The Scotsman

Timely revival asks same important questions

- JOYCE MCMILLAN

Sunshine on Leith King’s Theatre, Edinburgh

IT’S been a long 11 years since the first performanc­e, at Dundee Rep, of Stephen Greenhorn’s brilliant musical built around the songs of The Proclaimer­s; over that decade, the show has toured the UK, and become a successful film, released in 2013.

Yet it’ s a tribute both to green horn’ s writing, and to the magnificen­t, searching quality of the songs themselves, that this new revival from West Yorkshire Playhouse – new creative home of its original Dundee director, James Brining – seems even more timely than that first production, gathering up themes of war and peace, love and marriage, loss and change, junk jobs and gentrifica­tion, into a brilliant piece of 21st century popular theatre that nudges the mind into thought, almost as effectivel­y as it touches our hearts.

The story centres on two young Leith men, Ally and Davy, who have just returned from service in the British Army, and are trying to readjust to civilian life in a fastchangi­ng city.

Ally resumes his enthusiast­ic wooing of Davy’s sister Liz, Davy takes up with Liz’s nursing colleague Yvonne; and the show soon sweeps us into a riveting family drama – driven by great songs from I’m On My Way and Letter From America to Sunshine on Leith itself – about a 21st century world where love is love, but the NHS is under stress, communitie­s are being “developed” out of existence, and the best Ally and Davy can hope for is work in a call centre.

All of this is delivered with unforgetta­ble flair by Brining’s 18-strong company and a six-piece band, albeit on a surprising­ly hefty touring set modelled on the function room at Leith Dockers’ Club. Paul- james Corrigan and Steven miller are super bin the two leading roles, Jocasta Almgill and neshl ac a plan equally brilliant as Yvonne and Liz, Hilary

Mclean and Phil Mckee touching and perfectly-pitched as Davy’s mum and dad.

And although Sunshine On Leith is an Edinburgh story, received with rapture at the King’s, it is profoundly satisfying to know that this new production has also already scored a huge success on stage in Leeds, before an extensive tour. “What do you do when democracy fails you?” sings Liz, in one of the greatest numbers from the Proclaimer­s’ songbook; and it’s clearly a question that now has a resonance far beyond Scotland, in a world where politics so often seems to deliver the wrong answers to young people trying to build a future, here and now.

King’s Theatre, Edinburgh, final performanc­es today; then on tour to Aberdeen, Dundee, Glasgow, and Inverness, until 30 June

 ??  ?? Paul-james Corrigan, Steven Miller, Jocasta Almgill, Neshla Caplan, Hilary Mclean and Phil Mckee are all brilliant in the lead roles
Paul-james Corrigan, Steven Miller, Jocasta Almgill, Neshla Caplan, Hilary Mclean and Phil Mckee are all brilliant in the lead roles

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