FAT PIG by Pangdemonium! Productions

“Yo Mama so fat…!”

Reviewer: Andre Joseph Theng
Performance: 25 February 2014, 8pm

As I watched Pangdemonium!’s Fat Pig, I was reminded of a comic strip I used to read when I was younger – Cathy. A workaholic, a common theme of her womanly pains was her heft. She frequently tried to diet and exercise, but would always give in to temptation. When she tries to stop herself, it is too late and she can only lament her lack of willpower, resulting in an vicious cycle.

Just as Cathy is perpetually gorging on food, Helen (Frances Lee) is already seated on a long table and stuffing herself as one enters the DBS Arts Centre. In the background, Mika’s Big Girl you are Beautiful is playing softly, just loud enough to be discernable.

This nice touch by director Tracie Pang was quite promising. Unfortunately, despite many nice touches throughout the play, it never really climaxes. It is this that I feel prevents Pangdemonium!’s opening production for the season from being a great production.

Neil LaBute’s Fat Pig is a look into society’s notions of beauty. Tom (Gavin Yap) is forced to rethink his love for Helen when he realises that his friends and colleagues do not allow him to love Helen. It is his internal tensions that are at the heart of this play.
Despite being such a weighty topic, the actors in this play never need any gravitas. In fact it is the opposite – the humour is crass and tactless, and insensitivity is the rule of the day. This is best exemplified by Carter’s (Zachary Ibrahim) character – the good friend but one who is a little too honest as well. Completing the ensemble is Tom’s colleague Jeannie (Elizabeth Lazan), who has difficulty accepting the fact that Tom would choose Helen over her, a tall and slender, pulchritudinous lady.

There are many enjoyable bits throughout the play. The humour is intelligent and the jokes are not too corny. Newcomer Lee, a graduating Theatre student making her professional debut, is a delight to watch and has just the right amount of awkwardness with Yap, although their romantic scenes could use a little more chemistry. Look out for Tom’s between-scene costume change, a necessary function nicely turned into a joke of sorts as well as the antics of the stage hands who do a little more than carry props in and out.

Credit definitely must be given to the impressive set designed by Eucien Chia, which effortlessly transformed among others, into an office, a bedroom and even a beach. Stanislavsky would have been impressed with the automatically- swivelling office, which earned audible oohs from the audience.

That said, perhaps Pangdemonium! is in need of a new formula. Fat Pig seems to be banking on the successful formula of past Pangdemonium! productions, where a controversial topic is brought to the fore and made emotional. While it has delivered previously, for example in last year’s Rabbit Hole which I really enjoyed, Fat Pig was simply nowhere as visceral.

While the entire play was not a particular heavyweight in the bigger scheme of things, I am thankful that Pangdemonium! has brought this topic to the fore. We no longer blink an eye at the many weight loss ads in the newspapers, and the mass media continues to perpetuate unrealistic notions of beauty. One can only hope that one day those Yo Mama! jokes will no longer be funny, and that one can confidently say –

Yo Mama so fat!
That she is ……. beautiful.

 

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ABOUT THE PRODUCTION

FAT PIG by Pangdemonium! Productions
13 February – 2 March 2014
DBS Arts Centre

ABOUT THE REVIEWER

Andre Joseph Theng is passionate about the intricacies of language, and reviewing allows him to combine his love for both theatre and writing.