Happy New Year from all of us at Tap Legacy™ Foundation to All our Friends and Supporters.
Gregory Hines in Rhythm Is My Business.
Performing at Broadway’s Best At Pops 1983, with the Boston pops Orchestra.
Preserving and Advancing the Art of Tap Dance.
By Tap Legacy
Happy New Year from all of us at Tap Legacy™ Foundation to All our Friends and Supporters.
Gregory Hines in Rhythm Is My Business.
Performing at Broadway’s Best At Pops 1983, with the Boston pops Orchestra.
By Tap Legacy
From the 1985 Columbia Pictures film White Nights, starring Gregory Hines Co-Founder of Tap Legacy™ Foundation and Mikhail Baryshnikov, Isabella Rossellini among others.
Directed by Taylor Hackford, it is a story of Treason, Love, Dance, and Homecoming and the Dance part is a must see to all dance enthusiasts, especially this solo tap number.
Watch the smoothness, Listen to the Rhythmic Musicality… Pure Joy… Enjoy…
By Tap Legacy
Gregory Hines, Co-Founder of the Tap Legacy™ Foundation in a rare 1995 video appearance with the legendary Dick Hyman on piano.
Hines on tap and Hyman on piano performing Blue Skies while aboard the Silver Sea cruise ship the Silver Cloud.
Enjoy the singing and the tap dancing … Rare and Raw!!
By Tap Legacy
The Dance as it is called, performed by two of the most talented and special Dance Masters having fun….
Mikhail Baryshnikov and Gregory Hines Co-Founder of Tap Legacy™ Foundation Inc Playing… Dancing… Just for the sheer joy of it….
Sit back and join them… Enjoy their Artistry, Smoothness and Togetherness…
Pairing the two in the 1985 Columbia Pictures Corp film White Nights was a historic moment for dance…. This is absolutely inspiring…
By Tap Legacy
Jelly’s Last Jam opened at the Virginia Theater on April 26, 1992 and closed on September 5, 1993 after 569 performances and 25 previews.
The musical was directed by George C. Wolfe, choreographed by Hope Clarke, with Tap choreography by Gregory Hines and Ted L. Levy.
Gregory Hines and Savion Glover played the older and younger Morton respectively. Enjoy….
By Tap Legacy
The legendary Tap Master and National Treasure Teddy Hale in a circa 1950 TV performance.
We know that Hale was a major influence on Gregory Hines and his dance style, and an influence on the styles of many up and coming tap dancers of his time.
Notice the breadth and smoothness of the act. Enjoy, watch and most importantly Listen to the Rhythmic Musicality of his taps.