The Oklahoman

‘ The Outsiders’ is about to officially open on Broadway

- Brandy McDonnell The Oklahoman USA TODAY NETWORK

When they set out to create songs for the new stage adaptation of “The Outsiders,” musical theater newcomers Jonathan Clay and Zachary Chance took inspiratio­n from the most famous line in Oklahoma novelist S.E. Hinton’s iconic book: “Stay gold, Ponyboy.”

“The producers were looking for a band that wasn’t necessaril­y a typical composer for Broadway or musicals ... we heard that there was maybe an opportunit­y if we wanted to write some songs,” Clay recalled.

“So we wrote two or three songs ... and we wrote one that was really exactly what we thought Broadway should be. It was kind of like Frankie Valli’s ‘Sherry.’”

“And they basically said, ‘This is awful, but would you mind trying one more time?’” Chance added.

So the pair, who typically write and perform as the Texas roots rock duo Jamestown Revival, submitted the first song they had penned for the show, a wistful acoustic ballad called “Stay Gold.”

“We were like, ‘This is sad and dreary. It’s really singer-songwriter. It’s not (from the) period. This is more like a song we’d write.’ So, we didn’t even send it (at first). Then, after they hated the first one, we were like, ‘Well, nothing to lose now,’” Chance told The Oklahoman during an interview Jan. 26 at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center.

“And they loved it. They were like, ‘This is what we were hoping we would get. Can you do more of this?’ So, we were like, ‘Let’s go. Hire us.’”

Alongside Tony Award winner Justin Levine, Jamestown Revival co-wrote the music and lyrics for “The Outsiders” musical, which began its Broadway run March 16 with previews ahead of the show’s official April 11 opening night at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre.

“That song, ‘Stay Gold,’ it’s still in the show,” Chance said. “We’re definitely aware that this story means a lot to a lot of people. So, to be able to carry the torch in some way, that’s a big responsibi­lity. We haven’t taken it lightly.”

How does ‘ The Outsiders’ musical adapt S.E. Hinton’s iconic novel?

Like most Broadway shows, the musical adaptation of “The Outsiders” has been years in the making.

The stage version is based on both Hinton’s landmark coming-of-age novel, which has sold more than 15 million copies and been published in more than 30 languages, and Academy Award-winning director Francis Ford Coppola’s iconic 1983 movie, which has only grown in popularity as a cult favorite over the past four decades.

Inspired by her experience­s at Will Rogers High School, Susan “Susie” Eloise Hinton penned the tale of two rival Tulsa gangs — the poor Greasers and the privileged Socs (pronounced Soshs) — when she was still a teenager. She published “The Outsiders” under her initials to keep male reviewers from knowing she was a woman and immediatel­y dismissing her work.

“My first ‘Outsiders’ experience was eighth grade. My beloved, dear English teacher — who I just rattled her cage, really gave her a hard time — she was very intent on exposing us all to the book. And it was actually the first fiction book I ever read. ... I wasn’t a big reader. But I read it, and I enjoyed it. And I thought that pocket knives were really cool,” Clay recalled.

Like the book and film, “The Outsiders” musical is set in Tulsa in the 1960s and focuses on young Greaser Ponyboy Curtis, his two older brothers and their chosen family of “outsiders” struggling to survive in a world of haves and havenots.

Brody Grant is making his Broadway debut in the role of Ponyboy, while Sky Lakota-Lynch is returning to Broadway in the role of Johnny, Ponyboy’s best friend. Brent Comer makes his Broadway bow in the role of the eldest Curtis brother, Darrel, while Jason Schmidt is a Broadway newcomer playing the role of Sodapop, the middle Curtis brother. Joshua Boone and Daryl Tofa play fellow Greasers Dallas Winston and TwoBit Mathews, respective­ly.

Emma Pittman co-stars as Cherry Valance, while Kevin William Paul and Dan Berry play Socs Bob Sheldon and Paul Holden, respective­ly.

How did ‘ The Outsiders’ songwriter­s’ Texas upbringing influence their work on the musical?

Like his musical partner in Jamestown Revival, Chance said he read the book “The Outsiders” for the first time in middle school.

“I had just a very visceral reaction to it,” he said. “I think the sentiment of Ponyboy is pretty universal. Especially in like seventh, eighth grade, with all the older kids in high school or your friends who have older siblings, you can be so intimidate­d. You don’t know who you are, and you’re asking all these questions.”

Although the duo is now based in Austin, the musicians grew up in the small town of Magnolia, Texas, and they found the Oklahoma story told in “The Outsiders” relatable.

“We met in high school, so after we had both read it, but when the world just feels so big outside of where you are,” Chance said.

The Original Broadway Cast Recording of “The Outsiders” is due to be released May 22 via Sony Masterwork­s Broadway.

Who are the creative team and cast for the Broadway musical ‘ The Outsiders?’

A Tony Award winner for his work on “Moulin Rouge! The Musical,” Levine co-wrote the book for “The Outsiders” musical with Tony nominee Adam Rapp and the co-wrote the score with Jamestown Revival. Levine, who also is handling the show’s music supervisio­n, arrangemen­ts and orchestrat­ions, said working with musical theater newbies on the project was a refreshing experience.

“I’ve lived in New York for all of my life, and sometimes I really just get so tired of it and hate it. Then, when someone comes to visit, and I’m taking them around, suddenly I’m like, ‘This is a cool town. This is a beautiful place. I do love this place,’” Levine told The Oklahoman.

“I feel similarly working on a musical, sometimes, because that’s my primary work that I do, working with other people and having those moments where we have an idea we get excited about about it, then suddenly, I’m falling back in love with it. So, I think it was really helpful, and I really appreciate­d the opportunit­y, to see it anew.”

Ahead of the start of rehearsals for the Broadway production, members of the cast and creative team of “The Outsiders” musical — including Oscar winner Angelina Jolie, a lead producer on the show — made a Jan. 25-28 visit to Tulsa to explore the place where Hinton penned her iconic 1967 novel and Coppola made his beloved movie.

Oklahoma City native Laura Galt, who is a co-producer on the show and has been involved in its developmen­t since 2018, said the group visited Hinton’s alma mater, Will Rogers High School, as well as the Outsiders House Museum, where the author and Danny Boy O’Connor, the museum’s founder and executive director, joined them for a tour of the filming-location-turnedtour­ist-attraction.

But the Jamestown Revival musicians had made the pilgrimage to Tulsa years before, when their touring schedule had brought them to Oklahoma. They met with Hinton and O’Connor and visited “The Outsiders” filming locations like the Admiral Twin Drive-In.

“Seeing the house, for whatever reason, that really stuck with me. It felt really symbolic,” Clay said.

How has ‘ The Outsiders’ musical been received so far?

Directed by Obie Award winner Danya Taymor, who is also helming the Broadway production, “The Outsiders” musical made its world premiere last year at the La Jolla Playhouse in California. The show proved popular enough there that an extra week was added to its initial run.

In a particular­ly bustling season on Broadway — 18 new shows are slated to open on in March and April - “The Outsiders” got off to a strong start. Deadline reports it was “a virtual sell-out,” with 99% of seats taken. The show grossed $725,440 over seven previews.

 ?? PHOTO BY MILLER MOBLEY ?? From left, Joshua Boone plays Dallas Winston and Brent Comer plays Darrel Curtis in the original Broadway cast of “The Outsiders” musical.
PHOTO BY MILLER MOBLEY From left, Joshua Boone plays Dallas Winston and Brent Comer plays Darrel Curtis in the original Broadway cast of “The Outsiders” musical.
 ?? CAMBRY SHIELDS/TULSA WORLD ?? Jonathan Clay and Zachary Chance, of the Texas roots music duo Jamestown Revival, stand Jan. 26 on the Tulsa Performing Arts Center stage. The pair co-wrote the music and lyrics for the new musical “The Outsiders” and visited Tulsa along with other members of the Broadway show’s cast and creative team in January.
CAMBRY SHIELDS/TULSA WORLD Jonathan Clay and Zachary Chance, of the Texas roots music duo Jamestown Revival, stand Jan. 26 on the Tulsa Performing Arts Center stage. The pair co-wrote the music and lyrics for the new musical “The Outsiders” and visited Tulsa along with other members of the Broadway show’s cast and creative team in January.

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