Here's who won album of the year since the Grammys began in 1959, from Henry Mancini to Taylor Swift.
Barbra Streisand's memoir 'My Name Is Barbra' is nominated for Audiobook and Autobiography of the Year at the 2025 Audie Awards.
By Paul Grein Barbra Streisand’s My Name Is Barbra is in the running for audiobook of the year at the 2025 Audie Awards. Winners across 28 competitive categories will be revealed on March 4 in New York.
After an array of false starts and high-profile planned productions that collapsed thanks to financing issues and other woes (including a 1996 tour with pop star Debbie Gibson that was aiming for New York), “Funny Girl” finally landed back on Broadway in 2022 for the first time in nearly 60 years.
This year the nominees in the audiobook, narration and storytelling category include Jimmy Carter, George Clinton and the Beatles.
On Jan. 22, the Audio Publishers Association announced the finalist list for the 30th Annual Audie Awards. The awards are the premier awards program for distinction in audiobooks and spoken-word entertainment,
How many Broadway shows has Barbra Streisand been in? Barbra Streisand has appeared on Broadway in 2 shows. How many West End shows has Barbra Streisand been in? Barbra Streisand has appeared on ...
NEW YORK (AP) — Barbra Streisand, Kate McKinnon and Elton John are among the nominees for the 30th annual Audie Awards, presented by the Audio Publishers Association. Streisand's self-narrated “My Name Is Barbra” is a finalist for best audio book and ...
Barbra Streisand, Kate McKinnon and Elton John are among the nominees for the 30th annual Audie Awards, presented by the Audio Publishers Association in the United States. Streisand’s self-narrated My Name Is Barbra is a finalist for best audio book and for best memoir/autobiography.
NEW YORK — Barbra Streisand, Kate McKinnon and Elton John are among the nominees for the 30th annual Audie Awards, presented by the Audio Publishers Association. Streisand’s self-narrated ...
Sometimes you’re lucky enough to see something and know that it’s special. I had that experience last summer when I saw, Oh, Mary! on Broadway. I had it again last weekend when I attended the second week of Diamond Stage Company’s inaugural production of I’ll Eat You Last: A Chat with Sue Mengers.
Having landed more than a dozen hits – “Midnight Blue,” “Don’t Cry Out Loud,” “You Should Hear How She Talks About You,” and “Through the Eyes of Love” among them – on the Billboard charts in her long recording career,