Throughout his career, Barry Manilow has made media headlines on various subjects from his health to crashing his Range Rover. Some of the most memorable ones include:
Edna Manilow, the mother of Barry Manilow, explained how her son got a scar on his right cheek by 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.
A young woman's letter was published in the syndicated
Dear Abby advice column in late 1981 expressing her sincere desire to meet "lonely" Manilow, or actor
Burt Reynolds.
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 complains 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."
Manilow's personal life caused quite a stir in the late 1980s when 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. It turned out to be a publicity stunt by Byrd who used Manilow to gain greater fame.
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 cancelled 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.
The Trentonian newspaper gave the "Geek of the Week" award to Manilow, and Trump banned him from Atlantic City for a dozen years.
In another headline story, Manilow, on
February 8,
1994, sued Los Angeles radio station
KBIG (104.3 FM), 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, two-acre 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 3,700 square feet 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 the 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.
Some fans were unhappy that Manilow, through a Platinum Package, began charging his fans $1,000 each to meet him after concert shows for a
meet-and-greet,
champagne,
photo session and front row seats. The money goes to Manilow's foundation and each participant is only allowed to do this one time. They do keep track.
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.
On
September 17 2007, producers of
ABC's The View cancelled a scheduled appearance of Manilow on the show because his reps demanded that
Elisabeth Hasselbeck not be on the show during his appearance because of her conservative stance. He stated, "I strongly disagree with her views. I think she's dangerous and offensive. I will not be on the same stage as her." His objections came despite having appeared twice on the show with Hasselbeck the previous year. Many believe that this was prompted by previous
The View host Rosie O'Donnell, who is a good friend of Manilow. Both have been involved with gay rights organizations.