Tommy Tune | |
|---|---|
Tune in 1977 | |
| Born | Thomas James Tune (1939-02-28)February 28, 1939 (age 86) Wichita Falls, Texas, U.S. |
| Education | Lon Morris College University of Texas, Austin(BFA) University of Houston(MFA) |
| Occupations |
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| Years active | 1965–present |
| Website | http://www.tommytune.com/ |
Thomas James Tune[1] (born February 28, 1939[2]) is an American actor, dancer, singer, theatre director, producer, and choreographer. Over the course of his career, he has won tenTony Awards, theNational Medal of Arts, and a star on theHollywood Walk of Fame.
Tune was born inWichita Falls, Texas, to oil rig worker, horse trainer, and restaurateur Jim Tune and Eva Mae Clark along with his sister, Gracey. He attendedMirabeau B. Lamar High School, Houston and theMethodist-affiliatedLon Morris College inJacksonville, Texas. He studied dance underPatsy Swayze in Houston.[3] He also studied dance with Kit Andree in Boulder, Colorado. He went on to earn hisBachelor of Fine Arts in Drama from theUniversity of Texas at Austin in 1962 and hisMaster of Fine Arts in Directing from theUniversity of Houston. Tune later moved to New York to start his career.[4]
Tune stands a lanky 6 feet6+1⁄2 inches (199.4 cm) tall, and at first he found his height to be a disadvantage when auditioning for roles, as he would tower over potential co-stars. He wore horizontally striped shirts to auditions, dipped extra low when he did pliés and learned to dance upstage ("I'd look shorter that way. It's a law of perspective") to try to overcome it.[5]
In 1965, Tune made hisBroadway debut as a performer in the musicalBaker Street. He gained national attention in 1969 when TV producerGreg Garrison hired him as a specialty dancer and assistant choreographer forThe Dean Martin Show and its summer replacement series,Dean Martin PresentsThe Golddiggers.
Tommy Tune became well known behind the scenes as a reliable dance expert. In 1978, when the musical-comedy revueHellzapoppin starringJerry Lewis andLynn Redgrave was having an out-of-town tryout, Tune was called in three weeks before the show's Broadway bow: he arrived in Boston on a Saturday to debut in a dance number on the following Monday.[6] Tune's contribution came too late to save the show, which closed less than a week later when a plan to televiseHellzapoppin suddenly fell through.
Tune's first Broadway directing and choreography credits were for the original production ofThe Best Little Whorehouse in Texas in 1978. His direction ofMaury Yeston'sNine in 1982, which also won the Tony for Best Musical, garnered him his first Tony for direction of a musical. He has gone on to direct and/or choreograph eight Broadway musicals. He directed a new musical titledTurn of the Century, which premiered at theGoodman Theatre in Chicago on September 19, 2008, and closed on November 2, 2008.[7]

Off-Broadway, Tune has directedThe Club andCloud Nine. Tune toured the United States in theSherman Brothers musicalBusker Alley in 1994–1995, and in the stage adaptation of the filmDr. Dolittle in 2006.[8][9]
Tune is the only person to winTony Awards in the same categories (Best Choreography and Best Direction of a Musical) in consecutive years (1990 and 1991), and the first to win in four categories. He has won ten Tony Awards, including a Lifetime Achievement Award in 2015.
Tune appeared in a 1975 TV special titledWelcome to the "World" along withLucie Arnaz andLyle Waggoner to promote the opening ofSpace Mountain atWalt Disney World. His film credits include Ambrose Kemper inHello, Dolly! (1969), directed byGene Kelly and starringBarbra Streisand,The Boy Friend (1971) withTwiggy, andMimì Bluette... fiore del mio giardino (1976) withShelley Winters andMonica Vitti. He also appeared briefly onMister Rogers' Neighborhood in 1988.[10][11]
Tune released his first record album,Slow Dancin', in 1997 on theRCA label featuring a collection of his favorite romantic ballads. In 1999, he made hisLas Vegas debut as the star ofEFX at theMGM Grand Las Vegas.[12]
Tune staged an elaborate musical entitledPaparazzi for theHolland America Line cruise ship the Oosterdam in 2003.[13] He works often with The Manhattan Rhythm Kings, for example touring in a Big Bandrevue entitledSong and Dance Man andWhite Tie and Tails (2002).[14]
Tune performed in his musical revue,Steps in Time: A Broadway Biography in Song and Dance, in Boston in April 2008 and continuing in various venues from Bethesda, Maryland in January 2009 to California in February 2009.[15][16][17]
The Tommy Tune Awards, presented annually byTheatre Under The Stars (TUTS), honor excellence in high school musical theatre in Houston. The current home of the Tommy Tune Awards is the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts in Houston, Texas.[18]
Tune appeared asArgyle Austero in the revived fourth and fifth seasons ofArrested Development onNetflix. In 2015, he made a return to the New York stage as a featured performer in City Center's staged concertEncores!. He was featured in two numbers inLady, Be Good!; his first act number was the Gershwin standard "Fascinating Rhythm."[19]
In the eighteenth episode of the sixth season ofThe Simpsons, "A Star Is Burns," the citizens of Springfield are invited to make their own movies for a town film festival.Mr. Burns's film, "A Burns for All Seasons," features Tune's name in the credits, playing the role ofWaylon Smithers.
Before leaving Texas in the 1960s for a Broadway career in New York, Tune worked with Mary Highsmith (mother of novelistPatricia Highsmith) at the Point Summer Theatre. In a letter to her daughter, Highsmith referred to Tune as her "adopted boy" whom she called "Romano." Tune later praised Highsmith for helping him develop his talents: "She was an opening for me; she opened a little bit of my tight fabric so that I might peer through."[20] When not performing, he used to run an art gallery inTribeca that featured his own work. As of 2014, it is no longer open.[21][22]
In 1997, Tune's memoir,Footnotes, was published. In it, he wrote about what drives him as a performer, choreographer, and director and reminisced about his days withTwiggy inMy One and Only; as well as meeting and working with his many idols. He further wrote about being openly gay in the world of theater; about losing his partner, choreographer David Steiger Wolfe, to AIDS in 1994, and about the unhappy ending of his relationship withA Chorus Line actor Michel Stuart.[23] He also described a woman whom he did not name but who he said was the "love of [his] life," and some media speculated that the description he gave appeared to fitTwiggy.[24]
In September 2021, Tommy Tune was elected the honorary president of theAmerican Guild of Variety Artists, the labor union for non-actor stage performers.[25]