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NOSTALGIA/MANHATTAN RHYTHM KINGS
30's & 40's Vocal Trio

Known for their polished performances of American popular music from the ‘20s, ‘30s and ‘40s, the Manhattan Rhythm Kings have gained a large and enthusiastic following across the country.  While frequently compared with such musical greats as the Mills Brothers and Paul Whiteman’s Rhythm Boys, the trio has established a unique character of its own with a combination of close harmony singing, virtuosic instrumental work, and spectacular tap dancing.  The Rhythm Kings started performing together on the sidewalks of New York in 1980.  From there, these song and dance men graduated to playing some of the Big Apple’s top nightspots.

    It was their sparkling combination of song and dance that first attracted the attention of Broadway’s Tommy Tune.  In 1984 Mr. Tune asked the trio to help him assemble an act based on songs written by Fred Astaire.  Their collaboration continues today and the act has performed together in venues as diverse as Carnegie Hall and Atlantic City’s Trump Plaza, and a tour of the former Soviet Union, where they commanded standing ovations in Moscow, Tiblisi, and St. Petersburg.

    The King’s are favorites at symphony pops concerts and have performed with over 80 orchestras, including the Boston Pops, the National Symphony, and the orchestras of Baltimore, Detroit, St.Louis, Cincinnati, Seattle, Indianapolis, Dallas and Pittsburgh, among others.

    The Rhythm Kings have made numerous appearances on television, most notably Evening at Pops with John Williams, Tommy Tune and the Boston Pops, as well as the Emmy-award winning Celebrating Gershwin with conductor Michael Tilson Thomas.  In addition, they’ve starred in their own special for Nebraska Public Television, and were featured with Andrew Litton and the Dallas Symphony on their PBS special.  Other TV credits include The 1992 Tony Awards, the Today show, CBS, This Morning, The 1992 Kennedy Center Honors Awards, Entertainment Tonight, As the World Turns, as well as several appearances on the The Charles Grodin Show.

    The Manhattan Rhythm Kings have shared the stage with Bob Hope, George Burns, Leonard Bernstein, Judy Collins, Bette Midler and Gregory Hines.  They also appeared at Radio City Music Hall with the Rockettes as part of Peter Allen’s Easter Spectacular.

    In 1992 the Rhythm Kings were back on Broadway, this time indoors, at the Shubert Theatre. They were featured as Moose, Sam and Mingo, a trio of crooning bumpkins in the “new” Gershwin musical Crazy for You, winner of three Tony Awards, including Best Musical and Best Choreography.

    This past season the Kings kept a busy concert schedule, performing concerts with orchestras in Seattle, Detroit and Grand Rapids, among others. The group was featured at the Kennedy Center with Leonard Slatkin and the National Symphony Orchestra, along with Michael Feinstein and Patti Lupone. The King’s concert in Stowe, Vermont marked the 50th state the group has performed in.

    The Manhattan Rhythm Kings are proud to have performed with Tommy Tune in their latest song and dance review, “White Tie and Tails”, inaugurating New York City’s newest theater, the “Little Shubert”, on 42nd St. To quote John Simon of New York Magazine, “90 minutes you fervently wish would never end!” The group also recorded with Vince Giordano’s Nighthawks on the soundtrack of the Martin Scorsese film “The Aviator”, starring Leonardo Di Caprio, and recently appeared on Garrison Keillor’s “A Prairie Home Companion” The 2007-2008 season will see the King’s touring with Tommy Tune, in addition to concerts with orchestras and the World Cruise on the Crystal “Serenity”.

 

11/2007

 

MANHATTAN RHYTHM KINGS INDIVIDUAL BIOGRAPHIES

 

BRIAN M. NALEPKA

Brian M. Nalepka is one of the founding members of the Manhattan Rhythm Kings. In addition to his work with the “Kings”, Brian is a busy New York free-lance musician, having recorded seven albums with Leon Redbone, as well as numerous commercials and movie soundtracks. Brian was also a member of Woody Allen’s jazz band and Jim Cullum’s band in San Antonio, Texas. He has also performed in the Broadway show Chicago, as well as numerous shows at New Jersey’s Papermill Playhouse. Brian is married to People Magazine Reporter and Writer Mary Shaughnessy, who penned “Les Paul, An American Original”, published by William Morrow. They reside in Bloomfield, N.J., with their two lovely daughters, Ella and Nora.

 

HAL SHANE

Hal Shane has been a member of the Manhattan Rhythm Kings for 19 years. A native New Yorker, Hal got his start in show business at the age of four, when he began tap dance lessons.  He was soon tap dancing his way into the hearts of millions with his appearances on the “Ted Mack Amateur Hour, the “Jackie Gleason Show,” the “Children’s Hour” and the “Ed Sullivan Show”. Hal graduated from Hofstra University with a degree in music education and soon after was touring the U.S. and Canada as a classical guitarist and folk singer in his own one-man show. He went on to appear in the many national and regional theater productions including Guys and Dolls, Hit the Deck, Lady be Good, and Annie Get Your Gun. Hal is also a veteran of the Broadway stage, appearing in Very Good Eddie, Shenandoah, and Neil Simon’s They’re Playing Our Song where he understudied Robert Klein and Tony Roberts. His greatest thrills have come from working beside his childhood stage idols, and dancing with tap greats Tommy Tune and Gregory Hines.

 

MARC KESSLER     

Marc Kessler hails from Lambertville, a small town in southeast Michigan.  He graduated from the University of Michigan School of Music with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in musical theatre, and he now resides in New York City.  Marc has performed in national tours of 42nd Street as Billy Lawlor and Anything Goes, as well as regional productions of No, No, Nannette and George M! at the Goodspeed Opera House in Connecticut,  West Side Story at the North Shore Music Theatre in Massachusettes and The Secret Garden, Cabaret, and The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas at the Maine State Music Theatre.  Marc was able to follow the foot steps of one of his idols, James Cagney, by playing George Cohan in the musical George M! 

In New York, Marc appeared as Clyde Barrow in the musical Bonnie and Clyde, as well as two other workshop productions starring Sally Mayes (Honky Tonk Angels) and Sam Harris (The Jazz Singer).  He has played either Jinx or Sparky in productions of Forever Plaid at the Royal George Theatre (Chicago), Hilton Head Island (South Carolina), and Kennebunk (Maine).

 

 

 


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