The original production opened at the
Denver Center Theater on April 13, 1987. The production was co-written and directed by Randal Myler, with
Mark Harelik in the lead role (and also co-writer). After a successful season in Denver, the production was mounted at the
Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles, CA. The show opened on July 7, 1988 and ran through August 21, 1988. The show was again directed by Randal Myler, and
Mark Harelik again played the lead role. Other cast members included
Ron Taylor (original plant in Little Shop Of Horrors) as Tee-Tot,
Cassie Yates as Audrey, Grammy winner Keb' Mo' as Peen, Dan Wheetman (fiddler from John Denver's band) as Loudmouth and
Molly McClure as Mama Lilly. Following the limited run at the
Mark Taper Forum, the production was next presented at the
Old Globe Theatre in San Diego, CA, opening August 28, 1992 and closing on October 4, 1992. Randal Myler directed and
Mark Harelik continued in the lead role (with noted television actor
Michael Bryan French subbing two days a week), and
Ron Taylor again played Tee-Tot. In 1996 Lost Highway opened at the
Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, with Tennessee singer Jason Petty in the lead role. While Petty had portrayed Hank and other country legends in numerous musical revues at
Opryland, Lost Highway was his first starring role in a feature production. In the initial run at the Ryman, Petty was described as looking remarkably similar to Williams, and doing an "un-canny job of recreating" Williams' phrasing. The show ran for two seasons at the Ryman, before going on tour, with Petty continuing in the lead role, playing theaters primarily in the southern, eastern, and midwestern United States from 1998 until 2002. A new production (directed by Myler) then opened
off-Broadway at the
Manhattan Ensemble Theater, and then moved to the
Little Shubert where it ran through August 2003. The show garnered numerous Off-Broadway award nominations (for both Myler and the production), including Petty winning an
Obie award in 2003 for his performance. The New York production also featured stage/film veterans
Margaret Bowman and
Myk Watford. == Cast Recording ==