A rumor has been doing the rounds online asking whether Barry Manilow is dead, and it says more about the internet than it does about the singer. Manilow is alive, speaking for himself, and sounding bruised but stubborn after what he called a 'very depressing visit' with his surgeon.

In brief, he has postponed the first run of his 'Once Before I Go' arena tour dates scheduled from Feb. 27 through March 17 while he recovers from lung cancer surgery. He says he still cannot sing more than three songs in a row without stopping, despite using a treadmill three times a day.

The blunt medical message, as he relayed it, was that his lungs are not ready for 90‑minute shows and that he 'won't make it through' if he tries to push on. This is not diva theatrics — it is an 82‑year‑old man being told to sit down.

Manilow told fans on Instagram that he had convinced himself he could muscle his way back in time for the arena dates, then watched that certainty evaporate in the surgeon's office. 'He looked at me and then he looked at the floor,' Manilow wrote, before quoting the doctor's warning about a full-length show.​

He announced that the concerts from Feb. 27 to March 17 will be rescheduled. The timing matters because an arena tour is not a cozy theater run, it is loud, physically demanding, and built around the unromantic grind of travel and repeated 90-minute performances.

Barry Manilow offered an update as he recovers from lung cancer surgery.https://t.co/R4s7fapzjJ

For readers outside the US, the other piece of the schedule is hisLas Vegas residency, the modern entertainment arrangement where an artist plays multiple dates at the same venue rather than moving city to city. Manilow has been performing at the Westgate Las Vegas, and he had already postponed some of those shows earlier this year.

Even now, his doctor is apparently offering a narrow sliver of hope on the calendar. Manilow wrote that he could 'likely' do the Vegas shows at the very end of March, with dates including March 26, 27 and 28, then April 2, 3 and 4.​

The latest delay sits on top of a health story Manilow chose to narrate in plain language months ago. In December 2025, he told fans that an MRI found a 'cancerous spot' on his left lung that needed to be removed.

He said doctors did not believe it had spread and that he was taking tests to confirm their diagnosis.​ He also tried to soften the fear with a joke that felt very Barry Manilow, promising 'No chemo. No radiation.

Source: International Business Times UK