The
Man Who Makes the Whole World Sing is used to far bigger venues than
the 1,710-seat St. James Theatre, one of the smaller theaters on the
Great White Way.
“It’s a totally
different feeling from the stage. I’m in their laps; they’re in my lap.
It’s very, very intimate,” says Manilow. “This is like going to
somebody’s house.”
Manilow - and
his fans dubbed Fanilows - are clearly enjoying his first return to
Broadway in nearly 25 years. Though his opening was postponed due to
bronchitis, the singer sounded and looked great during a recent quick
interview.
The New York City-born
icon has had a street corner - at Seventh Ave. and 44th Street -
temporarily renamed “Barry Manilow Way” and a caricature unveiled at
Sardi’s restaurant.
It’s a long
way from where he began in the neighborhood of Williamsburg in Brookyn,
where “I was lucky to get home from school without getting beaten up.”
He later moved to a Manhattan studio apartment so small that he had to
sleep under his Steinway grand piano.
His
two-hour show - makeup dates have been added to “Manilow on Broadway”
that now take the show into early March - includes all the hits,
including “Could It Be Magic,” “Mandy,” “Copacabana” and “Can’t Smile
Without You.”
Manilow has sold
over 80 million albums worldwide and this Christmas had a 50th hit -
“Santa Claus Is Coming to Town” - on Billboard’s Adult Contemporary
chart. “That was a nice Christmas present,” he says, sipping white wine.
Manilow
says he keeps his show fresh by making sure the arrangements are
contemporary. “Every few years, I go back into all the songs and I
update them so that it never sounds like an oldies show. If you come to
the shows, they’re full of muscle,” he says. “`Copacabana’ sounds like
it could have been released yesterday.”
After
Broadway, Manilow says he’ll continue doing weekend gigs on the road,
working on two albums and is most excited at the idea of getting a new
musical off the ground: “Harmony,” which follows a group of singers
through Weimar-era and then Nazi Germany.
Manilow
has written original songs for it and Bruce Sussman has contributed the
story and lyrics. “It’s the best work I’ve ever done ever in my life,”
Manilow says.
At 69, Manilow vows to keep on going.
“Yeah,
I’m old as the hills and you would think I’d be out to pasture
someplace because I’ve done everything, but nothing has changed,” he
says. “I’m still hungry. I’ve still got a million ideas. I’m still
strong and ready to create.”

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