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Singapore Internatio­nal Festival of Arts’ new festival director Gaurav Kripalani on curating a programme for the next generation

aurav kripalani has fond memories of the Singapore Arts Festival, including watching a theatrical adaptation of Macbeth by acclaimed Japanese director Yukio Ninagawa in 1992. “I don’t recall watching a Shakespear­e production in Singapore that blew me away like that. But seeing Shakespear­e in an Asian context, where Birnam Wood was a cherry blossom forest and soldiers were samurais, changed my perception of the scale that it can be done. The festival shaped my appreciati­on and taste for the arts, and broadened my artistic horizon.” Now Kripalani is at the helm of the next three editions of the performing arts festival, now known as the Singapore Internatio­nal Festival of Arts (SIFA), taking over from theatre veteran Ong Keng Sen. The artistic director of Singapore Repertory Theatre wants to “programme a festival that would inspire young people”, just like it did for him those years ago. For one, he has introduced $10 front-row student tickets at this year’s festival, which is held from April 26 to May 12. And alongside George Orwell’s dystopian classic, 1984, and Toy Factory’s contempora­ry take on the Ming opera epic, Dream Under the Southern Bough, the line-up also includes Youtube sensation and Grammy Award-winning jazz prodigy Jacob Collier, along with new initiative­s such as a Festival House. Kripalani tells us more.

What is your artistic vision for SIFA in its next phase?

I want SIFA to be the pinnacle performing arts festival in Singapore, presenting a spectrum of works for diverse audiences. SIFA’S role is to give audiences the opportunit­y to see some of the world’s most exciting works and experience art forms they haven’t seen before. It also gives Singaporea­n artists the opportunit­y to produce works they may not be able to do otherwise, either in terms of time and money, or collaborat­e with one another or with artists internatio­nally.

What are some of the festival highlights this year?

I wanted to work with game changers, people who are pushing boundaries in their respective fields such as German director Thomas Ostermeier, whose adaptation of is relevant to what’s happening in the world today; likewise for the acclaimed adaptation of George Orwell’s Big Brother is watching, state surveillan­ce and fake news; and I really wanted American choreograp­her Michelle Dorrance’s

Why did you want to programme a festival that would inspire young people?

Young people are the next generation. We want to make art a central part of their lives. I would encourage parents to bring their children, especially teenagers, to experience some of these shows. I would like to think that they’d have the same life-changing experience­s that I had growing up.

Tell us about the new Festival House initiative.

I’ve been to festivals where you can meet people and artists at the festival village. We have transforme­d The Arts House into a Festival House where you can engage in a meaningful discourse. It’s also where you can relax, find out what the next shows are, and buy tickets—it will be the heartbeat of the festival, and very much for the audience as it is for the artists.

What can we expect from the 2019 and 2020 editions?

The goal is to broaden the scope and spectrum of works to include more hard-hitting production­s as well as shows for families so that the reach will grow. I’m building on the work of all the previous festival directors, not just Keng Sen, but all of them. I want everyone to own this festival collective­ly, and if we can rally everyone’s support, SIFA would have played a big part in Singapore’s growth as a cosmopolit­an city. Wouldn’t it be great if people said, “I go to Singapore every year because they have some of the best art in the world”.

 ??  ?? ONE TO WATCH George Orwell’s 1984 (right) is one of the headline acts of the 2018 Singapore Internatio­nal Festival of Arts, under the helm of new festival director Gaurav Kripalani
ONE TO WATCH George Orwell’s 1984 (right) is one of the headline acts of the 2018 Singapore Internatio­nal Festival of Arts, under the helm of new festival director Gaurav Kripalani

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