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Barry Manilow (born Barry Alan Pincus in Brooklyn, New York on June 17,
1943) is an American singer and songwriter best known for his hit recordings
"I Write The Songs", "Mandy" and "Copacabana (At The Copa).
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Manilow dominated the soft rock scene in the 1970s with a string of top ten
hits and multi-platinum albums. His music is considered by some to be kitsch
or camp, even when it was released, owing to its difference in style to the
pop or rock mainstream. Despite the frequent barbs from critics and
lampooning by comedians, he continues to maintain a large fan base,
especially among baby-boomer women in his native United States, as evidenced
by the No. 3 debut of his 2002 greatest hits album Ultimate Manilow, and
being dubbed "showman of our generation" recently by Rolling Stone.
Early life
Born to humble origins in Brooklyn, New York, shortly after his birth his
father Harold Pincus (son of a Russian-Jewish father and Irish mother) and
his mother Edna Manilow divorced. Barry was then brought up by his mother
and grandparents, Russian-Jewish immigrants who had a strong influence on
his life. He began singing shortly before his Bar Mitzvah at the age of 13
when he legally changed his surname to his mother's maiden name Manilow. He
took up the accordion, but preferring the piano, persevered with it, a
decision which would be vital for his career.
Career
Manilow's record label Arista took three years off his announced age when he
was really 32 (in 1975) and made him 29 years old so he would appeal to
teens; this made him appear to have been born in 1946 instead of his actual
birth year, 1943. Manilow reportedly wrote to Playboy in 1965 when he was 22
asking for advice about music.
Early in his career, Manilow worked as a pianist, producer and arranger,
accompanying Bette Midler among others at the Continental Bathhouse in New
York City. Manilow's major solo hits include "Mandy" (1974), "Copacabana (At
The Copa)" (1978) and "I Write The Songs" (1975). Manilow's Copacabana has
also been turned into a stage musical that ran for two years in the West End,
and toured the US in 2000 and 2003. His greatest UK hit was "I Wanna Do It
With You" (1982) which reached no. 8 in the UK charts, his only top ten hit
there.
Manilow's recorded work, spanning from 1971 through 2005, has gone through
several distinct phases. He first made a series of demo singles, both under
his real name (although born Barry Pincus, he had it legally changed to
Manilow), and under a pseudo-group name of Featherbed. His first album was
released by Bell (later Arista) records in 1973, and contained an eclectic
mix of piano-driven pop, big band remixes and guitar-driven rock. His second
album, called Barry Manilow II (Bell/Arista, 1974) contained the hit song "Mandy",
and began a string of hit singles and albums that lasted through the rest of
the 1970s, and into the early 1980's. While Manilow is known as a songwriter,
several of his hits were cover versions (the most notable instance,
ironically, being "I Write The Songs", actually written by Bruce Johnston of
The Beach Boys).
After the landmark Concert at Blenheim Palace in August of 1983, Manilow
started to venture into a jazz-driven style, starting with the 1984 album
2:00 am Paradise Cafe. The album was recorded with jazz greats Sarah Vaughan,
Mel Torme and Gerry Mulligan. Manilow would return to the genre in 1987,
with the release of Swing Street. The techno-jazz-inspired album contained
performances with Dianne Schuur, Phyllis Hyman, Kid Creole and the Coconuts,
and Tom Scott.
From 1985 to 1986, Manilow was involved with the pop album Manilow (RCA,
1985), and began a phase of international music, as he performed songs and
duets in French, Italian, Portuguese and Japanese, among other languages.
The 1980s saw a number of landmark hits such as Bermuda Triangle 1981, Let's
Hang On 1981, Stay 1982 and Please Don't Be Scared 1989. The greatest UK hit
of Manilow's career was I Wanna Do It With You 1982 which reached no. 8,
although it has since disappeared from his repertoire.
In the 1990s, Manilow recorded a succession of "event" albums, guided by
Arista's President, Clive Davis. From 1991's Showstoppers, a collection of
Broadway tunes, to a big band album Singin' With the Big Bands (1994), a
1970s collection Summer of '78 (1996), the decade ended with Manilow
recording a tribute to Frank Sinatra Manilow Sings Sinatra (1998).
Manilow's music connected with a new generation when top British boy band
Take That reached no. 3 in the UK charts with "Could It Be Magic" (1992) .
Later, Irish boy band Westlife reached no. 1 with "Mandy" (2003), in a
version clearly based on Manilow's hit version (differing only in that they
omitted the piano introduction and inserted a different fade-out ending).
After the start of the new millennium, Manilow left Arista records for
Concord Records, a jazz-oriented label in California, and started work on
the long-anticipated Here at the Mayflower album. The album was another
eclectic mix of styles, almost entirely composed and produced by Manilow
himself. 2004 saw the release of both a live album 2Nights Live! (BMG
Strategic Marketing Group), 2004], and a soundtrack album of his musicals
Scores (Songs from Copacabana and Harmony) (Concord, 2004). Two Christmas
albums, many live albums and compilations have rounded out a very large body
of music.
Manilow appeared as a guest judge and arranged music for American Idol on
April 24, 2004, the year in which he also embarked on his "One Night Live!
One Last Time!" final tour. Some fans were unhappy that Manilow charged his
fans $1000 to meet him after the show, but ticket sales were robust, landing
Manilow's tour into the Top Ten club for box office grosses in 2004.
Manilow co-wrote, with lyricist Bruce Sussman, a musical, Harmony, which was
originally scheduled to preview in Philadelphia in 2003. After financial
difficulties and a legal battle, Manilow and Sussman won back the rights to
the musical. It is currently unknown when the musical is slated to reach
Broadway.
On the heels of his 'Farewell' tour, Manilow opened a standing show in Las
Vegas in 2005 at the Las Vegas Hilton, where he will reside in the penthouse
where Elvis lived for 8 years (Newsweek/MSNBC).
Manilow has appeared in two movies. He portrayed Tony in a 1985 made-for-television
film based on "Copacabana" (Annette O'Toole was Lola and Joseph Bologna was
Rico). He also portrayed himself in the 2002 Kathy Bates-Rupert Everett
comedy "Unconditional Love", in which Manilow's hit "Can't Smile Without You"
plays a key role in the plot. He co-wrote the Broadway-style musical scores
for the animated films "The Pebble and the Penguin" (1995) and "Thumbelina
(1994)." Manilow hits have figured prominently in several films such as "Foul
Play" and "Serial Mom".
Manilow made an appearance (performing Can't Smile Without You, Mandy, I
Write The Songs and songs from his latest album) on the Oprah Winfrey show
on 7th April 2005. |
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BARRY MANILOW PICTURES |
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MOST POPULAR
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