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MEOW!

Presented by Agni Kootthu (Theatre of Fire)
Written & directed by Elangovan
Performed by Dew M Chaiyanara, Faizal Abdullah & Hemang Yadav
Sat 28 & Sun 29 Nov 2009
8 pm The Substation Theatre $20 (Tickets available at The Substation
box-office)
Media Development Authority (MDA) Advisory: R18 (Coarse Language and
Mature Themes)
“If you are not
greedy, you are not Chinese. If you are not backstabbing, you are not
Indian. If you are not lazy, ‘sorry’, contented, you are not Malay. If
you are not made of all these three, then you are not Singaporean.”
What would you do when you win a million in the Singapore Big Sweep? The
choices are endless, but for some, winning a fortune is as debasing and
disorientating as a horrific ordeal in a car on a rainy night. The
millionaires, a ‘subaltern Malay couple’: mechanic at a petrol station
and a salesgirl, re-enact their childless marriage baiting each other on
a never-ending car journey to take food home to their cat. She berates
him about his impotency and other inadequacies; he about her besotted
behaviour over their cat for whom he had just bought 32 tins of canned
food in a cat-food sale. He loves his job. She loves her cat. But the
condominium-bound tabby cannot speak and acts as a silent confidante
rather than a high counsel for their marital dilemmas. He suffers from
Ailurophobia and intermittently, an obese human-like cat appears in his
surrealistic dreams to philosophize and entreat him. The cat
proselytizes and conducts a psychiatric test to gauge his sanity. The
bizarre ending bursts the septic boil of corrosive morality to leave a
raw, ugly, warning wound. With instant wealth comes subtle change and
revelations of desires laid dormant by social circumstances and
convenient relationships. Impregnated with strange animal instincts, it
is the suppression of savagery that makes us human but occasionally when
pushed over the emotive precipice, the beasts emerge snapping and
snarling like feral cats. The play particularly addresses the cultural
and sexual values of the working class couple and brittle hegemony of
multi-culturalism and racial tolerance in Singapore. It addresses issues
of class, violence and urban alienation. It gets its teeth into
universal themes of cultural alienation and the manifestation of the
society’s bankrupted social values in fetishism, racism and impotency.
In MEOW, verbal abuse, physical violence, racism, sexism, and classism
are very ugly but demand serious attention. Desperation and loneliness
cry out in the midst of communication. MEOW is a marriage from noveau
riche hell for a ‘no-class’ Malay couple.
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