Los Angeles -- Hours after telling a national TV audience he would, Barry Manilow took his newly won Emmy into the hospital with him Monday as a good-luck charm for his hip surgery.\nApparently it worked.\nManilow came through the operation "swimmingly" and then headed back to his Palm Springs home, his publicist, Carol Marshall, said Monday afternoon.\nManilow's win, for outstanding individual performance in a variety or music program, came as a bit of a surprise to the Emmy crowd -- and to himself.\n"He was excited. He didn't think he'd win," Marshall said.\nIn his acceptance speech, he excitedly told TV viewers that he was going to bring his statuette into the operating room.\nManilow's recovery and rehabilitation is expected to take six to eight weeks. Then the celebrated showman plans to jump back into his performance routine.\nHe will travel to Atlantic City for an Oct. 14 performance.\nHe is scheduled to appear in Chicago on Oct. 21, then it's back to his show at the Las Vegas Hilton on Nov. 8. He is in the middle of a four-year contract with the hotel.\nHis new album, "The Greatest Songs of the Sixties," is due out early November.\nManilow postponed the arthroscopic surgery -- to repair cartilage tears in both hips -- so he could attend the Emmys on Sunday night. He performed "Bandstand Boogie," the theme from Dick Clark's "American Bandstand," as part of a tribute to Clark during the show.
Barry Manilow's newly won Emmy proves a good-luck charm for the singer's hip surgery
Emmy winner will perform in Chicago, Las Vegas
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