Current:Home > NewsTruth, forgiveness: 'Swept Away' is a theatrical vessel for Avett Bros' music-Angel Dreamer Wealth Society D1 Reviews & Insights
Truth, forgiveness: 'Swept Away' is a theatrical vessel for Avett Bros' music
View Date:2025-01-11 12:26:53
The musical Swept Away, set to songs by The Avett Brothers, received rave reviews when it premiered at Berkeley Repertory Theatre in early 2022. Now showing at Arena Stage in D.C., it's garnering the same kind of attention.
And with a cast and crew behind the production that have collectively won nine Tony Awards, there's hope the musical will head to Broadway.
From a book to an album to the stage
In the early 2000s, Scott Avett's dad recommended he read Neil Hanson's The Custom of the Sea, a true story about a shipwreck off the coast of Africa in 1884. Avett, who grew up in Concord, N.C., says his dad "loves non-fiction survival stories and so this was one of those those books."
Hanson recounts the horrific experiences of four men adrift in a dinghy for 19 days in the burning sun in the middle of the ocean on the verge of starvation. In life or death situations, the "custom of the sea" permitted sacrificing one to save the rest.
As Hanson explains, Captain Tom Dudley made the decision to kill the weakest among them. When they were finally rescued, he told the truth and then stood trial for murder. Dudley's "misfortune was that the British government were determined to outlaw the custom of the sea and his honesty gave them their chance, and they bent and even broke the law to do so," says Hanson in an email.
Scott Avett says he was moved by the captain's honesty, even though it meant confessing to a heinous act, "Because at the end...although the truth was the right thing, it was going to be a cause of suffering."
More than a decade after The Avett Brothers' 2004 album Mignonette was released, they got a call proposing to turn it into a musical. "It made perfect sense because I visualize these things as whole stories," Avett says.
There are some key differences between the story of the Mignonette and the musical. Among other things, the whaling ship sinks off the coast of New Bedford, Mass. The character who first proposes killing an ailing crew member is called simply the "Mate."
Unlike Captain Dudley, the Mate doesn't believe in God and admits he's lead a life of sin. He sings The Avett Brothers' song "Satan Pulls The Strings." By contrast, the character Big Brother is deeply religious and sings the only song the Avetts wrote specifically for the show, "Lord Lay Your Hand On My Shoulder."
'Swept Away' built from pieces of The Avett Brothers' overall catalogue
John Logan, whose credits include the movies Skyfall and Gladiator and winning a Tony Award for Red, was brought in to craft the story out of The Avett Brothers' songs. He was thrilled to tackle big themes like redemption and forgiveness, and says: "I hope Swept Away says to the audience, 'What would you do if you were one of these four men in this lifeboat after 21 days?'"
Logan knew some of The Avett Brothers' music but says he now pored over their entire catalogue.
"I was just struck by the poetry of their lyrics, by the intensity of the music, and by the way they could explore different characters through songs and that's what musicals do," he recounts. "I went to them and I said, 'Look, can you give me permission to use any of your songs? And if you don't like how I'm using them, we'll discuss it. And they said, 'Great.'"
Actor and singer Adrian Blake Enscoe plays Little Brother in Swept Away. He's also in the indie-folk-pop-americana group Bandits On The Run. He says The Avett Brothers' catalogue is "incredible for this tale of morality and mortality, wrestling with darkness and light and faith and what is my meaning."
When Scott Avett first saw the production on stage, "I thought, 'These guys can sing way better than me,'" he laughs. "They have more control than I'll ever have and I think it's beautiful."
'Nothing that is human is alien to me'
In Swept Away, the Mate is haunted by his sins. Actor and singer Stark Sands, who plays Big Brother, believes the musical's themes of reckoning with the truth and seeking forgiveness continue to plague humanity.
"I think that right now we're living at a time when there are some people who don't want to face the past," Sands says. "They don't want to acknowledge the sort of awful things that we have done as a race, as a nation... This man that we are following in the story, the Mate, he's done some horrible things that he admits to over the course of the play and all we're asking him to do is just say them out loud."
For John Logan, Swept Away is about having empathy for all, including "those who have sinned." Over his computer are the words: "Nothing that is human is alien to me," a translation of a famous quote that is linked to the Roman playwright Terence but has been used by the philosopher Seneca and others subsequently.
"So when I look at the actions of the Mate in this story, I say he's a human being just like I am, and I'm capable of the same exaltation, the same joy, the same degradation, and the same violence, because nothing that is human is alien to me," he says.
This story was edited for broadcast and digital by Meghan Collins Sullivan and produced for radio by Isabella Gomez-Sarmiento.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Get well, Pop. The Spurs are in great hands until your return
- Savannah Chrisley Shares Why It’s “Tough” Having Custody of Brother Grayson and Niece Chloe
- Comfort Calendar: Stouffer's releases first ever frozen meal advent calendar
- Jets, OC Nathaniel Hackett get last laugh in win against Sean Payton, Broncos
- Does the NFL have a special teams bias when hiring head coaches? History indicates it does
- What to know about the Psyche mission, NASA's long-awaited trip to a strange metal asteroid
- Louisiana public school principal apologizes after punishing student for dancing at a party
- Wanted: Knowledge workers in the American Heartland
- Tennis Channel suspends reporter after comments on Barbora Krejcikova's appearance
- Hong Kong eyes stronger economic and trade ties with Thailand to expand its role in Southeast Asia
Ranking
- To Protect the Ozone Layer and Slow Global Warming, Fertilizers Must Be Deployed More Efficiently, UN Says
- For years, they trusted the army to defend and inform them. Now many Israelis feel abandoned
- Diamondbacks jump all over another Dodgers starter and beat LA 4-2 for a 2-0 lead in NLDS
- Oregon announces record $5.6B tax kicker thanks to historic revenue surplus
- Ex-Duke star Kyle Singler draws concern from basketball world over cryptic Instagram post
- Dominican Republic to reopen its border to essential trade but not Haitians
- Sudan and Iran resume diplomatic relations severed 7 years ago, promising to ‘open embassies soon’
- Big 12 pursuit of Gonzaga no slam dunk amid internal pushback, financial questions
Recommendation
-
Kentucky gets early signature win at Champions Classic against Duke | Opinion
-
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announces he's ending Democratic primary campaign to run as independent
-
Feeling disrespected, Arizona Diamondbacks embrace underdog role vs. Los Angeles Dodgers
-
Dead skydiver found on front lawn of Florida home: The worst I've seen
-
Horoscopes Today, November 9, 2024
-
Dodge, Nissan and Mercedes-Benz among 280,000 vehicles recalled: Check car recalls here
-
What to know about the Psyche mission, NASA's long-awaited trip to a strange metal asteroid
-
I'm a Shopping Editor, and This Is What I'm Buying at Amazon's October Prime Day 2023
Like
- Cruise ship rescues 4 from disabled catamaran hundreds of miles off Bermuda, officials say
- WEOWNCOIN: Top Five Emerging Companies in the Cryptocurrency Industry That May Potentially Replace Some of the Larger Trading Companies
- Diamondbacks jump all over another Dodgers starter and beat LA 4-2 for a 2-0 lead in NLDS