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Engelbert Humperdinck on October 17 at 7:30 p.m.

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The “King of Romance” performs an intimate concert of classic love songs, including cuts from his latest duets album

The Deal

  • $38 for one ticket for front balcony seating (up to $82 value)
  • $48 for one ticket for side orchestra seating (up to $92 value)
  • View the seating chart

Engelbert Humperdinck

  • How you know Engelbert Humperdinck: as the crooner who for years contended with Tom Jones for the crown of Las Vegas lounge
  • Who won that contest: hard to say, but Humperdinck took the title of the “King of Romance”
  • Where he got “Engelbert Humperdinck”: he borrowed it from a 19th-century German opera composer
  • Modern Humperdinck’s classics: “After the Lovin’,” “Release Me,” “The Last Waltz”
  • His most recent release: Engelbert Calling, a double-album of duets with an all-star lineup of pop, rock, country, and opera stars, recorded across two years and four cities
  • What you’ll get on his latest tour: a career-spanning set of time-tested favorites, plenty of tracks from Engelbert Calling, and tingling sensations as a master showman shows Cupid who’s boss

Need To Know Info

Promotional value expires Oct 17, 2017. Limit 8/person. Valid only for option purchased. Refundable only on day of purchase. Must purchase together to sit together. Merchant is issuer of tickets - discount reflects current ticket prices, which may change. ADA seating cannot be guaranteed; contact box office prior to purchase for availability. Ticket value includes all fees. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services. Learn about Strike-Through Pricing and Savings

About Engelbert Humperdinck

It's in the tiny sixth percentile of theaters built in the US before the year 1900, and there's a good chance its elegance will outshine those erected in the year 2100. The noble brick facade. The sash windows bordered by painted wood. The cast-iron parapet at the center of the roof. But it's not just the architecture that made Tarrytown Music Hall's 1980 inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places seem long overdue. It also possesses a rich history. Famous figures such as the Rockefellers and Vanderbilts patronized the theater in its early days, when the Tarrytown was one of the first venues to usher in the dawn of cinema. During the venue's "Millionaire's Colony" era, the stage even played home to Teddy Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, who regaled the crowd with speeches and their famous plate-spinning act.

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