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1[[quoteright:315:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/nashville3_7922.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:315:"Twenty-four of your favorite stars!"]]
3
4->"''You get your hair cut; you don't belong in Nashville.''"
5-->-- '''Haven Hamilton'''
6
7One of Creator/RobertAltman's most acclaimed films, the 1975 comedy-drama ''Nashville'' boasts an {{ensemble cast}} of 24 -- count 'em, ''24'' -- principal characters, whom it follows around the country music capital of UsefulNotes/{{Nashville}} over the course of the five days leading up to a concert being staged on behalf of a third-party candidate for the U.S. presidency.
8
9There is no exact definition of who is and isn't a main character, but here are the ones that get the most screen time:
10
11* Barbara Jean (Creator/RoneeBlakley), the darling of the country music world. She is frail, lonely, and worn out both physically and emotionally, but [[StepfordSmiler tries to keep a smile on anyway]]. She is also responsible for more than a few of the film's best musical moments. Blakley's performance earned her an [[MediaNotes/AcademyAward Oscar]] nomination for [[MediaNotes/AcademyAwardForBestActressInASupportingRole Best Supporting Actress]].
12* [[AlliterativeName Haven Hamilton]] (Creator/HenryGibson), an aging, egotistical country music legend with his own political aspirations.
13* Barnett (Creator/AllenGarfield), Barbara Jean's emotionally abusive manager/husband. A Col. Parker type, he's more interested in his wife's career than her crumbling sanity.
14* Linnea Reese (Creator/LilyTomlin), a middle-aged gospel singer/housewife stuck with her inept husband Del (Creator/NedBeatty) and two deaf kids. She is torn between loyalty to her husband and the advances of a charming womanizer. Tomlin also got a Best Supporting Actress nomination for her role.
15* Tom Frank (Creator/KeithCarradine), the most famous third of the folk-rock trio Bill, Mary, and Tom. A self-loathing womanizer, he has several trysts over the course of the film. Carradine won the [[MediaNotes/AcademyAwardForBestOriginalSong Best Original Song]] Oscar for "I'm Easy", which he performs as Tom in-universe.
16* John Triplette (Creator/MichaelMurphy), an operative for dark-horse presidential candidate Hal Phillip Walker, whose slick, smooth-talking recruitment tactics to attract big-name singers for the concert stands in stark contrast to Walker's folksy, homespun image.
17
18The screenplay was written by Creator/JoanTewkesbury, who'd collaborated with Altman on ''Film/ThievesLikeUs'' one year earlier.
19
20----
21!!This film provides examples of:
22
23* AssassinationAttempt: The closing scene.
24* AwardBaitSong: "It Don't Worry Me" counts. Ironically, it was the other song Creator/KeithCarradine contributed to the soundtrack, the folky "I'm Easy", that ended up winning an Oscar.
25* BigBrotherInstinct: The relationship between Wade and Sueleen has shades of this, especially [[spoiler: after Sueleen does her strip-show - Wade, knowing she's been manipulated and is just going to be manipulated more, [[BreakingSpeech tries to convince her]] that she doesn't have the talent, to protect her. It doesn't work.]]
26* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: Barbara Jean]] has been shot, likely fatally, but Winifred's gotten her big break, and the crowd rallies admirably to refuse to let the assassin 'win'. Furthermore, this MIGHT have just derailed Hal Philip Walker's Replacement Party, a group that's wound up seeming more ominous as the film's gone along.
27* BreakingSpeech: Wade tries this [[IgnoredEpiphany unsuccessfully]] on Sueleen after [[spoiler:she's manipulated into doing a strip-show, telling her that she doesn't have what it takes to be a star.]]
28* BreakTheCutie: After [[spoiler: being manipulated into a degrading strip performance on night four on promises of performing alongside Barbara Jean,]] Sueleen is despondent, visibly disturbed and a little unstable. When Wade confronts her after the fact, [[spoiler: in their final conversation, and outright tells her that she can't sing, doesn't have talent and will never be a star, she just disregards what he tells her and shuts the door on him, suggesting [[DownerEnding all she's really got to look forward to is being manipulated more, without any success]].]]
29* TheCameo: Creator/ElliottGould and Creator/JulieChristie appear [[AsHimself as themselves]] in different scenes.
30* TheCasanova: Folk rock singer Tom has a way with the ladies.
31* CelebrityParadox: Creator/ElliottGould and Creator/JulieChristie appear [[AsHimself as themselves]], but Gould had already appeared in several Robert Altman films, and Christie co-starred in ''Film/DoctorZhivago'' alongside Creator/GeraldineChaplin (Opal, Creator/TheBBC documentarian).
32* ChekhovsGun: Kenny's violin case [[spoiler: [[SenselessViolins which turns out to hold a gun]]]].
33* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}:
34** Opal, who may or may not actually work for Creator/TheBBC as a documentarian. Her train of thought during her "narration" frequently derails, leaving her spouting nonsense bordering on word salad.
35** The Tricycle Man casually performs simple sleight-of-hand tricks to the bemusement of onlookers and appears to be camping out, if not ''living'', on the grounds of a school bus depot when he is not driving about the city from venue to venue as an audience member. He has an airy, dreamy nature and absolutely no dialogue, furthering the enigma.
36* CreatorBreakdown: Barbara Jean suffers this in-universe, in her first public performance after her accident. [[invoked]]
37* CreatorCameo: Richard Baskin, the film's musical director and co-writer of a bunch of the songs, plays long-haired session keyboardist Frog (as possibly the same character, he's also seen playing guitar in a club when Albuquerque shows up wanting to perform). Robert Altman himself is the voice of the RecordProducer in the studio sequence, and screenwriter Joan Tewkesbury is the voice of the woman on the phone with Tom while Linnea gets ready to leave his room (she's also the voice of Kenny's mother on the phone).
38* CreditsGag: The film opens with a fake commercial for its own soundtrack album, with the cast members' names ("Twenty-four of your favorite stars!") being rattled off by a [[MotorMouth motormouthed]] voiceover announcer in the manner of an old K-Tel spot.
39* CultOfPersonality: The Replacement Party seems to function as this for the enigmatic Hal Philip Walker.
40* TheDitz: Opal and Sueleen.
41* DodgyToupee: Haven Hamilton's toupee comes off [[spoiler:during the chaos after Barbara Jean gets shot]].
42* DomesticAbuse: Barbara Jean's husband/manager Barnett emotionally belittles her and micromanages her career. This seems to be playing a part in her ongoing mental decline--which tends to make him more controlling and abusive.
43* DoNotCallMePaul: Singing hopeful Winifred prefers to be called Albuquerque, while Mr. Green's niece Martha insists her name is really L.A. Joan.
44* {{Eagleland}}: Haven Hamilton's song "200 Years" is Type 1, and not unlike "real" songs of the mid-'70s that tied into the Bicentennial.
45* EnsembleCast: The film centers on 24 characters, and balances screentime between them fairly evenly. John Triplette has the most actual screentime, but he's mainly just interacting with the others and doesn't have much of a character arc of his own.
46* ExtremelyShortTimespan: The story takes place over five days.
47* FanDisservice: On the night of day four [[spoiler: Sueleen performs at a campaign event, but gets booed off the stage, and is then manipulated into doing a strip-tease for the crowd, resulting in an extremely uncomfortable nude scene.]]
48* FictionalPoliticalParty: The Replacement Party is a third party, whose actual politics are kept vague and slightly ridiculous, making it rather hard to identify with any existing political group.
49* HiddenDepths:
50** Haven Hamilton's son Bud is briefly shown to be a pretty good singer himself. Dave Peel, who played him, had a few minor CountryMusic hits in real life.
51** Averted with Norman the limo driver. He gets a chance to play a guitar but only knows a couple basic chords.
52** In the final scene we discover that [[spoiler:Winifred/Albuquerque ''is'' an incredible singer]].
53* HollywoodToneDeaf: Sueleen Gay.
54* IceCreamKoan: Hal Philip Walker seems to use these when he isn't dispensing home-spun wisdom--one that stands out is the question 'Does Christmas smell like oranges to you?'.
55* {{Improv}}: While there was a solid script written by Altman and Joan Tewkesbury that dictated all the actions of all the characters, the dialog was largely improvised by the actors.
56* InnocentBigot: Opal obviously sees herself as the sophisticated, open-minded lady of the world traipsing through the racist South--however, it's just as obvious to the viewers that she's more racist than most of the Southerners in the film, all of whom are too polite or too baffled to call her on it.
57* {{Jerkass}}: Haven Hamilton pretty much acts like a pompous, arrogant narcissist for most of the film.
58* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Haven is pretty supportive of his son. Also, his actions at the rally [[spoiler: after he and Barbara Jean are shot]] speak for themselves, as [[spoiler: he re-takes the stage after having been shot in order to calm the crowd and prevent a riot.]]
59-->'''Haven Hamilton''': This is Nashville! [[spoiler: This ain't [[UsefulNotes/JohnFKennedy Dallas]]]], this is Nashville! They can't do this to us here in Nashville! Come on, sing! Sing, somebody, sing! I'm fine, I'm fine. You sing!
60** Likewise, Tom sleeps with a lot of women and treats them indifferently (except for Linnea; see LadykillerInLove below), and acts rudely towards Bill & Mary, but [[spoiler:he's one of the first to help Barbara Jean after she's been shot]].
61* LadykillerInLove: Tom falls in love with Linnea, but [[spoiler: she rejects him after they sleep together and leaves]].
62* MusicalWorldHypotheses: A prominent example of a purely Diegetic musical.
63* NewscasterCameo: Real life ABC News correspondent Howard K. Smith gives a commentary about Hal Phillip Walker.
64* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed:
65** Several of the characters are thinly-veiled expies of real life country music stars of the era: Barbara Jean (Loretta Lynn), Haven Hamilton (Roy Acuff), Tommy Brown (Charley Pride), Connie White (Lynn Anderson), and Bill, Mary & Tom (Peter, Paul & Mary).
66** There's also a fair bit of Hank Snow and Porter Wagoner in Haven Hamilton, and WordOfGod from screenwriter Joan Tewkesbury is that Conway Twitty and Tex Ritter inspired some elements of the character as well.
67** Hal Philip Walker seems like a strange combination of George Wallace, George [=McGovern=], and the Reverend Sun Myung Moon.
68* NoNameGiven: Creator/JeffGoldblum's Tricycle Man, a local(?) eccentric who rides through the film on his [[CoolBike three-wheeled motorcycle]], blithely oblivious to everyone else. (He's the sole significant character who has no dialogue.)
69* OneBookAuthor: In universe, Bill, Mary & Tom have only released one album but seem to be on the verge of breaking up.
70* PanUpToTheSkyEnding: The camera tilts up past the Parthenon as the performance of "It Don't Worry Me" fades out, and the film ends with a shot of an overcast sky.
71* PetTheDog: Kenny clearly has... issues, but he gets along with Mr. Green better than the man's own niece, Martha [[spoiler: He even attends the funeral of the man's wife, something Martha conspicuously fails to do.]]
72* PhoneyCall: Lily Tomlin's character receives a booty call from Tom while having dinner with her husband and kids. She first presents to be talking to someone else and after the caller has hung up she speaks a few more lines into the speaker to make the conversation sound less suspicious to her family.
73* PopCulturalOsmosisFailure: Del Reese doesn't recognize who Creator/ElliottGould is at first when the latter shows up at Haven's party.
74** Similarly, at Opryland later, when Creator/JulieChristie shows up, Connie thinks everyone is putting her on when talking about Christie being a star.
75* {{Pun}}: When Haven meets with John Triplette (Hal Phillip Walker's campaign manager) at his party, Lady Pearl, Haven's companion, tells Triplette Haven breeds Tennessee Walker horses, to which Haven says, "Mr. Triplette knows all about Walkers." [[ActuallyPrettyFunny Triplette chuckles at this]].
76* ReallyGetsAround: Tom, who once again has a way with the ladies. And Martha (aka "L.A. Joan"), who's visiting Nashville to see her ailing aunt, and never gets around to it, finding plenty of other things to keep her busy.
77* RedHerring: The soldier who serves as Barbara Jean's ominous apparent StalkerWithACrush. [[spoiler: Turns out his mother is the one who saved her life from her earlier accident, and that she wants him to keep an eye on her. (Though he is a rather starstruck fan.) He even helps get her likely killer at the end.]]
78* StagedPopulistUprising: The Replacement Party shows sign of being the democratic equivalent of one--while Hal Philip Walker takes great pains to paint himself as an honest man of the people out to save the nation, his underling John Triplette is a standard SleazyPolitician, and what we see of the Replacement Party's machinery seems closer to a cult than a political party.
79* StepfordSmiler: Barbara Jean is a serious case of Type A, and the mask is slipping ''badly''.
80* StylisticSuck: Many of the songs intentionally emulate the bombastic, overproduced style that many mainstream country artists were adopting in the mid-'70s.
81* TheVoice: Presidential candidate Hal Phillip Walker. His one on-screen appearance is shot from long distance so we never see his face. For the record, his portrayer Thomas Hal Phillips looked like [[http://www.mswritersandmusicians.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/thomas-phillips5.jpg this]]. Altman had Phillips reprise the role a decade later in ''O.C & Stiggs'', showing Walker giving a few speeches on TV. We get a better view of Walker but still not a crystal-clear image.
82* WordSalad:
83** Opal's "journalism" frequently passes through PurpleProse to wind up here.
84** More tragically, [[spoiler: Barbara Jean's stories during her onstage CreatorBreakdown are filled with this, becoming increasingly incoherent as she talks]].
85* YouCanLeaveYourHatOn: Sueleen is pressured into doing a striptease while singing at a Walker fundraiser.

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