New York Post

In Tune & walking tall

- By FRANK SCHECK

YOU can hardly blame Tommy Tune for being a little selfcongra­tulatory in “Taps, Tunes & Tall Tales,” his new show at Feinstein’s at Loews Regency. After all, the 6foot6 performer, director and choreograp­her (“Grand Hotel,” “The Will Rogers Follies”) racked up nine Tony Awards and just about every other theatrical honor during his halfcentur­y career. The New York Landmarks Conservanc­y even designated him a “Living Landmark.”

And yet an air of melancholy permeates the proceeding­s, which begin with Leiber and Stoller’s “I’ve Got Them Feelin’ Too Good Today Blues.” The 73yearold hasn’t staged a Broadway musical since 1994’s shortlived “The Best Little Whorehouse Goes Public,” and it’s our loss.

One of the show’s most moving segments is his descriptio­n of being onstage with Charles “Honi” Coles when the late, great tap dancer suffered a devastatin­g stroke. He recounts how he recently lost his precious theatrical archives to Hurricane Sandy, triumphant­ly adding, “I don’t need proof, I have the truth.” And he brings a real poignancy to KurtWeill’s nostalgic “September Song,” wittily followed by Green Day’s “Wake Me Up When September Ends.”

For all that wistfulnes­s, Tune— wearing a bright red suit that only he (or Santa) can pull off— exudes an infectious joy, especially when he elegantly dances on what he describes as “the world’s tiniest tap stage.” When he climbs a ladder to sing “Up on the Roof” his head grazes the ceiling, as if he can barely be contained, and “Raindrops Keep Falling onMy Head” is permeated with a sunny optimism.

There’s a personal element to nearly every song he sings. Boasting about landing a job in the chorus of “Irma la Douce” on the very first day he arrived fromhis native Texas 50 years ago, he sings Carol Hall’s “I’m Leaving Texas.” He pays tribute to his “My One and Only” costar Twiggy, reportedly the love of his life, with a sweetly crooned “I Remember You.” And his descriptio­n of the end of a longterm relationsh­ip is accompanie­d by a tender “I’ve Grown Accustomed to His Face.”

Accompanie­d by pianist Michael Biagi, his musical director for 37 years, Tune’s personalit­y is best summed up in his rendition of “Heart” from “Damn Yankees”:

“You gotta have heart/All you really need is heart,” he sings. Well, that and a whole lot of talent as well.

 ??  ?? Tommy Tune, 73, has been designated a “Living Landmark.”
Tommy Tune, 73, has been designated a “Living Landmark.”

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