
Nashville Shakespeare Festival is creating a “Cultural Alliance” with Kennie Playhouse Theatre, a local theatre company dedicated to giving the underserved African American acting community opportunities to perform for diverse audiences.
More than 30 arts organizations are joining a larger, nonpartisan VoteEarlyTN campaign to promote early voting leading up to the November election.
Due to the popularity its summer virtual events, TPAC announces an expanded Salon Series of free evening events to explore Nashville arts and culture starting Sept. 1.
Studio Tenn will present Broadway legend Adam Pascal’s “So Far…” An Acoustic Retrospective at the Academy Park Performing Arts Center on Aug. 22 at 7:00 p.m.
TPAC will host a Zoom discussion on the 19th Amendment as Marilyn Artus completes her nationwide Her Flag project at War Memorial Auditorium on August 18.
Marilyn Artus will bring the Her Flag project to War Memorial Auditorium on August 18 to culminate her commemoration of the 19th Amendment’s ratification.
Jason Alexander, Kelli O’Hara, and more performing arts luminaries are coming to Studio Tenn’s weekly talk show, “Studio Tenn Talks: Theater Conversations with Patrick Cassidy,” this summer.
A new musical written and produced by teenagers during Nashville’s safer-at-home order, will stream on The Theater Bug website on June 12 at 7 p.m.
Effective March 7, 2022
To help ensure the health and well-being of our audiences, artists, staff, and volunteers, TPAC has updated its Patron Entry Policy:
For our complete entry policy details and updated health protocols, visit TPAC.ORG/PatronHealth.
It means you’ll be unable to see the entire stage from those seats.
We sell these seats because for many fans the limited view is not a problem, and the tickets are clearly labeled at time of purchase (see photo below). Limited view seating varies event to event and could be something as small as a tiny corner of the stage being blocked from view. Call our box office at 615-782-4040 for additional information on limited view seating.
Seats marked with “Limited View” during purchase path
Many shows impose ticket limits to allow as many people as possible to have equal access to seats. This is done as a deterrent to third party vendors, i.e. scalpers, who may purchase large blocks of seats and then resell them online at an inflated cost. The term “household” refers to any shared information on one or more accounts. This includes, but may not be limited to matching names, mailing and billing addresses, email addresses, phone numbers and credit card numbers. Any households that purchase more than the allowed number of tickets may have their order(s) refunded without notice.