Bette Midler

Bette Midler built a successful stage, screen and recording career on the basis of her self-styled “Divine Miss M” character — a sassy, hip-wagging classic “broad” archetype. She was quick with the comebacks, took no guff and had the tendency to burst into tunes from the Great American Songbook. Her initial stage fame and string of nostalgia-tinged hit albums in the 1970s eventually led to big screen success, with dramas like the pseudo Janis Joplin biopic “The Rose” (1980) and three-hankie chick flick “Beaches” (1990). She also lent appropriately outrageous variations of Miss M to comedies including “Ruthless People” (1986) and “The First Wives Club” (1996). In an era where stage, screen and recording crossover success was rare, on Liza Minnelli rivaled Midler when it came to endless concert tour schedules and triumph in all genres. But unlike Minnelli, Midler enjoyed a relatively drama-free ride, with the dynamic redhead scoring Grammys, Emmys, Golden Globes and two Oscar nominations along the way.

The Divine Infant M was born on Dec. 1, 1945 to a seamstress mother and housepainter father from Paterson, NJ. The couple had moved to Hawaii just prior to Midler’s birth, where her father landed a job at a Navy yard. The transplanted Jewish East Coasters were a bit of an oddity in the rural South Pacific sugar cane fields, but Midler developed a quick wit to combat her outsider status, winding up as a well-liked class clown and notorious performer. Along with two other girls, she formed a vocal trio that played school events and eventually began to get work entertaining at adult venues. As soon as the senior class president and valedictorian accepted her diploma in 1963, she headed right into the entertainment field, putting in a year in the Drama Department at the University of Hawaii before landing a small role in the film adaptation of James Michener’s “Hawaii” (1966).

Midler spent her first big paycheck on a move to New York City, NY, where after a short stint as a go-go dancer, she went to an open call for a national tour of "Fiddler on the Roof" and ended up in the Broadway cast, taking over the part of Tzeitel in February 1967 and staying with the role for three years. After a run as The Acid Queen in a Seattle Opera Association production of “Tommy,” Midler returned to New York, determined to focus on her singing career. After rave club reviews which took note of her powerful pipes, she was booked on all the top variety TV shows of the day. She took a 16-week engagement that electrified the towel-clad gay clientele of the Continental Baths, where Barry Manilow backed her on piano. It was at that time, that the larger-than-life persona of 'The Divine Miss M' – not to mention a loyal gay following – was born.

Atlantic Records signed Midler to a record deal and released her debut album, The Divine Miss M, in 1972. The bawdy, red-haired performer with the wide, toothy smile built her career on outrageousness, but also balanced the camp by interspersing a few tears for the human spirit amidst the sequins and fringes. Musically, her early work "nailed the nostalgia thing" with Andrews Sisters takeoffs – i.e. "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" – and 1960s girl-group numbers, as well as including blues and show tunes in her broad musical spectrum. The album went gold and won her the Grammy for Best New Artist. Midler developed a larger version of her earlier cabaret revue and performed “Clams on the Halfshell” at the Palace Theater, earning a Special Tony Award in 1974. On a complete roll, she spent nearly the next three years on national and international concert tours, wowing the gays and the straights who poured in to worship Ms. Divine.

Unfortunately, sales dropped off sharply for her third LP, Songs for the New Depression (1976), but she retained a loyal concert following and picked up her first Emmy as the star of "Bette Midler — Ol' Red Hair Is Back" (NBC, 1977). She made her first impact as a film actress in Mark Rydell's "The Rose" (1978), earning a Best Actress Oscar nomination for her portrayal of a high-strung, burned-out singer loosely based on Janis Joplin. The soundtrack LP went platinum in 1980, aided by the Top Ten title song which became a bonafide smash single. A Midler concert film and soundtrack entitled "Divine Madness" came out later that year, as did her first book, A View from a Broad, a humorous memoir of her first world tour. Midler was at the top of her game, but bad advice from her agent led her to take a screen role in the aptly named comedy "Jinxed!" (1982). She suffered greatly, warring with co-star Ken Wahl and director Don Siegel and ultimately serving as scapegoat when the picture flopped. The film's failure followed her firing of her back-up singers the Harlettes, who successfully sued and won a $2 million judgment. The twin debacles helped bring on a nervous breakdown, which kept her off the screen for four years, though she remained busy with concert work and TV specials.

Midler bounced back with a formidable focus on big screen comedies throughout the 1980s. Signed by Disney in 1986, she proved herself a deft, aggressive comedienne in a skein of profitable films beginning with the bright satire "Down and Out in Beverly Hills" (1986) and continuing through the enjoyable if forgettable "Outrageous Fortune" (1987) and "Big Business" (1988), in which she and Lily Tomlin each got to play identical twins. Probably the best of her movies in this period was the clever black comedy "Ruthless People" (1986), which hilariously paired her with Danny DeVito as a thoroughly despicable couple. She formed her own production company, All Girl Productions, and made her first foray into producing with the moderately successful "Beaches" (1988), co-starring alongside Barbara Hershey as a charismatic New York cabaret performer in a tale of the lifelong bond between girlfriends. Bette also performed the film’s theme, "The Wind Beneath My Wings," which became her first number one hit, won a Best Song Grammy – and along with “The Rose” – became one of her two most definitive numbers.

The studio, sensing it was on to something, cast her in two old-fashioned follow-up tearjerkers, but Jeffery Katzenberg's wrong-headed passion for "Stella" (1990) earned Premiere magazine's kiss of death: "A must to avoid." She fared somewhat better in Rydell's "For the Boys" (1992) as a World War II USO performer, a seemingly natural fit for Midler, based on her earlier success with the Andrews Sisters' material. The picture revealed a flair for drama not really tapped since "The Rose" and earned Midler a second Best Actress Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe win, but audiences avoided the big-budget musical like the plague. She next teamed with Woody Allen to portray a married couple for Paul Mazursky's "Scenes from a Mall" (1991), but it did not come close to Midler's earlier comedic success. Her outlandish appearance as a long-deceased witch in Disney's "Hocus Pocus" (1993) – suggesting a return to the zany fare that made Midler a bankable movie star seven years earlier – could not save the ghoulish, effects-laden bomb, deemed a discredit to Disney "family entertainment" by Leonard Maltin.

The year 1993 marked Midler’s overdue return to live concert performances with "Experience the Divine,” which was capped by a record-breaking 30-night stand at New York’s Radio City Music Hall. That same year, she gave a tour-de-force performance as Mama Rose in a TV remake of the musical classic "Gypsy" (CBS), which earned her a second Golden Globe Award. Midler returned to big screen comedy full-force when teaming with Diane Keaton and Goldie Hawn in Hugh Wilson's "The First Wives' Club" (1996), a film about women whose husbands have left them for younger beauties which – thanks to the collective star power of the threesome – became one of the surprise hits of the season. She also starred with Dennis Farina in "That Old Feeling" (1997), about a divorced couple whose romantic yearnings are rekindled at their daughter's wedding, as well as returned to the mic to earn an Emmy for "Bette Midler – Diva Las Vegas" (HBO, 1997). She garnered another Emmy nomination for her guest-turn as a secretary on the final episode of the long-running CBS series "Murphy Brown" (CBS, 1988-1998) in 1998, before kicking off the international “Divine Miss Millennium” tour the following year, welcoming in 2000 with a New Year’s Eve performance at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas, NV.

After a pair of box office failures with the Jacqueline Susann biopic "Isn't She Great?" (2000) and the pallid comedy "Drowning Mona" (2000), Midler agreed to headline a sitcom in an effort to revive her acting career. In “Bette” (CBS, 2000-01), she played a variation of herself — a showbiz veteran juggling the demands of career, marriage and motherhood. Despite initially positive reviews, ratings were so-so and negative gossip about behind-the-scenes problems plagued the series’ image. After dabbling in the executive producer role when she helped bring "The Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood" (2002) to the big screen, Midler reunited with former collaborator Barry Manilow to record Bette Midler Sings the Rosemary Clooney Songbook for Columbia Records. The album was a bit of a surprise hit and went gold, in addition to earning the pair a Grammy nod.

Midler spent the following year-plus back on the road with her “Kiss My Brass” concert tour and made a return to theaters in 2004 with her role as Bobbie Markowitz, a Jewish writer and recovering alcoholic in the remake of the cult classic "The Stepford Wives." Midler and Manilow recreated their previous album success with 2005’s Bette Midler Sings the Peggy Lee Songbook and Midler returned to the studio in 2006 to record Cool Yule, a Grammy-nominated album of pop holiday classics. Helen Hunt lured Midler back to the big screen to star as her biological mother in Hunt’s pet project, the comedic drama “Then She Found Me” (2008). That same year, the 62-year-old powerhouse began a two-year run of “Bette Midler: The Showgirl Must Go On” at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas.

  • Also Credited As:
    'The Divine Miss M', Bette Davis Midler, The Divine Miss M
  • Born:
    Bette Davis Midler on December 1, 1945 in Honolulu, Hawaii
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Singer, Producer, Go-go dancer, Cannery worker in a pineapple factory, Glove saleswoman, Typist
Family
  • Brother: Daniel Midler. Younger; born mentally impaired
  • Daughter: Sophie Frederica Alohilani Von Haselberg. Born Nov. 14, 1986; father, Martin Von Haselberg
  • Father: Fred Midler. Originally from Paterson, New Jersey and moved to Honolulu shortly before Midler was born; painted for the Navy while family was living in Hawaii; died in the late 1980s
  • Mother: Ruth Midler. Originally from Paterson, New Jersey and moved to Honolulu shortly before Midler was born; died in the late 1980s
  • Sister: Judith Midler. Older; killed in 1968 when she was hit by a taxi cab, while visiting New York to see Midler perform on Broadway in "Fiddler on the Roof"; Midler's debut album was dedicated to her
  • Sister: Susan Midler. Older
Significant Others
  • Companion: Aaron Russo. managed her early career
Education
  • Radford High School, Honolulu, HI, 1963
  • University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI, drama, 1965
Milestones
  • 1965 Moved to Hollywood for final shooting on "Hawaii"
  • 1966 Answered open call for a national company of "Fiddler on the Roof"; hired for the chorus of the Broadway production; took over the role of Tzeitel in February 1967 and remained in role for three years
  • 1966 Film debut in a bit part as a missionary's wife in "Hawaii"
  • 1966 Made New York stage debut in "Miss Nefertiti Regrets"
  • 1966 Moved to New York City; worked as a go-go dancer in a Union City, New Jersey club
  • 1970 Appeared in the Off-Broadway musical, "Salvation"
  • 1970 Began appearing at NYC's Continental Bathhouse with accompanist Barry Manilow
  • 1971 Performed in the Who's rock opera "Tommy" with the Seattle Opera Company
  • 1971 Signed contract with Atlantic Records
  • 1973 Released first major album, The Divine Miss M; produced by Barry Manilow
  • 1975 Provided the voice of Woody the Spoon on the PBS educational series "Vegetable Soup"
  • 1979 Appeared on Broadway in "Bette! Divine Madness"
  • 1979 Played the title role of a 1960s drug-addicted rock star, modeled after Janis Joplin, in Mark Rydell's "The Rose"; received first Best Actress Academy Award nomination
  • 1980 Made a concert film of her Broadway show, "Divine Madness"
  • 1982 Played Rip Torn's lounge-singer wife in "Jinxed!"; Midler reportedly clashed with co-star Ken Wahl and director Don Siegal
  • 1983 Reportedly suffered a nervous breakdown
  • 1984 TV producing debut, the HBO concert "Bette Midler: Art or Bust"
  • 1986 Continued her comeback with comic leads in "Ruthless People" (1986), "Outrageous Fortune" (1987) and "Big Business" (1988)
  • 1986 Returned to films after a four-year absence to star in the popular comedy "Down and Out in Beverly Hills"
  • 1988 Formed production company, All Girl Productions with Bonnie Bruckheimer-Martell and Margaret Jennings South
  • 1988 Produced first feature, "Beaches"; also co-starred as singer CC Bloom and performed the song "Wind Beneath My Wings"
  • 1989 First Number One hit on the pop charts, "The Wind Beneath My Wings" (from soundtrack of "Beaches")
  • 1991 Re-teamed with director Mark Rydell to play a USO entertainer in "For the Boys"; also produced; received second Best Actress Academy Award nomination
  • 1992 Saluted a retiring Johnny Carson on the final episode of "The Tonight Show" (NBC), during which she sang "One for My Baby (and One More for the Road)"; won an Emmy for the appearance
  • 1993 Performed her first concert tour in ten years, "Experience the Divine"; set a record-breaking 30-night stand at NYC's Radio City Music Hall
  • 1993 Portrayed Mama Rose in the CBS TV remake of the stage musical "Gypsy"
  • 1995 Made hilarious uncredited appearance in "Get Shorty"
  • 1996 Teamed with Goldie Hawn and Diane Keaton for the hit comedy "The First Wives Club"
  • 1997 Headlined the Emmy winning HBO special "Bette Midler in Concert: Diva Las Vegas"
  • 1997 With co-star Dennis Farina play two middle-aged former spouses who rekindle their romance in "That Old Feeling"
  • 1998 Earned an Emmy nomination for her guest appearance on the final episode of "Murphy Brown" (CBS)
  • 2000 Starred in her own short-lived CBS sitcom "Bette"
  • 2000 Co-starred in the comedy-mystery "Drowning Mona" opposite Danny De Vito
  • 2003 Teamed with Barry Manilow after a long-standing feud to record Bette Midler Sings the Rosemary Clooney Songbook
  • 2003 Toured her new show "Kiss My Brass" to sell-out crowds in the US; toured Australia in 2005
  • 2004 Starred in the Frank Oz remake of Bryan Forbes' 1975 cult classic, "The Stepford Wives"
  • 2005 Received a Grammy nomination for Bette Midler Sings the Peggy Lee Songbook; again produced by Barry Manilow
  • 2007 Signed a two-year deal to headline at Las Vegas' Caesar Palace, replacing Celine Dion
  • 2008 Performed "Bette Midler: The Showgirl Must Go On" at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas
  • 2008 Starred in "Then She Found Me" directed by Helen Hunt
  • As teenager was member of folksinging trio that toured Hawaiian army bases
  • Fired her entire musical entourage, including her backup group, the Harlettes, after the close of "Divine Madness"; was successfully sued for $2 million
  • Performed at the Improvisation, a New York club that showcased new talent
  • Worked in a pineapple cannery in Hawaii after leaving college

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