- He revived Rhythm Tap in mainstream culture in the 1980s and 1990s after it had seriously gone out of fashion
- He was an amazing improviser (just watch some of his stuff on YouTube for inspiration!)
- He started dancing semi-professionally aged 5, with his brother Maurice, and took lessons with Broadway choreographer Henry Le Tang, who taught people such as Bunny Briggs, Eleanor Powell, Sandman Sims and Debbie Allen
- He was inspired by some of the tap dance heavyweights, including Sammy Davis Jr and the Nicholas Brothers
- He has influenced many, many artists such as Savion Glover, Dianne Walker, Jane Goldberg, Ayodele Casel, Michelle Dorrance
- In 1988 he successfully petitioned ‘National Tap Dance Day’ in the US (25th of May, which happens to be Bill ‘Bojangles’ Robinson’s birthday), which has now morphed into International Tap Dance Day!
- He starred on Broadway, and in many films, including ‘White Nights’ (1985), ‘The Cotton Club’ (1984) and ‘Tap’ (1989), receiving a Tony Award in 1992 for the musical ‘Jelly’s Last Jam’ plus several other nominations.
- He created a fantastic documentary for PBS in 1989 on the history and culture of tap dance, called ‘Tap Dance America‘
- He was a great singer, fronting a rock band in the 70s and later performing with artists such as Luther Vandross
- In the late 90s he had his own sitcom ‘The Gregory Hines Show’, plus he had a recurring role on the popular sitcom ‘Will and Grace’
- In 2019, 16 years after his untimely death at the age of 57, the US Postal Service created a Gregory Hines Black Heritage postage stamp
Awesome.