TANGO world champions Vincent Simone and Flavia Cacace were too busy for the 2013 stretch of Strictly Come Dancing, and you can see why on the evidence of Dance 'Til Dawn.

No sooner had they finished their Midnight Tango tour at the Leeds Grand last August than thoughts were turning to a follow-up.

If you've been tango'ed once, then be prepared to be tango'ed once again, although there are plenty of other dance styles in a show "straight from the golden age of Hollywood" song-and-dance movies and crime capers. The spirit of Fred and Ginger, Gene and Cyd, Bogart and Bacall, is evoked in a story by Ed Curtis built around "Sadie Strauss and Bobby Burns in the Fall's most highly anticipated movie sensation, Dance 'Til Dawn'", whose movie poster forms the stage curtain.

Sadie (Flavia Cacace) is contracted to making movies with Bobby Burns but her heart would prefer to make moves with Vincent Simone's Tony Deluca. Meanwhile, Abbie Osmon's fabulous singer Lana Clemenza, a cross between Marilyn Monroe and Jessica Rabbit in Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, needs to get her hands on incriminating photographic evidence of her fling with Bobby.

She goes to private dick Tommy Dubrowski (Teddy Kempner), but he plays hard ball while keeping the audience up to speed in his role as the sly, dryly humorous narrator: always essential to movies of this type.

Vincent and Flavia cannily repeat the best ingredients of Midnight Tango within their movie pastiche. They provide the dazzling choreography and hot dance duets,and the production team are back in place: director and co-choreographer Karen Bruce, set designer Morgan Large and lighting designer James Whiteside. Vicky Gill's costume designs are stunning, and equally important to the show's success are the ensemble dancers in particular the beautiful singing of Oliver Darley. How right his character should be called The Voice.

Dance 'Til Dawn, Vincent Simone & Flavia Cacace, Leeds Grand Theatre, until Saturday. Box office: 0844 848 2700 or leedsgrandtheatre.com