Tommy Tune - Famous Choreographer

Tommy Tune Net Worth

$20,000,000

Tommy Tune’s net worth is estimated to be around $20 million. The Famous Broadway star has achieved this impressive wealth through his career as an actor, singer, dancer, director, producer and choreographer directing eight musicals on Broadway and appearing in many award-winning productions and movies.

Key facts:

Here are five key achievements and facts about Tommy Tune:
  • Tommy Tune is a versatile artist who has achieved many accolades in the entertainment industry.
  • He made his Broadway debut in 1965 in Baker Street and went on to direct or choreograph eight musicals on Broadway.
  • Tommy Tune has starred in various Broadway productions including A Joyful Noise, How Now, Dow Jones, Seesaw, and Bye Bye Birdie.
  • He has also appeared in popular tv shows such as Nanny and the Professor, Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, The City, and Arrested Development.
  • In 1993, he was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for Live Performance and has won many Tony Awards and Drama Desk Awards.
These achievements show that Tommy Tune is a highly talented and successful artist in multiple roles including actor, singer, dancer, director, producer, and choreographer.

Basic Information About Tommy Tune

CategoryCelebrities β€Ί Actors
ProfessionsActor, Choreographer, Dancer, Theatre Director, Performer, Singer, Theatrical producer
Net worth$20,000,000
Date of birth1939-02-28 (85 years old)
Place of birthWichita Falls
NationalityUnited States of America
Curiosities and TrademarksSeemingly effortless movements
Towering height and lanky frame
GenderMale
Height6 ft 6 in (1.99 m)
Social Mediaβ†—οΈŽ Wikipedia β†—οΈŽ IMDb

Famous Network of Actors with Similar Net Worth

What Movie Awards did Tommy Tune win?


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Golden Globe

Golder Raspberry

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Tommy Tune roles

Movie / Series Role
Hello, Dolly!Ambrose Kemper
Nanny and the ProfessorCarnival Barker / ... 2 episodes, 1971
Arrested DevelopmentArgyle Austero 4 episodes, 2013-2019
The Bold and the BeautifulSelf 2 episodes, 1996
CBS News Sunday MorningSelf 1 episode, 2017
The Tonight Show with Jay LenoSelf 1 episode, 1992

Tommy Tune's Quotes

  • My idea of gambling was walking through Central Park, whistling show tunes.

Tommy Tune's photos

Interesting Facts about Tommy Tune

  1. Recipient of a (USA) National Medal of Arts. [2003]
  2. Has won nine Tony Awards: in 1974, as Best Supporting or Featured Actor (Musical), for Seesaw"; in 1980, as Best Choreographer (with collaborator Thommie Walsh) for "A Day in Hollywood/A Night in the Ukraine"; in 1982, as Best Director (Musical) for "Nine"; in 1983, as Best Actor (Musical) and Best Choreographer (also shared with Walsh) for "My One and Only"; in 1990, as Best Director (Musical) and Best Choreographer, for "Grand Hotel, The Musical"; and in 1991 as Best Director (Musical) and Best Choreographer for "The Will Rogers Follies". He was also nominated five other times, for a total of 14 nominations: in 1979, as Best Director (Musical), shared with Peter Masterson, and Best Choreographer for "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas"; in 1980, as Best Director (Musical) for "A Day in Holywood/A Night in the Ukraine"; in 1982, as Best Choreographer for "Nine"; and in 1983, as Best Director (Musical), again shared with Walsh, for "My One and Only". His additional record of winning four Tony Awards in four different categories has recently been tied by Harvey Fierstein.
  3. Despite the fact that he and Sandy Duncan had worked so well together on stage in "My One and Only", they failed to get a theatre adaptation of the Judy Garland and Fred Astaire movie classic Easter Parade (1948) off the ground in the late 1990s. This was primarily because Irving Berlin's daughters (who control his estate) were unhappy with workshop productions.
  4. He majored in drama at the University of Texas (BFA) and the University of Houston (MFA).
  5. Recipient of eight Drama Desk Awards, two Obie Awards, Dance Magazine's Award for Lifetime Achievement; the 1990 American Dance Award (presented by the National Academy of Dance); the 1990 Drama League Musical Theatre Award for Direction and Choreography; the Astaire Award in both 1990 and 1991; the George Abbott Award for Lifetime Achievement, the University of Texas' Distinguished Alumnus Award; and the Jean Cocteau International Style Award. He was also named to the Top 10 International Best Dressed List of 1992.
  6. In 1991, he was inducted by Gwen Verdon into the Theatre Hall of Fame in Broadway's Gershwin Theatre, and three years later was honored with his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
  7. His dream of playing Las Vegas finally came true in 1999 when he debuted as the star of EFX at the MGM Grand Hotel.
  8. Once worked as assistant choreographer on television's The Dean Martin Show (1965).
  9. In Houston, Texas, the Tommy Tune Award recognizes excellence in high school musical theater.
  10. His autobiography "Footnotes" (1997) details his personal relationships with stage manager David Wolfe, who passed away from AIDS in 1994, and actor/costumer Michel Stuart (1943-1997), with whom Tune lived for seven years.
  11. Tommy and Sandy Duncan tried to put a musical version of the classic MGM movie Easter Parade (1948) together but it never got off the ground. What they did do is star in "Two for the Show" in 1998. They presented a double bill of their musical touring acts into a single evening. Tommy took the first act and Sandy Duncan most of the second act. They then joined for the big finale which showed some of their numbers from the abandoned "Easter Parade". Tune worked with Duncan before -- in "My One and Only" in 1985 and, before that, as a 19-year-old dance partner to the 12-year-old Duncan in Texas.
  12. Attended and graduated from Lamar High School in Houston, Texas.
  13. Sister, Gracey Tune, is an award-winning dancer and owner of a popular multi-arts studio in Fort Worth, Texas.
  14. He was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for Live Theatre at 1777 Vine Street in Hollywood, California on August 12, 1993.
  15. Was the mentor of Broadway actress/singer Susan Egan. While performing in the revival of "Bye, Bye Birdie", he told her how much he loved the way she sang her first song and would often sing along with her as a vocal warm-up while he was in a costume change. The song was "How Lovely to Be a Woman". Although Egan considered that to be a great compliment, she could not get the image of him singing that song in his underwear backstage out of her mind.
  16. Before Tommy Tune could walk, he was choreographing his movements! In elementary school, when neighborhood friends would go from one child's house to play cops and robbers and another child's house to play cowboys and Indians, they would come to Tommy's house to put on a show. The family had a corner house with a courtyard, and his folks would put out blankets on the ground and watch. Tommy Tune produced shows on his porch for three or four seasons, and of course, later, many big college productions.

References & Fact Checks βœ…

1/ Filename: tommy-tune-directing-cloud-9-30d8sz8s.jpg
  • Checked: βœ… Yes (2023-07-02 16:37:32)
  • Source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Tommy_Tune,_directing_cloud_9.jpg
  • Original Source: https://www.loc.gov/item/2020733670/
  • Author: Bernard Gotfryd
  • Date taken: 1982

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