The Swordfish, Then The Concubine

OCBC Singapore Theatre Festival '08
6 – 10 Aug 2008

Drama Centre Theatre, Singapore

Swordfish attack Singapura, terrorising its citizens. A boy saves the kingdom by lining the beach with banana stems. But the Sultan, at his ministers’ advice, has the boy executed.

A generation later, the Sultan’s successor, his son, breaks the covenant between subject and ruler when he has his concubine publicly executed on trumped-up charges, bringing untold shame to her family. Sure enough, an armada of ships from the Majapahit Empire soon appears on the horizon, and threatens Singapura’s supremacy.

About OCBC Singapore Theatre Festival 08

W!LD RICE’s biennial festival dedicated to the development and staging of new Singapore plays featured 14 new plays by 6 theatre companies over the course of 3 weeks.

From bold, funny and irreverent, to whimsical, thought provoking and beautiful; from the intimate and personal, to the epic and fantastic; these plays represented the ideas of a generation of theatre artists reflecting on the problems and possibilities of our times.

By re-examining our history and legends, tackling urgent issues and musing about what the future might hold, the plays offered imaginative and critical perspectives.

Three themes stood out in this 2008 festival. The first was multiculturalism. In The Swordfish, then the Concubine, a multiracial Singaporean cast performed episodes from the Malay Annals, interpreted by a Chinese Malaysian playwright, revealing how a pre-colonial past was very much a vital part of our nation’s heritage. In angel-ism, we witnessed a collaboration between a Chinese-language and a Malay-language theatre company, arguably the first of its kind in recent years.

Another theme was that of history and memory. The Last Temptation of Stamford Raffles was an ambitious, iconoclastic treatment of the life of Singapore’s official founder, whereas I Am Queen provided us with a daring glimpse of turbulent pre-Independence Singapore and Malaya through the eyes of an exotic dancer. Tree Duet and House Of Memory offered a contemplative account of the fragility of memories in a city of forgetting.

A final theme was that of the future. The works of some first-time playwrights. Apocalypse: LIVE! and the plays in Own Time Own Target hopefully triggered a wave of new Singaporean playwrights, tackling themes as diverse as armageddon and the army. The plays presented by Magdalena (Singapore) assured us that women’s voices will always be a crucial and invaluable aspect of our vibrant theatre scene.

Syazwan bin Borhan
Alecia Kim Chua
Gerald Chew
Gordon Choy
Farhan Hassan
Sani Hussin
Lim Yu-Beng
Timothy Nga
Judy Ngo
Rodney Oliveiro
Farahliza Ong
Tony Quek
Najib Soiman
Darius Tan
Elena Wang

Ensemble

Alecia Kim Chua
Gerald Chew
Gordon Choy
Farhan Hassan
Sani Hussin
Lim Yu-Beng
Timothy Nga
Judy Ngo
Rodney Oliveiro
Farahliza Ong
Tony Quek
Najib Soiman
Darius Tan
Elena Wang

Playwright Kee Thuan Chye
Director Ivan Heng
Music Composer Joyce Teo
Fight Choreographer Gordon Choy
Dance Choreographer Farhan Hassan
Set Designer Wong Chee Wai
Lighting Designer James Tan
Sound Designer Shah Tahir
Costume Designer Moe Kasim
Hair Designer Ashley Lim
Make-Up Designer M.A.C.
Production Manager Purpink Chung
Stage Manager Juraidah Rahman
Producer Tony Trickett