No Maps on My Taps

1979 American film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

No Maps on My Taps is a 1979 American documentary film directed by George Nierenberg. The film recounts the history of tap dancing in America through the lives of three influential tap dancers, Chuck Green, Howard Sims, and Bunny Briggs, and showcases their dancing skills in a historic live performance at Smalls Paradise nightclub in Harlem.[1]

Written byLynn Rogoff
Produced byGeorge T. Nierenberg
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
No Maps On My Taps
Directed byGeorge Nierenberg
Written byLynn Rogoff
Produced byGeorge T. Nierenberg
StarringHoward Sims
Bunny Briggs
Chuck Green
Lionel Hampton
Music byLionel Hampton
Distributed byPBS
Direct Cinema Limited
Release date
  • 1979 (1979)
CountryUnited States
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The film is a wistful tribute to the careers of the performers and to an art form that at the time of filming seemed to be waning. According to a review in The New Yorker, "Ironically, “No Maps on My Taps,” whose participants regarded it as an elegy, helped to start a tap revival in the eighties. The film was shown in festival after festival. Its stars travelled with it and danced, live, after the screenings."[2]

The film won Lionel Hampton a News and Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Musical Direction in 1981.[3][4]

Structure

The dancers all recount their biographies and influences while rehearsing for a gala performance at a nightclub. Scenes of the performers dancing and kidding each other are interspersed with archival images and film footage of their early days. Also shown are archival film scenes featuring performances by John W. Bubbles and Bill Robinson. The film ends with a climactic dance-off in front of a live audience, with music provided by a jazz band fronted by Lionel Hampton.[5]

References

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