Grand Ole Opry To Livestream 100th Anniversary Night Show

Country music fans who can’t make it to Nashville on Friday to help celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Grand Ole Opry’s first broadcast will be able to tune in to a global livestream of the two star-packed shows.
The anniversary shows take place at the home of country music in Nashville at 7 p.m. and 10 p.m., featuring artists spanning four generations across country, bluegrass, gospel, Americana, and comedy. The performances commemorate the inaugural broadcast on Nov. 28, 1925 that featured a single fiddle tune performed by Uncle Jimmy Thompson.
Fans can tune in to the livestream on Facebook, X, Instagram, TikTok and YouTube.
“It’s truly amazing to me to think that what began as a regional radio broadcast on Nov. 28, 1925 is thriving more today than ever before and that exactly 100 years after that first performance, fans will be able to see and hear the celebration wherever they are around the globe,” said Opry Executive Producer Dan Rogers. “Families will be able to come together this Thanksgiving weekend and celebrate 100 years however they want—by tuning in on WSM or Sirius XM radio or by watching via Opry social media and YouTube. We promise a show that rises to the occasion of having been a century in the making.”
The lineup includes the Opry’s longest-serving member, Bill Anderson, and its most recent inductee, Kathy Mattea, along with Trace Adkins, Anderson, Mandy Barnett, T. Graham Brown, Steven Curtis Chapman, Henry Cho, John Conlee, Dailey & Vincent, The Gatlin Brothers, Vince Gill, The Isaacs, Jamey Johnson, Dustin Lynch, Mattea, Charlie McCoy, Scotty McCreery, Gary Mule Deer, Lorrie Morgan, Riders In The Sky, Ricky Skaggs, Don Schlitz, Connie Smith, Marty Stuart, Pam Tillis, The Whites, Mark Wills and Suzy Boggus.
Tickets for both shows are on sale now on opry.com.
The Nov. 28 shows are part of The Grand Ole Opry’s ongoing 100th anniversary celebrations. Throughout 2025, Opry 100 has had special shows, more than 60 Opry debuts and its first-ever live international broadcast from London’s iconic Royal Albert Hall last month. The 100th celebrations will continue into 2026 with numerous Opry 100 Honors shows, a performance at Carnegie Hall, and other special shows.
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