Centre 42 » Basement Workshop https://centre42.sg Thu, 16 Dec 2021 10:08:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.30 A TINY COUNTRY| by ATTEMPTS https://centre42.sg/a-tiny-county-by-attempts/ https://centre42.sg/a-tiny-county-by-attempts/#comments Wed, 13 Nov 2019 04:06:58 +0000 https://centre42.sg/?p=12843 BWBanner A Tiny Country
SynopsisCreation ProcessCreative Team

“It has been many days since we last ate. We barely manage to find some scrap of food here and there. These people, my people, my… tribe. I really hope we survive together.”

A TINY COUNTRY is a thought-provoking, experiential, playful, and exciting collective role-playing experience. The audience plays dual roles—one as a member of a community living in a tiny country who is invested in the country’s fate, and another as a social scientist who impartially experiments with the people’s future. The collective stories are woven through a person from the past, a present struggle, and a crisis in waiting.

The country has survived a long history of conflicts and threats. For the next decade, they come face to face with crossroads. Do they focus on harvesting natural resources or cultivating talents? Should they explore and expand or strengthen and defend? Do they unite or tear the country apart?

Others

Artist Statement

A TINY COUNTRY is a special project especially for me. I’d recently come across a documentary about Cocos (Keeling) Islands, an Australian island where a group of Malays reside. They practice Islam and similar Malay culture to us but yet speak with Australian accent. This makes me reflect upon my own relationship with the island I’m living on. What is my connection with this island? Why do I spend many years of my life, yearning for a place here when everything around me tells me to draw wisdom an foreign land elsewhere. How then, can I start telling my story, the story that starts with the place I call my home?

Development Process

This is an unique experience for us as it is the first time ATTEMPTS is working with an established playwright to write something participatory, forging a game while we are at it. C42 gives us the space to experiment and play with the ideas. Like all good games, one can only get better at repeated attempts at the game and tweaking the play. Right now, we are building, developing, writing, testing and rehearsing the performance as we speak. It has to run all at a go, which is the nature of spontaneous works.

ATTEMPTS
ATTEMPTS is a participatory theatre collective consisting of artists whose interests are participatory arts. They are Cheryl Tan, Farez Najid, Ng Sze Min and Rei Poh. It is founded by Rei Poh in 2019, after his research into video game mechanics and participatory narratives during his Master’s programme with the Victorian College of the Arts. Named after their first participatory project in 2018, ATTEMPTS is a collective that believes theatre can and should transform passive audiences into active players, by equipping them with agency (the power and capacity for action), while inviting them on a multi-sensorial adventure combining storytelling and game mechanics.

Director/Game Designer/Co-creator – Rei Poh
Rei Poh is a committed participatory theatre practitioner, director and game designer, who believes in the power of theatre to transform. He is a proud graduate of the Victorian College of the Arts’ Master of Directing for Performance program. Rei has created thought-provoking participatory and forum theatre works like ATTEMPTS:SG, ATTEMTPS:MEL and《莎莎》Girl In the White Sand Box. Rei’s recent projects include the showcase of DATING SIM (beta) —a participatory piece that experiments with video game-style narrative in LATE NIGHT TEXTING 2019 by CENTRE 42

Playwright/Co-creator – Jean Tay
Jean Tay is an award-winning Singaporean playwright, whose plays have been performed in Singapore, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Italy. She has been nominated four times for Best Original Script for The Straits Times Life! Theatre Awards, and won for Everything But the Brain in 2006. Everything but the Brain and Boom have both been used as ‘O’ and ‘N’ Level literature texts.

Producer – Woo Hsia Ling
Woo Hsia Ling is an independent producer with 17 years of experience as a Stage and  Production Manager. Ling ventured into independent producing since 2014, and was the Managing Producer for Saltwater by Jamie Lewis, a participatory performance which saw four performance seasons in Melbourne, Brisbane and Gold Coast, between 2015 and 2016. She was also the Managing Producer for Chinatown Crossings by Drama Box, a roving site-specific performance in Singapore that ran two sold-out seasons in 2018 and 2019.

Spatial & Visual Designer – Goh Abigail
Goh Abigail (b. 1993) works with sound, drawings, objects and space as both subject and material. She graduated in 2017 with a BA(Hons) Fine Arts from LASALLE College of the Arts and is a recipient of the 2017 Chan-Davies Art Prize and 2015 Winston Oh Travel Award. Her recent exhibitions include Bachelorette Machines at Institute of Contemporary Arts in 2019, and in-inhabitations at Telok Ayer Arts Club in 2018, and was onboard Toy Factory Production’s A Dream Under the Southern Bough: Reverie as the installation artist/set designer.

Sound Artist – Ng Sze Min
Ng Sze Min is a sound artist interested in expanding documentary and participatory forms. She expresses text, concepts and experiences into audio works. Her performances and one-on one live art shows have been featured at the Poetry Festival 2017 (Singapore), 15th Big Sky Documentary Film Festival (USA) and hillsceneLIVE 2019 (Melbourne, Australia). She recently completed a month-long residency in Kluang, Malaysia, engaging residents in detailing a sound map of their town.

Lighting Designer – Petrina Dawn Tan
Petrina Dawn Tan holds a Master of Art with Merit in Collaborative Theatre Production and Design from the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London. She practises Scenography (Space and Lighting) and has conceptualised a range of projects including circus, community music festivals and installations with the element of audience participation.

Performer – Farez Najid
Farez Najid started his professional career in 2006 and was trained in BA(Acting) at LASALLE College of the Arts. His works include Off Centre (The Necessary Stage, 2019), Main2 (Teater Ekamatra, 2017), Prism (Toy Factory Productions, 2017), Geylang (WILD RICE, 2016), and Tan Tarn How’s Lady Soul and the Ultimate “S” Machine (Esplanade Presents The Studios, 2015). He also participated in international works such as Year Zero (Drama Arts, 2017) at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and Super Happy Land (Hatch Theatrics and Theatre Gumbo, 2016) with stagings in Singapore and Japan.

 Development Milestones 

A TINY COUNTRY was developed in residence at Centre 42’s Basement Workshop from November 2019 to January 2020.

8 – 12 January 2020:
World Premiere at Centre 42 Black Box, as part of M1 Singapore Fringe Festival 2020

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Homage to Mat and Minah Reps https://centre42.sg/homage-to-mat-and-minah-reps/ https://centre42.sg/homage-to-mat-and-minah-reps/#comments Tue, 22 Oct 2019 08:04:06 +0000 https://centre42.sg/?p=12744 The cast of Rumah Dayak. From left: Rusydina Afiqah, Uddyn J, Yamin Yusof, Al-Matin Yatim, Farah Lola, Tysha Khan, Yamin Yusof Ali Mazrin. Photo: Rupa co.lab

The cast of Rumah Dayak. From left: Rusydina Afiqah, Uddyn J, Yamin Yusof, Al-Matin Yatim, Farah Lola, Tysha Khan, Yamin Yusof Ali Mazrin. Photo: Rupa co.lab

In 2015, Nessa Anwar volunteered for an organisation that provided educational opportunities for underprivileged children. When she visited a rental flat on a mission trip, she was greeted by a sobering sight.

“I saw five or six curtains hanging from the ceiling inside a one-room flat. Faces kept popping out from nowhere and I realised there were more than eighteen people living in that tiny room,” she recalls vividly. “It broke my heart.”

That image stuck with Nessa, becoming both inspiration and motivation to create her latest work, Rumah Dayak, a play about a safehouse run by a pair of ex-offenders for troubled youth. The play is being developed at Centre 42’s Basement Workshop ahead of its premiere at the Malay Heritage Centre next month.

Rumah Dayak is Nessa’s second full-length work, presented by brand-new collective Rupa co.lab, which was founded by Nessa and fellow playwrights Nabilah Said and Hazwan Norly. All three are also founding members of Main Tulis Group, a Malay playwriting circle that has made Centre 42 their home base since 2016. The trio plans to take turns producing each other’s plays annually over the next three years.

Each annual production, Nessa explains, will focus on a sub-set of the Malay community. This year, Rumah Dayak shines a spotlight on the mat rep and minah rep. Often shortened to mats and minahs, the terms refer to male and female Malay youths who are trouble-makers and delinquents.

Playwright of Rumah Dayak, Nessa Anwar responding to feedback at the Guest Room reading of the work.

Playwright of Rumah Dayak, Nessa Anwar responding to feedback at the Guest Room reading of the work.

It’s a group she knows well having grown up alongside many mats and minahs: “They had problems with money, family and working for a living. A couple of them got into trouble with the law.”

Her volunteering stint also gave her insight into the difficulties that the troubled youths and their families faced. She says, “This play is my thought experiment on what [at-risk] kids really need – do they need tangible resources or just a space to make mistakes?”

In order to learn more, Nessa embarked on an extensive research process which involved speaking with friends, reading up on police cases, and interviewing officers from the Central Narcotics Bureau and police. As her curiosity grew, so did the material for Rumah Dayak.

Nessa finished a first draft in October 2018 and then, in June 2019, presented a test-read of the script under Centre 42’s Guest Room. There, she received a wealth of feedback on her script from theatre-artists such as Rafaat Hamzah and Najib Soiman.

“I am not an expert. I am just one voice,” she says. “But I want to make sure that Rumah Dayak is as realistic as possible.”

Her desire for veracity also extends into her direction for the work, particularly with the cast’s performance of the mat lingo.

“[When] mat reps fight, their language is coarse, but the delivery is beautiful. They use a lot of rhythm that is found in pantun [a Malay poetic form],” she explains. “This rhythm needs to be practiced. If it is not delivered properly, it will fall flat and it won’t make sense.”

Since not all of her eight cast members were familiar with the world of mats and minahs, she facilitated a two-day workshop for them to delve into the history, culture and lingo of the community.

Referencing popular reggaeton music, Nessa calls mats and minahs of the early noughties the Gasolina (2004) generation, and their present-day counterparts, the Despacito (2018) generation. The Despacito generation, in particular, has to deal with the pervasiveness of social media and higher cost of living.

“The climate of being a mat was very different. Back then, if you said you were going to run away, you would do it. Now, it’s just too expensive to run away from home,” she explains. “But there’s still that swagger [of being a mat]. It’s just translated differently and depicted differently.”

All these details are important to Nessa.

“I just want to see my friends represented on stage,” she says simply. “It is a way to pay homage to the people I grew up with.”

By Lee Shu Yu
Published on 22 October 2019

Rumah Dayak is in residence under the Basement Workshop and will be staged at the Malay Heritage Centre from 21 to 24 November 2019. Tickets available here.

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The A to Z of Making Theatre https://centre42.sg/a-to-z-of-making-theatre/ https://centre42.sg/a-to-z-of-making-theatre/#comments Tue, 22 Oct 2019 08:03:46 +0000 https://centre42.sg/?p=12748 Zelda Tatiana Ng (left) and Aidli 'Alin' Mosbit (right) performing the Phase 2 version of Just AZ at a Basement Workshop showing in August 2019.

Zelda Tatiana Ng (left) and Aidli ‘Alin’ Mosbit (right) performing the Phase 2 version of Just AZ at a Basement Workshop showing in August 2019.

Imagine this – you’ve written a script. You’ve even tested it out on an audience. And then, your director says you’re scrapping it all and starting again. (Did you wince?) Well, it’s not that your script is terrible. It’s just part of the process.

That’s exactly what happened in a GroundZ-0 project that’s been in development in our Basement Workshop residency since 2018. The project involves seasoned theatre practitioners Zelda Tatiana Ng, Aidli ‘Alin’ Mosbit, and Alvin Tan. In October 2018, after spending a month workshopping, Zelda and Alin performed their original script Just AZ, titled so because it was just about Alin and Zelda. It was an intensely personal work reaching deep into the love lives of the two women. There were exes. There were tears. There were love ballads. This was Phase 1 of the project.

The team reassembled at Centre 42 almost a year later for Phase 2, an intensive week of workshopping and development. But what they presented at the second closed-door showcase was vastly different. It’s still primarily a story about one Malay woman and one Chinese woman; but now, the former is Lela, a single woman and Head of Department at a school, and the latter is Lydia, a single parent and popular news anchor. Lydia’s son, who is a student at Lela’s school, becomes embroiled in a statutory rape scandal. Just AZ was no longer autobiographical, but instead, entirely fictional. So what of the original script?

Alvin Tan, director of Just AZ introducing the audience to the Phase 2 script in August 2019.

Alvin Tan, director of Just AZ, introducing the audience to the Phase 2 script in August 2019.

“Zelda did ask me if we weren’t going on with the Phase 1 script, then won’t it go to waste?” director and collaborator Alvin Tan recalls. “But when you do process work, you’re aware there is a lot of waste.”

For Alvin, it was necessary for the two actors to dig deep in Phase 1. He always begins a project by asking the question: “What is disturbing you?” It’s a technique he’d learnt at a directing workshop run by late theatre doyen Kuo Pao Kun in the 1980s.

“Through the project, through the production, through the process, Pao Kun would try to explore what has been disturbing him and all the different perspectives on it,” Alvin says. “I asked Alin and Zelda what at this point in their lives was disturbing them. And they very quickly talked about being single and the instability.”

Because of the deeply personal nature of Phase 1, this technique requires a lot of trust between all involved. Alin, Zelda and Alvin have plenty of history together – Alvin is the founding artistic director of theatre company The Necessary Stage (TNS), Zelda was formerly an ensemble actor with TNS, and Alin has inhabited many iconic roles in TNS productions, including her breakout role as Saloma’s mother in Off Centre.

Surprisingly, the original brief for “Just AZ” wasn’t about women and love, but rather, an exploration into the relationship between the Chinese and Malay ethnic groups in Singapore. But Alvin is quick to reassure that the project hadn’t gone off-course: “I can’t go straight into ethnic differences. I have to have a story, and then through the material, sensibilities will show. How they behave, how they react. I need a story to be the vehicle. And as the actors discuss it, I’m observing their discussion.”

It is these observations and more that have ensured that Phase 2 wasn’t throwing the baby out with the bath water. Alvin shares, “A lot of things, subconsciously get taken up. Broader themes like single women are taken up. We just have to follow the themes into a new environment.”

Time was another factor that allowed the team to take such a bold step. The Just AZ project in the Basement Workshop is spread out over three years, with Phase 1 in 2018, Phase 2 in 2019, and a concluding Phase 3 in 2020.

“After finishing Phase 1, all of us had many projects so we couldn’t continue it until much, much later. But it gave us distance,” Alvin says, “When writers write, you need some months away before you can come back and edit. You don’t feel like you’re killing your children. There is enough distance not to feel the waste.”

Entering Phase 2 this year afresh, Alvin was inspired by a 1994 film called Ladybird, Ladybird by British filmmaker Ken Loach. The film, about a woman losing her children to Social Services, would provide the starting point for a new, totally fictional Just AZ involving single women, motherhood and the State.

A Basement Workshop showing of Just AZ (Phase 1) in October 2018.

A Basement Workshop showing of Just AZ (Phase 1) in October 2018.

“I wrote all these briefs and I WhatsApp-ed them to Zelda and Alin,” Alvin shares. “Zelda had a lot of questions. Alin’s not the kind. Alin’s the kind that may be absent on WhatsApp, but goes off and creates on her own. They have different working styles.”

But again, what of the discussion on inter-ethnic relations? Alvin says, “Phase 2 gave us all more things to discuss about, because it’s not just actors, it’s the characters also. Characters which are a certain kind of Malay and a certain kind of Chinese. And then, the notion of the intersectional comes in.”

The team had also made a decision not to involve playwrights in the first two phases. This way of making theatre breaks away from a convention which places the playwright at the apex of a work and all other disciplines following suit. It’s not a new method, Alvin admits, who cites the devised works of Drama Box as example. But for Alvin, who has been directing work for three decades, is finding himself treading on new ground.

“I do feel insecure. I don’t know which part to cut, to let it breathe,” he confesses.

That’s where Phase 3 in 2020 comes in. The team will be joined by not one, but two playwrights, to help flesh out the 40-minute Phase 2 script. Alvin shares that there may even be a dramaturg. With additional script-writing brawn, GroundZ-0 hopes to stage the work in the near future.

But with the work deviating so far from where it first began, will it still be called Just AZ?

“We’ll change the title,” Alvin concedes with a chuckle.

By Daniel Teo
Published on 22 October 2019

]]> https://centre42.sg/a-to-z-of-making-theatre/feed/ 0 RUMAH DAYAK | by Nessa Anwar https://centre42.sg/rumah-dayak-by-nessa-anwar-2/ https://centre42.sg/rumah-dayak-by-nessa-anwar-2/#comments Fri, 27 Sep 2019 02:52:53 +0000 https://centre42.sg/?p=12682 Rumah Dayak Banner

SynopsisCreation ProcessCreative Team
A night-hour safehouse for the troubled youths, dropouts, runaways and delinquents of the Malay community is run by a pair of ex-offenders. When external intervention looms, it will take their collective efforts to keep the walls of their home up. Or will they come tumbling down?

Written and directed by Nessa Anwar, Rumah Dayak is an unflinching look at the struggle to guard a home built out of circumstances surrounding poverty, deprivation and abuse. Rumah Dayak is the inaugural production by new collective Rupa co.lab, which comprises Hazwan Norly, Nabilah Said and Nessa Anwar.

Performed in Malay and English, with English surtitles.

1st Phase (July 2019)

Rumah Dayak was presented as a full-length dramatised-read at Centre 42’s Guest Room on 6 July 2019. A post-presentation feedback session was facilitated by Nabilah Said. Feedback gathered at this by-invite presentation will provide Nessa with additional information to further develop the play.

2nd Phase (November 2019)

Rumah Dayak will be staged at the Malay Heritage Centre from 21 to 24 November 2019.

Others

About Rupa co.lab
Rupa co.lab is a Singaporean art collective of theatremakers Hazwan Norly, Nabilah Said and Nessa Anwar. In collaboration, these three artists tap into their vibrant and diverse creative processes and talents to create new Singaporean works. Derived from the Sanskrit word, रूप (rūpa), which means “form, shape”, Rupa co.lab is dedicated to reshaping contemporary conversations, through the lens of the Malay person.

Playwright & Director, co-founder of Rupa co.lab – Nessa Anwar
Nessa Anwar has written, acted and produced for theatre, television and video. Nessa began acting under companies like Singapore Repertory Theatre’s Young Company and Teater Ekamatra. Nessa graduated in Philosophy from NUS, studying playwriting and screenwriting. She has written award-winning short films, television programmes and an online series “InstaScram”. Her first full-length play, “Riders Know When It’s Gonna Rain” was staged under Checkpoint Theatre and Wild Rice. She is a founding member of Singapore playwright collective Main Tulis Group.

Producer, co-founder of Rupa co.lab – Nabilah Said
Nabilah Said is a playwright and producer who has presented work in Singapore and London with Teater Ekamatra, The Necessary Stage, Bhumi Collective and Lazy Native. Recent producing credits include “ANGKAT: A Definitive, Alternative, Reclaimed Narrative of a Native” and “Inside Voices” in London’s VAULT Festival. She is the founder of Main Tulis Group, Singapore’s first collective of playwrights writing in Malay and English. Nabilah is also a theatre critic and arts writer.

Marketing Manager, co-founder of Rupa co.lab – Hazwan Norly
Hazwan Norly would like to sell himself as an artist/writer/theatre practitioner/dabbler in pain, but pain is not a condition exclusive to artists. He is a sentimental and emotional observer of the universe, whose currency is life experience points, and whose caffeine is of the mental sort – shaken, not stirred. To date, he has both written and performed for the stage. Hazwan is also one of the founding members of Singapore playwright collective Main Tulis Group.

Actor – Al-Matin Yatim (NAHAR)
Al-Matin Yatim is a Professional Theatre Practitioner graduated from Intercultural Theatre Institute. He has been working for the past decade, mainly as a stage actor, with many notable and established companies like The Necessary Stage, TheatreWorks, Cake Theatrical Productions, Hatch Theatrics, The Theatre Practice, etc. He has also performed internationally in cities like Braunshweig, Brisbane and Edinburgh. He shared the nomination of Life! Theatre Award 2016’s Best Ensemble and Best Production of the year in “It Won’t be too long: The Cemetery” in the Singapore International Festival of Arts (SIFA) 2015.

Actor – Farah Lola (JULIA)
Farah Lola is a budding local comedienne with a knack for observational humour and parody. Most of her content is drawn from her experience growing up as a brown female in Singapore. In the past year, her viral videos have garnered over half a million views on social
media. Her recent work has been covered by international media such as Business Insider and Yahoo SG to rave reviews.She is also a host and has worked as an actor with Teater Ekamatra under the Playwright Director Mentorship Programme.

Actor – Uddyn J (SHAH)
Saifuddin Jumadi, or affectionately known as Uddyn, is a lifelong arts enthusiast. He had his roots in Malay traditional dance with Era Dance Theatre & People’s Association Malay Dance Group. Under the guidance of Osman Hamid, Fathurrahman Said and Sumia Samsudin, he performed various dance pieces and represented Singapore in various International Festivals. Uddyn is multi-faceted; he was pursuing his degree in the infamous Al-Azhar University of Egypt and simultaneously developing his capacity in performing arts. It was in Egypt that he
began exploring creative directing, scriptwriting and producing several plays. With the aim of marrying arts and faith and making it  accessible and mainstream, Uddyn with his 2 other friends formed Big Mouth Production. Since 2009, he has creative-produced and scriptwrote 30 production pieces and still aspire to do more and push boundaries.

Actor – Yamin Yusof (DASH)
Yamin’s first foray in acting was his appearance in Anugerah Skrin 2016 as a contestant. Yamin Yusof has worked in theatre as well as had featured and main roles in short films and television productions for Mediacorp Suria. Formerly trained by Rafaat Hamzah, Najib Soiman, Norisham Osman and Kamil Haque (under the Haque Collective), Yamin spends most of his time in the gym or making coffee.

Actor – Rusydina Afiqah (ELLA)
Rusydina Afiqah received her BA (Hons) in Theatre Arts from Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts. Notable productions include Here and Beyond! (Toy Factory); Bloody Damn (NAFA); Step Outta Line (M1 Singapore Fringe Festival 2018 & NAFA) and a multimedia screening for Kenang-Kenangan Seorang Wanita Pemalu (Teater Kami). Recently, she was a part of Late Night Texting 2019 as a performer in Spittle Spattle, part of Verso/Recto and also a host. Witness the humorous side of Rusydina as she stars in an online comedy sketch series on
YouTube called The BenZi Project.

Actor – Wan Ahmad (BOY)
Wan Ahmad discovered theatre back in 2014 as a member of Temasek Polytechnic’s Teatro Since then, he has worked for numerous companies such as Teater Ekamatra, The Necessary Stage, Malay Heritage Centre, and Esplanade’s Alkesah. He also volunteered in Muhammadiyah Welfare Home to teach theatre to the residents. With two of his friends, he owns a theatre collective, Teater Artysan.

Actor – Tysha Khan (AMIRA)
Tysha is a Singapore-based actor and writer. She has worked in productions by companies such as Teater Kami and UNSAID, often on topics that hold great meaning to her. Her most recent performance was in Anak Melayu (Teater Kami). Besides performing on stage, Tysha acts on screen, hosts, and has her own YouTube channel called Go Jerr. She is also a published poet and has translated films and interviews. A recipient of the Goh Chok Tong Youth Promise Award, she is currently training at the Intercultural Theatre Institute, and will soon be the first Malay-Muslim woman to graduate from the school.

Actor – Ali Mazrin (SLIM)
Ali Mazrin is an actor and set designer. Graduated from HNITEC in Performance Production, Ali studied both in performing and technical aspects, under the teachings of Elnie S Mashuri, Terrence Lau, A Kumarran, Haizan Salam and more. He has designed sets for Karya 2018 by
Azpirasi. He was the stage crew and doubled up as the ensemble, for Alkesah Pestaraya 2018 by Esplanade Theatre. ‘Rumah Dayak’ is going to be his first full-length play, and he couldn’t be more thrilled!

Lighting Designer – Emanorwatty Saleh
Emanorwatty Saleh has worked extensively in production and stage management, lighting and sound design, acting and performance. Some of her technical credits include Reading Centhini (2014) by Agnes Christina at The Substation Directors’ Lab, Lockdown (2014) by Hatch Theatrics and as a lighting designer for Untitled (2013) by The Kaizen M.D. She graduated with a BA (Hons) in Technical Theatre Arts from LASALLE College of the Arts in 2008.

Set Designer – Mohd Fared Jainal
Mohd Fared Jainal graduated with a Master In Arts (Design) from Open University/LASALLE College of the Arts and is a recipient of the Goh Chok Tong Youth Promise Award. He has collaborated extensively with various theatre and art groups as a director, performer, visual artist and set designer. The Gingerbread Man (Singapore Repertory Theatre), a collaboration with LASALLE College of the Arts, earned him Best Set Design for 2007 Life! Theatre Awards. His work The Comedy of the Tragic Goats by Cake Theatre won him Best Director for 2009 Life! Theatre Awards, and Cuckoo Birds, collaboration between Cake Theatre and Five Arts Centre, Malaysia, won him Best Set Design for 8th BOH Cameronian Arts Awards 2009. In 2010, he was one of the four artists selected for residency with the prestigious La Mama International in Spoleto, Umbria, Italy.

Production Stage Manager: Azy Alias
Assistant Stage Manager: Iffah Idi

 Development Milestones 

Rumah Dayak is in residence at Centre 42’s Basement Workshop from September 2019 to November 2019.

21 – 24 November 2019
Full staging at Malay Heritage Centre Auditorium

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JUST AZ | by GroundZ-0 https://centre42.sg/just-az-by-groundz-0/ https://centre42.sg/just-az-by-groundz-0/#comments Fri, 14 Jun 2019 10:40:41 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=11492 Just AZ Banner

SynopsisCreation ProcessCreative Team
The Malays and Chinese has its own, and yet intertwined history and relationship between themselves on this little island country – Singapore.

How much do we really know one another? We have friends from the other race but we also harboured prejudices and judgement against the other. We have set ‘set assumptions/ perspectives’ for one another. We judged each other. There is anxiety, friendship, anxiousness, care, angst, tolerance, blame, acceptance, hurt, distrust… throughout our Singapore history and within our daily routine.

How do we manage?

This is a devised play by both collaborators – Alin & Zelda, with the guidance by Alvin Tan (as Director). It is a character-based story aims to explore the complexity of the relationship between the two races in this country. Through this process, the work also hope to further understand and excavate the ‘identities’ of being a Singaporean.

1st Phase (September – October 2018)

The first phase of the development focused on research and workshops. The team researched on the theme and brainstormed ideas for the play. In the process of the research and improvisations, the team aimed to find a basic structure of the play.

2nd Phase (August 2019) – Refinement & Structure

After the first phase, the team will review the feedback received. They will make edits to the script, focus on specific issues related to the work and do further research. At the end of second phase, there will be a Work-in-Progress presentation for the team to gather feedback and comments.

GroundZ-0 原。空間, is a Singapore-based multi-lingual experimental inter-space initiated by Zelda Tatiana Ng, which aims to explore, research, promote and produce intercultural and cross-genres/ disciplines works in Singapore. GroundZ-0 原。空間 is interested in the experimentation of traditional arts forms (especially Chinese Opera & Japanese Noh) in contemporary theatre, as and when suitable and applicable. It also seeks opportunities to work with various international artists in order to share research and learn knowledge across nationalities/ races/ cultures.

Through explorations and experiments, GroundZ-0 aspires to find/ define/ re-define its identity(ies) as Singaporean as well as a Global Citizen.

Collaborator / Cast – Zelda Tatiana Ng

  • Has been working in the arts/theatre scene for more than 18 years
  • Involved in various aspects oftheatre with almost all major established local theatre companies i.e. The Necessary Stage, Drama Box, The Finger Players, The Theatre Practice and Singapore Repertory Theatre etc.
  • In 2003, graduated from the Theatre Training & Research Programme (currently known as Intercultural Theatre Institute)
  • Recent work includes – Inheritance (The Finger Players, Director), Sea (Centre 42 – The Vault, Actor), Afar (The Finger Players – Watch This Space, Director), Red Dot Radio (Esplanade Outdoor Theatre Concert, Lead Singer), Three Children & Titoudao (Esplanade The Studios – fifty, Director), Garisan Kuning (Singapore Repertory Theatre – Actor), Square Moon (Independent, Lead Actor), 100 Years of Solitude-Cultural Revolution (Zuni Icosahedron & Drama Box, Actor) and movies Ilo Ilo & Taxi Taxi (Featured Actor)

Collaborator / Cast – Aidli Mosbit

  • Graduated from Queensland University of Technology and has worked extensively with local companies like The Necessary Stage, Teater Kami, Wild Rice, Cake Theatre, Toy Factory, The Theatre Practice, Teater Ekamatra and Drama Box.
  • Published an anthology of Malay plays in the book, BISIK with Noor Effendy Ibrahim and Alfian Sa’at
  • She toured to Scotland, Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, Romania, Hong Kong and Hungary, performing Singapore-brand theatre
  • Recipient of the Young Artist Award for Theatre in 2008, she played the leading role of Murni alongside Malaysia’s legendary actor, Datuk Haji Rahim Razali, in the film Sayang Disayang (2013) by Sanif Olek which was Singapore’s Official 2015 Oscar® Entry for Best Foreign Language Film.
  • In 2016, she published her collection of Malay plays entitled CHANTEK. CHANTEK was awarded the Hadiah Persuratan (Literary Award) 2017 by the Malay Language Council, Singapore.
  • Currently working in Temasek Polytechnic as the Section Head of the Arts Division, in the Student Development & Alumni Affairs department, while pursuing her Master of Education.

Director – Alvin Tan

  • Founder and Artistic Director of The Necessary Stage
  • A leading proponent of devising theatre in Singapore. Directed more than 70 plays, which have been staged locally and at international festivals
  • In 1998, was conferred the Young Artist Award for Theatre
  • Awarded Best Director at 2011 The Straits Times Life! Theatre Awards for Model Citizens by The Necessary Stage
  • In 2014, Alvin was conferred the Cultural Medallion for his artistic excellence and contribution to Singapore’s arts and cultural landscape
  • Artistic Director of Peer Pleasure, an annual youth-oriented theatre festival in Singapore
 Development Milestones 

Just AZ was developed in residence at Centre 42’s Basement Workshop from September 2018 to August 2019 (separate phases).

September – October 2018
1st Phase

13 – 18 August 2019
2nd Phase

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HAPPY WAITING | by Grain Performance & Research Lab https://centre42.sg/happy-waiting-by-grain-performance-research-lab/ https://centre42.sg/happy-waiting-by-grain-performance-research-lab/#comments Mon, 03 Jun 2019 07:43:45 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=12103 Happy Waiting Banner

SynopsisCreation ProcessCreative Team

An actress (Sonia Kwek) and a dancer (Neo Yan Zong) meet in Happy Waiting, a new play written by Beverly Yuen, inspired by Samuel Beckett’s Happy Days and Waiting for Godot. Choreographer/ dance artist Bernice Lee is making her theatre directorial debut with Happy Waiting. This combination is exciting and creatively stimulating for a text-based physical theatre performance!

Vicky (Sonia Kwek) is trapped in a mound, but in a cheerful spirit, with only her limbs and head seen. In the mound, Vicky enters into a series of memories, imaginations and recollections of stories told by her folks when she was young. Often, she speaks to her husband Victor as she recalls the happy days of their dating and marriage. However, she is not acknowledged with any response. She thinks— perhaps, her husband is busy. Thus, she sings, dances with her limbs and plays games to occupy time. She is constantly “visited” by Bobo (Neo Yan Zong) who dances past her frequently but does not seem to respond to her. Is he her memory, imagination, or someone from her life?

We follow through the life of Vicky as she passes through the routine of waking up to her alarm, brushing teeth, and making breakfast for herself and her unseen husband. She is totally comfortable and joyous in her routine, maintaining an electrifying positivity within the confines of her limited mobility, hoping that Victor will respond to her one day.

 

Happy Waiting is an absurdist play that portrays the situations when one is trapped and immobilised with a tint of dark humour.

While Vicky, stuck in the mound, is waiting for her husband to return, the play reflects any life situations when we are stranded, wanting to move on but afraid to do so, and thus choose [could be subconsciously] to stay in the comfort of a familiar, routine and nondescript condition. The absurdity of the characters onstage allows the audience to contemplate and ponder about their lives, be it their studies, career, relationship or family matters.Beverly Yuen

1. Happy Waiting (Process 1), 1 Oct- 2 Nov 2018

Putting herself in a box, Beverly Yuen, the playwright of Happy Waiting, started her journey in writing the original play, which is inspired by Samuel Beckett’s Happy Days and Waiting for Godot. She confined herself within the dimension of a box, exploring what it felt like to be stranded, and yet abiding in optimism; experience the bleak situation of being stuck, and yet hopeful. Her approach to writing is not merely sitting in front of the laptop! She was using a “doer” and “performer” approach to write the script. From there, she did an 8-minute presentation of Happy Waiting (Process 1) at Make It Share It’s Open Stage on 2 November 2018.

2. Phase 1 of rehearsals for the full-length play (April 2019)

Phase 1 of rehearsals involves exploration of the play with the director and the cast through script reading and improvisation. The script was finalised in the beginning of May.

3. Phase 2 of rehearsals (May 2019)

In Phase 2 of rehearsals, the director will work on the blocking of the play with the cast and continue in-depth explorations of the script. The script will may still undergo slight amendments.

4. Phase 3 of the rehearsals (June 2019)

Phase 3 of rehearsals is when everything comes together. The production design elements and the rehearsals will meet in the Phase 3 of the rehearsals.

5. Phase 4 of the rehearsals (July 2019)

Phase 4 is the final phase of rehearsals leading up to the presentation.

The presentation will take place on 12 July (8pm) & 13 July 2019 (3pm) at Stamford Arts Centre’s Black Box.

Documentation of the process
Others

Playwright – Beverly Yuen

Beverly Yuen is the Artistic Director of Grain Performance & Research Lab. Under the collective, she directed and performed in a physical theatre piece A Walk into the Mandala in 2017.

Beverly obtained her Bachelor of Arts (Theatre Studies) from the National University of Singapore and a Masters and PhD in Communication Studies from the Nanyang Technological University. In 1995, she co-founded Theatre OX with Ang Gey Pin and a few other theatre practitioners, and was a full-time performer with the troupe from 1995 to 1999. In 1998, she headed to the Workcenter of Jerzy Grotowski and Thomas Richards (Italy) and received intensive performer training for a year.

Beverly founded In Source Theatre (IST) in 2001 and was its Artistic Director from 2001 to 2013. With IST, she produced, created, performed and marketed more than 20 original works locally and internationally. Beverly also performed in productions directed by various directors/ choreographers such as Lim Chin Huat, Kok Heng Leun, Jean Ng and the late William Teo.

She also penned four full-length plays: D-evil of Light (English, 2001), I Dance I Wander I Wonder (English, 2004), Cage (Mandarin, 2004) and Sleeping Naked (English, 2016). Happy Waiting is her second play to receive developmental support from Centre 42 under the Basement Workshop programme after Sleeping Naked (2016).

Director – Bernice Lee

A National Arts Council Bursary recipient, Bernice received a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Dance with Honours from The Ohio State University (OSU) in May 2010, where she performed the works of Bebe Miller, Gu Ming-shen, Meghan Durham, and Sololos by Trisha Brown, directed by Abigail Yager.

Her works have shown internationally in Vientiane, Solo, Jogjakarta, Bangkok and New York. She often devises performances collaboratively and those works have been presented in Singapore at ArchiFest, ArtScience Museum, Arts House, The Substation, and TheatreWorks. A prolific performer, she has worked for Frontier Danceland (2012-2014) and Maya Dance Theatre (2014-2017). She also performed in Mandala by In Source Theatre at GAC Black Box in 2014 and Shanghai International Theatre Festival 2015. In 2018, Bernice has been developing her artistic practice through residencies including ELEMENT at Dance Nucleus and Time_Place_Space: Nomad organised by Arts House Melbourne.

In Happy Waiting, Bernice is interested to examine how a stuck human body produces choreography and drama, and what it means to be trapped, and yet embody a sense of freedom. She is also inspired to excavate what it means for women’s voices to re-imagine the Beckett plays in this original work.

Performer – Sonia Kwek

Sonia’s arts practice sits between theatre, performance art and dance/ movement. She also partakes in image-making and content-creation. Sonia does not like labels, and enjoys exploring between and beyond defined disciplines. Currently, Sonia is interested in the politics of female eroticism, the human physical body as material, and decolonising her own artistic processes.

Sonia often engages in work across the performing and visual arts realms, both locally and internationally. In 2018, her solo work Hymen Instinct toured to Taiwan as part of《女。性。诫?》Alternative Lessons for Women, a double-bill selected for the 2018 Asia Weekend Theatre Festival (2018 亞洲假日劇場戲劇節). She was also selected as part of the 2018 Time, Place, Space: Nomad residency through Arts House (Melbourne), an action-research residency held in the Australian outback.

Sonia graduated from Intercultural Theatre Institute (ITI) in 2017. She was a recipient of the ITI-William Teo Scholarship for her studies. Sonia also holds a Bachelor of Creative Industries (Drama) with Distinction, a study in interdisciplinary practice, from Queensland University of Technology, (QUT). Sonia strongly believes in collaboration and mixing as an ethos; she continually seeks training and working opportunities that allow her to hone her understanding of body and movement across cultures.

Performer – Neo Yan Zong

Yan started dancing in 2008. In 2011, he was selected for a Scholarship Program at Frontier Danceland, a professional Contemporary Dance Company in Singapore. The training sparked his interest to pursue dance full-time in 2014. He is now a graduate of the Anton Bruckner Private University’s bachelor program, with a Degree in Contemporary Stage Dance and Dance Pedagogy.

Yan is passionate for theatrical, improvisational and performative works. He seeks to incorporate humour and props in performances. Yan was part of a collective named Yellooww, which performed a fully improvised work, The Happy Hour Show in Linz, Austria.

Yan has a keen interest in Contact Improvisation; he has traveled to Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia), Taipei (Taiwan), Xiamen (China) for various festivals. He had the privilege to learn from one of the pioneers of Contact Improvisation, Nancy Stark Smith. It is his practice to search for efficiency and functionality in movement. Yan has a deep interest in martial arts. He practised Aikido, Systema and Wing Chun, seeking to integrate other movement practices with dance.

Yan aspires to be a dance educator in the future. He had the opportunity to share his interests and teach workshops and intensives in Singapore, Poland, Austria, Germany, and the UK. He hopes to continue to improve his methodologies and approaches in dance pedagogy.

Set designer – Shalyn Lim
Sound designer – Mohammad Hafizh Bin Hardi
Lighting designer – Mohammad Nor Ermeen Bin Chohari
Costume designer – Mohamad Hakimi Bin Abdullah
Props manager/ designer – Tania Shafiqah Bte Arshad

 Development Milestones 

Happy Waiting was developed in residence at Centre 42’s Basement Workshop from April 2019 to July 2019.

18 June 2019:
By-invitation only open rehearsal at Centre 42

3 July 2019:
By-invitation only open rehearsal at Centre 42

12 – 13 July 2019
Presentation at Stamford Arts Centre Black Box Theatre

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ANGKAT: A DEFINITIVE, ALTERNATIVE, RECLAIMED NARRATIVE OF A NATIVE | by Nabilah Said and Noor Effendy Ibrahim https://centre42.sg/angkat-a-definitive-alternative-reclaimed-narrative-of-a-native-by-nabilah-said-and-noor-effendy-ibrahim-2/ https://centre42.sg/angkat-a-definitive-alternative-reclaimed-narrative-of-a-native-by-nabilah-said-and-noor-effendy-ibrahim-2/#comments Sat, 02 Mar 2019 04:55:22 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=11497 Angkat Banner
SynopsisCreation ProcessCreative Team
ANGKAT: A Definitive, Alternative, Reclaimed Narrative of a Native subverts norms of genre and dramatic form to tell the intertwining histories of a mother and daughter, and a re-imagining of a young Singapura trying to find her footing amidst the rough seas.

Salma, an aspiring singer, is an adopted child whose struggle with identity is played out on a national stage.

Mak, a former islander, tries to process the loss of her home from the mainland, with a little help from some friends.

The play blends fantasy and fact, history and the imagined future, and the national, personal and magical to explore and empower hidden narratives of the Singapore story.

Credit source: M1 Singapore Fringe Festival 2019

In 2015, Nabilah Said join Centre 42’s Boiler Room through an open call. She was working on a play titled State Land, which was about people who used to live on Singapore’s offshore islands before being forced to move to the mainland. At the same time, as an associate artist in residence at Teater Ekamatra, she was also working on another piece called Angkat, about the common and informal practice of adoption in Malay families.

Nabilah went on a hiatus in July 2016 for six months when she had difficulty developing both works further. When she came back on January 2017, she decided to incorporate her ideas for State Land into Angkat. Subsequently, a test read of of Angkat was done in September 2017 at Centre 42 to conclude her Boiler Room Journey. Read more about Nabilah’s Boiler Room journey here.

At the end of 2017, Teater Ekamatra staged the piece, which was directed by Irfan Kasban. There were new scenes devised which took the production to a different direction.

Nabilah still wanted to develop her original idea for Angkat, and hence reached out to director Noor Effendy Ibrahim. Together they submitted the piece to the M1 Singapore Fringe Festival open call which was then accepted for 2019 Festival. Her play was renamed ANGKAT: A Definitive, Alternative, Reclaimed Narrative of a Native.

Playwright & Producer – Nabilah Said
Nabilah Said is a playwright and poet whose work has been presented in Singapore and London by theatre companies Teater Ekamatra, The Necessary Stage and Bhumi Collective. She is the founder of Main Tulis Group, a collective of playwrights writing in Malay and English. Nabilah is a former arts journalist at The Straits Times and currently writes reviews and articles for publications such as ArtsEquator and Exeunt Magazine.

Director – Noor Effendy Ibrahim
Noor Effendy Ibrahim is an interdisciplinary arts practitioner based in Singapore. Effendy was the Artistic Director of The Substation (2010-2015), and of Teater Ekamatra (2001-2006). He formed the interdisciplinary performance collective akulah BIMBO SAKTI in 2016. Effendy served on the National Arts Council’s Board from 2004 to 2006 and was selected for the National Arts Council’s Cultural Fellowship programme in 2014.

Production Stage Manager – Vivi Agustina
Vivi Agustina is an independent trilingual stage manager based in Singapore. She enrolled in the Stage Management Training Programme at Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay, training under the guidance of Jessie Ksanznak, a US-based stage manager. Since then, she has stage managed various theatre productions, dance recitals and music concerts. She is also currently the company stage manager at Ding Yi Music Company and venue stage manager at the Esplanade. She strives to keep on improving her stage management skills through her work.

Lighting Designer – Emanorwatty Saleh
Emanorwatty Saleh has worked extensively in production and stage management, lighting and sound design, acting and performance. Some of her technical credits include Reading Centhini (2014) by Agnes Christina at The Substation Directors’ Lab, Lockdown (2014) by Hatch Theatrics and as a lighting designer for Untitled (2013) by The Kaizen M.D. She graduated with a BA (Hons) in Technical Theatre Arts from LASALLE College of the Arts in 2008.

Sound Designer – Bani Haykal
bani haykal experiments with text + music. As an artist, composer and musician, bani considers music as a metaphor for cybernetics and his projects revolve around modes of interfacing and interaction in feedback/feedforward mechanisms. He is a member of b-quartet and Soundpainting ensemble Erik Satay & The Kampong Arkestra. In his capacity as a collaborator and soloist, bani has participated in festivals including Media/Art Kitchen (Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines and Japan), Liquid Architecture (Singapore) and Singapore International Festival of Arts.

Production Designer – Akbar Syadiq
Akbar Syadiq is a designer who crosses mediums, materials, space, and disciplines. He collaborates to realise process and ideas, focusing on stage design, props making, print and digital design. As an individual and formerly part of the design collective, neontights, he has worked with companies such as Esplanade – Theatres By The Bay, Cake Theatrical Productions and Teater Ekamatra.

Dramaturg – Zulfadli Rashid
An educator, writer and a multi-disciplinary arts practitioner, Zulfadli Rashid has explored diverse issues pertaining to the Singaporean person in his works. Recent works include the Malay musical Alkesah (2018) for Esplanade’s Pesta Raya festival; Harap (2017), an adaptation of Haresh Sharma’s Hope, for Teater Ekamatra; and The Chronicles of One and Zero: Kancil (2016), written under the collective, Zeugma, for the M1 Singapore Fringe Festival. Besides playwriting, he also dabbles in poetry recitals and performance art.

Actor – Adib Kosnan
Adib Kosnan is a theatre actor, director and playwright. As an actor, he has appeared in productions by TheatreWorks, The Necessary Stage, Drama Box, Teater Kami and was most recently seen in Teater Ekamatra’s Anak Bulan di Kampung Wak Hassan (Oct 2018). Adib enjoys the collaborative nature of theatre and is especially interested in improvisation and forum theatre. He is currently an Associate Artist at Checkpoint Theatre. He is also a founding member of Singaporean playwright collective Main Tulis Group.

Actor – Hafidz Abdul Rahman
Hafidz Abdul Rahman graduated from LASALLE College of the Arts (Theatre Arts). He is obsessed with Indian cinema. In his free time, he is an arts educator and performer.

Actor – Izzul Irfan
As a fresh face in the local theatre scene, Izzul Irfan has not stopped creating new and original works. From his first mono-drama Sampan (2016) to writing his first original musical Runaway (2018), he constantly pushes himself to make exciting productions that touch on issues facing his generation today. After acting in his first professional production Without Reason (M1 Peer Pleasure Theatre Festival, 2017), he hopes to inspire more youths to take up theatre as a space for change.

Actor – Moli Mohter
Moli Mohter has taken various positions in theatre since 1993, ranging from stage managing, production co-ordinating and acting, to costume, set, props making/building and make-up. In recent years, she has also been writing and directing theatre. As an actor, Moli has played various roles ranging from a schizophrenic to a blind old woman. She performed a monologue, La Libre Latifa (2002), produced by Teater Ekamatra and commissioned for Esplanade’s Pesta Raya festival. It was also performed in Kuala Lumpur’s Dewan Bahasa.

Actor – Shafiqhah Efandi
Shafiqhah Efandi graduated from LASALLE College of the Arts with a BA(Hons) in Acting. While at LASALLE, she worked with directors such as Noor Effendy Ibrahim, Natalie Hennedige, Edith Podesta and Stefanos Rassios. In 2018, she was in Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay’s Pesta Raya’s first ever Malay pantomime Alkesah written by Zulfadli Rashid and directed by Aidli ‘Alin’ Mosbit. She was recently seen in Cerita Cinta, written and directed by akulah BIMBO SAKTI, which was staged as part of Esplanade’s Pentas season.

Credit source: M1 Singapore Fringe Festival 2019
 Development Milestones 

ANGKAT: A Definitive, Alternative, Reclaimed Narrative of a Native was developed in residence at Centre 42’s Basement Workshop from December 2018 to January 2019.

24 – 26 January 2019
World Premiere at NAFA Studio Theatre, as part of M1 Singapore Fringe Festival 2019

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A PIECE OF CAKE | by Samantha Chia https://centre42.sg/a-piece-of-cake-by-samantha-chia/ https://centre42.sg/a-piece-of-cake-by-samantha-chia/#comments Sat, 02 Mar 2019 04:49:07 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=11488 A Piece of Cake Banner

SynopsisCreation ProcessCreative Team
“Because your dreams should not come with an expiry date.”

A Piece of Cake tells the story of Pat, a self-taught baker who finds herself at a crossroad in her 30-something life. While dealing with the challenging task of kick-starting a second career in her own bakery, Pat is faced with the parental pressure to start her own family with her long-time boyfriend, Thomas, and start it soon.

But that’s easier said than done, especially when money is tight. And now, niggling doubts start to cross Pat’s mind that maybe love is not what she needs right now.

So what do you do when society demands you stick to the status quo? Is there really an age limit to pursue your dreams?

A Piece of Cake explores the idea that a coming of age tale, can sometimes come at any age.

THE BEGINNING:

A Piece of Cake was first conceived during TheatreWorks 24-Hour Playwrighting Competition in 2012. The premise revolves around a 30-something daughter, her mother and her non-existent love life. The script was short, crammed full of ideas but was rough round the edges.

The script has since then gone through numerous drafts and was submitted to Toy Factory’s Playwright Incubation Programme, The Wright Stuff in 2016. A Piece of Cake was one of the four selected script to be further developed under the mentorship of Toy Factory’s Chief Artistic Director, Mr Goh Boon Teck.

Through an intensive period of re-writes, discussion and reflection, A Piece of Cake finally presented its work-in-progress by mid-July 2017.

 

CURRENT PHASE:

The experience garnered from The Wright Stuff has been invaluable. There were feedback ranging from audience members to critics alike. Even throughout the rehearsal progress, blind spots were discovered that were not noticed before.

Armed with new found knowledge, A Piece of Cake continued to evolved through rounds of re-drafting, table readings and more, you guess it, re-drafting.

Now with evolved characters, trimmed storyline and a heartfelt message, A Piece of Cake is ready once again to present its story to the masses.

 

STORY EVOLUTION:

What started out as an observation on singlehood vs marriage, the world of A Piece of Cake has evolved to encompass issues of identity, defying social expectations, love and family, which are universal themes that transcend gender, age and social status.

Whether it’s a teenager dealing with strict parents, or an office worker going through the motions, there are themes within A Piece of Cake that would resonate with them.

Playwright/Producer/Production Stage Manager – Samantha Chia
A Piece of Cake is Samantha Chia’s debut as a playwright. Prior to this play, Samantha has worked largely behind the scenes as a stage manager, production stage manager and crew in numerous musicals, plays and concert productions. Some of the productions the she has been involved in are Last Five Years: A Gender Reversal, by Ethel Yap as Production Stage Manager and Those Who Can’t, Teach, by The Necessary Stage as Stage Manager.

Director – Mustafa Sulaiman
Mustafa Sulaiman has over three years of experience as a director, writer and producer in theatre, corporate and broadcast productions. He has worked in both local and overseas projects. Some of the projects that he has been involved in are Toy Factory’s playwright incubation program, The Wright Stuff as Director and Assistant Director in local horror film, 2359.

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 Development Milestones 

A Piece of Cake was developed in residence at Centre 42’s Basement Workshop in March 2019.

18 – 23 March 2019
Intensive workshops and showcase

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MY GRANDFATHER’S ROAD (RHDS) 阿爺條路 ~ 兔心龍魂 | by Neo Kim Seng https://centre42.sg/my-grandfathers-road-rhds-by-neokimseng/ https://centre42.sg/my-grandfathers-road-rhds-by-neokimseng/#comments Sat, 02 Mar 2019 04:34:30 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=11501 MGFR Banner

SynopsisCreation ProcessCreative Team
Neo Kim Seng grew up in Pasir Panjang on Neo Pee Teck Lane, a side road named after his grandfather, until he moved out in 1973. My Grandfather’s Road is a collection of stories of the familial haven that stood along the road, stories that have helped him reconnect with his idyllic childhood and his family’s history. It does not dwell in nostalgia but instead explores how personal stories make us who we are.

The latest iteration of My Grandfather’s Road includes new stories that were unearthed, new speculations and reflections, and forgotten histories.

Karen Tan will be joined on stage by Loong Seng Onn in the English version. In the Cantonese version, Tan Cher Kian and Gary Tang come together, this time questioning who is telling the real story.

Credit source: Esplanade Presents: The Studios 2019

My Grandfather’s Road was first presented in 2015 as an English-language monologue, a photo exhibition and a book as one of nine performances at Cake Theatrical Productions’ 10th anniversary celebrations, Running with Strippers. It was conceived and written by Neo Kim Seng as a way of reconnecting with childhood memories of living on Neo Pee Teck Lane, which was named after his paternal grandfather.

In 2017, Kim Seng revisited the text of My Grandfather’s Road, refreshing it in the spoken language of his childhood – Cantonese. He also explored Cantonese as it is spoken on both sides of the Causeway. There were two versions of The Vault: My Grandfather’s Road – one in Singaporean Cantonese performed by Gary Tang, and one in Malaysian Cantonese performed by Tan Cher Kian. Read more about The Vault: My Grandfather’s Road here.

In 2018, an updated iteration of My Grandfather’s Road was independently produced and staged by Kim Seng. This iteration comprised two performances: the Cantonese versions updated by Gary Tang and Tan Cher Kian, and a new English monologue performed by Karen Tan.

Others

Playwrights

Neo Kim Seng (English)
Tan Cher Kian & Gary Tang (Cantonese)

Director

Neo Kim Seng

Performers

Karen Tan & Loong Seng Onn (English)
Tan Cher Kian & Gary Tang (Cantonese)

 Development Milestones 

My Grandfather’s Road (RHDS) was developed in residence at Centre 42’s Basement Workshop from January 2019 to April 2019.

8 – 17 March 2019
Exhibition and Readings at The Arts House as part of Textures 2019

18 – 21 April 2019:
Performance at Esplanade Theatre Studio as part of Esplanade Presents: The Studios 2018

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CATAMITE | by Loo Zihan https://centre42.sg/catamite-by-loo-zihan/ https://centre42.sg/catamite-by-loo-zihan/#comments Fri, 08 Feb 2019 03:55:21 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=11427 Catamite Banner
SynopsisArtist
What relationship do we share with our possessions?

How can we orient ourselves to these things differently?

This intimate interactive performance takes the form of an artist lecture and dialogue where Zihan will share his experiences of staging his installation Queer Objects: An Archive for the Future (2016), an assemblage of objects for a hypothetical queer archive in Singapore. Through participatory activities, the audience will join Zihan in an examination of the fictional and factual, virtual and actual potential of objects, and meditate on the contingency of identity and being.

Interview
Others

Artist – Loo Zihan

Loo Zihan is an artist working at the intersection of critical theory, performance, and the moving-image. His work emphasises the malleability of memory through various representational strategies that include performance re-enactments, essay films and data visualisation. His research includes the erotiohistoriographical potential of archives and queer bonds. His performances have been presented at the Singapore International Festival of Arts and the Brisbane Festival. He was awarded the Young Artist Award by the National Arts Council of Singapore in 2015.

 Development Milestones 

Catamite was developed in residence at Centre 42’s Basement Workshop from October 2018 to January 2019.

10 January 2019, 7pm:
Trial rehearsal at Centre 42

15 January 2019, 7pm:
Trial rehearsal at Centre 42

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