Title: Emily of Emerald Hill
1Emily of Emerald Hill
Prepared by Mr. Kevin Cheng
2Some facts about Emily
- Emily of Emerald Hill is a one-woman play about a
Nonya matriarch who dominates her family, yet in
the end finds that she loses what she loves
most. - The play won the First Prize in the National
Play-Writing Competition 1983.
3More stuff about Emily
- Since then it has been presented more than a
hundred times, - by eight different performers,
- in Singapore, Malaysia, Hawaii and Edinburgh.
- It has been translated into Chinese and Japanese
and broadcast over Radio Iceland. - A film version is under negotiation.
4Who has played Emily?
- Leow Puay Tin 17 Nov 1984
- Margaret Chan 4-5 Sept 1985
- Claire Wong June 1989
- Pearlly Chua 13-18 March 1990
- Jalyn Han Practice Theatre Ensemble (Mandarin) 6
Jan 1991 - Aileen Lau Geuk Lin 16-18 March 1991
- Neo Swee Lin 15-17 Aug 1996
- Ivan Heng Oct 1999
5Emily in a Nutshell by Krishen Jit 1/3
- In the play, Emily is a Chinese Peranakan, who by
dint of her native wit and cunning, emerges as
the matriarch of a large and distinguished
household, but only at the expense of her sons
suicide and her estrangement from her husband.
6Emily in a Nutshell by Krishen Jit 2/3
- The end of the play sees her alone in a much
reduced mansion. She is old, and wistful, and the
remnants of her family have moved to the suburbs
while she is surrounded by the urgent hammering
and pounding of an expanding inner-city
construction.
7Emily in a Nutshell by Krishen Jit 3/3
- The assuredness of a rooted past, springing from
her Peranakan heritage, lends depth to Emily,
easily the most convincing character who has so
far appeared in Singapore English theatre.
8Ivan Heng as Emily
9Ivan Heng as Emily
10Ivan Heng as Emily
11Ivan Heng as Himself
12IVAN HENG AS EMILY CROSS-DRESSING AND PERANAKAN
THEATRE (WAYANG PERANAKAN) 1/3
- Peranakan is a name given to the earliest Chinese
settlers of the Malayan peninsula and a unique
culture influenced by Chinese, Malay and colonial
ways. Peranakan men are known as Babas and their
womenfolk, Nyonyas.
13IVAN HENG AS EMILY CROSS-DRESSING AND PERANAKAN
THEATRE (WAYANG PERANAKAN) 2/3
- Before World War 2 it was a necessity to have
males playing female roles in the Wayang
Peranakan as Baba Peranakan society frowned upon
the very thought of Nyonyas appearing on stage. - These men faithfully portrayed roles such as the
domineering matriarch, the fragile heroine and
the Cantonese domestic help. Although attitudes
toward Nyonyas on stage and in society have
changed, to this day no play is complete without
a female impersonator.
14IVAN HENG AS EMILY CROSS-DRESSING AND PERANAKAN
THEATRE (WAYANG PERANAKAN) 3/3
- Cross-dressing makes visible what contemporary
culture has made invisible the 'accomplishment'
of gender. As the first male actor to play Emily,
Heng offers a version of performed femininity
that adds new depth to Emily's struggle. Under
these circumstances, it's impossible to forget
that women's 'roles' are male creations. Given
the play's feminist slant, the inversion is
provocative and powerful.
15Excerpts of Interview with Ivan Heng
- Int Everybody's searching for a Singapore
identity. We don't know what we are all about - Ivan and here's a woman who's Chinese, wears
Malay clothes, speaks English, studies French,
listens to Dizzy Gillespie and dances to Fred
Astaire, sends her son to England where he goes
to plays, plays polo. Sure she's from a very
privileged class of people, but really, Emily's a
citizen of the world. In that glamorous decadent
world of the 1950s, identity, who we are, was
never really a problem. Its only now when the
world is becoming so globalized, and at the same
time homogenized
16Excerpts of Interview with Ivan Heng
- Int Everyone finds something familiar in Emily
- Ivan Times may have changed, life may have
become more complex but I'll tell you this -
Emily lives today. After watching the play people
say, " oh that's my mother!", or " that's my
sister, my aunty, my grand-aunty", nobody dares
to say " Oh that's me!".
17Excerpts of Interview with Ivan Heng
- Int There are many dimensions to her character
- Ivan On another level it's about the woman, and
all the parts of her. As a woman of her time she
was assigned to her roles in that big patriarchal
system and what were her roles good
daughter-in-law, wife, mother, ambitious for her
husband like a modern Lady Macbeth, uh, y'know,
good grandmother, what do all these roles mean?
Jilted housewife, just what do all these roles
mean? She was a veritable CEO!
18Excerpts of Interview with Ivan Heng
- IntYes, I wanted to ask you about that. What
sort of qualities do you think you being a man in
a woman's role, has imparted to the character? Do
you think it has given it a new edge or somehow
made the character appear stronger?
19Excerpts of Interview with Ivan Heng
- Ivan I think that just because it's a man, you,
kind of make visible all because, it is a man
performing mother, performing jilted housewife,
performing, performing, the point is that
performing is something we all do as human
beings, everyday of our lives. We perform the
good son, the good daughter. With Emily sometimes
you see the real person beneath all these masks.
This mask that we all put on, it's about
survival!
20Excerpts of Interview with Ivan Heng
- Int I don't know. You can't put a finger on it.
There's some spiciness to their character. - Ivan Spicy Huh? Lemak (rich as in, rich in
coconut milk) huh? I think that that's it because
they're so confident, y'know. The men may have
the money but who actually wears the trousers?
They held the fort while their men were taken
away or taken out by the war. They politicized
the kitchen and the bedroom and the living room.
21Interesting Links
- W!ld Rice Home http//www.wildrice.com.sg/producti
ons/shows/emily.htm - Interview with Ivan Heng http//www.happening.com.
sg/livehtml/features/0107emily.html - Stella Kons Notes on the Play http//www.emilyofe
meraldhill.com/EEH20play/Emily20Text20Notes.htm
l - Reviews http//inkpot.com/theatre/emily.html
http//www.stageleft.com.au/2002/emily.html