Steven Wing & Brian Gens

Cabaret duo Steven Wing & Brian Gens return to The Bradstan Cabaret Series on August 23 at 7 p.m.!
Two voices, decades of chemistry, and a repertoire built for an intimate cabaret room. Steven Wing & Brian Gens return to The Bradstan stage at The Eldred Preserve with a duo-driven evening that moves effortlessly from standards to Broadway to contemporary ballads. If you love harmony, storytelling, and musical polishโthis is a Catskills night out that feels genuinely special.
5:30 p.m. doors open | 7 p.m. showtime
| BEFORE THE SHOW: Make a full evening of it at The Eldred Preserve! Cabaret ticket holders receive 15% off food* ordered before showtime in eitherย The Homestead dining roomย orย The Bradstan Cabaret Room. If you plan to dine in The Homestead dining room before the show, reservations are strongly recommended. To reserve your table, click here or call 845-557-8316. Guests are also welcome to arrive early in The Bradstan Cabaret Room, where doors open at 5:30 p.m., to enjoy cocktails and order from the Lounge menu. *Excluding beverages |
The Bradstan Cabaret Series features many other incredible performers! Explore the full lineup HERE.
ABOUT STEVEN & BRIAN

Steven Wing & Brian Gens are the definition of a true cabaret duo: two voices that lock in like they were designed to sing togetherโwarm, polished, and instantly connected to the room. Theyโve been performing together for 30 years, building a loyal following with shows that blend standards, Broadway, and contemporary ballads into a set that feels both classic and personal.
Their story is especially meaningful to The Bradstan: Wing and Gens began doing cabaret shows in the Nancy LaMott Room at the Bradstan Country Hotel in the Catskills in the 1990s, then brought their act to stages in New York City and Los Angeles, carrying that Catskills cabaret spirit into bigger markets.
What makes them work is the โduo advantageโ: harmony that lands cleanly, solo moments that still feel threaded together, and that cabaret-room intimacy where the audience isnโt just watchingโtheyโre in it. If you want a night that feels like the golden-era cabaret tradition, but with a repertoire that moves across genres instead of staying in a museum, this is it.