
To celebrate the holiday season, Nashville Repertory Theatre brings the cherished American classic, It’s a Wonderful Life, back to the stage at TPAC‘s Polk Theatre. For this special holiday edition of Rapid Fire 20Q, JHPEntertainment.com sat down with members of the extraordinary cast and creative team — Brian Charles Rooney, Tamiko Robinson Steele, Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva & Eve Petty, as well as the show’s director Alicia Lark Fuss — to talk character discoveries, backstage magic, family traditions, and why this timeless story still resonates so deeply. Ready for a visit to Bedford Falls? Let’s go.
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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST AND DIRECTOR OF NASHVILLE REP’s IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE
RAPID FIRE WITH BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY, GEORGE BAILEY IN NASHVILLE REP’s IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE
RAPID FIRE WITH TAMIKO ROBINSON STEELE, MARY HATCH BAILEY IN IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE
RAPID FIRE WITH JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA, CLARENCE & OTHERS IN IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE
RAPID FIRE WITH EVE PETTY, VIOLET IN IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE
RAPID FIRE WITH IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE DIRECTOR, ALICIA LARK FUSSFollowing It’s A Wonderful Life, Nashville Rep’s season continues in the new year with FAT HAM, James Ijames‘ Pulitzer Prize-winning reinvention of Hamlet, a co-production alongside Nashville Shakespeare Festival, onstage February 13-22, followed by the audience favorite SISTER ACT April 10-19. Closing out the season will be Amy Tofte‘s BLOOD SUCKING LEECH, as part of Nashville Rep‘s New Works: Next Stage, after having presented a staged reading of Tofte’s work just last season. CLICK HERE to purchase Season Tickets.
As always, check out Nashville Rep online and follow them on Facebook, X, YouTube and Instagram.
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RAPID FIRE WITH JIANA KEVILUS, AMALIA IN SHE LOVES ME
RAPID FIRE WITH TOMMY ANGLIM, KODALY IN SHE LOVES ME
RAPID FIRE WITH KIMBERLY WOLFF, ILONA IN SHE LOVES ME
RAPID FIRE WITH SHE LOVES ME DIRECTOR, MORGAN ROBERTSON
FIRE WITH CINDERELLA STAR, VERONICA HODGSON
RAPID FIRE WITH DEBORAH SEIDEL, BARONESS VINDETTA IN CINDERELLA
RAPID FIRE WITH WANDERSON REZENDE, ANITA BATH IN CINDERELLA
RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH DIRECTOR AND CAST OF PLAYHOUSE 615’s CINDERELLA: THE FAIRYGODMOTHER OF ALL PANTOS
RAPID FIRE WITH 



RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH MAGNHILD
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Last year, you released your debut single Maybe, then the follow-up, 17 and now you’ve got Ending. How excited are you for listeners to hear the new track as they continue to discover you as an up-and-coming artist?
JHPENTERTAINMENT: As a songwriter, what’s your creative process like? Do you set aside a certain time daily to explore lyric ideas and melodies, or do you take a more organic approach?
JHPENTERTAINMENT: With Ending now streaming, is there any talk of a music video? How would you like to see it visualized?
RAPID FIRE WITH BETH HENDERSON, JOAN WATSON IN
RAPID FIRE WITH SKYLER COLE, LESTRADE, ELLIOTT MONK & OTHERS IN
RAPID FIRE WITH JEN HOUGHTON, IRENE ADLER, MRS HUDSON & OTHERS IN
RAPID FIRE WITH ELYSE DAWSON, SHERLOCK HOLMES IN 







RAPID FIRE WITH QUEENS OF HEART’s DORIS, KATHLEEN JENSEN
RAPID FIRE WITH QUEENS OF HEART’s ALICE, KATIE CAMPBELL
RAPID FIRE WITH QUEENS OF HEART’s EMILY, COURTNEY LINAM
RAPID FIRE WITH QUEENS OF HEART’s ROSE, JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN
Rapid Fire with Lucy Turner, Eleanor Vance in The Haunting of Hill House
Rapid Fire with Andrea Coleman, Mrs. Montague in The Haunting of Hill House
Rapid Fire with James David West, Dr. Montague in The Haunting of Hill House

While none of the cast truly look like their real-life counterparts, it’s not an impersonator show in Las Vegas, after all, Grace Gaddy’s Lucille Ball is, when all is said and done, a loving tribute to the iconic comedian. From her expressive eyes and impeccable comic timing to the way she embodies Lucy’s signature blend of glamour and goofiness, Gaddy gives a performance that’s joyously alive. Her physicality and facial expressions elicit hearty laughter while paying true homage to one of television’s greatest icons. My only hesitation in a giving Gaddy’s Lucilly Ball a full five star review rests on the fact that Gaddy’s choice of voice isn’t quite there. Yes, Lucille Ball’s real-life voice was quite different from her quicker, higher-pitched Lucy Ricardo voice, but Gaddy, try as she may, never quite hits the mark vocally. Of course the average Keeton audience member will easily overlook this because of Gaddy’s otherwise full-force embodiment of the iconic comedic actress. It should be noted that Gaddy’s Lucy is at her best not only when recreating a few classic I Love Lucy moments–her lip-smacking, face-pulling expressions during a quick look at Vitameatavegamin is indeed near-perfection–but also during scenes that show the rarer more vulnerable moment of the woman behind the legendary laughs.
Even though he plays the man upon whose book this play is based, Michael Welch has the benefit of playing someone most people have never seen and whose physical appearance isn’t as easily recognized as the four stars of the groundbreaking sitcom. That anonymity works to Welch’s advantage as he simply shines as Jess Oppenheimer, serving as the grounding force amid the behind-the-scenes chaos. His balance of humor and sincerity keeps the story engaging and human. His scenes between Gaddy’s Lucy and Rainwater’s Desi truly exemplify Oppenheimer’s role as both close friend and trusted collaborator in the creating of one of the world’s most beloved sitcoms.
Musically, this expanded version of the show delights with nostalgic selections that evoke memories of classic I Love Lucy episodes, including I’ll See You in C-U-B-A, Friendship, California Here I Come, and the beloved I Love Lucy theme song, complete with a bit of a did you know who wrote it spoiler and Rainwater and Gaddy singing the rarely heard lyrics. Enhancing the musical score throughout, frequent Keeton musical director Roger Hutson’s piano recordings add a lighthearted, era-appropriate touch, while Steve Love’s sound design, Brooke Sanders’ lighting, wig design by Alison Gaddy (loosen up those wigs so they look more natural and like the real-life ladies they’re styled after) and Denese René Evans’ costumes work in harmony to transport the audience straight to midcentury Hollywood. Evans’ costumes throughout are quite fun and seemingly period authentic, I do wish that Lucille’s Emmy dress was accurate, through…again, I’m just being an overzealous Lucy fan.
In spite of my above-reference initial hesitations and a strangely tepid Opening Night audience (Note: it’s ok to laugh out loud and to applaud after a particularly entertaining scene) and what could probably be chalked up to first night jitters from the cast resulting in the majority of Act 1’s delivery being a tad flat with several lines coming across as monotone with not real inflection and somewhat memorized, rather than convincingly felt and delivered with punch, those initial hesitations faded once the cast found their groove.