Centre 42 » Michael Chiang Playthings https://centre42.sg Thu, 16 Dec 2021 10:08:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.30 PRIVATE PARTS by Michael Chiang Playthings https://centre42.sg/private-parts-by-michael-chiang-playthings/ https://centre42.sg/private-parts-by-michael-chiang-playthings/#comments Tue, 20 Nov 2018 10:55:58 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=11272

“Private Parts”

Reviewer: Liana Gurung
Performance: 3 November 2018

Directed by Beatrice Chia-Richmond, Private Parts features a star-studded cast, with familiar faces from screen and stage, including Jason Godfrey, Chua En Lai, Jo Tan and Shane Mardjuki, just to name a few. The pounding beats and rhythms, the neon disco lighting that illuminates the white, angled walls of the set fully celebrate the historical setting of this play: we are in the 1990s.

The play does not rely on the juxtaposition of awkward, gangling men in heels for humour, which speaks strongly to the talent and effort of its cast. Chua is in particularly fine form as Mirabella, toeing perfectly her combination of brassy confidence and brittle uncertainty. The other half of her love story is perhaps slightly more wooden – Godfrey’s Warren is wide-eyed and confused, and his lines are delivered with less ease than his counterparts onstage. However, it is clear all the actors onstage have sought to do their characters justice, and act with a sensitivity and grace that is the emotional heart of the production.

Indeed, much attention and care has been paid to each aspect of the play. From the slickly-designed set, with its revolving doors and hidden platforms, to the lighting design that manages to expand the borders of the stage, to the costuming and music in a stylish celebration of the ’90s. Private Parts is undoubtedly entertaining and well-executed production, though whether it represents the trans and LGBTQ+ community faithfully and accurately is perhaps another matter altogether.

It is clear that it was written in a different time, in which the trans community in Singapore was asserting visibility through flamboyance, colour, and sound – elements that clearly lent themselves to Chiang as a source of theatrical inspiration. Where in the 1990s Private Parts might have been groundbreaking in lending a voice to an unheard community on the theatrical stage, in the 21st century we now have the space to ask – is all representation good representation? And are all stories timeless? Ultimately, there is a politic to reproduction that Private Parts might prove an interesting entry point to, and that, unaddressed, might detract from appreciation of the play.

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ABOUT THE PRODUCTION

PRIVATE PARTS by Michael Chiang Playthings
2 – 18 November 2018
Drama Centre Theatre

ABOUT THE REVIEWER

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.

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