Asian Books Blog is based in Singapore. Our regular
column Lion City Lit explores in-depth what’s going on in the City-State,
lit-wise. Here Raelee Chapman talks to Dr Chris Mooney-Singh an Australian writer, poet, musician and
performance artist who has lived and worked in Singapore for a number of years, and who has made his mark on the City-State
as an all-round arts entrepreneur.
Chris and his Singaporean wife Savinder Kaur founded and run the literary arts companies: Word Forward and Sunbird Arts; the literary festival Lit Up Singapore; Poetry Slam™ Singapore & Malaysia, and
the Writers Centre, Singapore. Over the summer Word Forward had great success with their children’s piece, Uncle Rajah’s Flying Carpet Show, culminating with a performance at the Sun Yat
Sen Memorial Hall on National Day, August 9th.
Uncle Rajah lands his magic carpet anywhere, ready with
poems and songs relevant to his location. The show begins:
My name is Uncle Rajah
I’m a traveller in
time.
I go by flying carpet
and I speak in prose and rhyme.
and I speak in prose and rhyme.
Chris explained that Uncle
Rajah lives beside a desert oasis in a faraway land. He is head honcho of the
Spellmakers’ Guild of the Universe. With his sidekick, Skid the Squirrel and
seven magical sunbirds, Uncle Rajah flies through time and space keeping Skid
and the sunbirds out of trouble and telling of their exploits.
Uncle Rajah loves to tell original
stories through a unique form of ‘spoken word theatre’ that presents
historical, contemporary and imaginary characters to children of 3 and older. Uncle Rajah is sometimes joined by Old Stripes, the vegetarian tiger along, with early Singapore merchants known as the Rubber and Pineapple Kings.
The show is
interactive. Youngsters get up and learn the Funky Monkey Dance and join in the
movements of Chingay Chingay Dragon, an energetic performance piece done with
music. On National Day both performances of Uncle Rajah’s Flying Carpet Show were packed to
capacity and everyone went away both highly-entertained and a little wiser about
Singapore’s early days. Who knows where Uncle Rajah will travel to next? Perhaps he'll land his magic carpet somewhere near you?
Photo credits: Lee Yew Moon
Photo credits: Lee Yew Moon