Tom Chandler (The Last Ship)

Tom Chandler
The Last Ship character

Tom Chandler (Eric Dane)
First appearance "Phase Six"
June 22, 2014
Created by Hank Steinberg
Steve Kane
William Brinkley (novel)
Portrayed by Eric Dane
Information
Full name Thomas Chandler
Gender Male
Occupation US Navy officer
Ship captain
Title

Commanding Officer, USS Nathan James (DDG-151) (Seasons 1-2)

Chief of Naval Operations (Season 3)
Family Jed Chandler (father)
Unnamed mother
Unnamed brother
Unnamed sister
Spouse(s) Darien Chandler† (wife)
Children Ashley Chandler
Sam Chandler
Relatives Unnamed sister-in-law†
Nationality American
Military career
Service/branch United States Navy
Service years 1990s–Present
Rank Commander
Commands held

USS Nathan James (DDG-151) (2014–2016)

Chief of Naval Operations (2016-Present)
Awards Legion of Merit
Meritorious Service Medal (2)
Joint Service Commendation Medal
Navy & Marine Corps Commendation Medal (3)
Navy & Marine Corps Achievement Medal (3)

Commander Thomas "Tom" Chandler is a fictional character and the protagonist of the cable network TNT post-apocalyptic drama TV series The Last Ship. He is portrayed by Eric Dane.[1][2]

Biography

The son of United States Army veteran Jed Chandler (Bill Smitrovich), Tom Chandler was raised in Virginia along with a brother and a sister. As a young man, Tom joined the United States Navy to piss off his father.[3]

At an unknown point in time, he married a woman named Darien (Tracy Middendorf). They have a daughter, Ashley, and a son, Sam, and reside in Norfolk, Virginia, where his ship is homeported.

He speaks and reads fluent Russian, and has a book written by Admiral Konstantin Nikolajewitsch Ruskov (Ravil Isyanov) in his personal collection.[4]

Career

By 2014, Chandler held the rank of Commander in the United States Navy and was the Captain of the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer USS Nathan James (DDG-151). That year, he and his crew took on paleomicrobiologists Dr. Rachel Scott (Rhona Mitra) and Dr. Quincy Tophet (Sam Spruell) as the Nathan James conducted operations at the Arctic. However, their mission, unknown to even them, was just a cover for Drs. Scott and Tophet, who were actually collecting samples of a deadly virus that has infected 80 percent of the human population while they have been at sea.[5]

The first season revolves around finding and creating a cure for the virus (called the Red Flu by those on land) while staying ahead of the RFS Vyerni, a Russian Navy Kirov-class battlecruiser commanded by Admiral Ruskov, who were looking for the cure for themselves so they could become the new "owners" of the world. During a rescue operation undertaken near Jamaica, CDR Chandler and Tex Nolan (John Pyper-Ferguson), the private security/military contractor who joined the Nathan James at Guantanamo Bay, were lost at sea and then taken captive by Admiral Ruskov.[3] The two of them were rescued by the Nathan James, and upon their escape, detonated a set of explosives left by the boarding party that ultimately sunk the Vyerni with all hands (save for Niels Sørensen (Ebon Moss-Bachrach), a Norwegian scientist held prisoner by Ruskov).[6]

With the Russians defeated and a cure synthesized, the Nathan James makes port in Baltimore, Maryland, where they meet up with Amy Granderson (Alfre Woodard), the Vice Chair of the President's Defense Policy Board and mother of one of Chandler's officers, who claims to be the leader of what's left of the United States government. As Chandler frantically searches for his family (who have traveled to Baltimore from Virginia to meet him), he learns that Granderson and her rogue Maryland State Troopers are killing the people infected with the virus and burning their bodies to power the city, intent that only the "proper" people survive to aid humanity. CDR Chandler finds his dad and his children and is able to cure them, but is too late to save his wife, who had succumbed to the virus just before he arrived.[7]

With the Nathan James under siege by Granderson's people, CDR Chandler and his few landlocked crewmembers take the fight to Granderson, teaming up with the underground resistance against Granderson led by Andrew Thorwald (Titus Welliver), a former Baltimore Police Department officer. Together, they were able to stop her, but Thorwald was killed in the attempt, and Granderson chose to commit suicide rather than be arrested by Chandler.[8][9]

After liberating Baltimore, the ship returns home to Norfolk, where they cure the town and reunite with several teams of Navy pilots and SEALs and scattered remnants of other branches of the U.S. Armed Forces and civilian medical and scientific experts. Although CDR Chandler planned to retire in order to take care of his family, his father convinced him that his place was on the Nathan James.[10]

CDR Chandler and the Nathan James's next opponents are a group of natural Immunes led by former Royal Navy Lieutenant Commander Sean Ramsey (Brían F. O'Byrne), who have taken command of the Astute-class submarine HMS Achilles. The Immunes have also brainwashed the United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Jeffrey Michener (Mark Moses), who is the sole surviving member of the Cabinet of the United States & Presidential Line of Succession.

After the defeat of the Immunes and the successful creation of the "contagious cure" by Dr. Scott, the Nathan James is put into drydock in St. Louis, Missouri, where Michener is sworn in as President of the United States by a surviving judge. One of Michener's first inaugural acts as President is to promote CDR Chandler to the position of Chief of Naval Operations.[11]

As a Commander in the United States Navy, CDR Chandler carries a Beretta M9 in 9×19 as his personal sidearm; he also frequently uses the M4A1 carbine in 5.56×45mm. Over the course of the series, CDR Chandler has killed numerous times in the line of duty.

Awards and decorations

The following are the medals and service awards fictionally worn by CDR Chandler.

Personal decorations
Legion of Merit
Gold star

Width-44 crimson ribbon with two width-8 white stripes at distance 4 from the edges.

Meritorious Service Medal, w/1 gold award star (2nd award)
Joint Service Commendation Medal
Gold star
Gold star

Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal, w/2 gold award stars (3rd award)
Gold star
Gold star

Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal, w/2 gold award stars (3rd award)
Unit awards
Bronze star
Bronze star

Navy Unit Commendation, w/2 bronze service stars (3rd award)
Bronze star

Meritorious Unit Commendation, w/1 bronze service star (2nd award)
Navy "E" Ribbon w/3 "E" devices
Service Awards
Navy Expeditionary Medal
Campaign and service medals
Bronze star

National Defense Service Medal, w/1 bronze service star (2nd award)
Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal
Global War on Terrorism Service Medal
Service and training awards
Bronze star
Bronze star
Bronze star
Bronze star

Navy Sea Service Deployment Ribbon, w/4 bronze service stars (5th award)
Marksmanship awards
Navy Expert Rifleman Medal
Navy Expert Pistol Shot Medal
Other accoutrements
Surface Warfare insignia
Command at Sea insignia

The Last Ship (novel)

CDR Chandler is loosely based on the captain, "Thomas" (whose full name is never revealed), of the United States Navy guided missile destroyer USS Nathan James (DDG-80) in the 1988 post-apocalyptic fiction novel, The Last Ship, written by William Brinkley.[12]

References

  1. Berkshire, Geoff (October 10, 2012). "Eric Dane's 'Grey's Anatomy' rebound: Starring in Michael Bay's TNT pilot 'The Last Ship'". Zap2it. Retrieved October 12, 2012.
  2. Ausiello, Michael (October 10, 2012). "Pilot Scoop: Grey's Anatomy's Eric Dane to Captain TNT Action Drama The Last Ship". TVLine. Retrieved October 12, 2012.
  3. 1 2 "SOS". The Last Ship. Season 1. Episode 7. August 3, 2014.
  4. "Dead Reckoning". The Last Ship. Season 1. Episode 3. July 6, 2014.
  5. "Phase Six". The Last Ship. Season 1. Episode 1. June 22, 2014.
  6. "Two Sailors Walk into a Bar". The Last Ship. Season 1. Episode 8. August 10, 2014.
  7. "No Place Like Home". The Last Ship. Season 1. Episode 10. August 24, 2014.
  8. "Unreal City". The Last Ship. Season 2. Episode 1. June 21, 2015.
  9. "Fight the Ship". The Last Ship. Season 2. Episode 2. June 21, 2015.
  10. "It's Not a Rumor". The Last Ship. Season 2. Episode 3. June 28, 2015.
  11. "A More Perfect Union". The Last Ship. Season 2. Episode 13. September 6, 2015.
  12. Brinkley, William (March 1988). The Last Ship. Viking Press (hardcover). ISBN 0-670-80981-0.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, April 20, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.