photo
session with front row seats, for a price: $1,500 each (the
money goes to Manilow's foundation). Formerly, each participant was
allowed to do this just once (Manilow's people did keep track).
However, in recent years, his management has allowed repeaters: now
it's once per person per year.
To help in the aftermath of
Hurricane
Katrina in 2005, for every US dollar donated by his fans to the
American Red Cross through the
Manilow Fund for Health and Hope website, Manilow personally
matched, and the fund itself also matched, tripling the original
donation. The fund delivered $150,000 in less than 48 hours to the
American Red Cross, and hoped to raise a grand total of
$300,000.
Manilow made headlines in June 2006 when Australian officials
blasted his music between 9pm until midnight every Friday, Saturday
and Sunday to deter gangs of youths from congregating in a
residential area late at night. On July 18, 2006, Manilow released
a
tongue-in-cheek statement saying
that the youths might like his music.
On August 29, 2006, Manilow had
hip
surgery at a Southern California hospital. According to his press
release, he tore the labrum (cartilage) in both hips. When the
symptoms of extreme pain and discomfort did not go away following
preliminary treatment, an MRI arthogram was performed and the
labrum tears were discovered.
Discography
Awards
TV and movie appearances
- ABC special The Stars Salute Israel At 30 on May 8,
1978.
- May 8, 1982, Goldie & Kids a special where he
acted in skits and sang "One Voice" and "I Am Your Child" with
hostess Goldie Hawn.
- On
September 17, 1987 he appeared in the star-studded CBS special
We The People 200: The Constitutional Gala taped at the
Philadelphia
Civic Center
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to debut his song
"Let Freedom Ring" where President Ronald
Reagan was in attendance.
- On January 2, 1993 guest on the NBC special Dame Edna's
Hollywood.
- On May 17, 1993, Manilow made an guest appearance on the CBS
show Murphy Brown. On the
show, Candace Bergen's title character had frequently made
reference to her hatred of Manilow's music, but after she became a
mother, Manilow appeared to sing her a sweet version of his tune "I
Am Your Child," winning her over with the song about a parent's
bond with a child. Later that year he appeared in England on
Surprise! Surprise! with Cilla Black where he performed the new single he
had recorded with Cilla of "You'll Never Walk
Alone"..
- Guest appearance in a 2001 episode of Ally McBeal. He played both a hallucination of Ally's and himself on stage
at the end of the show.
- On December 11, 2003, Manilow appeared on the NBC show Will &
Grace as himself backstage between tour stops. The name of
the episode is "Fanilow" as in a fan of Manilow.
- On April 20, 2004 – April 21, 2004 Manilow reunited with
Debra Byrd his former backup singer who
is now the vocal coach at American
Idol when he appeared as a guest judge and worked with the
top seven finalists for the popular FOX variety prize show where the
season three contestants
sang his songs as the theme for the week.
- On December 8, 2004, he was a guest on the NBC special A
Clay Aiken Christmas, hosted by the former Idol
runner-up.
- On February 3, 2006 Manilow was the guest singer on the
ABC variety prize show
Dancing with
the Stars where he sang three songs on the results
show.
- On March 21, 2006 – March 22, 2006 Manilow returned to
American Idol in season five when 1950s music was
the theme. He again helped the top eleven finalists to fine tune
their performances and again sang on the results show.
- On November 23, 2006, Manilow appeared live on a float in the
Macy's Thanksgiving Day
Parade, and performed the song "What the World Needs Now" on
the television broadcast of the parade.
- On December 2, 2006, Manilow was the celebrity guest and theme
for the week on series
three of The X Factor
where he assisted the top four acts with their performances.
- Barry narrated and wrote original music for the Ocean Spray
Christmas special—Cranberry Christmas which drew an estimated 1.5
million viewers for its December 2008 debut on ABC Family.
Notes and references
- Patricia Butler, Barry Manilow, Omnibus Press, 2002.
p. 223.
- EVEN NOW, IMAGE HAUNTS MANILOW, St. Louis
Post-Dispatch, June 27, 1993
- Showtime Presents Barry Manilow: SRO on Broadway 1989
- BarryNet - His Music - Commercial Jingles, [1], accessed December 5, 2006
- BarryNet - The Man - Honors and Awards, [2], accessed December 5, 2006
- Barry Manilow Keeps Flying High Critics? 'They
Really Can't Hurt Me', Tulsa World, January 21,
1983
- Barry Manilow
- Bette Midler: The Divine Miss M Tour
(1972–1973), accessed December 23, 2006.
- TV.com American Bandstand Barry Manilow / Minnie
Riperton March 22, 1975, accessed December 18, 2006
- Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, [3], accessed November 8, 2006
- BarryNet - The Man - At The Movies, [4], accessed November 2, 2006
- The Official Academy Awards Database, [5], accessed November 18, 2006
- People, The Dallas Morning News,
November 3, 1984
- Newsmakers, The Philadelphia Inquirer,
December 1, 1983
- Peopletalk, The Valley Independent,
December 1, 1983
- The longest shot; measuring Al Gore Jr. for the
White House - Albert Gore Jr, Washington Monthly,
November 1986
- Manilow: Bill Would Spell Disaster - Star Reacts To
Source Licensing Moves, Billboard, October 11,
1986
- Barry Manilow swings on album - and at critics,
Chicago Sun-Times, November 29, 1987
- Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, [6], accessed November 9, 2006
- BARRY MANILOW (1989)
- Internet Broadway Database, [7], accessed November 14, 2006
- House Testimony for Home Recording Act,
February 19, 1992
- La Jolla Playhouse HARMONY - 1997, accessed
December 20, 2006
- DIS-'HARMONY', New York Post, July 22,
2005
- Lyricists Compete for Barry Manilow Scholarship at UCLA
Extension, Broadcast Music, Inc (BMI)
- Las Vegas Hilton Signs Barry Manilow to Long-Term
Engagement, PRNewswire, December 14, 2004
- LAS VEGAS HILTON AND BARRY MANILOW CELEBRATE CHART
SUCCESS BY ANNOUNCING EXTENSION OF MANILOW’S SUCCESSFUL LONG-TERM
ENGAGEMENT: SUPERSTAR RECEIVES 'KEY' TO THE HILTON, HIS EXCLUSIVE
HOME THROUGH 2008, Las Vegas Hilton Press Room, March
27, 2006
- Barry Manilow Croons For ET, Entertainment
Tonight, January 27, 2006
- MAMA TELLS ALL, The Quarter Notes
BMFC, 1987
- Pop Notes, Washington Post, November
3, 1978
- Paris Report, Teen Stars Today,
February 1979
- Barry, Ladies Home Journal, April
1979
- PNEUMONIA ENDS MANILOW'S EUROPEAN TOUR,
Associated Press, February 8, 1982
- People in the News, The Capital,
February 5, 1982
- People in the news, The Capital,
October 8, 1983
- JERRY LEE LEWIS CUTS SHORT TREATMENT, The
Philadelphia Inquirer, December 12, 1986
- "THE DAY I THOUGHT I HAD CANCER", Woman
Magazine (UK), November 14, 1987
- CROONER MANILOW 'FEELING FINE' AFTER EMERGENCY
STOMACH UPSET, San Jose Mercury News, May 15,
1989
- REAGANS CRAMP MANILOW'S STYLE, San Jose
Mercury News, June 9, 1989
- REAGAN BUFFER ZONE KEEPS EX-FIRST COUPLE FROM BARRY
IN THE BUFF, Lexington Herald-Leader, June 9,
1989
- [8] The Official Tonight Show Website: Guest
Search 6/22/89
- Robin Byrd with Barry Manilow
- BARRY MANILOW CONCERT SCHEDULED BENEFIT PERFORMANCE
TO RAISE MONEY FOR HURRICANE RELIEF EFFORT, The Charlotte
Observor, October 9, 1989
- FOR A SONG, The State, November 13,
1989
- TAYLOR CELEBRATES 60TH AT MICKEY MOUSE PARTY,
Associated Press, February 29, 1992
- SINGER UNHURT AFTER FOUR-CAR CRASH IN RAIN,
San Jose Mercury News, February 22, 1996
- Barry Manilow bends a fender, `The Mousetrap' keeps
its spring, and Dorothy Hamill is sued..., The Orange
County Register, February 21, 1996
- BEYOND GLASSES!, The Consumer's Guide To
Laser Vision Correction, 1996
- The Eyes Have It, People Weekly, June
26, 2000
- Singer Manilow Enjoys the Benefits of LASIK,
Vision Service Plan, October 2005
- CELEBS BACK UP EYE SURGEON, New York
Post, May 31, 2005
- Stargazing, The Kansas City Star,
October 9, 1996
- People, Contra Costa Times, June 29,
1997
- BRONCHITIS CAUSES MANILOW TO POSTPONE FIVE
PERFORMANCES, The Buffalo News, June 29, 1997
- Barry Manilow OK After Dental Surgery Scare,
Yahoo! Music, May 25, 1999
- Manilow has a nose for success, The Sydney
Morning Herald, May 9, 2002
- Manilow recovers after breaking nose,
Associated Press, June 5, 2003
- BARRY MANILOW, THE WIG AND THE PLASTIC SURGEON,
August 21, 2003
- Manilow Returns Home Following Hospital Stay for
'Broken Heart', PRNewswire, February 2, 2004
- Barry Manilow: Music and Passion,
LasVegas.BroadwayWorld.com, August 2, 2006
- Manilow Fund Set To Triple Aid For Hurricane
Katrina Relief, PRNewswire, September 3, 2005
- Barry Manilow and Manilow Fund Matching Donations
For Hurricane Katrina Relief
- Singer Barry Manilow to Have Hip Surgery
- Fans cheer Barry Manilow
On 2 October 2009 he appeared on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island
Discs.
External links