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One Look Lyrics — Nativity!

One Look Lyrics

St Bernadette Kids
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He's not my type, he's not too bad
Not the most gorgeous I've ever had

I'll grow to love her,

it's my's back out

To young, to young, what it's all about

And yet there's something behind those eyes

A far that figures, but never lies

Could I love him?

Could she love me?

(all)
We're conversate to what he's meant to be

Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome to the stage for one night only It's Pardons!

(all)
One love, can we forever wander?
And it's like we've always known
One love, we've walked together
Together, forever, and always home
Together, forever, and always, always home

Song Overview

One Look lyrics by St Bernadette Kids
St Bernadette Kids sing 'One Look' in a widely shared official-audio style upload.

TL;DR: A short Act II ensemble number where school-kid crush logic meets a grown-up pop-ballad frame - sweet, slightly cheeky, and built to pivot the show from travelogue sparkle into communal celebration.

Review and Highlights

Quick summary

  1. Performed by the St Bernadette kids as a compact ensemble vignette in Act II.
  2. Plays like a pop-romance parody that still keeps a sincere pulse underneath.
  3. Its hook turns "first impressions" into a chorus built for a school cast, not a solo star.
  4. On the 2018 original cast album, it functions as a quick palate-cleanser between bigger set-pieces.
Scene from One Look by St Bernadette Kids
'One Look' in the official-audio playlist ecosystem.

Nativity! The Musical (2017) - stage musical - non-diegetic. The St Bernadette kids deliver it in Act II, placed after "Nazareth" and before "Good News" in the published running order. It matters because the show needs a quick turn: the wonder of the story world has landed, and now the kids translate that wonder into their own messy, funny feelings - then the piece hands the baton back to the ensemble celebration.

Creation History

The writers lean on a neat trick: dress a primary-school moment in the clothes of a grown-up love song, then let the seams show. Debbie Isitt and Nicky Ager built the musical from the film world and its original numbers, and the stage version premiered at Birmingham Repertory Theatre on October 20, 2017 before touring. The cast recording arrived later, fixing these fast-moving scenes into tidy album shapes - short tracks, punchy transitions, and hooks that read clearly even without the staging. As stated by British Comedy Guide, the film soundtrack release history also helped cement this song family as part of the wider Nativity music footprint.

Song Meaning and Annotations

St Bernadette Kids performing One Look
Video moments that reveal the meaning.

Plot

Inside the Nativity storyworld, the kids keep ricocheting between big promises and small realities. This number zooms all the way in: not Hollywood, not headlines, just the quiet chaos of who likes who, who is pretending not to care, and who is trying to talk themselves into the "right" feeling. The scene plays like a classroom daydream that spills into song, then snaps back to the show’s forward drive.

Song Meaning

At heart, it is about first impressions and second thoughts. The lyric voice keeps bargaining with itself - a kid trying to sound certain while obviously not certain at all. The chorus reframes attraction as destiny ("we have always known"), which is funny because it is exactly how crushes feel at that age: absolute, dramatic, and liable to change by lunchtime. According to Radio Times magazine, the film's song universe is packed with these original kid-led tracks, and this number fits that house style of sincerity with a wink.

Annotations

He's not my type, he's not too bad / Not the most gorgeous I've ever had

That is the whole joke in two lines: a child borrowing adult dating language, then undercutting it with blunt honesty. The rhyme is simple, but the character detail is sharp - it sounds like someone play-acting confidence.

And yet there's something behind those eyes

The lyric suddenly tries on a more "grown" romantic lens. It is a kid reaching for poetry, which is part of the charm: the song lets innocence and imitation sit in the same chair.

Could I love him? / Could she love me?

With one quick switch, the number opens space for different viewpoints inside the same chorus engine. Onstage, that can read as a group sharing lines across the class - not one narrator, but a crowd of narrators.

One love, we've walked together / Together, forever, and always home

This is the big, sweeping promise. It is intentionally oversized for the situation, and that mismatch is the punchline and the tenderness: kids feel big things in small rooms.

Rhythm and style fusion

Musically, it leans on pop-ballad expectations: steady pulse, a lift into the hook, and choral stacking that keeps the words easy to catch. The arrangement is built for clarity, not virtuosity. Even when the lyric reaches for romance-film language, the group delivery keeps it grounded in school-play practicality.

Emotional arc

The verse posture is defensive - "not my type" energy - and the chorus is surrender. That swing is the emotional engine: skepticism melting into certainty, then repeating as if repetition can make it true. It is a familiar theatre move, but here it is compressed into a short runtime, which makes it land like a quick comic beat with a soft center.

Symbols and key phrasing

"Behind those eyes" is the song’s tiny metaphor, a doorway to the idea that people contain surprises. "Always home" is the closer, and it reads like a child’s definition of safety rather than an adult’s definition of romance. The number is not trying to be a grand philosophy; it is trying to capture the feeling of wanting the world to settle down for a minute.

Technical Information

  • Artist: Nativity! The Musical Original Cast (St Bernadette Kids featured as the in-story ensemble)
  • Featured: St Bernadette Kids (ensemble)
  • Composer: Debbie Isitt; Nicky Ager
  • Producer: Cast recording production is credited at album level; song-level production is not consistently listed in accessible public credits
  • Release Date: January 29, 2018 (original cast recording track); November 30, 2009 (film soundtrack release containing the Nativity! Cast version)
  • Genre: Musical theatre; show tune; children's music
  • Instruments: Ensemble vocals; stage-band rhythm section (typical drums, bass, keyboards, guitar)
  • Label: The Umbrella Rooms (cast recording track listings); Decca (film soundtrack distributor)
  • Mood: Bright, teasing, romantic-playacting
  • Length: 1:46 (2018 cast recording); 2:00 (film soundtrack listing for the Nativity! Cast version)
  • Track #: 23 on the 2018 cast album; placed in Act II between "Nazareth" and "Good News" in the stage score
  • Language: English
  • Album (if any): Nativity! The Musical (Original Cast Recording); Nativity! - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
  • Music style: Pop-ballad pastiche with ensemble theatre phrasing
  • Poetic meter: Mixed accentual meter with regular four-beat chorus phrasing

Questions and Answers

Who sings this number in the stage musical?
It is assigned to the St Bernadette kids, delivered as a class-wide ensemble moment rather than a single character showcase.
Where does it sit in the Act II flow?
In the published order it follows "Nazareth" and sets up the move into "Good News", acting like a quick change of camera lens from big story to kid feelings.
Is it meant to be funny or sincere?
Both. The verse language borrows adult romance talk for laughs, but the chorus commits hard to the feeling, which is why it can land warmly in performance.
What is the central idea in the lyric?
First impressions are unstable, but the mind keeps trying to turn a glance into a promise. The song dramatizes that leap.
Why does the lyric switch pronouns in the questioning lines?
It reads like a group sharing perspectives in rapid succession. Onstage it can also feel like the class singing one shared thought from different angles.
What style does it echo?
A pop ballad, simplified and brightened for an ensemble of young voices, with theatre diction keeping the story legible.
Does it connect to the film version of Nativity!?
The wider song set comes from the film universe, and the official soundtrack tracklist culture includes this title among the original kid-led numbers.
Why is it so short on the cast album?
Because it is built like a scene component: a quick emotional beat that must not stall the show’s momentum.
What should a director watch for in staging?
Clarity of who is addressing whom. The funniest staging keeps the "confident" lines paired with visible uncertainty, so the audience hears the contradiction.
What is the cleanest musical takeaway?
Keep the hook unified. The chorus is the payoff, so ensemble blend matters more than solo color.

Awards and Chart Positions

The song itself is not commonly listed with standalone chart history, but the soundtrack ecosystem around Nativity did chart. According to Official Charts Company, the Decca soundtrack album logged a notable run on the UK Soundtrack Albums chart, reflecting seasonal replay value more than radio-single behavior.

Release Chart Peak First chart date Label Catalogue
Nativity! - Original Soundtrack UK Official Soundtrack Albums Chart 14 December 19, 2009 Decca 5323757
Nativity! - Original Soundtrack UK Official Album Downloads Chart 79 December 14, 2017 Decca 5323757

Additional Info

One of the quiet strengths of Nativity! as a franchise is that it never pretends kids sing like adults - it lets them sing like kids who have watched adults. That is why this number works: it is a mirror held at a funny angle. A 2019 write-up from Beyond the Curtain points out how the stage show leans on the film’s "famous numbers" while adding new material, and this track sits right in that recognizable set.

Outside the main recordings, the title has a small practical afterlife: rehearsal and performance culture. Backing-track services list it with a clear key for school and amateur staging, and YouTube hosts multiple versions, from cast-album uploads to instrumental practice cuts. That is how theatre songs survive between seasons: not by chasing charts, but by living in classrooms, living rooms, and the last row of a community hall.

Key Contributors

Subject Relationship Object
Debbie Isitt co-composed and co-wrote lyrics for Nativity! The Musical
Nicky Ager co-composed and co-wrote lyrics for Nativity! The Musical
St Bernadette Kids perform "One Look" (Act II ensemble number)
Birmingham Repertory Theatre hosted world premiere of Nativity! The Musical (October 20, 2017)
The Umbrella Rooms label for Nativity! The Musical (Original Cast Recording) (January 29, 2018)
Decca distributed Nativity! - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (first released November 30, 2009)

Sources: Wikipedia (Nativity! The Musical), British Comedy Guide, Official Charts

Music video


Nativity! Lyrics: Song List

  1. Act I
  2. Overture
  3. M.A.D.A - Here Comes Santa Claus / Going For The Big Time
  4. And that's exactly what he did
  5. Review
  6. Five Star Review / Better Than You
  7. St Bernadette's
  8. My Very First Day At School
  9. Wrapped In A Rainbow
  10. Hollywood Are Coming
  11. Our School Nativity
  12. The Lord Mayor's Ball
  13. Dear Father Christmas
  14. Hollywood We're Coming / Sparkle and Shine
  15. Act II
  16. Ent'racte to Hollywood (Instrumental) 
  17. Welcome To Hollywood
  18. Jennifer's Request
  19. Dear Father Christmas (Reprise) / My Very Last Day at School
  20. Herod The Rock Opera
  21. Suddenly
  22. Our School Nativity (Reprise)
  23. Backstage
  24. Nazareth
  25. One Look
  26. Good News
  27. Hollywood Never Came 
  28. Sparkle And Shine
  29. She's The Brightest Star
  30. One Night, One Moment
  31. Sparkle And Shine
  32. Bows / Exit Music

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