TheBigA said:secondchoice said:The one thing I remember was the lack of "commercials" for The Orpyland Theme park.
Huh? I had the complete opposite experience. It was one of my most vivid memory, seeing regular commercials for "the package," of staying at the hotel, attending the Opry and Opryland. They seemed to be once every hour. But maybe not as often. I never went to the park, but I had a sense of what it was like from the commercials.
As for "Branson style venues," Gaylord had the Opry House, as well as the Roy Acuff and Minnie Pearl Theaters on the Opryland grounds, then they restored the Ryman Auditorium, and built the Wildhorse Saloon, and the General Jackson river boat, each with a performance stage. Quite a few venues around Nashville. In fact, Gaylord still owns all those places.
This is a little off-topic, but I just wanted to correct this last post a bit:
There was no Minnie Pearl venue. There were small Roy Acuff and Minnie Pearl museums, just outside the main doors and to the west of the Opry House, but those closed with the theme park and their contents were either merged with the Grand Ole Opry Museum or returned to their families. The buildings they were in later became the WSM-AM administrative offices. Those offices were heavily damaged in the 2010 flood, and the buildings were razed. There's just a patch of grass there now. The Opry Museum closed after the flood and never reopened, but the building still stands and the jury is still out on whether Gaylord will ever bring it back to life.
There was a "Roy Acuff Theatre" (later the BellSouth Acuff Theatre) just to the South of the Opry House, between it and the Grand Ole Opry Museum. Despite sitting outside the park gates, it was used as a venue for Opryland Themepark's top stage show ("Brenda Lee's Music Music Music" and "Dick Clark's American Bandstand Classics", among others -- you had to show your themepark admission stub to get in). It only became a 'ticketed venue' late in the park's run, during the "Nashville On Stage" concert series from 1995-1997. After the park closed, it was used as a venue for smaller shows, an auxiliary lecture hall for Gaylord Opryland conventions, and was the broadcast location for USA's/NBC's "Nashville Star". It suffered much the same fate in 2010. There was a children's dance competition taking place in there on May 2, and they had to evacuate the premises when they realized water was pooling on the carpet in the audience seating area (http://www.showstopperonline.com/blog/?p=137). After the flood, Gaylord opted not to repair the building—I can't imagine it was much of a profit center for Gaylord—and tore it down last year. It's now a bus parking lot for the Opry House.