Centre 42 » Living Room https://centre42.sg Thu, 16 Dec 2021 10:08:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.30 In the Living Room: Year in Review 2019 https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-year-in-review-2019/ https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-year-in-review-2019/#comments Thu, 05 Dec 2019 06:01:52 +0000 https://centre42.sg/?p=12915
SynopsisThe PanelTheatre and Depictions of Sexual Violence (1pm - 3pm)Theatre and Decolonisation (5pm - 7pm)
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As 2019 draws to a close, we’re inviting the Singapore theatre community to come together to review our year in theatre. In this special edition of the Living Room, we will explore two topics which trended in this year’s slate of productions: sexual violence and decolonisation. A panel will kick off each session, followed by break-out groups so everyone can participate in the discussion.

Theatre and depictions of sexual violence, 8 Dec, 1pm – 3pm

Nabilah Said, editor of arts website ArtsEquator.com, convenes the first panel on depictions of sexual violence in 2019’s theatrical works. What are the responsibilities of theatre-makers in staging sexual violence, and how do these square with their artistic impulses? Is theatre still a safe space? The panelists are Rosemary McGowan, Grace Kalaiselvi, and Rei Poh.

Theatre and decolonisation, 8 Dec, 5pm – 7pm

Theatre-maker and educator Felipe Cervera assembles a second panel which will explore the theme of decolonisation across productions which have directly or indirectly responded to Singapore’s Bicentennial celebrations this year. What are the aesthetic similarities and differences between all these productions? How has the aesthetics of decolonialising performance been explored this year? Did we push the envelope enough? This panel comprises Chong Gua Khee, Charlene Rajendran, and Noorlinah Mohamed.

An exhibition of the timeline Singapore Theatre in 2019, which documents the theatre productions in the calendar year, will be displayed in the Front Courtyard from 8 Dec.

EVENT DETAILS

Sunday, 8 December 2019
From 1pm @ Centre 42 Black Box
Admission price: Give-What-You-Can
(Cash only, at the door)

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

From the “Theatre and Depictions of Sexual Assault” Panel:

Nabilah Said
Nabilah Said is a playwright, arts writer and theatre critic. Formerly an arts correspondent with The Straits Times, Nabilah is currently the editor of ArtsEquator. Nabilah’s plays include Tart (Teater Ekamatra), yesterday it rained salt (Bhumi Collective), ANGKAT (M1 Singapore Fringe Festival; Noor Effendy Ibrahim), Drip (The Necessary Stage) and Inside Voices (VAULT Festival; Lazy Native). She is the founder of Malay playwright collective Main Tulis Group, and co-founder of theatre collectives Rupa co.lab and Lazy Native.

Rosemary McGowan
Rosie comes from an extensive history of working with young people using drama and theatre to explore potentially difficult and sensitive youth-related themes and issues. She has a masters in applied theatre and a masters in counselling and often combines her knowledge of these two fields throughout her practice.

As a freelance applied theatre practitioner, facilitator and educator, Rosie has taught drama in numerous schools in Singapore, both in-curriculum and CCA. She runs workshops and projects exploring themes of self-care, sexual assault trauma, self-harm, communication, leadership and understanding mental health. She has also designed and run projects in two Singapore halfway houses – the Community Rehabilitation Centre, and The Turning Point.

As a counsellor, Rosie specialises in addiction and trauma- working with various addictions, as well as family members of addicts and trauma survivors. She uses a mixture of cognitive and experiential methods throughout her practice.

As a theatre practitioner, Rosie has acted in The Crucible (Toy Factory Productions); Mind Map of Love, sold-out runs of The Woman Who Cooked Her Husband and Ragnarok (Skinned Knee Productions); and dramaturg on Edith Podesta’s commissioned production, Leda and The Rage (The Esplanade).

Rosie runs a performers emotional support group on Mondays, 12-130pm.

She is currently the President of the Singapore Drama Educators Association.

More information is available at www.rosiemcg.com

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.

Grace Kalaiselvi
Kalaiselvi Grace graduated from Intercultural Theatre Institute in 2014 and now works as a freelance actor, creator, director, educator, puppeteer and writer. Some of her own works include Crocodiles in Kurtas (Esplanade-OctoBurst’19), Touch Me Not (1st part of Goddesses of Words – Sarojini Naidu), The Old Fogies (Esplanade-OctoBurst’18) and Mother I (1 & 2). Grace also acted in Ms British (Esplanade Studio Series’19) and directed 3FVU for TheatreWorks’ Now Festival’19. She started Brown Voices, a collective, to write professional scripts with Indian Narratives and they did their first showcase at C42’s Late Night Texting.

From the “Theatre and Decolonisation” Panel:

Felipe Cervera
Felipe Cervera is a writer, theatre-maker, and academic. He is a Lecturer of Theatre at LASALLE College of the Arts in Singapore and an Assistant Professor with the Centre for Drama, Theatre & Performance Studies at the University of Toronto. He has acted and directed internationally since 2008, and co-leads, with Fezhah Maznan, the theatre and performance collective The Art of Strangers. His research interests are collaborative theatre-making, teaching, and research, and the interplays between performance theory, science, and technology. He is an associate editor of the international peer-reviewed journals, Global Performance Studies and Performance Research.

Charlene Rajendran
Charlene Rajendran is a theatre educator, practitioner and researcher who is currently based at the National Institute of Education – Nanyang Technological University. She is also Co-Director of the Asian Dramaturgs’ Network.

Noorlinah Mohamed
Noorlinah is an award-winning theatre actress who is also a teaching artist and creator of public engagement arts projects in Singapore. Since 1988, she has performed with various Singapore theatre companies. Internationally, she has performed in Asia, Europe and the US. In arts education, she has undertaken artist residencies in schools, develops curriculum as well as professional development for teaching artists and teachers in arts pedagogy. As a producer, she has worked on both intimate and large-scale arts events, including the Singapore International Festival of Arts (2014-2017), co-creating platforms and works for and with Singapore as well as international artists. Noorlinah is a recipient of the JCCI Cultural Award (2008) and the Women’s Weekly Women of our Time Award (2005) for her work in the arts. She obtained her PhD in Arts Education from the University of Warwick in 2013. Presently, she is the Artistic Director of N.O.W., Not Ordinary Work. It is an interdisciplinary public project focusing on women creatives and change-makers.

Chong Gua Khee
Chong Gua Khee / 张月崎 works primarily as an independent theatre director and performance-maker in Singapore. She also takes on facilitation and dramaturgical work that spans disciplines such as dance and visual arts.

Gua Khee’s practice centres a collective (re)imagination of relationships and the current landscape of conversations. In her work, she often seeks to cultivate and nurture relationships and conversations by asking: What conditions of space and time are set up in a project or piece? How do these allow for the seeding of various conversations – both the spoken and textual, as well as the unspoken conversations between and amongst bodies and architecture – and how might these bloom and flourish over time?

Recent projects include music theatre piece Songs for Tomorrow (director), art experience PASSPORT: Anthony Chin x Christophe & Sharon with OH! Open House (dramaturg), the musical Island Song (director), participatory performance LAST DANCE by Drama Box and ArtsWok Collaborative (creative team), theatre piece Tortoise Tales under Silver Arts Festival 2018 (director and co-playwright), and performance HOT POT TALK: Theatre & the Arts (producer and director). She has been an Associate Member of Dance Nucleus since 2018, and was Artist-In-Residence under its ELEMENT #3 (Solo) Dramaturgies. More details available at: www.guakhee.com

Session Overview

For Theatre and Depictions of Sexual Violence, Nabilah convened a team consisting of applied theatre practitioner, counsellor, facilitator and educator Rosemary McGowan, theatre actress, director and educator Grace Kalaiselvi and participatory theatre creator Rei Poh. They were interested in the following questions:

  • What are the responsibilities of theatre-makers in staging sexual violence, and how do these responsibilities square with their artistic impulses?
  • Is theatre still a safe space?
Structure of Session
Reflections from Facilitators

Session Overview

For Theatre and Decolonisation, Felipe Cervera assembled a team comprising of Chong Gua Khee, Charlene Rajendran, and Noorlinah Mohamed to facilitate the session. The team was keen to interrogate decolonisation across productions which directly or indirectly responded to Singapore’s Bicentennial celebrations this year. They asked the following overarching questions:

  • What are the aesthetic similarities and differences between all these productions?
  • How have the aesthetics of decolonialising performance been explored this year? Did theatre-makers and audiences push the envelope enough?
  • How are we educating ourselves as theatre-makers and audiences and what is the role of theatre in education?
Structure of Session
Reflections from Facilitators

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The Living Room is a programme by Centre 42 that welcomes chat and conversation. Through focused but casual dialogues and face-to-face exchanges, this programme encourages participants to re-examine trends, happenings, people (on & off-stage) and phenomena in Singapore theatre.

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In the Living Room: Snapshots Into the Study of English Language, Literature and Theatre https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-snapshots-into-the-study-of-english-language-literature-and-theatre/ https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-snapshots-into-the-study-of-english-language-literature-and-theatre/#comments Wed, 04 Sep 2019 11:11:23 +0000 https://centre42.sg/?p=13019
SynopsisThe PanelAbstracts
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To mark the 90th anniversary of the NUS Department of English Language and Literature, the department, in collaboration with Centre 42, presents a panel discussion: “Snapshots into the study of Singapore English, Literature and Theatre.” Associate Professor Anne PakirDr Gwee Li Sui and Associate Professor Robin Loon will share insights into Singapore English, its relationship with Singapore Literature and Singapore English language theatre respectively. All are welcome.

EVENT DETAILS

Wednesday, 4 September 2019
From 1pm @ Centre 42 Black Box
Admission price: Give-What-You-Can
(Cash only, at the door)

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

Gwee Li Sui
Gwee Li Sui is a poet, a graphic artist, and a literary critic. He wrote Singapore’s first long-form graphic novel in English, Myth of the Stone, in 1993 and has published six volumes of poetry to date. His latest titles are Death Wish, the bestselling Spiaking Singlish: A Companion to How Singaporeans Communicate, and The Leeter Tunku, a Singlish translation of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s The Little Prince. A familiar name in Singapore’s cultural scene, Gwee has also edited several acclaimed literary anthologies and written and lectured on a range of subjects.

Anne Pakir
Professor Anne Pakir received her Bachelor’s, Master’s and PhD degrees, respectively, from NUS, UC Berkeley and University of Hawaii, Manoa and is with the Department of English Language and Literature at NUS. She was Director of International Relations at NUS (2008-2017) and Associate Vice President, University and Global Relations (2018 – 2019). She was recently conferred an Honorary Fellowship at the University . She was Vice President of the Asia Pacific Association for International Education (APAIE, 2016-2018). A Fulbrighter at Berkeley and Cornell, she served as President of the Fulbright Association (Singapore) from 2008-2011 and was a TOEFL Board Member (2005-2009). She was conferred The Ordre des Palmes académiques from the French Government and received the Public Administration Medal from the Government of Singapore (2014). She is an Honorary Life Member of AILA, the International Association for Applied Linguistics. Her primary research interest is in English-knowing bilingualism and World Englishes. She is currently working on a Routledge book project, “English in Singapore: Global Competence and Local Realities”.

Robin Loon
Robin Loon is an Associate Professor (Educator’s Track) of Theatre Studies at the Department of English Language and Literature, NUS.  He is a practising playright and dramaturg and a co-founder of Centre 42.  He teaches and researches in Singapore Theatre, playwriting, dramaturgy and theatre criticism.

 

Singaporean Literature: How We Got Here
By Gwee Li Sui

Singaporean literature has changed through the decades and, most radically and materially, in recent years. What are the challenges that contemporary writers face – and, by extension, the responsibility of academic study? Gwee Li Sui will address some of the most key developments and transformations in literary culture in Singapore.

English-knowing bilingualism in Singapore: Striking a New Balance for Future-Readiness*
By Anne Pakir

‘English-knowing bilingualism’ (Pakir, 1991) has gained ascendancy in Singapore and may become a core competency for the 21st-century world with the rise in status of English as a global language.  However, the path to English-knowing bilingualism in the pluri-lingual and heterogeneous country was often marked by paradoxical debates surrounding the issues of language maintenance and shift, identity and the transmission of values, equity and meritocracy, as well as balancing between local versus global linguistic norms and standards.  The debates continue unabated as new challenges arise, and in going forward, a new balance has to be achieved in language strategy, policy and management for a future-ready Singapore.

*This presentation is based on a co-authored publication in Asian Englishes, 2018, Vol 20, No. 1, 41-53, English in Singapore: Striking a new balance for future-readiness.  Co-authors: Ee Ling Low, NIE/NTU Singapore and Anne Pakir, NUS.

Singapore English-Language Theatre
By Robin Loon

Robin Loon will discuss the relationship between Singapore English and Singapore English Language Theatre.  He will trace the early developments of Singapore English Language Theatre in the 1960s and its struggle to legitimise the use of Singapore English.  The 80s see the rise of Singapore English Language Theatre where the theatre and the audience begin to embrace Singapore English as an authentic language to express ideas, ideals and ideologies.

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The Living Room is a programme by Centre 42 that welcomes chat and conversation. Through focused but casual dialogues and face-to-face exchanges, this programme encourages participants to re-examine trends, happenings, people (on & off-stage) and phenomena in Singapore theatre.

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In the Living Room: Year in Reviews 2018 https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-year-in-reviews-2018/ https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-year-in-reviews-2018/#comments Tue, 27 Nov 2018 09:08:12 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=11285
SynopsisThe Reviewers
Has the term “site-specific” been misused by too many productions this year? Are emerging theatre groups currently creating more exciting works than established companies?

All this, and more, will be up for discussion at our final Living Room of 2018. Over 150 local theatre productions lit up our stages this year, and we would like to invite you to join us for a casual evening of conversations to look back at some of this year’s most noteworthy trends in Singapore theatre.

Reviewers from Centre 42’s Citizens’ Reviews programme and arts website ArtsEquator will begin the evening by sharing some of their observations, based on the shows that they watched and wrote about this year. You can then pick a topic and engage the reviewers in small-group discussions. Year in Reviews is an opportunity to reflect on the performances you watched, as well as the wider local theatre landscape.

The event will be accompanied by the exhibition “Singapore Theatre in 2018″, a timeline of all local theatre productions that were staged in Singapore in 2018. The timeline, spanning over five metres long, also features artefacts from Centre 42’s digital archive, The Repository, drawing a link between present day and Singapore theatre history. The exhibition is on display in the Centre 42 Front Courtyard from 4 December 2018 to 31 January 2019.

EVENT DETAILS

Tuesday, 4 December 2018
7.30pm @ Centre 42 Black Box
Admission price: Give-What-You-Can
(Cash only, at the door)

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

FROM CITIZENS’ REVIEWS:

Christian W. Huber
Christian is a C42 Boiler Room 2016 playwright, and enjoys being an audience member to different mediums of the arts. He finds arts invigorating to the soul, and truly believes that the vibrant arts scene has come a long way from its humble beginnings.

Cordelia Lee
Cordelia is a final-year Theatre Studies major trapped in a full-time relationship with the National University of Singapore. Whenever the opportunity arises, she purchases discounted tickets, slips into the theatre and savours every moment of her temporarily bought freedom. She prefers performances that run no longer than two hours, and is always in the mood for innovative directorial choices – the less she sees them coming, the better. Outside of theatre, she routinely tortures her obliques in the gym and sings to ’90s hits in the shower.

Isaac Tan
Isaac graduated from the National University of Singapore with a BA (Hons) in Philosophy, and he took Theatre Studies as a second major. He started reviewing plays for the student publication, Kent Ridge Common, and later developed a serious interest in theatre criticism after taking a module at university. He is also an aspiring poet and his poems have appeared in Symbal, Eunoia Review, Eastlit, and Malaise Journal.

Jocelyn Chng
Jocelyn is a freelance educator, practitioner and writer in dance and theatre, and has written for various platforms since 2013, including The Flying Inkpot and Arts Equator. She holds a double Masters in Theatre Studies/Research, and a Postgraduate Diploma in Education (Dance Teaching). At the heart of her practice, both teaching and personal, lies a curiosity about personal and cultural histories; writing about performance allows her to engage with this curiosity. She sees performance criticism as crucial to the development of the performance landscape in Singapore, and a valuable opportunity to contribute to ongoing discussions about performance and society.

Lee Shu Yu
Shu Yu is a currently pursuing a degree in Theatre Studies at the National University of Singapore and loves exploring all that has to do with the arts. Her latest foray into reviewing stems from a desire to support the vibrant ecology of the arts in Singapore.

Liana Gurung
With a Literature major’s love and propensity for over-analysing, Liana is a mostly-reader, sometimes-writer who was raised on a diet of musicals (read: Julie Andrews). Her attention has since turned to the gritty, innovative and often subversive world of the Singaporean play: the leaner, the tauter, the more spare – the better.

FROM ARTSEQUATOR.COM:

Akanksha Raja
Akanksha is an arts writer from Singapore. She has been writing reviews on theatre (and occasionally visual art) as part of the editorial team at ArtsEquator.com since its launch in 2016, and is an alumnae of the Points of View Performance Writing workshop organised by the Asian Dramaturgs’ Network in 2018.

Naeem Kapadia
Naeem is a finance lawyer and passionate advocate of the arts. He has acted in and directed student drama productions in both London and Singapore. He has been writing about theatre for over a decade on his personal blog Crystalwords and has contributed reviews and podcasts to publications such as London student newspaper The Beaver, Singapore daily newspaper TODAY and arts journals The Flying Inkpot and ArtsEquator. Naeem enjoys cooking, running and travel.

Patricia Tobin
Patricia Tobin is Singaporean theatre critic. Her reviews can be found on ArtsEquator and on her blog, havesomepatty.com. She currently works in media.

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The Living Room is a programme by Centre 42 that welcomes chat and conversation. Through focused but casual dialogues and face-to-face exchanges, this programme encourages participants to re-examine trends, happenings, people (on & off-stage) and phenomena in Singapore theatre.

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In the Living Room: Three Children https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-three-children/ https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-three-children/#comments Mon, 15 Oct 2018 07:28:30 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=11199

On the 30th anniversary of the TheatreWorks production of “Three Children”, playwright Leow Puay Tin, actors Claire Wong and Loong Seng Onn, and theatre academic Robin Loon, gather to chat about this landmark work in Singapore Theatre.
SynopsisThe SpeakersPhotos
In the Living Room: Three Children

From how the work was created to what audiences saw onstage, the 1988 TheatreWorks production of Three Children was ahead of its time. The project, jointly led by Krishen Jit and Ong Keng Sen, saw the actors put through three months of rigorous training and devising sessions. When Three Children opened on 11 November, audiences and critics lauded the production’s unconventional, nonlinear storytelling and its bold mix of Chinese opera and Western stage techniques.

Thirty years after this landmark production, our Living Room will play host to Leow Puay Tin, the playwright of Three Children, Loong Seng Onn, actor in the 1992 touring production, and Claire Wong, actor in the 1988 and 1992 productions. Together with theatre academic Robin Loon, the four will chat about this remarkable play, from its conception, development and reception, to its impact on today’s theatre landscape.

To mark the 30th anniversary of Three ChildrenIn the Living Room: Three Children is accompanied by The Vault: Sau(dara) on 5 and 6 October. Created by Bhumi Collective, Sau(dara) is a contemporary response to Three Children based on play and traditional Indonesian Pakarena dance, and features newly-composed music.

EVENT DETAILS

Sunday, 7 October 2018
5pm @ Centre 42 Black Box
Admission price: Give-What-You-Can
(Cash only, at the door)

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

  • Leow Puay Tin
  • Claire Wong
  • Loong Seng Onn
  • Robin Loon
2018 marks the 30th anniversary of the landmark TheatreWorks Singapore production of “Three Children” by Malaysian playwright Leow Puay Tin. On 7 October 2018, the day after Bhumi Collective performed “The Vault: Sau(dara)” as a contemporary response to “Three Children”, we invited practitioners who were involved in the original stagings of the play to join us in the Living Room. The panel comprised Puay Tin, as well as actors Claire Wong and Loong Seng Onn, who chatted with theatre academic Robin Loon about what their experience of working on the 1988 and 1992 productions of “Three Children”. Photos: Daniel Teo

Source: Centre 42 Facebook 

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The Living Room is a programme by Centre 42 that welcomes chat and conversation. Through focused but casual dialogues and face-to-face exchanges, this programme encourages participants to re-examine trends, happenings, people (on & off-stage) and phenomena in Singapore theatre.

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Helmi Yusof in the Living Room with Tay Tong https://centre42.sg/helmi-yusof-in-the-living-room-with-tay-tong/ https://centre42.sg/helmi-yusof-in-the-living-room-with-tay-tong/#comments Tue, 14 Aug 2018 07:54:37 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=10967

Former managing director of TheatreWorks Tay Tong sat down with Business Times arts journalist Helmi Yusof, to chat about the former’s long and storied career in theatre.
SynopsisThe SpeakersPhotos

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Tay Tong, more affectionately known as “TT”, is an accomplished arts producer and manager. He first started out with Singapore-based performance company, TheatreWorks, in 1989 as a producer, soon rising to general manager in 1993. He was made managing director in 1999, a role he has held until earlier this year. In the past three decades, TT has produced countless shows and festivals as well as managed programmes both locally and internationally.

TT will be joined by Helmi Yusof, an arts journalist with The Business Times who has followed TT’s career ever since he started volunteering backstage at TheatreWorks in the 90’s.

Join TT and Helmi in the Living Room as the pair chat and reflect on TT’s rich career in the arts and what lies ahead for TT.

EVENT DETAILS

Saturday, 15 September 2018
7.30pm @ Centre 42 Black Box
Admission price: Give-What-You-Can
(Cash only, at the door)

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

 

taytongTay Tong has close to 30 years of professional experience, working in the arts both locally and internationally. He was the Managing Director of TheatreWorks (Singapore) and its home and creation space, 72-13, created in 2005. From 1989 to 2018,  he has produced over 200 productions and international arts festivals here in Singapore and internationally. This includes the Singapore International Festival of Arts, 2014 – 2017, as the Aide to the Festival Director. Tay is an advocate for engagement with diverse cultures and firmly supports the philosophy of ‘celebrating differences’ and cultural negotiation.  He produced the long-running inter-cultural, multi-disciplinary Flying Circus Project between 1996 and 2013 as well as the capacity building programme, The Continuum Asia Project in Luang Prabang, between 2002 and 2012, and recently the Curators Academy 2018, for TheatreWorks. Tay was also the Director of Arts Network Asia (ANA) from 1999 to 2017 and he   brokered greater intra-Asia dialogues and exchanges.  ANA provides project grants and mobility grants to artists and cultural workers to develop connectivity and a network of dialogues within Asia.

 

helmiHelmi Yusof is the Arts Correspondent for The Business Times covering a broad range of topics including visual arts, theatre, film and books. He graduated from Victoria School, Victoria Junior College and National University of Singapore. He joined Singapore Press Holdings’ (SPH) flagship newspaper The Straits Times in 2000 as a film and theatre critic. During his time there, he profiled hundreds of international creatives. In 2005, he received a Media Development Authority scholarship to pursue an Advanced Diploma in Film Production at Ngee Ann Polytechnic. His graduation film Flyer received the Highly Commended prize in the Festival of Fantastic Films in Manchester in 2007. The following year, he rejoined SPH to help launch its first online video channel RazorTV. As RazorTV’s Lifestyle Editor and later its News Director, he led a team of eight reporters to produce at least 20 original video stories a week. In 2012, he moved to SPH’s The Business Times to be its Arts Correspondent. Within a year, the arts coverage of the newspaper expanded to include major international events such as Art Basel, Asia Pacific Triennial and Venice Biennale, profiling top names such as Ai Wei Wei, Takashi Murakami and Yayoi Kusama. In 2016, his first play My Mother Buys Condoms was produced by theatre company W!ld Rice and directed by Ivan Heng. It received good reviews in major publications including TODAY which called it a “remarkably assured debut”.


Tay Tong – affectionately known as “TT” – stepped down from his role as managing director of TheatreWorks Singapore a few months ago, after overseeing some 200 productions over 30 years with the company. In this edition of the Living Room, which took place in our Black Box on 15 September 2018, we invited him to share his colourful career and life experiences with Helmi Yusof, an arts journalist with The Business Times. Over the course of the evening, TT and Helmi discussed a wide range of topics, from the early years of Singapore theatre, to the challenges of being a producer, to the importance of self-care for arts workers. Here’s a snapshot of the event. Photos: Daniel Teo

Source: Centre 42 Facebook 

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The Living Room is a programme by Centre 42 that welcomes chat and conversation. Through focused but casual dialogues and face-to-face exchanges, this programme encourages participants to re-examine trends, happenings, people (on & off-stage) and phenomena in Singapore theatre.

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In the Living Room: Year in Reviews 2017 https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-year-in-reviews-draft/ https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-year-in-reviews-draft/#comments Tue, 24 Apr 2018 12:45:05 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=9082

A panel of seven reviewers from Centre 42’s critical writing platform Citizens’ Reviews and online arts publication ArtsEquator revisited the local productions staged in 2017. The session was moderated by Robin Loon, chief editor of Citizens’ Reviews.
SynopsisThe ArtistsPhotos
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What were the performances that captivated you and what were the ones that left you cold in 2017?

As the year draws to a close, we invite you to revisit the local productions staged in 2017 with critics from Centre 42’s critical writing platform Citizens’ Reviews and online arts publication ArtsEquator.

Join us in the Living Room as the panel of seven reviewers discuss and debate the best and the most disappointing productions, performances, design, and other theatrical experiences they witnessed in the last 12 months. The session will be moderated by Robin Loon, chief editor of Citizens’ Reviews.

An accompanying exhibition featuring the 2017 productions and ephemera from our Repository archive will be held in the Front Courtyard.

EVENT DETAILS

Saturday, 14 December 2017
8pm @ Centre 42 Black Box
Admission price: Give-What-You-Can
(Cash only, at the door)

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

FROM CITIZENS’ REVIEWS:

Casidhe Ng
Casidhe is currently serving his national service,  having just graduated from the School of the Arts, Singapore. He enjoys reading and writing, and believes that theatre reviewing is an excellent motivator for artistic improvement when done right. Aside from writing, his true passion is for the stage and enjoys acting, designing and occasional dramaturgy.

Christian W. Huber
Christian has been away from the theatre scene for over ten years as he focused his time in running and managing the family business of Boncafé International Pte Ltd – A Pioneering Gourmet Coffee Roasting and Manufacturing Company in Singapore. Christian stepped down from the company earlier this year to pursue his other interests and to spend time with his family of four. He continues to look after another family business, as well as to pursue his renewed interest in the arts.

Christian is a C42 Boiler Room 2016 playwright, and enjoys being an audience member to different mediums of the arts. He finds arts invigorating to the soul, and truly believes that the vibrant arts scene has come a long way from its humble beginnings. He looks forward to appreciating, experiencing, and exploring more of it as a Citizen Reviewer!

Cordelia Lee
Cordelia is a second-year Theatre Studies and English Linguistics double major, who is currently trapped in a full-time relationship with the National University of Singapore. When life with NUS gets too overwhelming, she purchases student-discounted tickets to local plays, slips into the theatre, and savours every moment of her temporarily bought freedom.

She views the theatre as a liminal space providing far more than simply entertainment. It is there where inspiration strikes, where beliefs are challenged and discussions are sparked. While she appreciates a wide range of theatrical styles, she admits to being especially intrigued by avant-garde performances. Often, the more perplexing and thought-provoking they are, the better.

Outside of university and the theatre, she finds herself spinning to Spanish music on the salsa dance floor, torturing her obliques in the gym, and routinely singing to ’90s hits in the shower.

Isaac Tan
Isaac graduated from the National University of Singapore with a BA (Hons) in Philosophy, and he took Theatre Studies as a second major. He started reviewing plays for the student publication, Kent Ridge Common, and later developed a serious interest in theatre criticism after taking a module at university. He is also an aspiring poet and his poems have appeared in Symbal, Eunoia Review, Eastlit, and Malaise Journal.

To top it off, he is equally passionate in acting and flamenco dancing, and hopes to pursue all his passions in equal measure. He blogs infrequently at pre-lude.blogspot.com, while his portfolio and other reviews can be found at www.isaactanbr.com.

Jocelyn Chng
Jocelyn holds a double Masters in Theatre Studies/Research. She is a founding member of the Song and Dance (SoDa) Players – a registered musical theatre society in Singapore. She is currently building her portfolio career as an educator and practitioner in dance and theatre, while pursuing an MA in Education (Dance Teaching).

Myle Yan Tay
Yan is currently studying in Yale-NUS College, where he enjoys spending his free time in far too many productions. Having tried acting, writing, and directing for the stage, Yan looks forward to reviewing. He believes that theatre should challenge both the audience and creators. Theatre, to him, is about constantly pushing the boundaries of what the medium can do while telling a compelling story.

FROM ARTS EQUATOR:
Kathy Rowland (Managing Editor)
Kathy Rowland, as is glaringly obvious from her name, is from Malaysia. A chance encounter with a commedia dell arte troupe in her teens led to a career in the arts (also, lifetime penury).  Since 2011, Kathy has lived in Singapore, where she teaches part-time at LASALLE College of the Arts. She is a writer, editor and producer. Her articles on the politics of culture have appeared in publications in Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, the US and South Korea. Kathy edited and introduced  Staging History: Selected Plays from Five Arts Centre 1984 – 2014 (2015), Huzir Sulaiman: Collected Plays 1998 – 2012 (2013) and Krishen Jit: An Uncommon Position, Selected Writings (2003). Kathy has produced theatre and visual arts events in Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, New York, Australia and Thailand.  She is part of the Asia Europe Foundation’s ASEAN Researchers’ program, Regionally Speaking (2016-2017) led by Prof Dr Ruth Bereson of Griffith University and is the Lead Researcher in a theatre archive project run by Five Arts Centre Malaysia.

Biography taken from Arts Equator
The last Centre 42 event of 2017, “In the Living Room: Year in Reviews” was held on 14 December 2017. Six of the Centre’s Citizen Reviewers and Kathy Rowland from ArtsEquator were invited to look back and share their opinions on the local theatre productions they watched this year. The session, which was moderated by Citizens’ Reviews’ chief editor Robin Loon, was divided into six sections: 2017 as the year of the musical; The Necessary Stage’s 30th anniversary season; productions by smaller collectives; the most disappointing and exciting shows the panellists watched this year; and what they’re looking forward to most in 2018. Photos: Daniel Teo

Source: Centre 42 Facebook 

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The Living Room is a programme by Centre 42 that welcomes chat and conversation. Through focused but casual dialogues and face-to-face exchanges, this programme encourages participants to re-examine trends, happenings, people (on & off-stage) and phenomena in Singapore theatre.

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In the Living Room: William Teo’s Asia-in-Theatre Research Circus https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-william-teos-asia-in-theatre-research-circus/ https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-william-teos-asia-in-theatre-research-circus/#comments Fri, 20 Apr 2018 10:01:42 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=9464

Robin Loon, Elizabeth de Roza, Jeremiah Choy, Lok Meng Chue, and Neo Kim Seng came together to discuss the extraordinary achievements of bygone theatre company Asia-in-Theatre Research Circus (ATRC) and its late founder William Teo. This Living Room commemorated the 30th anniversary of the founding of ATRC.
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Asia-in-Theatre Research Circus (ATRC) was founded in 1987 by the late William Teo. For 15 years, the theatre company, with Teo as its artistic director, created and produced some of Singapore’s most unique and visually-arresting English-language productions. ATRC was in search of a new theatrical expression, experimenting with merging various Asian performing arts traditions with English-language contemporary theatre. With Teo’s sudden passing in 2001, ATRC ceased operations soon after.

To commemorate the 30th anniversary of ATRC’s founding, Robin Loon assembles a panel of past ATRC collaborators in this Living Room. Join Elizabeth de Roza, Jeremiah Choy, Lok Meng Chue, and Neo Kim Seng as they discuss the extraordinary achievements of this bygone theatre company and its founder.

EVENT DETAILS

Saturday, 29 July 2017
8pm @ Centre 42 Black Box

Admission price: Give-What-You-Can
Please register here

elizabethderozaElizabeth de Roza is an artist-researcher/educatorperformance maker, theatre director, a multi-disciplinary performance artist, collaborator and theatre academic based in Singapore. She worked with ATRC from 1996 till the passing of William Teo’s and credits her first influence on intercultural theatre to William Teo. She is currently pursuing her PhD at Goldsmiths University on the embodied cultural memory and the contemporary body in cross-cultural performance practices. She is also a full-time lecturer at LASALLE College of the Arts, School of Dance and Theatre, and in and a co-convenor of the Embodied Research Working Group at IFTR

jeremiahchoyJeremiah Choy left the law for the arts in 1997. He founded Orangedot Productions which provides creative consultancy, curatorial and production services in the arts and entertainment industry. Since 1988, he has performed and toured extensively in many critically acclaimed productions with TheatreWorks. Jeremiah first worked with William Teo in the production of The Sword Has Two Edges (1990), and subsequently assisted directed Listen To The Dolor of Dolores (1991). He then performed The Conference of the Birds (1991) at the disused warehouse where SRT now stands, and the groundbreaking monologue Lest The Demons Get To Me (1992). He was a musician in The Tragedy of Macbeth (1993), and played the leads in The Dragon King (1994) and The Painted House (2000).

lokmengchueLok Meng Chue has been a stage actress for more than 30 years. She was most recently on stage as Habiba in Nine Years Theatre’s production of Fundamentally Happy for the 2017 season of Esplanade’s The Studios. Meng Chue also acted on television and in films. She first worked with ATRC on its very first production, The House of Bernarda Alba, in 1987as well as the groundbreaking productions Medea (1988) and Mother Courage and Her Children (1989) which were staged outdoors in Fort Canning Park.

neokimsengNeo Kim Seng is a cross-disciplinary practitioner and has been involved in independent and large-scale projects in Singapore and overseas in different capacities. He has programmed for Esplanade – Theatres On The Bay, Singapore International Film Festival, Singapore Arts Festival and managed productions for major theatre companies and independent artists. He has produced and toured independent dance works to Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Canada. Recently, he has begun creating his own work. Kim Seng used the work with ATRC in the capacity of a stage manager. He also designed some of the company’s programmes booklets.

Asia-in-Theatre Research Circus (ATRC) was founded by the late William Teo in 1987. To commemorate the 30th anniversary of the theatre company’s establishment, we invited past ATRC collaborators Elizabeth De Roza, Jeremiah Choy, Lok Meng Chue, and Neo Kim Seng to share their experiences with Robin Loon in this edition of the Living Room. Held on 29th July 2017, the event was also attended by many theatre practitioners who knew and were inspired by William. Photo credit: Daniel Teo & Gwen Pew.

Source: Centre 42 Facebook

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The Living Room is a programme by Centre 42 that welcomes chat and conversation. Through focused but casual dialogues and face-to-face exchanges, this programme encourages participants to re-examine trends, happenings, people (on & off-stage) and phenomena in Singapore theatre.

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In The Living Room: Fundamentally Happy https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-fundamentally-happy/ https://centre42.sg/in-the-living-room-fundamentally-happy/#comments Fri, 20 Apr 2018 09:35:31 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=9455

The Necessary Stage’s researcher Shawn Chua is joined by Nelson Chia, the director and translator of the 2017 production, Aidli ‘Alin’ Mosbit, who played the character Habiba in the first staging, and theatre researcher Wong Chee Meng. The four discuss the creative processes behind the development of the original play and its Mandarin translation, as well as language and its culture and politics.
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Fundamentally Happy, a story about two former neighbours whose reunion is marred by allegations of sex abuse, was first staged by The Necessary Stage in 2006. In 2017, this award-winning English play by Haresh Sharma receives a Mandarin restaging by Nine Years Theatre.

This Living Room conversation spotlights both versions of Fundamentally Happy, with theatre practitioners and researchers in a discussion of language, changing contexts and more.

Join actress Aidli ‘Alin’ Mosbit (who played the character Habiba in 2006 and 2007), director Nelson Chia (who directed and translated the 2017 Mandarin production), independent theatre researcher Dr. Wong Chee Meng, and The Necessary Stage’s researcher Shawn Chua, as they chat about Fundamentally Happy.

In the Living Room: Fundamentally Happy is held in conjunction with The Studios 2017, presented by Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay.

EVENT DETAILS

Wednesday, 5 April 2017
8pm @ Centre 42 Black Box

Admission price: Give-What-You-Can
Please register here

Aidli MosbitAidli ‘Alin’ Mosbit graduated with a degree in Drama from Queensland University of Technology. Aidli writes, directs, acts, teaches, and designs lighting and costume. She has worked with local theatre companies like The Necessary Stage, W!ld Rice, Teater Ekamatra, and Drama Box. Together with Noor Effendy Ibrahim and Alfian Sa’at, Aidli published an anthology of Malay plays in BISIK. Aidli is the Founder and Director of Panggung ARTS and she is the recipient of the Young Artist Award for Theatre in 2008. Aidli is currently working in Temasek Polytechnic while pursuing her Master of Education.

NelsonNelson Chia is an actor, director and theatre educator. Trained in the Suzuki Method, he has performed on the Singapore stage for over two decades in both English and Mandarin productions. Nelson holds an MA in Directing from Goldsmiths College and has directed over 25 major productions. He is best known for his translation, adaptation and direction of old and contemporary classics in Mandarin. Nelson previously headed the Department of Theatre at the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts, and lectured at LASALLE College of the Arts and the Theatre Studies Programme at the National University of Singapore. In 2012, Nelson co-founded Nine Years Theatre (NYT) with his wife Mia Chee. NYT strives to raise the profile of Mandarin theatre among Singapore audiences. In 2013, Nelson created the NYT Ensemble, a first of its kind in Singapore, to have a group of actors who train and create work together over an extended period of time.

Chee MengWong Chee Meng is an independent researcher and theatre reviewer with particular interest in intercultural theatre. He has previously worked as a translator, a bilingual journalist and an arts manager in the performing arts. Apart from a bachelor’s degree in linguistics and Chinese studies from the National University of Singapore, he holds a Masters and a PhD degree in heritage studies from the Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus in Germany. His doctoral thesis was on performance and intercultural dialogue. He has lectured in Chinese film studies as a postdoctoral fellow in literary and cultural studies with the Nanyang Technological University.

Moderator:

ShawnShawn Chua is a researcher at The Necessary Stage. He holds an MA in Performance Studies from Tisch School of the Arts, New York University, and is a recipient of the National Arts Council’s Art Scholarship (Postgraduate).

On 5th April 2017, we held a Living Room session in conjunction with the Esplanade Presents: The Studios 2017 series. This Living Room conversation spotlights HARESH SHARMA’s “Fundamentally Happy”, both the original 2006 staging and the 2017 Mandarin adaptation by 九年剧场 Nine Years Theatre. Hosted by The Necessary Stage’s researcher Shawn Chua Ming Ren, the discussion on language and cultural contexts tapped into the memories and experiences of actress Aidli Mosbit (who played the character Habiba in 2006 and 2007), director Nelson Chia (who directed and translated the recent Mandarin production), independent theatre researcher Dr. Wong Chee Meng (who had watched both versions and wrote about the earlier staging).

Source: Centre 42 Facebook

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The Living Room is a programme by Centre 42 that welcomes chat and conversation. Through focused but casual dialogues and face-to-face exchanges, this programme encourages participants to re-examine trends, happenings, people (on & off-stage) and phenomena in Singapore theatre.

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In The Living Room with Juliana Lim https://centre42.sg/documentation-in-the-living-room-with-juliana-lim/ https://centre42.sg/documentation-in-the-living-room-with-juliana-lim/#comments Fri, 20 Apr 2018 09:18:56 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=9450

Veteran arts manager Juliana Lim chatted with students from Singapore Management University’s (SMU) ACM301 Cultural Policy and Practice class, about cultural policy in Singapore. The students also presented an exhibition of their research on the evolution and influence of cultural policies on present-day practices. The 120-minute Living Room Chat has been repackaged into a 2-part video recording.
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Tracing Cultural Policy in Singapore

What is the role of cultural policy in Singapore? How does cultural policy translate into, and impact practice? What are the origins, functions and limitations of cultural policy in Singapore?

Join Juliana Lim as she chats with students from Singapore Management University’s (SMU) ACM301 Cultural Policy and Practice class, about cultural policy in Singapore. Juliana is a veteran arts manager with over 30 years’ experience in arts management, policy-planning and grant-making in the Singapore Government and other organisations.

Juliana and the students will discuss the early years of cultural policy formulation and implementation in Singapore, with focus on three areas: Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay, the Arts Housing Scheme and the Grants Scheme. There will also be a mini-exhibition showcasing the students’ research on the evolution and influence of these policies on present-day practices.

In the Living Room with Juliana Lim is presented in partnership with Assistant Professor Hoe Su Fern, as part of the SMU School of Social Sciences’ Arts and Culture Management Program. 

EVENT DETAILS

Thursday, 30 March 2017
8pm @ Centre 42 Black Box
(The exhibition starts at 7pm.)

Admission price: Give-What-You-Can
Please register here

Juliana Lim
Juliana started her career in the Singapore Government Administrative Service in 1973. Since then, she has had over 30 years’ experience working in Government and Government-linked organisations, including 17 years in arts management positions and 18 years in arts, sports, charity and community grant-making positions. Some of her notable cultural policy-related projects include the formulation of several arts assistance and arts granting schemes including the Arts Housing Scheme and the Theatre-in-Residency Scheme, the development of The Esplanade: Theatres on the Bay, and the devising of the Heritage Link Project which resulted in the conservation of heritage buildings into several museums. Today, she continues to have an active interest in the arts and volunteers for various arts projects. As current President of the Richard Wagner Association (Singapore), she was most recently involved in the production of The Flying Dutchman (2016), the first Wagnerian opera to be produced and staged in Singapore.

Hoe Su Fern
Su Fern is Assistant Professor and Assistant Program Lead of the Arts and Culture Management Program at SMU. She holds a PhD in Culture and Communication from The University of Melbourne. Her current research areas include arts and cultural policy studies, urban cultural economies, arts spaces and creative placemaking.  She is exploring diverse ways to pursue practice-oriented and engaged research on the arts, and is also passionate about catalysing robust and collegiate discourse on issues related to the arts and culture in Singapore.  Recent projects include principal investigator for “Breaking Ground: The Impact of the Arts Housing Policy on Arts Development in Singapore: 1985 – 2015”, researcher for The Co-Op Experiment by The Substation, convenor-producer of the Singapore Biennale 2016 Symposium, and researcher for Between the Lines: Rant & Rave II, a verbatim theatre on the evolution of Singapore’s literary scene.  Prior to her current position, she held appointments at The Institute of Policy Studies, the Ministry of Communications and Information, and the Supreme Court.

ACM301 Cultural Policy
ACM301 is a new course offered by Assistant Professor Hoe Su Fern as part of SMU’s Arts and Culture Management Program, with almost 40 students for the 2017 intake. For their final assignment, they are required to work in groups to produce an investigative project on the role, evolution and influence of some of the policies that Juliana Lim has been involved in. Questions that they have been exploring include: what is the relationship between the state, arts and society? How does cultural policy translate into, and impact practice? What are the origins, functions and limitations of some of the existing cultural policies in Singapore? For most of them, this will be the first assignment with a public-facing component and they have been working extremely hard to fulfil the assignment components, which include conducting live interviews, sourcing and piecing together archival research, and exhibition design.  They are also grateful to Centre 42 for the kind opportunity and look forward to meeting everyone on 30 March!

Part 1: In the Living Room with Juliana Lim

Juliana and the students discuss the early years of cultural policy formulation and implementation in Singapore, with focus on three areas: Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay, the Arts Housing Scheme and the Grants Scheme.

Part 2: In the Living Room with Juliana Lim

Juliana and the students field questions from the audience.

The first Living Room of 2017 was a spotlight on veteran arts manager Juliana Lim. In this session held on 30 April 2017, she chatted with students from the SMU School of Social Sciences’ ACM301 Cultural Policy and Practice class. Divided into three main groups and under the guidance of assistant professor Sufern Hoe, the students discussed topics including the Arts Housing Scheme, the Grants Scheme, and Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay with Juliana. They also put together an exhibition about arts policy in Singapore, which will be on show at our Rehearsal Studio until 5 April. Here’s a quick look at what took place that night! Photo credits: Daniel Teo, Gwen Pew, Akshay Pundareekakshan Sampath.

Source: Centre 42 Facebook

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The Living Room is a programme by Centre 42 that welcomes chat and conversation. Through focused but casual dialogues and face-to-face exchanges, this programme encourages participants to re-examine trends, happenings, people (on & off-stage) and phenomena in Singapore theatre.

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Alfian Sa’at In The Living Room: New Directions in Malay Theatre https://centre42.sg/alfian-saat-in-the-living-room-new-directions-in-malay-theatre/ https://centre42.sg/alfian-saat-in-the-living-room-new-directions-in-malay-theatre/#comments Fri, 20 Apr 2018 08:38:15 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=9444

Singaporean playwright Alfian Sa’at sits down with a panel of fellow Malay playwrights  – Aidli ‘Alin’ Mosbit, Irfan Kasban, Nabilah Said, and Nessa Anwar – to discuss the state of Malay Theatre in Singapore, where it came from, how it is currently, and where it will head to in future. The 110-minute Living Room Chat has been repackaged into a 2-part video recording.
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Over the past decade, a new crop of Malay playwrights has emerged, making their mark on Malay Theatre. Works from these theatremakers raise interesting questions about the state of Malay Theatre in Singapore.

Is Malay Theatre defined purely by language? What are the politics and aesthetics of Malay Theatre? Is it situated at a margin to mainstream English Theatre, and how does this marginality shape production? Given the widespread use of surtitling, are those works still primarily written to address a Malay audience? And are there certain taboos that exist because of religious sensitivities and ‘community standards’?

Join Alfian Sa’at and a panel of fellow Malay playwrights – Aidli ‘Alin’ Mosbit, Irfan Kasban, Nabilah Said, and Nessa Anwar – in our Living Room as they explore the issues they grapple with in their works.

EVENT DETAILS

Thursday, 24 November 2016
8pm @ Centre 42 Black Box

Admission is free by registration

The Living Room is conducted in Malay and English.

Alfian Sa'atAlfian Sa’at is well-known for frank, insightful, and provocative literary and dramatic works, written in English and Malay. As the Resident Playwright of W!ld Rice, he has written acclaimed plays such as the Asian Boys trilogy (2000, 2004, 2007), Cooling-Off Day (2011), and the historical epic Hotel (2015, co-writer). Alfian is also an author with published collections of short stories and poems. He is a four-time winner of Best Original Script at the annual M1-The Straits Times Life Theatre Awards and a 2001 recipient of the National Arts Council’s Young Artist Award for Literature.

Aidli MosbitAidli ‘Alin’ Mosbit graduated with a degree in Drama from Queensland University of Technology. Aidli writes, directs, acts, teaches, and designs lighting and costume. She has worked with local theatre companies like The Necessary Stage, W!ld Rice, Teater Ekamatra, and Drama Box. Together with Noor Effendy Ibrahim and Alfian Sa’at, Aidli published an anthology of Malay plays in BISIK. Aidli is the Founder and Director of Panggung ARTS and she is the recipient of the Young Artist Award for Theatre in 2008. Aidli is currently working in Temasek Polytechnic while pursuing her Master of Education.

Irfan KasbanIrfan Kasban is a freelance theatre maker who writes, directs, designs and, at times, performs. The former Associate Artistic Director of Teater Ekamatra attended the prestigious La MaMa Umbria International Symposium for Directors 2012, and have written and directed several works. These include Hantaran Buat Mangsa Lupa (M1 Fringe Festival 2012), 94:05 (Kakiseni Festival 2013), ANA (Projek Suitcase 2015), and Trees a Crowd (Twenty Something Festival 2016). Last year Irfan’s play TAHAN (2012), was selected for Esplanade’s Fifty – a celebration of Singapore’s seminal works.

Nabilah SaidNabilah Said discovered the world of theatre in 2010. She is currently in Boiler Room, a programme for playwrights by Centre 42, and is this year’s resident artist for contemporary Malay theatre company Teater Ekamatra. She presented the short plays Tart (2015), Next Station (2014) and Lost (2012) as part of Teater Ekamatra’s playwright mentorship programme after undergoing a year’s training in its youth wing, Mereka. She is an arts and lifestyle journalist with The Straits Times, and also a freelance writer, editor and poet with works published in anthologies by Math Paper Press.

Nessa AnwarNessa Anwar has written, acted, produced and directed for theatre, television, digital content and short films. Currently a multimedia journalist by day, she believes wholeheartedly in the content she creates. Nessa began acting first, under companies like Singapore Repertory Theatre’s Young Company and Teater Ekamatra. Nessa also wrote and acted in a play commissioned for a Singapore Writer’s Festival Checkpoint Theatre 2015 event entitled Riders Know When It’s Going to Rain, which was restaged for the 2016 Singapore Theatre Festival under W!ld Rice.

Part 1: Alfian Sa’at in the Living Room: New Directions in Malay Theatre

Aidli ‘Alin’ Mosbit, Irfan Kasban, Nabilah Said and Nessa Anwar each shares his or her personal history in Malay Theatre, collectively constructing a ground-up account of Malay Theatre history.

Part 2: Alfian Sa’at in the Living Room: New Directions in Malay Theatre

The playwrights discuss several important topics in Malay Theatre, as well as field questions from the audience.

In a Living Room session on 24 Nov 2016, Alfian Sa’at sat down with fellow playwrights Aidli ‘Alin’ Mosbit, Irfan Kasban, Nabilah Said and Nessa Anwar to discuss the state of Malay Theatre in Singapore and where it is heading to. The group tackled questions such as: What makes a play a “Malay” play? Are you more comfortable writing in Malay or English? Do you feel pressure to portray the Malay community in a certain way? Are you writing for a Malay audience? What is the future of Malay Theatre? etc. Photo Credit: Lu Yixin

Source: Centre 42 Facebook

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The Living Room is a programme by Centre 42 that welcomes chat and conversation. Through focused but casual dialogues and face-to-face exchanges, this programme encourages participants to re-examine trends, happenings, people (on & off-stage) and phenomena in Singapore theatre.

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