Review: Sting’s ‘The Last Ship’ is thrilling stuff

MARK KENNEDY
AP Drama Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — You may be tempted upon leaving Sting’s Broadway musical “The Last Ship” to head straight to a pub to drain a pint and sing some sea shanties. Or maybe go weld something. Or do both.

Such are the foot-stomping, testosterone-filled feelings that emerge from the Neil Simon Theatre, where a blast of British working class camaraderie among steel workers has docked during these times when we only construct things from Ikea.

“The Last Ship” has some powerful performances, some outstanding songs, real heart and a creative team that uses every inch of the stage in thrilling ways. Perhaps there’s a bit of bloat and far too many sea references, but when it works, it does so brilliantly.

The show is Sting’s semi-autobiographical story about a prodigal son who returns to his northern England shipbuilding town to reclaim the girl — and a son — he abandoned when he fled 15 years before. The shipyard, meanwhile, is closing and the workers are divided over the future. The show is about loss and letting go.

Michael Esper (“American Idiot”) plays the hero, somehow making a man potentially unlikable into someone melancholy and sick at heart. Rachel Tucker is fiery and strong and superb as his love interest, both protective and vibrant. Jimmy Nail is a great as the softhearted foreman with a gruff exterior, and Fred Applegate is irrepressibly good as a profane priest.

Steven Hoggett’s special brand of choreography — unexpected dancers swaying in unison, slo-mo kicks — is particularly effective here. As he’s done in “Once,” and “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time,” he turns the un-lithe and the downright rotund into lighter-than-air expressions of dreamlike movement.

The project began as a CD and PBS concert special before it was turned into a stage version. Sting drew on his childhood, growing up in Newcastle’s Wallsend neighborhood, near the Swan Hunter shipyards. David Zinn’s sets are not surprisingly all about steel — girders and ladders and gates and rust-stained hulls. There’s even rain and acetylene torches.

Pulitzer Prize- and Tony-winning lyricist Brian Yorkey (“Next to Normal”) and Tony-winner John Logan (“Red”) wrote the book, plugging into the noble honor and passion of men and women who build things without romanticizing everyone. A love triangle at the story’s heart is deftly navigated, with no one cartoonishly evil. They’ve even salted the script with references to domestic violence.

Tony-winner Joe Mantello (“Wicked”) directs with the skill of a master craftsman: Adrenalin-fueled scenes of men at each others’ throats are flawlessly followed by candlelit, tender ones. He manages to steer away from simple, sticky-sweetness and stabs at an aching wistfulness, aided by gloomy, evocative lighting by Christopher Akerlind.

Sting’s stage composing is nicely complex, mixing sassy ballads with brooding duets and big, violin-led crowd pleasers. Outstanding are “Dead Man’s Boots” and “The Night the Pugilist Learned How to Dance,” which here is wonderfully staged between a father and son behind bars, and the simply beautiful title track, which the creators clearly know is good: It’s leaned on no less than four times.

Some songs on the CD never made it to the stage and Sting opened his rich catalog for some repurposing. You’ll hear “Ghost Story” from the album “Brand New Day,” ”Island of Souls” and “All This Time” from “The Soul Cages” and “When We Dance” from “Fields of Gold.”

What’s remarkable is the old tunes fit flawlessly, proof Sting’s songs have always been built of strong stuff and often reached back to his hometown. The writers also have plundered imagery from Sting’s old lyrics to build their story, particularly “Island of Souls.”

Broadway has something of a crush with the Irish and English right now. There’s “Once” and “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time” and “Matilda” and “Kinky Boots.” Hopefully there’s room for another, an unlikely moving musical about shipbuilders. We’ll raise a pint to that.

___

Online: http://thelastship.com

___

Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Federal News Network Logo
Log in to your WTOP account for notifications and alerts customized for you.

Sign up