
At 10am on Tuesday, February 20, Tennessee Performing Arts Center announced their upcoming 2024/2025 Broadway at TPAC season. Included in the announcement are six Music City premieres and two returning favorites.
Just a couple weeks ago, when TPAC began teasing their 24/25 Season Announcement as 1 Spectacular Season, they did so by revealing one of the six premiere productions headed to Music City as Moulin Rouge! What’s more, it will be in Nashville for a special two-week engagement October 8-20, 2024.
Back in December, another of the six coming premieres was announced early when it was revealed that the National Tour of Shucked would be coming to TPAC’s Jackson Hall November 5-10 of 2024. Not only is Shucked coming to TPAC, it’s also kicking off the National Tour with the Nashville dates, which makes perfect sense considering Music City is home to both Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally, the show’s composers.
With the official announcement hitting their socials first thing Tuesday morning, the rest of the season was unveiled. Below are details about each show taken directly from TPAC’s Season Announcement:
Clue (Nashville Premiere)
September 10-15, 2024
Murder and blackmail are on the menu when six mysterious guests assemble at Boddy Manor for a night they’ll never forget! Based on the cult 1985 Paramount movie and inspired by the classic Hasbro board game, Clue is the ultimate whodunit that will leave you dying of laughter and keep you guessing until the final twist.
Moulin Rouge! The Musical (Nashville Premiere)
October 8-20, 2024
Pop the champagne, Moulin Rough! The Musical is the winner of 10 Tony Awards® — including Best Musical! Enter a world of glitz, grandeur, and glory! Baz Luhrmann’s revolutionary film comes to life onstage, remixed in a new musical extravaganza. Moulin Rouge! is more than a musical — it is a state of mind.
Shucked (National Tour Opening)
November 5-10, 2024
Shucked is the Tony Award®–winning musical comedy The Wall Street Journal calls “flat out hilarious!” Featuring a book by Tony Award winner Robert Horn (Tootsie), a score by the Grammy® Award–winning songwriting team of Nashvillians Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally, and directed by Tony Award winner Jack O’Brien (Hairspray), this corn-fed, corn-bred American musical is sure to satisfy your appetite.
Peter Pan (Newly Imagined Classic)
January7-12, 2025
This high-flying musical has been thrilling audiences of all ages for close to 70 years and is now being brought back to life in a new adaptation by celebrated playwright Larissa FastHorse, directed by Emmy Award® winner Lonny Price and choreography by Lorin Latarro. Peter Pan embraces the child in us all – your entire family will be Hooked!
& Juliet (Nashville Premiere)
February 11-16, 2025
Created by the Emmy®-winning writer from Schitt’s Creek, this hilarious new musical flips the script on the greatest love story ever told. & Juliet asks: what would happen next if Juliet didn’t end it all over Romeo? Get whisked away on a fabulous journey as she ditches her famous ending for a fresh beginning and a second chance at life and love—her way.
Mamma Mia! (Global Smash Hit)
March 18-23, 2025
A mother. A daughter. Three possible dads. And a trip down the aisle you’ll never forget! For nearly 25 years, people all around the world have fallen in love with the characters, the story, and the timeless hits of ABBA that make Mamma Mia! the ultimate feel-good show.
Kimberly Akimbo (Nashville Premiere)
April 8-13, 2025
Winner of five 2023 Tony Awards® including Best Musical, Kimberly Akimbo is about teenager, Kim who recently moved with her family to a new town. She is forced to navigate family dysfunction, a rare genetic condition, her first crush…and possible felony charges. Ever the optimist, she is determined to find happiness against all odds and embark on a great adventure.
MJ (Nashville Premiere)
April 29 – May 11, 2025
One of the greatest entertainers of all time. Now, Michael Jackson’s unique and unparalleled artistry comes to Nashville as MJ, the multi Tony Award®-winning new musical begins a tour of its own. Created by Tony Award®-winning Director/Choreographer Christopher Wheeldon and two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Lynn Nottage, MJ offers a rare look at the creative mind and collaborative spirit that catapulted Michael Jackson into legendary status.
If you’re a current season ticket subscriber, CLICK HERE to renew your season tickets. New season ticket subscribers will have the option to purchase 2024-2025 Season Tickets beginning in April. Broadway at TPAC Season Tickets for all eight shows are available in five different price levels ranging from $378 to $884, depending on seat selection. For a visual map of seat level section, pricing options and more information, CLICK HERE.
Of course you don’t have to wait until September to see great Broadway shows at TPAC, as the current season continues. Next, for a limited two-night engagement is Jagged Little Pill, onstage at Jackson Hall March 1 & 2. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. Then Beetlejuice take to the stage March 12-17. CLICK HERE for tickets. Be sure to check out TPAC online and on socials by clicking any of the following: TPAC.org, TPAC on Instagram, TPAC on Facebook, TPAC on Twitter and TPAC on YouTube.
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, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram and JHPEntertainment on Twitter.
Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

RAPID FIRE WITH THE 39 STEPS’ CLOWN 2, ALYSSA BORG
RAPID FIRE WITH BARCLAY RANDALL, THE 39 STEPS’ CLOWN 1
RAPID FIRE WITH ERIN GRACE BAILEY, THE 39 STEPS’ ANNABELLA, MARGARET & PAMELA
RAPID FIRE WITH PHILIP DAVID BLACK, THE 39 STEPS’ RICHARD HANNAY
RAPID FIRE WITH CLOSER’s ANGELA GIMLIN
JHPENTERTAINMENT: You play Anna. What can you tell me about her?
RAPID FIRE WITH CLOSER’s BRITT BYRD
BRITT BYRD: I was quite reckless in my 20s, yeah. But who wasn’t in one way or another? I learned a lot of hard but valuable lessons from sabotaging my own happiness in those days, and I like to think I’ve grown up a lot since then, so I cut Alice a lot of slack for her mistakes.
RAPID FIRE WITH CLOSER’s ROSS CANALES
JHPENTERTAINMENT: There are some very intense scenes in Closer. How do you prepare for such somber moments in the script?
RAPID FIRE WITH CLOSER’s JEREMY JAMES CARMICHAEL
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Closer is being presented at the Annex on the second floor above Third Coast Comedy Club. What’s the advantage of presenting this particular show in such an intimate space?
RAPID FIRE WITH STEEL MAGNOLIAS’ CLAIREE, JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN
RAPID FIRE WITH STEEL MAGNOLIAS’ OUISER, CHERYL SINGTON
RAPID FIRE WITH STEEL MAGNOLIAS’ TRUVY, COURTNEY LINAM
RAPID FIRE WITH STEEL MAGNOLIAS’ SHELBY, MACY SAULS
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH GIRL FROM THE NORTH COUNTRY’s MATT MANUEL
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH GIRL FROM THE NORTH COUNTRY’s JEREMY WEBB

RAPID FIRE WITH THE LION IN WINTER DIRECTOR, CLAY HILLWIG
RAPID FIRE WITH JACK E. CHAMBERS, HENRY II IN THE LION IN WINTER
JHPENTERTAINMENT: As the central patriarch, you share the stage with Kay Ayers as Eleanor, Henry’s Queen, as well as Elizabeth Burrow, Henry’s rumored mistress. What’s been it been like sharing the stage with each of these actresses?
RAPID FIRE WITH KAY AYERS, ELEANOR IN THE LION IN WINTER
JHPENTERTAINMENT: While you’ve shared the stage with Clay Hillwig in the past, this marks the first time he’s directed you in a show. During the rehearsal process, what is it about Clay’s directorial style that you admire most?
RAPID FIRE WITH ELIZABETH BURROW, AlAIS IN THE LION IN WINTER
JHPENTERTAINMENT: In addition to your on-stage role, you’ve also been part of the technical crew for The Lion in Winter, as scenic painter. What can you tell me about the set?
From the moment Katerina McCrimmon takes the stage, she IS Fanny Brice. She’s got the period-authentic New York dialect, the exaggerated facial expressions, but most of all, she’s got the voice. Ok, so the voice might be more what audiences expect thanks to the aforementioned Streisand portrayal, but I’m here to tell you McCrimmon makes the character her own while carefully maneuvering through, and well beyond what could easily be brushed off as an impression. Throughout the show, including more familiar territory of musical moments like I’m the Greatest Star, Don’t Rain on My Parade and People, and my personal favorite, His Love Makes Me Beautiful, McCrimmon vocal range, strength and ability prove time and time again she’s the perfect powerhouse to introduce Fanny Brice to a whole new generation of musical theatre fans. 
Izaiah Montague Harris plays the always in-step and dependable Eddie Ryan, a dancer/choreographer friend of Fanny’s who’s always there to help her with her career and pick up the pieces when Nicky is out of step. When I say Harris’ Eddie is in-step, I mean it. One of the best non-Fanny-centric moments of the show features Harris in a tap-tactic dance sequence. Which reminds me, kudos to the show’s costume designer, Susan Hilferty. Yes, all of Fanny’s period-perfect costumes are fabulous, but it was during Harris’ tap number that I notice a wonderfully clever costuming detail. Hiferty has sewn the occasional rhinestone throughout the pant legs of Harris costume, which catch the light of his fancy footwork and draw the eye throughout the dancer’s entire body, allowing those of us who picked up on this seemingly random detail the joy of watching the full mechanics, precision and skill of the dance.
Speaking of Scrooge, Matthew Carlton is simply brilliant in the role, and it’s a bit of a full-circle moment! His bio reveals his first foray into A Christmas Carol at The Rep came in 1990 when he was cast as Scrooge’s young nephew, Fred. Over the years, Carlton says he’s played a dozen or more characters in eleven different production. I’m here to tell you though, he better free up his winter calendar going forward because it’s official, Matthew Carlton now ranks among my favorites to have ever taken on the role. He’s in good company, too, considering Sir Michael Caine’s Scrooge from The Muppet Christmas Carol tops the list! What’s interesting about Carlton’s performance is, it’s all-encompassing. Yes, he can mean-mug with the best of them, but the scene that struck me most, and may or may not have made my eyes sweat takes place during a party when Scrooge is transported back in time by Kris Sidberry’s beautiful Ghost of Christmas Past. In the scene, Carlton’s Scrooge sees his beloved Belle (Ivory Bodnar) enjoying the merriment of a dance with fellow holiday revelers. Caught up in the moment, but forgetting that he’s only a shadow presence, Scrooge attempts to join in the fun, getting caught at one point in the center of a quartet of dancers. Of course unseen because he isn’t actually there in his present form, he’s ignored as the dancers continue moving about without him. Within just a few minutes as this scene plays out, Carlton, under the keen direction of Brewer, runs the gamut of emotion from excitement to regret and sadness. Being a self-confessed Scrooge myself, I was a puddle.
You know you’re a great actor when just a projection of your face can elicit an internal squee. That’s the exact reaction when another longtime Nashville favorite, Brian Webb Russell’s face appeared on Scrooge’s door as the “dead to begin with” Jacob Marley. In an early scene, when Marley visits Scrooge to warn him of the coming visitors, Russell’s Marley rattles his chains as he floats about the room. More fanciful than frightening, a joy to watch. He’s equally enjoyable when paired with Deb Meeks (making her Rep debut) as a rather boisterous party-goer who’s husband (Russell) is partaking of a few too many Christmas ‘spirits’ of his own. These two need to be paired together more!
Can’t talk about A Christmas Carol without talking about the Spirits. Mentioned above, Kris Sidberry, making her Nashville Rep debut, is simply magical as Ghost of Christmas Past. Delightful, sweet and fun…all the things we think of most when we remember the past are personified in Sidberry’s performance. She doesn’t just shine in her performance, she sparkles. In part, thanks to Costumer Designer, Melissa Durmon’s literally and figuratively glowing gown!
Brian Charles Rooney, seen last holiday season as Buddy the Elf in Nashville Rep’s Elf, is larger than life as Ghost of Christmas Present, and what a present his performance is. Towering above Carlton’s Scrooge (did I see light-up disco platforms under Rooney’s velvet robe?) Rooney’s Ghost of Christmas Present is cheeky, loud and bossy. Everything you could wish for in a ghost guide. Again, kudos to Durmon, and added kudos to her and her wig department team for transforming Rooney into an almost unrecognizable bacchanalian party god with flowing ginger locks and beard. Didn’t think I was into scruffy gingers, but you never know. As mentioned previously, Rooney is among those featured throughout the action as a caroler. I have it on good authority he had been dealing with a bit of laryngitis during the opening days of the show. All I know is, if that’s Rooney with laryngitis, belting out and hitting those unfathomable soprano-high notes, the rest of the run the audiences were in for a treat.
Round out the ghostly trio is Ben Friesen as Ghost of Christmas Future. Even though the show is about to enter its final week at the time of this review being posted, I’m a staunch believer that spoilers do just that…they spoil aspects of shows that are meant to surprise and entertain. To that end, Friesen’s Ghost of Christmas Future definitely delivers. Visually hauntingly brilliant and looming large, Friesen’s appearance is definitely a powerful one. Suffice it to say, his performances a Ghost of Christmas Future would no doubt make Jim Henson proud..and that’s as much of a spoiler as you’ll get from me. Not to fret though, he’s also featured throughout the show, most notably as Dick Wilkins, a friend and colleague of younger Scrooge.
The entire cast is filled with great supporting performances. Mention should be made of Max Fleischhacker as Scrooge’s Nephew Fred, Ethan H. Jones as Mr. Blakeley, Abby Hopper as Alice Cratchit, Alex Hillaker as Henry Cratchit, David Long III as Peter Cratchit, Shelby Talbert as Martha Cratchit, Elle Wesley as Belinda Cratchit, Caroline Henry as Alice Cratchit and Emily Hooper and David Matthew Clark (on alternate nights) each sharing the role as Tiny Tim. 
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE’s GEOFF DAVIN
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE’s MARIAH PARRIS
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE’s CALEB SHORE
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE’s GEROLD OLIVER

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A CHRISTMAS CAROL DIRECTOR MICAH-SHANE BREWER
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A CHRISTMAS CAROL’s GHOST OF CHRISTMAS PAST, KRIS SIDBERRY
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A CHRISTMAS CAROL’s GHOST OF CHRISTMAS FUTURE, BEN FRIESEN
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A CHRISTMAS CAROL’s GHOST OF CHRISTMAS PRESENT, BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY