
From the moment the house lights dimmed in TPAC’s Jackson Hall on October 14, the national touring production of the Tony-winning Best Musical, THE OUTSIDERS made it abundantly clear: this is much more than nostalgia, more than adaptation — it is an emotional lightning strike. If Opening Night of the show’s six night Nashville tour-stop in Music City is any indication, the show promises to bring Tulsa’s Greasers and Socs to life with gritty heart, physical daring, and a musical pulse that lingered long after the final bow.
Based on S.E. Hinton’s seminal 1967 novel and a more than noticeable nod to the beloved 1983 Francis Ford Coppola directed film, that starred a who’s who of Hollywood up-and-comers including C. Thomas Howell, Matt Dillon, Tom Cruise, Diane Lane, Ralph Macchio, Patrick Swayze, Rob Lowe & Emilio Estevez, THE OUTSIDERS is a coming-of-age tale rooted in class divides, brotherhood, trauma, and the fragility of youth. The touring production, carrying the same Tony-winning creative team behind the Broadway show—director Danya Taymor, choreography by Rick & Jeff Kuperman, design courtesy the design collective AMP featuring Tatiana Kahvegian—hooks into the source material while carving out a new theatrical identity.
As is always the case, whether the story unfolds on the pages of the original book, or the aforementioned star-packed 80s now-classic cinema, the heart of THE OUTSIDERS always lies rests on the young shoulders of Ponyboy, Johnny, and Dallas — and in this magnificent tour cast, they are delivered with conviction.

Ponyboy Curtis (played by Nashville’s own Nolan White) is an earnest center. His vulnerability is palpable: you feel his longing, his anger, his fear. The softer, more introspective moments become small victories of clarity. When Ponyboy admiringly watches Paul Newman on the movie screen, dreaming of escaping his current us-vs-them small-town life, he’s instantly relatable to anyone who grew up unsure of what the future holds for them. When he recites Robert Frost’s Nothing Gold Can Stay, there’s not a dry eye in the house. Such emotion from such a young man is breathtaking. Later, when confronting what it means to “stay gold”, White again proves talent beyond his years. As I watched his performance on Opening Night of the Nashville dates, I marveled as the depth of his performance.
Johnny Cade (Bonale Fambrini) brings quiet intensity. His internal fragility — the sense that one more blow could break him — is juxtaposed with flashes of courage, especially in the church escape and later in his struggle to be seen. The camaraderie between Fambrini and White as Johnny Cade and Ponyboy Curtis is so believable, you just know these two young actors are forging a lifelong bond as friends on and off-stage.
Dallas Winston as portrayed by Tyler Jordan Wesley is swagger and sorrow intertwined. When the script calls for it, he roars like a lion, conversely, when necessary, he retreats far into himself, caught between angry rebellion and fracturing grief. In the inevitable climactic moments (surly by now we’ve all read the book or seen the movie), his breakdown feels earned — not sensational, but visceral, and sadly necessary.
The supporting ensemble (Sodapop, Two-Bit, Cherry, Bob and the rest of the Greasers and the Socs) feels fully realized. Corbin Drew Ross’s Sodapop Curtis, a standout, has infectious warmth, and yes, there’s no denying he looks the part, too. When he takes off his shirt early on in the show, I’m pretty sure I heard audible gasps as he revealed his sleek physique. I even asked my date for the evening (a dancer, herself) if she knew if he was a dancer or not. I also gotta mention Ross’s speaking voice. Meek and unassuming, I swear he’s having fun with the audience seeing if we think he sounds like Charlie Hunnam’s soft-spoken version of Ed Gein, but I digress.
As Cherry, Emmy Hearn soars, especially in moments where she bridges the divide between Socs and Greasers. A Cherry’s Socs steady, Bob, Mark Doyle paints the perfect high school bully and personification of thorn in Ponyboy’s life. Travis Roy Rogers’ Darrel Curtis, the eldest of the Curtis boys, finds a perfect balance between forced adulthood as the unplanned patriarch of the family, while simultaneously exhibiting his own self-doubt and unrealized dreams. Jaydon Nget’s Two-Bit brings a subtle but studied undertone to the wisecracking youth.

The structure propels you forward. With rapid scene changes, interwoven monologues and dreamlike transitions, it is never dull. The minimal scaffolding, projections, and shifting platforms keep the world lean yet alive. A perfect metaphor for the young cast themselves, lean, strong, always moving forward and alive. Interestingly, even before checking the Playbill and seeing that Kahvegian is credited as having created the scenography, I whispered to my date for the evening that I was coining a new term setography, because even when wood planks, tires, and various other elements of the minimal set were moved between scenes, they were done so-by the cast, no less- with such precisions and grace that the we at once unnoticeable, yet seamlessly part of the overall choreography of the piece
Coining another term, the fightography, especially in the pivotal confrontation between the Greasers and the Socs, is now the most beautiful movement I’ve ever seen on the stage. That honor, previously held by the quick/sharp jazz movement of the fight between West Side Story’s Sharks and Jets, no fully belongs to THE OUTSIDERS’ Greasers and Socs. Magnificently aided by Brian MacDevitt’s impactful lighting design, Cody Spencer’s chillingly vibrant sound design, Jeremy Chernick and Tillis Meeh’s mood-intensifying special effects design, the aforementioned AMP featuring Tatiana Kahvegian’s Tony-nominated scenography, and choreography by Rick and Jeff Kuperman, the fight choreography — punches, tumbles, and heart-pounding tension the show is choreographed to haunt, with no detail unattended. Slow-mo momentary freezes, punctuated by lighting cues, thunderous sound and an on-stage downpour, create a scene like none ever witnessed. A hauntingly perfect moment that’s likely forever etched into memory.
With a score by Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance, known collectively as folks duo Jamestown Revival, and Justin Levine, who also wrote the book of the musical, the score of THE OUTSIDERS fully embraces the rural small-town setting. Heck, the first number set the tone and time with the aptly named Tulsa ’67. THE OUTSIDERS score isn’t one that you’re likely to be humming after the show’s over. But, in the moment-while watching the story of young people trying to figure out who they are in their world as they struggle with inherent class division, sadness and expectations-realized or dreamed-the musical numbers perfectly propel the story, the emotion and the hopefulness of the characters. Fans of the novel might know that Ponyboy is reading Gone With the Wind. For the musical adaptation, Margaret Mitchell’s classic has been replace, dare I say, more fittingly, with Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations. To that end, Great Expectations, an impressive all-in musical number midway through Act 1, as lead by White’s Ponyboy, becomes a pivotal point as the audience fully realizes how trapped our antihero feels. Act 2’s Soda’s Letter, performed by Sodapop (Ross), Darrel (Rogers) and Ponyboy (White), in its raw, revealing, secure-in-their-masculity brotherhood realness, proves a tender audience favorite. Dallas (Wesley) and the company’s Little Brother, the perfect eleventh hour soulful and soul-gripping emotional melody. Of course you can’t have a THE OUTSIDERS musical without paying tuneful homage to the phrase “Stay Gold”. That said, the show’s final number, Stay Gold featuring White’s Ponyboy and Fambrini’s Johnny lyrically recounts the action of the story, reiterated Johnny’s wish for his friend and just like the precious metal referenced in the phrase, reflects brightly the beauty of friendship.
THE OUTSIDERS National Tour continues at TPAC’s Jackson Hall with a Friday evening performance, matinee and evening performances Saturday and Sunday. CLICK HERE to tickets and showtime details.
Having officially kicked off the National Tour in Tulsa (appropriately enough) just last month, following its Music City dates, THE OUTSIDERS tour continues with a four-city Texas tour in Austin, San Antonio, Dallas and Houston, then it’s on to Atlanta, GA, Durham, NC, Greensboro, NC, Orlando, FL, Tampa, FL, St Louis, MO and more through September of 2026. CLICK HERE for specific dates and the full tour schedule. Of course THE OUTSIDERS is still enjoying a hugely successful Broadway run at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre, so if you’re in New York, CLICK HERE. To keep up with the latest from THE OUTSIDERS, follow them on Insta, Facebook, Threads and YouTube.

Following THE OUTSIDERS, TPAC’s Broadway Season continues with the return of a favorite, Disney’s BEAUTY AND THE BEAST with an extended run November 4-16. CLICK HERE for tickets and showtimes. You can also follow TPAC on Insta, X, YouTube and Facebook.
As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who we’re chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for our take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us on Facebook, Insta and Twitter.

Rapid Fire Q&A with Lithium & Xanax & All of My Friends lead actor, Payton Justice
Rapid Fire Q&A with Lithium & Xanax & All of My Friends cast member Taryn Pray
Rapid Fire with Lithium & Xanax & All of My Friends director, Bradley Moore
Rapid Fire Q&A with Aunt Sally’s Wild Ride star Linda Speir
JHPENTERTAINMENT: You know you’re my favorite regional actress to have played some of my favorite southern women, including Daisy Werthan (Driving Miss Daisy) and Clairee Belcher (Steel Magnolias). When you think about it, there are similarities in these two iconic character with Aunt Sally, but what I want to know is…What in your estimation, makes Aunt Sally different from these two?
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Describe Jim Halpren in five words.
JEREMY JAMES CARMICHAEL: I absolutely have a favorite scene, but I can’t say anything about it. It’s near the end of act two between Jim’s wife (Amber Boyer) and his cousin Cat (Ann Street Kavanaugh). Just when you think it’s a comedy, it is not. It. Is. Not.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Ok, I have to start my conversation with you by telling you how excited I was when I saw that you’d been cast in this show! You never disappoint on stage. That said, who is Penny Pennabaker-Halpren to you?
AMBER BOYER: I am having such a blast creating this character! Playing “the ditsy one” is always fun. I’ve admittedly been pulling personality traits from different TV characters and people I’ve met in my real life. There are deeper aspects to Penny than people care to see at first glance because of her clothes (or lack there of), and I’m really enjoying bringing some depth to the ditz, so to speak.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: First off, thank you, not only for taking the time to do this Q&A, but also for allowing me a sneak peek at the script in order to familiarize myself with the story and characters in preparation for these conversations with you and your cast. I couldn’t help but notice some seemingly obvious (to me anyway) nods to everything from Robert Harling’s Steel Magnolias to Del Shores’ Daddy’s Dying Who’s Got the Will and Sordid Lives. Where those nods conscious or subconscious?
RAPID FIRE WITH YES! THE MUSICAL’s MISTER JIMMY, BRADLEY GALE
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Prior to saying YES!, you’ve enjoyed success on stage as part of the original company of Chicago’s The Book of Mormon, as well as numerous theatrical productions right here in Nashville, including roles in Beauty and the Beast, Avenue Q and Evita. How does being part of the World Premiere company of YES! compare?
RAPID FIRE WITH YES! THE MUSICAL’s ASHLEY, MAYA KAEMPF
JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand part of your creative process in getting into your current character often involves creating a playlist of songs you think that character might listen to. What’s on Ashley’s playlist?
RAPID FIRE WITH YES! THE MUSICAL’s LINDA, ERIN McCRACKEN
JHPENTERTAINMENT: A quick perusal of your social media revealed that you said Yes just over a year ago! That dress was gorgeous, by the way. So, I’m guessing if any of the cast can relate to the trials and tribulations of the subject at hand, it’s you. How many dresses did you look at before you found the perfect one?
RAPID FIRE WITH
JHPENTERTAINMENT: I have to admit, of the character shots photographed by the always brilliant MA2LA, your Kayley image is my favorite! Did you enjoy your photoshoot day, and would you wear Kayley’s fit IRL?





