New Straits Times

ILLUMINATI­NG ENDEAVOUR

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BARE bulbs hung from the low ceiling, their filaments clear for all to stare at. On, then off, and on again, in a cadence of their own.

Against those flickering moments of clarity, stories unfold in bursts of narratives, with non-verbal movements aiding the performanc­e.

Names were spoken, by the performers — Janet Moo, Chi Too, Syamsul Azhar, and Wong Tay Sy — as they made their way through the lines of bulbs. You realise they are of people deemed missing or dead under mysterious circumstan­ces.

The quartet loosely connected that rollcall of names to circumstan­ces of mystery in their own lives, however insignific­ant they may seem to others, as in wandering cats. Despite the sometimes eerie quality of the narratives spoken, the on-off rhythm of those lights did not seem spooky at all.

Truth be told, those 30-something bare bulbs lent a warm, fuzzy ambience to the small room, the Five Arts Centre’s Black Box of performanc­es. Perhaps donning sunglasses helped in creating this effect, intended or otherwise. In the end, songs carried the general theme, with Dangal (wrestle) being the wake-up call with a catchy beat.

a recent Five Arts Centre experiment­al workshop show, was interestin­g, to say the least.

Lighting designer Mac Chan was asked to create the lights for a show first, and then dancer-choreograp­her Datin Marion D’Cruz with thespian-activist Ivy Josiah worked out the performanc­e.

The brief, and the performanc­e itself, gave a “terbalik” sense to the normal hierarchy found in performanc­e-making, where the lighting designer sits on a par with the costume designer, et al, way below the actors/dramaturgs and directors.

Yet, a performanc­e wove its way out of the role-reversal play. There were some memorable moments like Chi Too relating a story with dramatic intent in his voice, and Syamsul re-enacting his Sam-the wanna be-straight bulb amusing dialogue.

In that firefly ambience, the stories were held in a captive aesthetic that made the performers strive to deliver their performanc­es. The technique meant that there were lots of silent moments as well to movements, and so character buildup lagged behind a blink or two.

However, the 45-minute workshop showed the method employed could stage a performanc­e. But whether it could sustain a show of longer duration remains to be seen.

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