Grace Good is a performance artist and the founder/creative director of Goodness Gracious Creative Entertainment. Known for large-scale hoop choreography, fire performance, and aerial work, she has performed at NBA halftime shows, national corporate events, and major entertainment venues across the country. She’s based in Nashville, Tenn.
How she got her start:
“I started my career as a performer, specializing in contemporary circus arts, fire performance, and large-scale hoop choreography. Touring nationally and working in sports arenas gave me a deep understanding of what truly connects with live audiences. It isn’t just technical skill—it’s pacing, scale, and how a performance feels in the room.
Over time, clients began asking for more than only my act. They wanted help sourcing additional artists, shaping visual concepts, and designing how entertainment fits into the overall experience. That evolution happened organically and eventually led to the launch of Goodness Gracious Creative Entertainment.
Because I still actively perform through Grace Good Cirque, I approach creative direction from a performer’s perspective. That balance between artistic vision and production reality is something I care deeply about and has shaped the company from the beginning.”
Photo: Courtesy of Goodness Gracious Creative Entertainment
What sets her work apart:
“What sets our work apart is that we approach entertainment as part of the overall design strategy, not as a separate layer added at the end.
Rather than simply booking acts, we think about how performance functions inside the event ecosystem. That might mean roaming performers acting as interactive visual elements, large-scale custom builds that anchor a theme, or specialty apparatus that changes the energy of a space.
We invest in original costuming, LED elements, large-format props, and custom apparatus so that our work feels specific to each event rather than pulled from a catalog.
Because I continue performing myself, the company never loses sight of what works in real-world environments. That connection to live execution keeps our creative ambition grounded in practicality.”
What innovation means to her:
“Innovation in events isn’t about doing something flashy just to be new. It’s about creating environments that people genuinely remember.
For me, innovation often means integrating performance directly into a space’s architecture rather than isolating it on a stage. It means developing custom acts, original costuming, and specialty apparatus instead of relying on stock entertainment.
Audiences today are incredibly visually literate. Between sports broadcasts, festivals, and immersive productions, expectations are high. We stay inspired by looking beyond traditional event spaces—drawing influence from halftime shows, immersive theater, fashion, and large-scale public productions—and then translating that energy into corporate and private environments.
Staying forward-thinking is essential because the bar continues to rise. If we aren’t evolving, we’re falling behind.”
Photo: Iron Lace Photography
Memorable moment:
“One of our most memorable projects was producing immersive entertainment for the Nashville Fantasy Ball. The concept blended gothic elegance with theatrical intensity, and we designed the entertainment to feel woven into the space’s architecture rather than presented as isolated stage moments.
We created living statues that functioned as sculptural installations, aerialists integrated into architectural focal points, and character performers interacting with guests in subtle, narrative-driven ways.
What made it special was its cohesion. Guests weren’t simply watching something happen—they were moving through a fully realized environment. That level of integration is where we believe event design is heading.”
Her vision for the future of the industry:
“The future of events is immersive and experience-driven. Audiences don’t just want to attend events—they want to enter environments. I see the industry continuing to move toward entertainment embedded within spatial design, interactive and roaming performance formats, and custom visual worlds instead of standardized decor packages.
There’s a growing crossover between sports production, theatrical staging, brand activations, and experiential marketing. The lines are blurring, and that’s exciting.
At Goodness Gracious Creative Entertainment, our goal is to continue merging performance and production design in ways that feel cohesive, intentional, and emotionally engaging.”
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