The Last Match
Written by Anna Ziegler; directed by Gaye
Taylor Upchurch
Performances through December 24, 2017
Laura
Pels Theatre, 111 West 46th Street, New York, NY
roundabouttheatre.org
A scene from The Last Match (photo: Joan Marcus) |
A tennis match as a grand
metaphor for life isn’t the most original idea, but playwright Anna Ziegler puts
some topspin on it in The Last Match, which takes place
during a U.S. Open semi-final between Tim Porter, the world’s greatest player who’s
contemplating retirement but making one last run, and Sergei Sergeyev, a young
hotheaded Russian talked about as a future champion.
As they play a hard-fought,
five-set thriller, the men get on each other’s nerves, admit to their own
nerves, and flashback to their off-court lives, which mainly consist of
Palmer’s all-American wife Mallory, a tennis pro who gave up her career to
marry and give him children (the latter of which was harder than they
expected), and Sergei’s feisty fiancée Galina, whose brimming self-confidence
helps balance Sergei’s rattling man-child antics.
As a tennis fan, I found it
interesting that Ziegler’s players are at least partly based on real pros: Tim
seems modeled after Roger Federer, the effortless, beloved G.O.A.T., while
Sergei seems a cousin of a younger and more distracted Novak Djokovic. The
men’s better halves are stock characters, but Ziegler’s zippy way with dialogue
allows all four to play an entertaining doubles match at the same time that the
men’s singles battle is going on.
With Tim Mackabee’s clever
set showing off the U.S. Open court and the couples’ off-court battlefields,
Gaye Taylor Upchurch directs with persuasive finesse, easily juggling the men’s
shotmaking with their verbal shots and flashbacks. Of course, her exemplary cast
is The Last Match’s ace in the hole.
Wilson Bethel’s Tim and Alex Mickiewicz’s Sergei trade witty barbs while they impressively
duke it out on the court, while Zoe Winters’ Mallory and Natalia Payne’s Galina
are perfect foils who also provide a needed perspective to the players’ battle royale.
The Last Match has its faults: Ziegler, who otherwise has the
court lingo down, lets her players serve at wrong times during the match, a
huge unforced error on her part. But there’s humor and drama in abundance,
which makes her play a down-the-line winner.
1 comment:
I imagine that it must be difficult to depict a full-blown tennis court on stage. Were audience members
offered therapy to deal with persistent neck pain from looking left to right during the tennis matches?
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