Summertime is here, what with Memorial Day and all that it encompasses, and we can think of no better seasonal activity than taking in some local theater. No matter where you are in the Volunteer State, Tennessee theater companies are ready and willing to help transport you to a different world, another time and place where your life can be is transformed magically on a stage very near you!
Sometimes it seems there is so much theater happening that it's difficult to keep track of it all. From personal experience, despite all the datebooks, smart phones, tablets, desktop computers and laptops...it's hard to keep everything straight in this wacky business of the show.
Thus, we are happy to present one of our most popular features: The Nashville Theater Calendar, a comprehensive - maybe even exhaustive (lord knows we're exhausted from putting it together, gathering all the info from all over the interwebs!) - listing of theatrical openings for the 2015/16 season. We'll update the calendar every Monday, clearing out the shows that have closed and adding additional information on the shows still to come. Something's missing? That's an easy fix: just send us a message here, on Facebook, or by email at jeffreyellis37215@att.com.
Opened April 22
Cumberland County Playhouse, Crossville: Southern Fried Nuptials, running through June 10. www.ccplayhouse.com Get ready to walk down the aisle to sidesplitting laughter as Cumberland County Playhouse presents Southern Fried Nuptials, the uproarious sequel to Southern Fried Funeral by Nashville playwrights J. Dietz Osborne and Nate Eppler. Southern Fried Nuptials reacquaints audiences with the Frye family of New Edinburgh, Mississippi, and features Carol Irvin as matriarch Dorothy, Weslie Webster as daughter Harlene, Nicole Hackmann as daughter Sammy Jo, and Daniel Black as Dewey Jr. As the play begins, it's three days before Harlene's wedding to attorney Atticus Van Leer (Britt Hancock). Nerves are running high and it seems Harlene, who has already postponed the wedding three times, in on the verge of postponing again. And although she doesn't know it yet, her wedding coordinator just eloped and moved to Atlanta. To make matters worse, Sammy Jo and her husband Beecham (Jason Ross) are moving in six days, but Sammy Jo still hasn't worked up the nerve to tell the rest of the family. And in the midst of all of this, the sudden appearance of a mysterious man from Harlene's past (Playhouse newcomer Joseph Wilson) brings the already hilarious complications to a whole new level! Rounding out the cast are Patty Payne and Judy Murphy as neighbors Martha Ann and Fairy June, Bill Frey as Vester Pickens and Terri Ritter as last-minute replacement wedding coordinator Ozella Meeks, whose last visit to the Frye house ended up with her getting a pie in the face.
Opened April 28
Chaffin's Barn Dinner Theatre, Nashville: Neil Simon's Rumors, running through June 3 www.dinnertheatre.com Widely regarded as one of the most successful, prolific and performed playwrights in the world, Neil Simon might well be considered the best comedy playwright in American Theater and Nashville audiences at Chaffin's Barn Dinner Theatre will be able to revel in the coming weeks as one of Simon's best-loved plays is brought to life on the miraculous floating stage by a cast of award-winning actors. Simon's Rumors - directed by Lydia Bushfield - stars Martha Wilkinson, Derek Whittaker, Bradley Moore, Joy Tilley-Perryman, Jenny Norris Light, Chase Miller, Charlie Winton, Linda Speir and Mike Scott, who will "not only keep your side splitting, but front and back splitting," promises a press release from Chaffin's Barn. Wilkinson and Whittaker, who were part of the first Barn cast of Rumors some 25 years ago, return to the venue to take on starring roles in the classic comedy. Showtimes for Rumors are Thursday through Saturday Evenings: Buffet: 6-7:30 p.m., Show: 8 p.m.; Sunday Matinee: Buffet 12 noon, Show: 2 p.m.; Every Thursday Matinee: Doors Open at 11 a.m., with the show at noon. Tickets for Thursday's matinee are only $19 (bring your own lunch or order a box lunch for $8.50 Reservations are required by calling (615) 646-9977.
Opened May 20
Street Theatre Company, at Holy Trinity Community Church, Nashville: Assassins, running through June 5. www.streettheatrecompany.org Coming off of its tremendously successful season opener In The Heights, Street Theatre Company stages its second show of the 2016 season, Stephen Sondheim's provocative musical Assassins. With music and lyrics by Sondheim (Sweeney Todd, Into the Woods), the production opened off-Broadway before moving to London's West End. The show created such a buzz that it reopened in New York, this time on Broadway, where it won multiple Tony and Drama Desk awards. With a book by John Weidman and based on an idea by Charles Gilbert, Jr., Assassins centers around the men and women who attempted (successfully or not) to assassinate United States Presidents. The story unfolds through Sondheim's revuestyle music that changes styles based on the eras in which the assassinations occur. Assassins is at Street Theatre Company, currently in residence at Holy Trinity Community Church (6727 Charlotte Pike), May 20 through June 5. The show is rated PG13 for strong language and adult themes. Parental guidance and discretion is encouraged. Showtimes are Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 5 p.m. Tickets are $20 for adults and $16 for students and seniors, and Thursdays are PayWhatYouCan. Tickets are available by contacting the box office at (615) 5547414 or by visiting www.streettheatrecompany.org.
Opening May 31
Broadway at TPAC, Nashville: Disney's Beauty and the Beast, running through June 5 www.tpac.org
Opening June 2
Music City Theatre Company at Darkhorse Theatre, Nashville: Psycho Beach Party, running through June 11. www.mctc.ticketleap.com Bradley Moore directs a revival of Charles Busch's Psycho Beach Party, starring Elizabeth Ayres Turner and Taylor Novak.
Opening June 3
Arts Center of Cannon County, Woodbury: Always, Patsy Cline, running through June 18 www.artscenterofcc.com Savanah Gannon and Mary Ellen Smith star in Arts Center of Cannon County's Always Patsy Cline, the award-winning play by Nashville's own Ted Swindley, running June 3-18 in Woodbury. Always, Patsy Cline is described as "more than a tribute" to the legendary country singer who died tragically at age 30 in a plane crash in 1963. The show is based on a true story about Cline's friendship with a fan from Houston named Louise Seger. This fun-loving, crowd-pleasing musical features 27 classic songs, including "Crazy," "Walkin' After Midnight," "I Fall to Pieces," "Sweet Dreams," "Back In Baby's Arms" and more.
Circle Players, at the Z. Alexander Looby Theatre, Nashville: Disney's The Little Mermaid, running through June 19. www.circleplayers.net In a magical kingdom beneath the sea, the beautiful young mermaid Ariel longs to leave her ocean home to live in the world above. Based on Hans Christian Andersen's beloved stories and the classic animated film, Disney's The Little Mermaid is a hauntingly beautiful love story for the ages. Directed by Brittany Blaire Anderson.
Studio Tenn, Franklin, at Schermerhorn Symphony Center: West Side Story, running through June 4, www.studiotenn.com
Pull-Tight Players, Franklin: The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, running through June 18 www.pull-tight.com Trust us - your elementary school spelling bee was never like this! Take a group of neurotic, over-achieving grade schoolers with a dictionary in their hands and hope in their hearts, add a group of equally wacky moderators and stir for a delightful and sharply funny comedy that will have you rolling in the aisles. But don't get too comfy on the floor - you might just be picked to join the bee!
Opening June 7
Broadway at TPAC, Nashville: If/Then, running through June 7 www.tpac.org
Opening June 9
The Larry Keeton Theatre, Donelson/Nashville: Thoroughly Modern Millie, running through June 25, www.thelarrykeetontheatre.org Jamie London directs, with musical direction by Ginger Newman.
Lipscomb University Theatre, at the Shamblin Theatre, Nashville: To Kill A Mockingbird, running through June 12. www.lipscomb.theatre.edu Chip Arnold stars as Atticus Finch in this revival of the play, presented as part of the Lipscomb's Christian Scholars Conference. The cast features a blend of professional actors from the community and Lipscomb students and alumni to bring the story, written by Harper Lee, to life onstage in an adaptation by Christopher Sergel.
Robertson County Players, at Springfield High School: Oklahoma!, running through June 18. www.ticketsnashville.com
Opening June 10
Murfreesboro Little Theatre: Butterflies Are Free, running through www.mltarts.org
Opening June 16
Gaslight Dinner Theatre, Dickson: Judy!, running through July 2 www.gaslightdinnertheatre.org This charming musical is dedicated to the woman who came to personify American popular music during the last century. Judy Garland came from rags to riches to become one of the most popular female entertainers in the world. Filled to the brim with Judy's most loved songs like, "Over the Rainbow," "I've Got Rhythm," "The Trolley Song," "Meet Me in St. Louis," "I'm Nobody's Baby," and "You'll Never Be Alone." Judy's inspiring story is the true embodiment of the American spirit, and is sure to inspire and delight audiences of all ages. Linda Sue Simmons Runyeon and Chase Miller bring to life the remarkable journey of the most popular female entertainer of our time.... Judy Garland. Brain Lucas tinkles the ivory as we take a stroll down memory lane with this musical tribute to the Legend and what it took to get there! Tickets are available at (615) 740-5600 or online at www.gaslightdinnertheatre.org.
Opening June 23
Woven Theater, at Belmont Little Theatre, Nashville: Giant Squid, running through June 26. A new play written by Miles Gatrell, Giant Squid follows the lives of two sets of young people in their late teens and mid-20s. Over the course of the play, these people grapple with the mistakes and successes of their lives as they try to find happiness and acceptance. Giant Squid speaks directly to what it means to live in this world today. Tickets are $10 at the door. Email wkyleodum@gmail.com to reserve tickets.
Opening July 8
Arts Center of Cannon County, Woodbury: The Little Mermaid, running through July 23 www.artscenterofcc.com
Murfreesboro Little Theatre: Next to Normal, running through www.mltarts.org
Opening July 18
Destiny Theatre Experience, at The Darkhorse Theater, Nashville: 7 Plays in 7 Days, running through July 30. After the success of the first 7 Plays In 7 Days in 2014, the Destiny Theatre Experience is bringing the event back with seven different plays for another seven-day run (July 18-24) with three encores July 28-30. Come join us for seven original plays by Shawn Whitsell. Tentative show schedule (in no particular order) Songs For Our Sons, 143, STEREO-type, En-Contracted, A Suffered Wrong, Colored and Moments in Time (tentative). Opening reception Sunday, July 17. More info to come. Save the dates!
Opening July 20
4th Story Theater and Street Theatre Company, at West End United Methodist Church, Nashville: You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown, running through July 24. www.westendumc.org
Opening July 22
Woven Theatre, in association with Verge Theater Company, at Belmont's Black Box Theatre, Nashville: Decision Height, running through July 24.
Opening August 10
4th Story Theater, at West End United Methodist Church, Nashville: Songs For a New World, running through August 21. www.westendumc.org
Opening August 11
The Larry Keeton Theatre, Donelson: Cabaret, running through August 27. www.thelarrykeetontheatre.org
Opening August 12
Arts Center of Cannon County, Woodbury: Rock of Ages, running through August 27 www.artscenterofcc.com
Boundless Theater, at Darkhorse Theater, Nashville: The World's A Stage, running through August 16. Described by director Jim Manning, The World's A Stage offers audiences an immersive experience in which they can choose one of two tracks: watch a performance of Love's Labour's Lost onstage, or follow the actors backstage to see behind the curtain.
Circle Players, at TSU Performing Arts Center, Nashville: Jesus Christ Superstar, running through August 28 www.circleplayers.net
Renaissance Players, at The Renaissance Center at Freed-Hardeman University, Dickson: Peter and the Starcatcher, running through August 21.
Opening September 8
Nashville Repertory Theatre, at TPAC's Andrew Johnson Theatre: The Last Five Years Book, running through September 24. www.nashvillerep.org Music and Lyrics by Jason Robert Brown. Running September 8-24. Previews: September 8-9 / Regular Run: September 10-24. Over the span of five years Cathy and Jamie meet, fall in love, marry, and divorce. The tale of their passionate, hilarious, and heart-breaking relationship is brilliantly told from beginning to end and from end to beginning at the same time.
Opening September 9
Tennessee Performing Arts Center Broadway at TPAC Series: Evita with Studio Tenn, running through September 18. www.tpac.org Activist, suffragist, and venerated celebrity, Eva Perón captivated a nation as Argentina's First Lady. The international musical sensation Evita chronicles her life and work, from her humble beginnings in the rural lowlands of South America through her ascent to fame, fortune, and untimely death. Broadway powerhouse Eden Espinosa stars in Studio Tenn's custom-designed presentation, a collaboration with the Tennessee Performing Arts Center built here in Music City, using the finest talents from Nashville and New York. Following its initial debut as rock opera concept album in 1976, Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber's smash hit stage production of Evita swept the 1980 Tony Awards - winning Best Musical, Best Original Score, Best Book of a Musical, and others - and has been performed all over the world.
Opening September 15
Nashville Children's Theatre: Afflicted: Daughters of Salem, running through October 2. www.NashvilleCT.org This production will be best appreciated by adults and children ages 10 and up. The untold tale of the girls of Salem. 1691. Abigail Williams, Ann Putnam, Mercy Lewis, Mary Warren, and Betty Paris meet with the slave, Tituba, deep in the dark woods of Puritan New England at night. Denied all outlets for imagination, the girls unite in secret society. When the girls force Tituba to tell their fortunes, they ignite a crucible of events that burns out of control, leading straight to the infamous Salem Witch Trials. In award-winning playwright Laurie Brooks' fictionalized look into peer politics and teenage rebellion, alliances will be formed and betrayed, promises made and broken, power taken and lost - and through secrets, gossip, fear, lies and accusations, these young girls ignite a crucible of dark events that will brand them amongst the most notorious teenagers in American history. Following each performance, Audience members will have the chance to participate in a unique post-show forum to delve into the themes of the play, a trademark of Brooks' plays. The resolution of the play will happen in the forum.
Opening September 30
Arts Center of Cannon County, Woodbury: The Odd Couple, running through October 15 www.artscenterofcc.com
Opening October 6
The Larry Keeton Theater, Donelson: Annie Get Your Gun, running through October 22. www.thelarrykeetontheatre.org
Opening October 7
ACT 1, at Darkhorse Theater, Nashville: Arsenic and Old Lace, running through October 22. www.act1online.com Daniel DeVault directs the classic comedy by Joseph Kesselring.
Opening October 13
Nashville Repertory Theatre, at TPAC's Andrew Johnson Theatre: Noises Off by Michael Frayn, running November 5. Previews: October 13-14 / Regular Run: October 15-November 5. In this show-within-a-show sex farce, the chaos of rehearsal becomes chaos behind the scenes (literally), and ultimately, utter disaster. This brilliant comedy was a riotous success when Nashville Rep produced it over ten years ago, and a big laugh is always a worthwhile venture...
Opening October 14
4th Story Theater and Street Theatre Company, at West End United Methodist Church, Nashville: School of Rock, running through October 22. www.westendumc.org
Opening October 18
Tennessee Performing Arts Center Broadway at TPAC Series: Rent 20th Anniversary, running through October 23. www.tpac.org In 1996, an original rock musical by a little-known composer opened on Broadway and forever changed the landscape of American theatre. Two decades later, Jonathan Larson's RENT continues to speak loudly and defiantly to audiences across generations and all over the world. And now, this Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning masterpiece returns to the stage in a vibrant 20th anniversary touring production. A re-imagining of Puccini's La Bohème, RENT follows an unforgettable year in the lives of seven artists struggling to follow their dreams without selling out. With its inspiring message of joy and hope in the face of fear, this timeless celebration of friendship and creativity reminds us to measure our lives with the only thing that truly matters - love.
Opening October 27
Nashville Children's Theatre: Junie B. Jones Is Not A Crook, running through December 4. www.NashvilleCT.org Adapted by Allison Gregory. From the series by Barbara Park. Junie B. Jones, the world's funniest kindergartner, is back at NCT in a brand new stage adventure! A terrible thing has happened to Junie B.! And it's called-someone took her new black furry mittens! And they kept them! They didn't even put them in the Lost and Found at school. A stealer stoled them! So when Junie B. finds a wonderful pen on the floor, one of those wowie-wow-wow pens that writes four different colors, she should be allowed to keep it, too. Right? That's fair. Finders keepers, losers weepers! Right?
Opening October 28
Circle Players, at Z. Alexander Looby Theatre, Nashville: Stuff Happens, running through November 13. www.circleplayers.net
Opening November 2
4th Story Theater, at West End United Methodist Church, Nashville: Cotton Patch Gospel, running through November 13. www.westendumc.org
Opening November 4
Arts Center of Cannon County, Woodbury: Chitty Chitty Bang Band, running through November 19 www.artscenterofcc.com
Opening November 11
ACT 1, at Darkhorse Theater, Nashville: A Lie of the Mind, running through November 26 www.act1online.com David McGinnis directs the play by Sam Shepard.
Opening November 15
Tennessee Performing Arts Center Broadway at TPAC Series: The Book of Mormon, running through November 20. www.tpac.org The New York Times calls it "the best musical of this century." The Washington Post says, "It is the kind of evening that restores your faith in musicals." And Entertainment Weekly says, "Grade A: the funniest musical of all time." Jimmy Fallon of The Tonight Show says "It's genius. It's brilliant. It's phenomenal." It's The Book of Mormon, the nine-time Tony Award winning Best Musical from the creators of South Park. Contains explicit language.
Opening November 27
Nashville Repertory Theatre, at TPAC's Andrew Johnson Theatre: A Christmas Story adapted by Phillip Grecian, based on the motion picture A Christmas Story by Jean Shepherd, Leigh Brown and Bob Clark, running through December 21. www.nashvillerep.org Preview: November 27 / Regular Run: November 28-December 21. This is Nashville Rep's eighth consecutive year performing A Christmas Story for Nashville, and we're pretty sure you don't need another description of the show. There's a leg lamp, a pink bunny suit, and "Deck The Halls" sung at a Chinese restaurant.
Opening December 1
The Larry Keeton Theatre, Donelson: Nuncrackers, running through December 18. www.thelarrykeetontheatre.org
Opening December 15
Nashville Children's Theatre: Special Holiday Event: Nashville Children's Theatre's Cinderella, running through December 22. www.NashvilleCT.org Dramatized by Scot Copeland. Nashville Children's Theatre's breathtaking production of Cinderella is your new holiday tradition! As colorful as a Victorian pop-up book and as lush as a Viennese Waltz, this sparkling holiday confection brims with humor, romance, and spectacular theatrical effects. All the iconic elements one would hope to see are here; hilarious stepsisters, wise fairy godmother, amazing transformations, delicate pumpkin coach, beautiful ball gown, a handsome Prince, the striking clock, a desperate flight and, of course, a delicate glass slipper left behind in the snow - all lovingly designed, carefully crafted, and beautifully played by the extraordinary artists of Nashville Children's Theatre.
Opening January 6
Circle Players, at TSU Performing Arts Center, Nashville: The Wiz, running through January 22. www.circleplayers.net
Opening January 19
Nashville Children's Theatre: Treasure Island, running through February 5, 2017. www.NashvilleCT.org Dramatized by Scot Copeland. Based on the book by Robert Louis Stevenson. Adventure awaits so lay your course for the sun-baked sands of the Caribbean as young Jim Hawkins, treasure map in hand, sets sail in an epic drum-pounding tale that has it all: suspense, comedy, mystery, swashbuckling swordplay, honor and treachery - all among a crew of some of the most colorful heroes and villains in all of literature. Dramatized by NCT's own Scot Copeland, Treasure Island is the ultimate pirate adventure, reinvented for today's young audiences and families!
Opening January 24
Tennessee Performing Arts Center Broadway at TPAC Series: A Gentlemen's Guide to Love and Murder, running through January 29, 2017. www.tpac.org The most celebrated musical of the 2013-14 Broadway season, Gentlemen's Guide received ten 2014 Tony Award nominations, eventually winning four awards: Best Musical, Direction of a Musical, Book of a Musical, and Best Costume Design. In addition, it won the Best Musical prizes from the Drama League, Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle, and received a 2015 Grammy Award nomination for Best Musical Show Album.
Opening February 9
Nashville Repertory Theatre, at TPAC's Andrew Johnson Theatre: Posterity by Doug Wright, running through February 25, 2017. www.nashvillerep.org Previews: February 9-10, 2017 / Regular Run: February 11-25, 2017. Take a world renowned Norwegian playwright, Henrik Ibsen, near the end of his life, and force him into a room with Norway's favorite sculptor, Gustav Vigland, whose ambitions make it necessary for him to persuade a reluctant Ibsen to sit for him. Then their battle begins. This will be the regional premiere of this play by Pulitzer and Tony winner Doug Wright, who developed it initially with the support of the Ingram New Works Fellowship.
Opening February 14
Tennessee Performing Arts Center Broadway at TPAC Series: The Sound of Music, running through February 19, 2017. www.tpac.org The Sound of Music is a brand new production directed by three-time Tony Award winner Jack O'Brien. The spirited, romantic, and beloved musical story of Maria and the von Trapp Family will once again thrill audiences with its Tony, Grammy, and Academy Award winning Best Score, including "My Favorite Things," "Do-Re-Mi," "Climb Ev'ry Mountain," "Edelweiss," and the title song. The Sound of Music features music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II, book by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse, suggested by "The Trapp Family Singers" by Maria Augusta Trapp. The Sound of Music enjoyed extraordinary success as the first live television production of a musical in over 50 years when The Sound of Music Live! aired on NBC in December, 2013, and was seen by over 44 million people. 2015 marked the 50th anniversary of the film version, which continues to be the most successful movie musical ever.
Opening February 16
The Larry Keeton Theatre, Donelson: My Fair Lady, running through March 4. www.thelarrykeetontheatre.com BroadwayWorld Nashville senior contributing editor Jeffrey Ellis directs the Lerner and Loewe classic, with musical direction by Ginger Newman and choreography by Lauri Gregoire.
Opening February 23
Nashville Children's Theatre: And In This Corner: Cassius Clay, running through March 12, 2017. www.NashvilleCT.org This production will be best appreciated by adults and children ages 10 and up. What kind of fights are you going to fight and what are you going to fight for? Before he was real-life superhero Muhammad Ali, he was Cassius Clay, a black teenager growing up in segregated Louisville, Kentucky. Against all odds, the young boxer pursues and achieves his dream of Olympic Gold, but finds his triumph hollow when faced with the realities of segregated Jim Crow America. Vowing to never be treated as a second-class citizen again, Cassius decides he is going to be the type of person who fights not only for himself, but for others too. In this corner, ignorance, bigotry, poverty and injustice. And in this corner...Cassius Clay!
Opening March 9
ACT 1, at Darkhorse Theater, Nashville: Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on American Themes, Parts 1 and 2, performed in repertory, through March 25. www.act1online.com Jim Manning (Millennium Approaches) and Lane Wright (Perestroika) direct.
Opening March 17
Circle Players, at Z. Alexander Looby Theatre, Nashville: Clybourne Park, running through April 2. www.circleplayers.net
Opening March 21
Tennessee Performing Arts Center Broadway at TPAC Series: The Bodyguard, running through March 26, 2017. www.tpac.org The Bodyguard is the award-winning musical, based on the smash hit film, starring Grammy Award-nominee and R&B superstar Deborah Cox. Former Secret Service agent turned bodyguard, Frank Farmer, is hired to protect superstar Rachel Marron from an unknown stalker. Each expects to be in charge; what they don't expect is to fall in love. A breathtakingly romantic thriller, The Bodyguard features a host of irresistible classics including "Queen of the Night," "So Emotional," "One Moment In Time," "Saving All My Love," "Run to You," "I Have Nothing," "I Wanna Dance With Somebody," and one of the biggest selling songs of all time - "I Will Always Love You."
Opening March 23
Nashville Repertory Theatre, at TPAC's Andrew Johnson Theatre: A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, running April 15, 2017. www.nashvillerep.org Previews: March 23-24, 2017 / Regular Run: March 25-April 15, 2017. With the passing of the patriarch, a life insurance check of significant value arrives. How will the money best be spent for the benefit of the family? Should a home be purchased, a business venture invested in, or medical school paid for? And whose decision is it? Whose dream gets deferred?
Opening April 13
Nashville Children's Theatre: Goodnight, Moon: running through May 14, 2017. www.NashvilleCT.org Adapted by Chad Henry. Music and Lyrics by Chad Henry. Based on the book by Margaret Wise Brown. Illustrations by Clement Hurd. In the great green room, there was a telephone, and a red balloon, and a picture of the cow jumping over the moon. Everybody's favorite bedtime book is magically transformed into an imaginative, unforgettable theatrical experience, live, on NCT's stage. It's a sparkling, wonder-filled musical that elaborates on the original with style and wit, yet remains true to the simple, loving heart of this beloved book. You'll find a hundred delightful surprises on the way to getting exactly what you expect!
Opening April 20
The Larry Keeton Theatre, Donelson: Daddy's Dyin', Who's Got the Will?, running through May 6. www.thelarrykeetontheatre.org
Opening April 21
Tennessee Performing Arts Center Broadway at TPAC Series: Riverdance, running through April 23, 2017. www.tpac.org The international Irish dance phenomenon is back by popular demand in Riverdance - The 20th Anniversary World Tour. Drawing on Irish traditions, The Combined talents of the performers propel Irish dancing and music into the present day, capturing the imagination of audiences across all ages and cultures in an innovative and exciting blend of dance, music and song. Of all the performances to emerge from Ireland - in rock, music, theatre and film - nothing has carried the energy, the sensuality and the spectacle of Riverdance.
Opening April 25
Tennessee Performing Arts Center Broadway at TPAC Series: The Curious Incident of the Dog at Nighttime, running through April 30, 2017. www.tpac.org The Curious Incident of the Dog at Nighttime on Broadway is the recipient of five Tony Awards including Best Play, six Drama Desk Awards including Outstanding Play, five Outer Critics Circle Awards including Outstanding New Broadway Play, and the Drama League Award for Outstanding Production of a Broadway or Off-Broadway Play. The production was named among the Top 10 productions of 2014 by amNY, Asbury Park Press, Associated Press, Bergen Record, Broadway.com, Broadway Insider, Chicago Tribune, Daily News, Deadline, Entertainment Weekly, Hollywood Reporter, Huffington Post, New York Magazine, New York Post, NY-1, The New York Times, Playbill, Star Ledger, Time Magazine, Time Out New York and Towleroad.
Opening May 12
ACT 1 at Darkhorse Theater, Nashville: Noises Off!, running through May 27. www.act1online.com Bradley Moore directs the Michael Frayn farce.
Opening May 23
Tennessee Performing Arts Center Broadway at TPAC Series: Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, running through May 28, 2017. www.tpac.org Long before she was Carole King, chart-topping music legend, she was Carol Klein, Brooklyn girl with passion and chutzpah. She fought her way into the record business as a teenager. By the time she reached her twenties, King had the husband of her dreams and a flourishing career writing hits for the biggest acts in rock 'n' roll. But it wasn't until her personal life began to crack that she finally managed to find her true voice. Beautiful tells the inspiring true story of King's remarkable rise to stardom, from being part of a hit songwriting team with her husband Gerry Goffin, to her relationship with fellow writers and best friends Cynthia Weil and Barry Mann, to becoming one of the most successful solo acts in popular music history. Along the way, she made more than beautiful music, she wrote the soundtrack to a generation. Beautiful features a stunning array of beloved songs written by Gerry Goffin/Carole King and Barry Mann/Cynthia Weil, including "I Feel The Earth Move," "One Fine Day," "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman," "You've Got A Friend," and the title song.
Opening June 2
Circle Players, at Z. Alexander Looby Theatre, Nashville: 1776, running through June 18. www.circleplayers.net
Opening June 9
ACT 1, at Darkhorse Theater, Nashville: Reefer Madness the Musical, running through June 24. www.act1online.com Jason Lewis directs the musical based on the classic 1930s movie melodrama.
Opening June 15
The Larry Keeton Theatre, Donelson: The Little Mermaid, running through July 1. www.thelarrykeetontheatre.org
Opening June 27
Tennessee Performing Arts Center Broadway at TPAC Series: Something Rotten!, running through July 2, 2017. www.tpac.org Something Rotten! is "Broadway's big, fat hit!" (New York Post). Set in 1595, this hilarious smash tells the story of Nick and Nigel Bottom, two brothers who are desperate to write a hit play. When a local soothsayer foretells that the future of theatre involves singing, dancing, and acting at the same time, Nick and Nigel set out to write the world's very first musical! With its heart on its ruffled sleeve and sequins in its soul, Something Rotten! is "The Producers + The Book of Mormon x The Drowsy Chaperone. Squared!" (New York Magazine).
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