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Archives for January 2026

Rachel Potter and Friends Return to Analog at The Hutton January 23 for Latest ‘Off Broadway’, Promising a Night of Magical Music

January 22, 2026 by Jonathan

Rachel Potter at Analog at The Hutton’s ‘Off Broadway’ series debut. (Photo by JHPEntertainment)

Following the success of its inaugural installments in 2025, Off Broadway returns to Analog at The Hutton on January 23, 2026, with a brand-new theme and an all-star lineup. Hosted once again by Broadway favorite (and Nashville resident) Rachel Potter, Off Broadway: An Evening of Magic will spotlight beloved songs from iconic animated films, celebrating the musical storytelling that has defined generations.

The Off Broadway series kicked off in October with Witch, Please, a Wicked– and Oz-inspired evening that packed Analog with Broadway powerhouses and theatrical flair. That one-night-only event set the tone for what has quickly become a must-see series—intimate, artist-driven concerts featuring top-tier performers in one of Nashville’s most distinctive venues.

This latest installment leans fully into nostalgia, fantasy, and heart, bringing Broadway-caliber talent together for a night of unforgettable music in Analog’s up-close setting.

A CAST WORTHY OF THE MAGIC KINGDOM

Leading the evening is Rachel Potter, whose career began at Walt Disney World before taking her to Broadway in Wicked, The Addams Family, and Evita. From viral vocal performances to her recent symphonic album Stages, Potter’s blend of powerhouse vocals and personal storytelling makes her the ideal host for a night centered on musical magic.

Joining Potter is an impressive roster of guest performers, including:

    • Susan Egan, Tony-nominated Broadway icon and the original Belle in Beauty and the Beast, whose voice is forever etched into Disney history as Meg in Hercules.
    • Caroline Bowman, celebrated for her on-stage turns as Wicked’s Elphaba, Frozen’s Elsa, Evita’s Eva Perón, and Sunset Boulevard’s Norma Desmond, bringing fearless vocals and commanding presence.
    • Corey Mach, currently appearing in the film adaptation of Merrily We Roll Along, with Broadway and touring credits that span Kinky Boots, Wicked, and & Juliet.
    • E.J. Cardona, Disney and VOCTAVE favorite, whose versatility spans a cappella, musical theater, and pop performance.
    • Lauren Paley, viral creator turned Disney collaborator, known for her modern reimaginings of princess favorites.
    • MORGXN, genre-defying singer-songwriter—and native Nashvillian—whose emotionally charged vocals add a contemporary edge to the evening.
    • JADA, powerhouse vocalist and actress with pop, theatrical, and cinematic credentials.
    • Matt Bloyd, acclaimed vocalist stepping into the spotlight with his own country-rooted original music.
    • Wil Merrell, a soul-infused vocalist whose jazz-forward sound brings timeless elegance to the stage.
    • Piper Jones, a Nashville native, recording artist, and commercial voice instructor at Belmont University. Known for her work in area productions such as Waitress, RENT, Violet, and The Little Mermaid, Jones blends theatrical storytelling with rich musicality. Currently working on her debut jazz album, she brings both local roots and Broadway sensibility to the Off Broadway stage.

Music direction for the evening is provided by Chris Brent Davis, whose Broadway, touring, and regional credits ensure a cohesive, high-level musical experience.

WHAT TO EXPECT

Audiences can expect a mix of iconic ballads, ensemble moments, and reimagined favorites performed by artists who have lived these stories onstage, at the Parks and beyond. With intimate staging and cozy seating , Analog offers a concert experience that feels personal, immediate, and perfectly tailored for a night you’ll not soon forget.

Ticket holders can also take advantage of:

• $10 flat-rate parking in the on-site garage

• 15% off dinner at Evelyn’s, the Hutton Hotel’s elevated American restaurant, perfect for a pre-show stop

TICKETS & DETAILS

General Admission / Standing Room: $35

Reserved Seating: $60

Tickets are available now! CLICK HERE to purchase. 

Off Broadway: An Evening of Magic

January 23, 2026 at 8pm

Analog at Hutton Hotel

1808 West End Avenue, 2nd Floor

Nashville, TN 37203

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, visit JHPENTERTAINMENT.com or find us on  Facebook, Insta and Twitter.

Filed Under: Disney Music, Live Performance, nashville, Theare Tagged With: Analog at The Hutton, Off Broadway, Rachel Potter

Behind the Barricade: Rapid Fire 20Q with ‘Les Misérables’ National Tour Cast Members

January 15, 2026 by Jonathan


Few shows in Broadway history carry the emotional weight, cultural legacy, and sheer endurance of Les Misérables. Following its 1980 Paris debut and a subsequent London premiere, Les Mis first stormed Broadway in 1987. Since then, the musical has lived many lives: record-breaking original runs, celebrated revivals, concert spectaculars, a current 40th Anniversary National Tour and an upcoming 2026 Les Mis Concert engagement at Radio City in New York, all proof that this story still hits just as hard.

Two years after Les Mis’ Broadway debut, Nashville theatre goers got their first chance to witness the spectacle when the National Tour made its TPAC debut at Jackson Hall during the spring of ‘89. Over the years, TPAC has presented subsequent tours nearly half a dozen times. As Les Misérables prepares to return to TPAC next week with eight shows over five days from January 20-25, we sat down with members of the current tour for our signature Rapid Fire 20Q. From Broadway debuts and tour firsts to deeply personal connections with Fantine, Marius, Éponine and Cosette, cast members Lindsay Heather Pearce, Peter Neureuther, Jaedynn Latter and Alexa Lopez share what it means to step into a show that has shaped musical theater history—and continues to change lives as the tour continues.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH MEMBERS OF LES MISÉRABLES NATIONAL TOUR

RAPID FIRE WITH LES MIS’ FANTINE, LINDSAY HEATHER PEARCE 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: From The Glee Project to belting it out as Elphaba in your Wicked Broadway debut in 2020 to touring with Mean Girls and now Fantine in the 40th Anniversary Tour of Les Misérables, your entire career (so far) feels full of pinch me moments. With all these great roles already, do you even have a bucket list? 

LINDSAY HEATHER PEARCE: It HAS been full of pinch me moments. The fact that I have yet to wake up from this dream is a good sign that it’s all real and actually happening. I have definitely been very lucky in the last five years of my life to play so many wonderful roles, but the bucket for my list is deep and my actual list is long. A lot of the roles I want to play the most are out of my age range right now (I would need a few more years under my belt), but my biggest dream is to originate or revive a show! 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Across Broadway, tours, and television, which role has most profoundly shaped you as an artist?

LINDSAY HEATHER PEARCE: I don’t know if I can pick just one! Each role I’ve been lucky to play has been so crucial to who I am today and was so important for who I was then. 

If I had to choose, I would say Rebecca in Recovery Road on FreeForm and Elphaba in Wicked on Broadway. 

Recovery Road was such a special experience, and to show up to set almost every day, to learn how to use those on camera skills we well as grow the skills of how to be a good team member on a set were some of the most important ones.

Elphaba was like taking a masterclass in self-care, self-understanding, bravery, humility, curiosity, and steadfastness. That’s on TOP of the lessons in leading a Broadway company, learning how to do 8 shows a week, and the excitement of joining such an incredible arena. Huge lessons, huge huge huge life changing lessons.  

JHPENTERTAINMENT: How do you emotionally prepare to sing I Dreamed a Dream night after night?

LINDSAY HEATHER PEARCE: I’ll be honest, the show does it for me. Fantine has an entire factory scene before I Dreamed A Dream that is filled with character exposition. So much happens in that ten-minute scene that by the time I get thrown into the streets, I am emotionally there and ready to sing my heart out. That’s a testament to how well Les Misérables is written and structured. Even if it’s a tired day and I don’t know if I am mentally or emotionally there, the show will get me there.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: This tour cast features a great mix of actors making their tour debuts and folks like Nick Cartell (Jean Valjean) who have history with their roles, having appeared in prior productions. It’s often said that a touring company truly becomes family. Do you feel that with Les Mis?

LINDSAY HEATHER PEARCE: Absolutely, yes. More so than any other company I have ever been a part of (and I’ve been in some of the best companies). These are GOOD people, with good hearts and open arms. When you’re on the road, away from home and family and all that is familiar, being in a company with good, gracious and FUNNY people is truly a balm.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Fantine’s story is brief but devastating — what do you hope audiences take with them after your final moment?

LINDSAY HEATHER PEARCE: We all know someone with Fantine’s story, or some aspect of it. Know that one kind act, or one good decision can change someone’s life. Without Fantine’s tragedy and sacrifice, the story doesn’t move forward.

Valjean is given the incredible opportunity to become a father to little Cosette, through whom he learns to love and look beyond himself in service of someone else. How beautiful is that? 

I hope people can take away the idea that there are opportunities around every corner to be good to someone else, to be of service, to help or save however they can. Even small stones make ripples.

RAPID FIRE WITH LES MIS’ MARIUS, PETER NEUREUTHE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You first stepped into the role of Marius at The MUNY back in June of 2024, since first taking on the role, has anything changed or deepened in the way you portray him?

PETER NEUREUTHER: When I played Marius for the first time, rehearsals were so fast that I had to put this character together in just 10 days! Now being on the tour being over 100 shows in, I have learned so much more about Marius — the immense joy and hope he feels at the beginning of his story preparing for the revolution, and falling in love, to his deep trauma and maturity as he watches friends die on the barricade, and learning how to overcome this grief. I feel like now I really have been able to understand his story being on this tour alongside these incredibly talented storyteller castmates!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Making your national tour debut on the barricade — after already having lived in this world at MUNY, is there a moment that still gives you full-body chills each night?

PETER NEUREUTHER: I truly do have to shoutout, and thank The MUNY for honestly, giving me my start into the business! I got such chills every night at that stage going out and performing for 11,000 people every night. We perform for massive stages everywhere in the country, but the MUNY’s venue will always hold a special place in my heart. Every night, from the MUNY to the dozens of cities we have been to, going out and singing Empty Chairs at Empty Tables always gives me full-body chills, as I know the weight this song holds, and how it is almost cathartic for Marius.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You graduated high school in 2020 — fast forward to spring 2025 and you’re making your Broadway debut in Stephen Sondheim’s Old Friends alongside Bernadette Peters and Lea Salonga. How do you even begin to process a leap like that?

PETER NEUREUTHER: It definitely still doesn’t feel real! I honestly sometimes just try to take a minute when I’m feeling overwhelmed and stressed about auditions or the show, even just life, and remind my self how proud high school me would be to see me up on these stages, sharing the stage with legends, and talent I could’ve only ever dreamed of. I am truly so lucky to have had the opportunities that I have had, but it has come with lots of hard work in college, in and out of the classroom. I am so grateful for the experiences I’ve had thus far, and I know my hard work and work ethic will keep serving me. I’m never satisfied (in the best way!).

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Having performed Les Misérables in The MUNY’s massive outdoor amphitheater — how does that experience compare to setting up shop in a new indoor venue with each stop on the national tour?

PETER NEUREUTHER: The MUNY’s massive stage is truly like performing at a football stadium! I definitely feel like I had to emote more on that stage so even the people all the way in the back rows who looked like they were on the moon could understand the story! These indoor venues are a whole different beast. Setting up shop in a new theater almost every week and seeing how our show fits in every venue so perfectly is awesome! I love getting to perform for a new crowd and new theatre every week!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: If Marius could send one modern-day text message, who’s it to — Cosette or the revolution group chat? AND What might it say?

PETER NEUREUTHER: Well lucky for me, Alexa Lopez our Cosette in the show is also my partner outside of Les Mis. So, if it was Peter sending a message it would be “What’re we getting to eat after the show? I’m starving.” But as Marius to Cosette it would be “Dearest Cosette, I’ll come find you I promise. It doesn’t matter if you’re here or across the sea. My love for you makes any distance crossable. I love you endlessly”.

RAPID FIRE WITH LES MIS’ ÉPONINE, JAEDYNN LATTER

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Fresh out of Baldwin Wallace Conservatory of Music and straight into Les Misérables 40th Anniversary Tour. Not a bad way to jumpstart your professional career, huh? — when did it finally feel real?

JAEDYNN LATTER: When I put on the iconic red hat for the first time. That’s when I thought, “Oh, wow, I’m actually doing this for real.” It was like the physical embodiment of a legacy, and especially when I was first wearing it, I could feel the weight it had.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Éponine’s journey is heartbreak, bravery, and resilience all at once — which lyric is the hardest to sing eight times a week?

JAEDYNN LATTER: “A world that’s full of happiness that I have never known.” Yes, it is vocally challenging, but I think one of the most tragic parts of Éponine is that she’s not really mad at Marius or Cosette because they fell in love. She’s grieving that she was born into her circumstances and thinks more than anything, “If things were different.” Seeing Cosette, (and in turn, Marius), reap the benefits of a life that she could have lived hurts most of all. Seeing their privilege and their ability to fall in love in such an innocent, ideal way, knowing that she will never experience that is so incredibly painful. I think coming to that realization every night is the most excruciating thing to enact eight times a week.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You’ve played roles from Waitress’ Jenna to Into The Woods’ Little Red — how did those experiences prepare you for Éponine?

JAEDYNN LATTER: Waitress was the first show that I ever played the leading role in, and I barely left the stage. I think that experience taught me to trust my body’s own stamina, and to sort of be okay with not being able to second guess myself once we got going. Into the Woods had an eight-show week, so it definitely showed me what that schedule feels like. But actually, I think Little Red really prepared me for Éponine in the sense that they’re both younger than I am. In both cases, I had to mentally travel back to adolescence and think, “How does a teenager view love, or grief, or power, etc.?” It taught me to really listen to what I was actually hearing rather than acting based off of my own gained maturity and pre-conceived notions of her journey.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Pre-show routine: quiet focus, vocal warm-ups, or hyping yourself up backstage?

JAEDYNN LATTER: It’s definitely more of a mid-show routine for me—mostly consisting of Jolly Ranchers and reminding myself to breathe. In a voice lesson, a coach had told me to remember I have toes (as a way to say, “be aware of your body as a whole”). So a lot of the time before On My Own, I’m telling myself, “You have toes.”

JHPENTERTAINMENT: If Les Mis were to go the route of some other musicals who use pop tunes to tell the story, what might Éponine’s pop counterpart to On My Own be?

JAEDYNN LATTER: I literally have an Éponine playlist that’s nearly six hours long. Some of my favorite fits for her are Waiting Room by Phoebe Bridgers and David by Lorde. If we’re talking old-school, I think the most literal counterpart would be All By Myself by Celine Dion.

RAPID FIRE WITH LES MIS’ COSETTE, ALEXA LOPEZ

JHPENTERTAINMENT: National tour debut and Cosette — what was the very first thought that hit you when you got the call welcoming you to the tour?

ALEXA LOPEZ: My heart literally burst out of my chest! I actually got the call as I was about to clock into my hostessing job at the time. It was one of those pinch me moments every performer in NYC dreams of having. I simply just couldn’t wait to be on stage sharing this story with thousands of people, bringing life to it and trying to do it justice every night. I could barely even concentrate that night as I was working – my mind was reeling with so many thoughts of the future, tour, excitement, gratitude, and the list goes on. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Cosette is often described as gentle — what strength do you love most about her that audiences sometimes overlook?

ALEXA LOPEZ: Cosette is definitely a gentle force of light and goodness in our show. However, and moreover, she is strong, determined, and has depth to her. She fights to learn the truth about her life, she fights to be there for the people that she loves in their hardest times. She could sit back and live the life that Valjean has built for her, no questions asked. But instead, she pushes to learn the truth and have her father know that she has grown into a woman–a woman with agency, a woman with desires, and a woman who deserves and can handle the truth. So, definitely her strength and determination. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is it about Cosette that challenges you most as a performer?

ALEXA LOPEZ: The track itself can be challenging at times from a technical standpoint. I have to be careful about when I warm up so that my voice can be ready for certain moments in the show after not being on-stage for a good amount of time. Cosette’s big vocal moments come fast and furious, so being dropped in and prepared when the time comes has been a learning curve for me. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Quick pick: sweeping romantic ballads or emotionally charged duets?

ALEXA LOPEZ: Emotionally charged duets!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When audiences see this tour, what do you hope stays with them after the curtain call?

ALEXA LOPEZ: This is a story that is timeless and that everyone, to some degree, can resonate with. I hope audiences feel a sense of hope as they walk out of the theater. Our show is about unconditional love, the strength of the human spirit, and the fact that redemption and light are possible, even through the darkest and most impossible times. 

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Celebrating 40 years since Les Misérables first arrived on Broadway, the revolution returns once more. This 40th Anniversary Tour honors every chapter of the show’s extraordinary life while proving its message remains as urgent as ever. Les Misérables plays TPAC’s Jackson Hall January 20–25, 2026. Tickets are on sale now at TPAC.org, starting at $72.55. Whether it’s your first barricade or your fiftieth, this is a dream worth dreaming—again.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, visit JHPENTERTAINMENT.com or find us on  Facebook, Insta and Twitter.

 

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: Broadway, Broadway at TPAC, Broadway Tour, Les Mis, Les Misérables, Live Performance, Nashville, Rapid Fire, Touring Company, TPAC

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