Metro

7th inning kvetch

Yankees fans were stunned after beloved “God Bless America” singer Ronan Tynan got himself tossed from last night’s American League Championship Series game after making an anti-Semitic remark.

The famous Irish tenor — who has become a iconic staple of New York Yankees playoff games for much of this decade — admitted making the slur Thursday to a Jewish woman who was looking to buy an a apartment in his East Side building, a team spokeswoman said.

The slur came while Dr. Gabrielle Gold-von Simson, an NYU Medical Center pediatrician, was inspecting the building with a real estate agent.

The agent joked to Tynan: “Don’t worry — they are not Red Sox fans.”

Tynan responded by saying: “I don’t care about that, as long as they are not Jewish.”

The burst of bigotry stunned Gold-von Simson, who said, “Why is that?”

According to the team, Tynan said that a lot of “scary” Jewish ladies had been looking at the apartment before.

Outraged, Gold-von Simson, sent an angry e-mail to the Yankees yesterday, describing the incident to the team.

The team got in touch with Tynan as soon as they could, said spokeswoman Alice McGillion.

“He admitted that the contents of the e-mail were true,” McGillion said.

“He said it was a bad joke. So we told him that was absolutely intolerable behavior and he needed to apologize.

“He said he spoke to the woman and apologized.”

Despite the apology and the claims it was all a joke, the Yankees benched Tynan from his normal duties of singing “God Bless America” during the seventh-inning stretch.

McGillion said that the tenor is not a Yankees employee, and there are “no plans for him to sing” for the rest of the playoffs.

His gig for last night’s game was then canceled. It was a move that even Yankee fans who loved the singer agreed with.

“If this is true, it’s an awful thing to say, and he shouldn’t sing,” said Brian Dandeneau, 30, of Huntington, LI, who was at last night’s game.

“I thought he was a nice guy. I’m surprised,” he added.

“That’s an ignorant thing to do, he’s an idiot,” added fan Vicky Bongiovanni, 53, of East Hanover, NJ. “He had a privilege that he could go out there and sing, and I think it’s good they took it away from him.”

Tynan could not be reached for comment. But he told WNBC/Channel 4: “A lot of my friends are Jewish. It’s something misfortunate. I was too stupid with my mouth.”

Gold-von Simson said his words didn’t sound to her like a joke when he said them.