Tony Bennett’s Son, Danny, on His Father’s Final Shows

By A.D. Amorosi, Variety | August 30th, 2021

There will be no more shows for the 90-year-old singer, but Alzheimer’s is not the reason


Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett perform at the 57th Annual Grammy Awards at Staples Center in Los Angeles on Sunday, Feb. 8, 2015. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times/TNS). For article on Tony Bennett’s final performances

Danny Bennett on his father Tony Bennett’s final performances: why the legend’s Radio City Music Hall Shows went so well – and why there won’t be any more.


It’s been a week since standard-bearing crooner Tony Bennett and his collaborator Lady Gaga ripped triumphantly through two sold-out shows at Radio City Music Hall in New York City, the first of which celebrated his 95th birthday, complete with a Gaga-led, congratulatory sing-along. And Danny Bennett’s head is still spinning.

From his father’s usual concert entrance pose with arms held high and spread wide to the complexly nuanced manner in which he addressed each syllable, the singer was at his best during those Radio City Music Hall shows.

“Tony always takes chances,” says Danny Bennett, 66, his father’s manager for the last 40-plus years, and the man who helped make the Astoria-born saloon singer a household name for the MTV generation. “It is, as he has always said – when others zig, he zags.”

Last hurrahs – Tony Bennett’s final performances

The two Radio City concerts, dubbed “One Last Time: An Evening with Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga” – and held in anticipation of the platinum pair’s second duets album, “Love for Sale” – were billed as Bennett’s final New York City shows, with additional concerts to follow along the East Coast.

Sadly, however, the Radio City Music Hall shows will be Bennett’s last anywhere, as the announcement came Thursday morning that Bennett’s short run of fall 2021 tour dates had been canceled. The brief casino tour was to have consisted of pre-pandemic concert dates that had been rescheduled for 2021, starting in September and ending in December.

“There won’t be any additional concerts,” his son makes clear. “This was a hard decision for us to make, as he is a capable performer. This is, however, doctors’ orders. His continued health is the most important part of this, and when we heard the doctors – when Tony’s wife, Susan heard them – she said, ‘Absolutely not.’ He’ll be doing other things, but not those upcoming shows. It’s not the singing aspect but, rather, the traveling. Look, he gets tired. The decision is being made that doing concerts now is just too much for him. We don’t want him to fall on stage, for instance – something as simple as that.”

But, emphasizes Danny, “We’re not worried about him being able to sing. We are worried, from a physical standpoint … about human nature. Tony’s 95.”

Out with a bang

It has been, in Danny Bennett’s estimation, an exciting month. Along with dropping a video for “I Get a Kick Out of You” with Lady Gaga and announcing their tribute album to the songs of Cole Porter, the shows at Radio City Music Hall were, in Danny’s words, “triumphant. He sounded amazing for a man of any age.”

Danny Bennett tells a funny story of how fans of his father approached Danny during the Radio City Music Hall shows. In 2020, the family revealed that Tony Bennett had had Alzheimer’s disease since 2016, a debilitating form of age-related dementia characterized by progressive memory loss. But some fans were certain the evidence showed otherwise.

“They kept telling me that we lied, that there was no way Tony had Alzheimer’s,” says Danny with a soft chuckle. “I assured everyone that he does. … Yes, here he was, at 95, and still singing like this: strong, emotive. But still, it is a complex question: how can he do this?


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“My answer is that this is where he has lived his whole life and where he is most happy – on the stage, making music. Dealing as we have with Alzheimer’s for the last four-five years, it’s cognitive. He has short-term memory loss. That, however, does not mean that he doesn’t still have all this stored up inside of him. He doesn’t use a Teleprompter. He never misses a line. He hits that stage, and goes. Tony may not remember every part of doing that show. But, when he stepped to the side of the stage, the first thing he told me was: ‘I love being a singer.’”

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