Bookwaves on Cover to Cover

July 7, 2016: Barbara Cook

Cook showsBarbara Cook, the legendary Broadway star and author of a memoir, Then & Now, in conversation with host Richard Wolinsky.

Barbara Cook came to New York from Atlanta in the early 1950s and was the young ingenue in the musicals Flahooley and Plain & Fancy. Her first major role was as Cunegonde in Leonard Bernstein’s Candide. She made her greatest mark as the original Marian the Librarian opposite Robert Preston in the hit show, The Music Man, and followed it up as Amalia in the original production of She Loves Me, currently in a hit revival on Broadway. Along the way, she performed in several New York revivals, including The King and I, Show Boat and Carousel.

After a rough few years in which she battled weight issues and alcoholism, she emerged in the mid-1970s as one of America’s greatest interpreters of the American musical canon, with performances in cabaret venues, at the Met, and at Carnegie Hall. She also was featured on the Sondheim Follies in Concert albumin 1985, which has become a must-own for collectors of musical theatre recordings.

In 2010, she returned to Broadway in Sondheim by Sondheim, and received the Kennedy Center honors in 2011. At the age of 88, she continues to perform and record.

This interview was recorded at Barbara Cook’s home in New York. A 40-minute version can be found on the Area 941 Radio Wolinsky podcast.

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