Barbara Mandrell (born December 25, 1948, Houston, Texas, U.S.) is an American musician, ranked as one of country music’s most popular performers in the late 1970s and ’80s. Mandrell was also a successful actress, making regular appearances on television programs and starring in films and commercials.
Mandrell began singing and playing musical instruments in early childhood; the first instrument that she learned to play was the accordion. She made her professional debut at a young age on a California television show. She had mastered the steel guitar by age 11. After seeing her perform at a trade show in Chicago, country musician Joe Maphis invited her to play at the Showboat Hotel in Las Vegas. Maphis subsequently became a major influence in her professional life. In her teens she performed on The Johnny Cash Show and toured with a number of country music legends, including Johnny Cash, Patsy Cline, and George Jones. She then toured internationally with her parents as part of the Mandrell Family Band.
In the late 1960s Mandrell graduated from high school, married, and retired from music. While her husband was deployed overseas in the navy, however, she went to live with her parents in Nashville, where her passion for music was reignited. She decided to pursue a career as a country singer, with her father as her manager. In 1969 she signed a contract with Columbia Records and released her first single with the studio, “I’ve Been Loving You Too Long (to Stop Now),” a remake of a song by American singer-songwriter Otis Redding. Her next single, “Do Right Woman, Do Right Man” (1971), a song originally made famous by American singer Aretha Franklin, reached number 17 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart. Mandrell released her first studio album, Treat Him Right, in 1971; it included several of her previous singles in addition to other cover songs. With the follow-up release of the single “Tonight My Baby’s Coming Home” (1971), she had her first top 10 solo hit. Other albums soon followed, including A Perfect Match (1972), The Midnight Oil (1973), and This Time I Almost Made It (1974).
In 1975 Mandrell ended her contract with Columbia and joined the ABC/Dot record label (later ABC); her first album with ABC/Dot was This Is Barbara Mandrell (1976). The album includes the track “Standing Room Only,” which had been released as a single the year before and peaked at number five on the Billboard chart. In the years that followed, Mandrell had multiple chart-topping songs, including “Sleeping Single in a Double Bed” (1978), her first number one hit, and “(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don’t Want to Be Right” (1979), which also peaked at number one on the charts. Her other number one hits were “Years” (1979), “I Was Country When Country Wasn’t Cool” (1981), “ ’Till You’re Gone” (1982), and “One of a Kind Pair of Fools” (1983).
In 1979 and 1981 Mandrell won the female vocalist of the year award from the Country Music Association. From 1981 to 1985 and again in 1987 she captured the favorite female country music vocalist award from the American Music Awards. She also won two Grammy Awards, the first in 1983 for best inspirational performance for “He Set My Life to Music,” and the second in 1984, with American gospel music singer and television host Bobby Jones, for best soul gospel performance by a duo or group for “I’m So Glad I’m Standing Here Today.” She continued to produce albums through the late 1980s and early 1990s. In 1994 she released It Works for Me, the 27th—and final—studio album of her career. In 2009 she was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.
Mandrell also made television appearances on and off throughout her music career and took up acting more seriously in the late 1990s. From 1980 to 1982 Mandrell and her sisters, Irlene and Louise, starred in a television variety show called Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sisters. In 1993 Mandrell appeared in an episode of the television series Empty Nest. In 1997 she cowrote, coproduced, and starred in Get to the Heart: The Barbara Mandrell Story, a made-for-television adaptation of her best-selling autobiography, Get to the Heart: My Story (1990; cowritten with George Vecsey). She subsequently appeared in a number of television shows and made-for-television movies, including Stolen from the Heart (2000).