If they do then it is pretty low key.Real men play singles. Other than mixed doubles, I just can't play (or watch) doubles. The few times I played doubles I kept hitting my partner with my shots. On at least a couple of occasions I've hit my partner in the back of the head with my serve.
Frew McMillan was largely a niche player (doubles).
Eddie Dibbs and Harold Solomon were also largely niche players. Their best surface by far was clay. At my club we called them "Dirt Devils".
Question: Do they still have the seniors tour?
I remember it started shortly after the golf seniors tour which was and still is quite popular, but the tennis version petered out pretty quickly. You can see how much slower and less fit the players are. Actually, I think golf is the only sport where a seniors tour would be a viable entity. The reason for that is that there is very little athleticism in golf. As such watching a 55 year old hit a ball is not much different than a 25 year old hitting a ball. In other sports you move slower, you are not as strong, you can't jump as high, hit or throw the ball as far, you can't dive to make a catch etc. etc. and that diminution of athleticism is evident to everybody and is actually kind of sad to watch. You don't see that loss of athleticism in golf because it is basically a skill, swinging a club. All they have to do in golf is make the holes a bit shorter and the players can stick it as close to the pin as they did when they were in their prime. So there is still the same drama in golf unlike other sports. Watching a 55 year old playing tennis is dull.