Barry Manilow is getting real about what cosmetic surgery he has gotten over the years.
“I look fantastic, but I’m 100 years old, right?” the singer, 82, joked during an interview with the Los Angeles Times published on Wednesday, May 27. “I don’t know how that happened, by the way.”
Manilow revealed he doesn’t get “Botox or anything,” which prompted the outlet to ask if he had any previous “work done.”
“I must say, there was one time when we lived in L.A. that I did do a facelift,” he revealed. “But after that it’s just been a little here, a little there.”
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Manilow clarified that he considers getting “work done” as going under the knife for something extreme like a facelift.
“I only had one of those,” he continued of his previous facelift. “The rest of it — I see something falling down, sure, I’ll do that. I’m as vain as anybody else. One of my old friends, his mother said, ‘I always knew he was talented, but when did he get so handsome?’”
Manilow’s cosmetic confession comes five months after he revealed his lung cancer diagnosis.
“As many of you know, I recently went through six weeks of bronchitis followed by a relapse of another five weeks. Even though I was over the bronchitis and back on stage at the Westgate Las Vegas, my wonderful doctor ordered an MRI just to make sure that everything was OK,” he wrote via Instagram in December 2025. “The MRI discovered a cancerous spot on my left lung that needs to be removed. It’s pure luck (and a great doctor) that it was found so early. That’s the good news.”
The “Mandy” singer shared that he needed to undergo surgery to remove the cancerous spot. He did not need chemotherapy because it was caught early.
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“The doctors do not believe it has spread, and I’m taking tests to confirm their diagnosis. So, that’s it. No chemo. No radiation,” he continued. “Just chicken soup and I Love Lucy reruns.”
Amid his recovery, Manilow postponed his concerts. Three months later, Manilow shared that he is cancer-free.
“You just don’t even think about [how fragile life is]. And suddenly, you have lung cancer. But I’m still here,” Manilow told People in March. “I’m still here. I’m not all here — there’s part of me that isn’t here — they took out a part of me, and now I’ve got to figure out, ‘What do I do?’”



