Grand Ole Opry to re-create final night at Ryman Auditorium

The show returns to the famed Downtown Nashville venue for one night only this summer

The Grand Ole Opry has announced a one-night return to its most famous former home, Ryman Auditorium in downtown Nashville, including an unprecedented re-creation of a past Opry show. The July 17th show will feature performances destined to return fans to the historic night of March 15, 1974, the final night of the Opry’s original Ryman run. Throughout that portion of the show, moments from the 1974 broadcast will be closely re-created for the Ryman and radio audiences.

“I am certain this is going to be another unforgettable part of our 100th year,” states Opry Executive Producer Dan Rogers. “For generations of Opry fans and artists, the Opry’s 1943 – 1974 run at the Ryman was a truly magical part of the Opry’s 100-year history. While we can’t actually turn back time, we’re going to do our best with performances and even commercial reads to transport fans to that historic evening when the Opry said farewell to the Mother Church of Country Music. I grew up listening to my parents talk about having witnessed Opry shows at the Ryman during that era, and for an hour or so on July 17, we’ll all have an experience similar to theirs.”

The Opry’s longest-serving member, Country Music Hall of Famer Bill Anderson, was among those who performed on March 15, 1974, and is scheduled to return to reprise his set from that historic evening.

“The last Grand Ole Opry show at the Ryman would have been special under any circumstances,” Anderson recalls, “but it was made extra special for me by the fact that my mom and dad had driven up from Georgia to be in the audience. Twenty years earlier, in 1954, they had brought me to Nashville and to the Ryman to see the Opry for the very first time. None of us could have ever imagined the summer before my senior year in high school that only a few years later I would be performing on that very stage, let alone go on to become the longest-serving Opry member in history. That night in 1974 I stood alongside many of my heroes from those earlier days, smiling down at my parents, and saying so long to the only Opry home I had ever known…definitely a moment I will remember for the rest of my life. When the Opry asked me if I’d be part of helping to re-create that last night at the Ryman in 1974…and sing the songs I sang back then…I readily agreed. ‘Just don’t ask me to wear the same clothes I wore that night,’” I quipped. “’Even if I could find them, I’d never be able to get in them!’”

Among those joining Anderson during the throwback will be Lorrie Morgan, whose father, George Morgan, was the final artist to perform on the March 15, 1974, Opry show, as well as Mandy Barnett and Chuck Mead. The Band Perry will perform earlier in the night.

In celebration, WSM Radio will re-air the historic shows from both the final Ryman show residency and the opening of the Grand Ole Opry House. Fans can relive these legendary moments in their entirety for the first time since they aired live on WSM-AM more than 50 years ago. WSM-AM will air the final Ryman Auditorium show on Thursday, July 17th at 10 am CT and will air the first Grand Ole Opry House show on Friday, July 18th, at 10 am CT.

The re-creation is part of the Grand Ole Opry’s ongoing Opry 100 anniversary celebration. The year-long celebration will pay tribute to the artists, fans, and songs that have cemented the Opry as the cultural heart and home of country music since its debut on WSM radio in 1925.

Buddy Iahn
Buddy Iahn