The Sun (Malaysia)

In complete control

> Theatre performer Ho Lee Ching refuses to let a few neurologic­al disorders stop her from living her life to the fullest

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to cope with her syndrome and made the best out of the situation.

“I cannot continue living my life in anger,” she says.

When she was about 17 and waiting for her SPM results, Ho took up acting classes under the guidance of wellknown theatre director Joe Hasham. She loved the experience.

Strangely enough, she discovered that whenever she was on stage playing a role, she could control her involuntar­y movements.

She was not experienci­ng any of the jerking moments, or making those strange noises that have plagued her life.

“When I do theatre, I feel very normal,” she says.

Ho cannot give any rational explanatio­n how she is able to control her tics on stage.

“That is the magic of theatre,” she says. “I really believe theatre is the best platform for children to learn about themselves.”

After her SPM, Ho went on to graduate with a degree in mass communicat­ion, and even became a sports writer for a website for a while.

But ultimately, she returned to her first love – theatre.

Currently, she is an actor in residence and facilitor at The Actors Studio.

She has appeared in Thuderstor­m, Dator Seri, The Taste of Water, Aku Nak Jaid Bintang, Three Doors, and Zak Zebra’s African Safari Musical, which toured to South Korea

Under the mentorship of Kuala Lumpur Performing Arts Centre’s resident director Mark Beau De Silva, Ho has also co-directed two plays – Still Taming and S’kolah.

Still Taming recently toured in Singapore, and will be touring Russia this December.

Ho will soon be making her debut as a theatre director with OCD, a devised physical theatre piece exploring what it’s like living with obsessive compulsive disorder.

The cast comprises Emma Megan Khoo, Amanda Xavier, Riena Aisya, and Jun Vinh Teoh. Music for the show will be provided by Coebar Abel and Ian Francis.

“The subject matter hits very close to home,” Ho says. “I have been living with OCD, and OCD can be both terrorisin­g and embarrassi­ng for people.

“The stigma cuts both ways – it keeps you away from people, and keeps people away from you.

“I hope this play will start a conversati­on on this topic, and perhaps even create empathy towards people who have been living with OCD.”

OCD will be staged at Pentas 2, Kuala Lumpur Performing Arts Centre (klpac), from tomorrow to Saturday.

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 ??  ?? Ho ... (below) used her personal experience­s to direct and channel into her play, OCD (left and right), about living with the disorder.
Ho ... (below) used her personal experience­s to direct and channel into her play, OCD (left and right), about living with the disorder.

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