1960s In 1964, Manilow met Bro Herrod, a CBS director, who asked him to
arrange some songs for a musical adaptation of the
melodrama,
The Drunkard. Instead, Manilow wrote an entire original
score. Herrod used Manilow's composition in the
Off Broadway musical, which had an eight-year run at New York's
13th Street Repertory Theatre. During this time, Manilow began work as a commercial
jingle writer and singer, which continued through the remainder of the 1960s. He performed many of the TV jingles he composed, including
State Farm Insurance ("Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there") or
Band-Aid ("I am stuck on Band-Aid, 'cause Band-Aid's stuck on me!"), for which he adopted a childlike voice and wrote the music (Donald B. Wood wrote the lyrics). His singing-only credits include commercials for
Kentucky Fried Chicken,
Pepsi ("all across the nation, it's the
Pepsi Generation"),
McDonald's ("you deserve a break today"), Manilow was awarded an Honorary Clio at the 50th Anniversary
Clio Awards in
Las Vegas in 2009 for his 1960s work as a jingle writer and singer. When accepting the award, he said he learned the most about making pop music by working for three or four years as a writer in the jingle industry. By 1967, Manilow was the musical director for the
WCBS-TV series
Callback, which premiered on January 27, 1968. He next conducted and arranged for
Ed Sullivan's production company, arranging a new theme for
The Late Show, while 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
Julius Monk's Upstairs at the Downstairs club in New York. By 1969, Manilow was signed by
Columbia/
CBS Music vice-president and recording artist
Tony Orlando, who went on to co-write with and produce Manilow and a group of studio musicians under the name "Featherbed" on
Columbia Pictures's newly acquired
Bell Records label.
1970s Manilow recorded and accompanied artists on the piano for auditions and performances in the first two years of the 1970s. He recorded four tracks as Featherbed, produced by Tony Orlando on Bell Records. Three of the tracks were "Morning", a ballad; "Amy", a psychedelic-influenced pop song; and an early, uptempo version of his own co-composition (with Orlando) "
Could It Be Magic". and subsequently as a producer on both her debut and second record albums,
The Divine Miss M (1972) and
Bette Midler (1973). He also acted as her musical director on the tour mounted for her first album. In 1973, Manilow was nominated for the
Grammy Award for Album of the Year for his production role on
The Divine Miss M at the
16th Grammy Awards. Manilow worked with Midler from 1971 to 1975. After the Featherbed singles failed to impact on the music charts, in July 1973, Bell Records released the album
Barry Manilow, which offered an
eclectic mix of piano-driven pop and guitar-driven rock music, including a song called "I Am Your Child", which Manilow had composed with
Marty Panzer. Among other songs on the album were
Jon Hendricks'
vocalese jazz standard "Cloudburst", most successfully recorded by his group
Lambert, Hendricks and Ross in 1959, and a slower-tempo version of "Could It Be Magic". The latter's music was based on
Chopin's "
Prelude in C Minor" and provided
Donna Summer with one of her first hits. It was also covered by
Take That in the 1990s, as an upbeat disco song. In 1974, former CBS Records chief
Clive Davis became temporary president of Bell with the goal of revitalizing Columbia Pictures's music division. With a $10 million investment by CPI, and a reorganization of the various Columbia Pictures legacy labels (
Colpix,
Colgems, and Bell), Davis introduced Columbia Pictures' new record division,
Arista, in November 1974, with Davis himself owning 20% of the venture. Bell had its final number 1 hit in January 1975 with Manilow's breakthrough 1974 release of the single "
Mandy" (Bell 45,613), followed shortly by the label's final hit, as well as its final single, "Look in My Eyes Pretty Woman" by
Tony Orlando and Dawn (Bell 45,620—US No. 11), after which the more successful Bell albums were reissued on Arista. The final releases using the Bell imprint have the designation "Bell Records, Distributed by Arista Records, 1776 Broadway, New York, New York 10019" around the rim of the label. Davis' reorganization efforts continued to bear fruit in 1974, with the release of Manilow's second album,
Barry Manilow II, with "Mandy" as the lead single. Manilow had not wanted to record the song, which had originally been titled "Brandy" when recorded by its co-writer
Scott English, but the song was included at Davis's insistence. The title was changed to "Mandy" during the recording session on August 20, 1974, because there had already been a song called "
Brandy (You're a Fine Girl)" performed by
Looking Glass and released in 1972 on Davis's
Epic label. "Mandy" was the start of a string of hit singles and albums that lasted through 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. Following the success of Barry Manilow II
, the first Bell Records album was remixed and reissued on Arista Records as Barry Manilow I
. When Manilow went on his first tour, he included in his show what he called "A V.S.M.", or "A Very Strange Medley", a sampling of some of the commercial jingles that he had written, composed, and/or sung in the 1960s. The medley appeared later on his triple-platinum 1977 album Barry Manilow Live''. Beginning with Manilow's March 22, 1975, appearance on
American Bandstand to promote the second album, a productive friendship with
Dick Clark started. Among their projects together were 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 the 1985 television movie
Copacabana, starring Manilow and executive produced by Clark. Despite being a songwriter in his own right, several of Manilow's commercial successes were songs written by others. In addition to "Mandy", written by Scott English and
Richard Kerr, other hits he did not write or compose include "
Tryin' to Get the Feeling Again" (by
David Pomeranz), "
Weekend in New England" (by
Randy Edelman), "
Ships" (by
Ian Hunter), "
Looks Like We Made It" (by Richard Kerr and
Will Jennings), "
Can't Smile Without You" and "
Ready to Take a Chance Again" (by
Charles Fox and
Norman Gimbel). His number 1 hit "
I Write the Songs" was composed by
Bruce Johnston of
The Beach Boys. According to album liner notes, Manilow did, however, perform co-production as well as arrangement duties on all the above tracks along with
Ron Dante, most famous for his vocals on records by
The Archies. Manilow's breakthrough in Britain came with the release of
Even Now, the first of many top-20 albums on that side of the Atlantic, which contained four singles that became major hits in the US. This was quickly followed by
Manilow Magic The Best Of Barry Manilow, also known as
Greatest Hits. In the late 1970s and early 1980s,
ABC aired four variety television specials starring Manilow, who served as an executive producer.
The Barry Manilow Special with
Penny Marshall as his guest premiered on March 2, 1977, to an audience of 37 million. The special was nominated for four
Emmys at the
29th Primetime Emmy Awards and won in the category of
Outstanding Special–Comedy, Variety or Music.
The Second Barry Manilow Special in 1978, with
Ray Charles as his guest, was also nominated for four Emmys at the
30th Primetime Emmy Awards. On February 11, 1979, a concert from Manilow's sold-out dates from his
Even Now Tour at the
Greek Theater in Los Angeles aired on the
HBO series
Standing Room Only, which was the first pay-television show to pose a serious threat to network primetime specials for 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 at the
31st Primetime Emmy Awards and won for
Outstanding Choreography. In 1980, Manilow's
One Voice special, with Dionne Warwick as his guest, was nominated for an Emmy for
Outstanding Music Direction at the
32nd Primetime Emmy Awards. It was the first such event ever held at that venue and was attended by an estimated 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
2:00 AM Paradise Cafe, a
jazz/
blues collection of original barroom tunes recorded in one live take in the studio. That same year, Showtime aired a documentary of Manilow recording the album with a number of jazz legends including
Sarah Vaughan and
Mel Tormé. In 1984 and 1985, England aired two one-hour concert specials from his
National Exhibition Centre (NEC) concerts. Barry also produced more songs for Dionne Warwick 6 songs on her Finder Of Lost Love album and 1 on her Friends album both albums released in 1985. In 1985, Manilow left Arista Records for
RCA Records, where 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. The
Manilow album was a complete about-face from the
Paradise Cafe album, containing a number of uptempo tracks that featured synthesizers. In 1985, Japan aired a Manilow concert special where he played "
Sakura" on the
koto. In his only lead acting role, Manilow portrayed Tony Starr in the 1985 CBS film
Copacabana, based on his 1978 song "Copacabana", alongside
Annette O'Toole as Lola Lamarr and
Joseph Bologna as Rico Castelli. Manilow wrote all the songs for the movie, with lyrics provided by his longtime collaborators
Bruce Sussman and
Jack Feldman. A soundtrack album for the TV film,
Copacabana: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Album, was released on RCA Records. In October 1986, Manilow, along with 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. They were lobbying 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 the use of the blanket license then in effect. The songwriters said without the blanket license, artists would have to negotiate up front with producers individually, without knowing if a series would 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 Manilow's autobiography,
Sweet Life: Adventures on the Way to Paradise, which took three years to complete. While promoting the work, 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, a mixture of traditional after-dark and techno jazz, 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. CBS aired Manilow's
Big Fun on Swing Street special in March 1988. It 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, and Uncle Festive, a band within Manilow's band at the time. The special was nominated for two Emmys in technical categories, and won in the category of
Outstanding Art Direction for a Variety or Music Program at the
40th Primetime Emmy Awards. at the
Gershwin Theatre (also known as the Uris Theatre), where he had also recorded
Barry Manilow Live 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 world tour of the Broadway show.
1990s Manilow released a number of cover tunes during the 1990s, starting with tracks on the 1989 release
Barry Manilow, and continuing with his 1990 Christmas LP ''
Because It's Christmas. On the Christmas album, Manilow was joined by pop girl trio Exposé and together they recreated, note for note, a 1943 million-selling recording of "Jingle Bells" by Bing Crosby and The Andrews Sisters. Manilow has credited Patty, Maxene, and LaVerne Andrews as inspiring him, perhaps most evident in his recording of "Jump, Shout Boogie". More "event" albums followed, including Showstoppers'', a collection of Broadway songs (1991), 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,
Rapunzel, was shelved after the poor performance of
The Pebble and the Penguin. Manilow was to be cast as the voice of a cricket. He also composed the score and wrote two songs with Sussman for ''
Disney Sing Along Songs: Let's Go To The Circus''. Manilow produced the 1991 album
With My Lover Beside Me by legendary jazz vocalist
Nancy Wilson. The record is based on lyrics left behind by famed composer
Johnny Mercer that had never been set to music. Manilow was invited in 1993 by Mercer's widow to complete the songs. His own recording of "
When October Goes", with lyrics by Mercer, was released as a single in 1984, from his album
2:00 AM Paradise Cafe. The bill was signed into law on October 28, 1992, by President
George H. W. Bush and became effective immediately. In 1993,
PBS aired
Barry Manilow: The Best of Me, which was taped at Wembley Arena in England earlier that 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 Complete Collection and Then Some..., the video release of the show, but 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. He performed 14 concerts as part of an extended tour of Germany,
Austria, and
Denmark. Manilow branched out in another direction and, with Sussman, launched
Copacabana, a musical play based on previous Manilow-related adaptations. They wrote new songs and it ran for two years in London's
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, Manilow and Sussman co-wrote
Harmony: A New Musical, based on the story of the
Comedian Harmonists, a male singing group popular in Germany from 1928 to 1934. The musical previewed from October 7 to November 23, 1997, at the
La Jolla Playhouse. In 2003,
Harmony was originally scheduled for a tryout run in Philadelphia before going to Broadway, but was canceled after financial difficulties. In a legal battle with Mark Schwartz, the show's producer, Manilow and Sussman in 2005 won back the rights to the musical. The work was staged in Atlanta in 2013 and Los Angeles in 2014, had its New York debut in 2022 at the National Yiddish Theatre
Folksbiene and came to Broadway in late 2023 for a three-month run at the
Ethel Barrymore Theatre. In 1998, Manilow released the record album
Manilow Sings Sinatra which earned him a Grammy nomination for
Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album at the
42nd Annual Grammy Awards in 1999. In February 2002, Manilow returned to the charts when
Arista released a greatest hits album,
Ultimate Manilow. On May 18, 2002, he returned to CBS with
Ultimate Manilow, his first special on the network since his
Big Fun on Swing Street special in 1988. The special was filmed in the
Kodak Theatre in
Hollywood, California, and was nominated for an Emmy in the category of Outstanding Music Direction at the
54th Primetime Emmy Awards. He began the residency in February 2005 with a show entitled
Manilow: Music and Passion. In March 2006, Manilow's engagement was extended through 2008. It was an unexpected success, 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 had reached number one in 29 years. It was eventually certified Platinum in the U.S., and sold more than 3 million copies worldwide. In March 2006,
PBS aired
Barry Manilow: Music and Passion, a Hilton concert recorded exclusively for the network's fundraising drive. Manilow was nominated for two Emmys, winning for
Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program at the
58th Primetime Emmy Awards. A sequel album to his bestselling 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 number 2 in the Billboard 200. (2008). In January 2007, Manilow returned to New York City for three shows at
Madison Square Garden. These included showing onscreen Manilow performing in one of his first television appearances, while the "live" Manilow played along onstage. In August, he played several shows on the east coast of the United States. Four more took place in December, half in the New York
tri-state area in
Uniondale and
East Rutherford, and two in
Cleveland and Detroit. Manilow launched another short tour in early 2008, visiting several large venues, including the
Xcel Energy Center in
St. Paul, Minnesota. A further album in the decades themed series,
The Greatest Songs of the Seventies, went on release September 18, 2007.
Barry Manilow: Songs from the Seventies, a PBS concert special based on the work, was taped in Brooklyn in October 2007. The show aired on PBS in December 2007 and was rebroadcast over New Year 2009. He appeared on
American Idol on February 3, 2009, during Hollywood Week to give advice to the contestants. Manilow released his third Christmas album in November 2007,
In the Swing of Christmas, which went Gold and earned him another Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album Grammy Award nomination at the
51st Grammy Awards in 2008. In December 2008, Manilow narrated the animated Christmas special
Cranberry Christmas, which was broadcast on
ABC Family and sponsored by
Ocean Spray. In addition to narrating, he also contributed two original songs that he composed with his long time collaborator, lyricist Bruce Sussman: "Christmas Is Just Around the Corner" and "Watch Out for Mr. Grape". "Christmas Is Just Around the Corner" was also released as a single, and appeared as a bonus track on the 2009 re-release of
In the Swing of Christmas. In October 2009, Manilow TV, a monthly video subscription service, launched. Once a month, Barry Manilow picks a different concert from his personal archive to show to subscribers. In the first month, the first episode showed performances on April 20–21, 1996, at Wembley Arena in London. Manilow ended his residency at the Hilton with a show entitled "Ultimate Manilow: the Hits" on December 30, 2009, after 300 performances for 450,000 fans. On December 11, 2010, Manilow performed at the
Nobel Peace Prize Concert in Oslo, Norway. Manilow completed work on his new album,
15 Minutes, in March 2011, with his official Facebook page announcing that he had completed putting "finishing touches" to the album on March 16, 2011. On March 13, 2011, Manilow appeared at the
2011 Laurence Olivier Awards at London's
Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, singing "
Copacabana" with the
BBC Concert Orchestra and also singing with hit West End star,
Kerry Ellis. Since March 2011, he has hosted
They Write the Songs, a documentary series for
BBC Radio 2 in which he looks at the life and work of popular composers. In May 2011, Manilow recorded his concerts at the
O2 Arena in London, for CD and DVD release in early 2012. In a June 2011 interview with the
Los Angeles Times, Manilow said his new album was influenced by
Britney Spears; the album is about the pleasures and pitfalls of fame. It was influenced directly by Spears's personal struggles in 2007.
15 Minutes debuted at number 7 on the U.S. Billboard 200 Album Chart. The first single from
15 Minutes, "Bring on Tomorrow", entered the U.S. Billboard Hot 200 Singles Chart's top 40, becoming Manilow's 47th top 40 hit. In November 2011, Manilow recorded his shows at the Paris Las Vegas for an upcoming TV special and DVD release. Manilow concluded his two-year residency at the Paris Hotel in Las Vegas on December 11, 2012. This also ended his seven-year stay in Las Vegas. In January 2013, Manilow returned to Broadway with his concert series "Manilow on Broadway". It was his first appearance on Broadway in more than two decades. On July 4, 2013, Manilow performed live on the west lawn of the
U.S. Capitol as part of
A Capitol Fourth. This was his second appearance on the PBS program. On September 6, 2013,
Harmony: A New Musical started a second run. This time at
Atlanta's
Alliance Theatre. The musical then had performances in Los Angeles in 2014. On November 12, 2013, he performed at the BBC's
Children in Need Rocks 2013. On March 11, 2014, Manilow released
Night Songs, an album of standards performed only with piano and synthesized
acoustic bass by Manilow himself. It earned him a Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album Grammy nomination that year at the
57th Grammy Awards. In 2017,
Billboard declared that Manilow has been on a
Billboard 200 hot streak since 2002, when his greatest-hits collection
Ultimate Manilow debuted and peaked at No. 3 (February 23, 2002), becoming his highest-charting set (and first top 10) since 1979's
One Voice (No. 9). Since 2002, Manilow has logged a dozen top 40 efforts (including Ultimate). Further, he has notched at least one top 40 album in each of the five decades from the 1970s through the 2010s. In 2019, it was announced that Manilow's original musical
Harmony would make its New York debut at
National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene in the
Museum of Jewish Heritage, running from February 11 until March 29, 2020. The run was canceled due to the start of the COVID-19 pandemic and rescheduled for spring 2022.
2020s On February 14, 2020, Manilow released
Night Songs II, which debuted at No. 32 on the Billboard 200, marking his sixth consecutive decade of top 40-charting albums beginning with
Barry Manilow II in 1975. In April 2020, Manilow scored his 36th top-20 Billboard Adult Contemporary chart hit with "When the Good Times Come Again", which peaked at number 12 the week of July 2. The song was originally recorded for his self-titled 1989 album and never released as a single. A fan made a lyric video for the song when the
COVID-19 pandemic hit. Manilow found the video and posted it on his Facebook page, leading his management company to send the song to radio stations for airplay. In August 2020, Manilow sold his song catalog to
Hipgnosis Songs Fund. In 2021, Manilow started his The Hits Come Home residency at the
Westgate Hotel in Las Vegas. A fourteen-night residency at the
London Palladium in May and June 2024 has been billed as the "last, last UK concerts". On September 23, 2025, Manilow released the Peter Allen/Dean Pitchford-penned song "Once Before I Go," a single from his forthcoming album
What a Time. ==Personal life==