Thursday, 26 February 2015

Singapore arts festival to go islandwide

Singapore arts festival to go islandwide

The Singapore International Festival of Arts (SIFA) is spreading its wings wide - the entire island is set to become a performance venue of sorts for this year’s edition.

Aside from typical performing arts venues such as the Victoria Theatre and Concert Hall and Drama Centre, the festival, which will run from Aug 6 to Sep 20, will include performances at four Housing and Development Board (HDB) estates and 25 homes.


The performers include comedian Kumar and a selection of stand-up comics such as Sharul Channa and Zaliha Hamid, who will be holding fort at the HDB estates in the show Living Together.


Meanwhile, the programme Open Homes will see theatre performances inside people’s living rooms, done in collaboration with the People’s Association’s PAssionArts.


Festival director Ong Keng Sen said having the shows in the heartlands was a way of “bringing the arts more intimately and closer to the audiences of Singapore”.


“The arts in the heartlands happens in certain fixed ways. It is karaoke, line dancing, mass something. So, we decided to bring Kumar and other stand-up comics to talk about how the different races live together, this sense of sharing space in this diverse landscape,” he told TODAY.


With the theme of POST-Empires, which looks at what the world is like after colonialism, communism and even globalisation, this year’s SIFA will run for seven weeks - one week longer than last year’s edition - and feature four anchor productions spread out over the weeks, instead of a single major opening show kicking off the festival.


Each show will correspond to one of the four festival “lines” or threads: Transformations, Archives, POST-Empires: What Remains After? and Playing With POST-.


Production details will be revealed in April, said the organisers. Last year’s festival drew 22,000 people, with 86 per cent of tickets sold. 60 per cent of the line-up will comprise local works, a conscious decision in light of Singapore’s 50th anniversary celebrations, the organisers said.


Among the participants are experimental musician Margaret Leng Tan as well as theatre companies Cake and W!LD RICE, which will premiere a new play, Hotel.


Mr Ong’s six-hour production The Incredible Adventures Of The Border-Crossers, which debuts in Paris next month as part of the Singapore Festival in France, will also be re-staged.


Other festival highlights include Nanyang - The Musical, a commissioned Mandarin musical loosely based on the lives of the Nanyang artists of Singapore such as Cheong Soo Pieng and Liu Kang, who made a groundbreaking trip to Bali in the 1950s and came back with new ideas that would influence a generation of artists.


The musical is written by renowned music producers and songwriters Eric Ng and Xiao Han, arranged by Goh Kheng Long and directed by Alec Tok.


Singapore’s dance greats are also coming together in Homecoming, the first work by Cultural Medallion (CM) recipient and dance pioneer Goh Lay Kuan in 20 years. It will bring together Chinese, Malay, Indian and contemporary dancers who have been mentored by fellow CM recipients Som Said and Santha Bhaskar.


The coming together of these influential figures and the various types of dances provides “an alternative vision to a national company”, said Mr Ong.


Elsewhere, popular classical ensemble T’ang Quartet will be curating three concerts, including a collaboration with pianist Melvyn Tan; Hungary’s Proton Theatre will present the play Dementia, directed by Mr Kornel Mondruczo (whose film White Dog won top prize at the Un Certain Regard section at last year’s Cannes Film Festival); and South African video artist William Kentridge will offer a multimedia rendition of composer Franz Schubert’s song cycle, Winterreise.


A 16-day mini dance festival will also take place during SIFA, titled Dance Marathon - Open With A Punk Spirit!


Organisers said it would take place at a yet-to-be-confirmed heritage site that will be transformed into a “dance house” featuring dance artists from Japan, India and South-east Asia.


SIFA’s pre-festival event The OPEN will also return and will run from Jun 17 to Jul 4. While it will still include talks, film screenings and exhibitions, Mr Ong said there will be more performances this time around. “Ideas can be exposed not just through talks, but also through experiencing performances,” he said.


Like the festival proper, The OPEN will have two “lines” running through it: The Young And The Restless and Augmented Reality. The latter will feature an augmented-reality tour of a heritage site via a downloadable app.


The Singapore International Festival of Arts runs from Aug 6 to Sept 20, while The OPEN runs from June 17 to July 4. Ticket sales start on April 8 from SISTIC. For more information, visit http://sifa.sg


~News courtesy of Channel News Asia~

Tuesday, 24 February 2015

Adding colour to this week's Chingay Parade

Adding colour to this week's Chingay Parade


Mr Peter and his friends on their modified electric bicycles. The group were invited to join this year's Chingay after one of the organisers spotted them cruising around Chinatown.

When Simon Peter cycles along the streets of Chinatown and Clarke Quay on weekend evenings, he cannot help but become the focus of attention.

Motorists slow down to gawk at his ride, wjile pedestrians stop to look at the colourful, moving light show.

That is because Mr Peter's trippy bicycle is festooned with so many LED lights that it looks like a Chingay Parade float.

Indeed, the 59-year-old hardware store assistant and his friends will be taking part in this year's Chingay Parade, after being spotted cruising around Chinatown by one of the organisers.

The man followed them in a car and stopped the group to invite them to take part in this year's Chingay, which will take place on Friday and Saturday.

Mr Peter said: "I'm very happy and excited. This is my first time taking part in Chingay."

It has been a long ride to the parade - Mr Peter bought his electric bicycle shortly after selling an older model to a German man for $2,000 in 2012.

Feeling that his new bicycle was too plain, he initially spruced it up with a few LED lights.

Over time, the electric bicycle was transformed into a kaleidoscope of colour, thanks to a multitude of LED lights and stickers.

Now, it even has a modified car alarm and a DVD karaoke system with an amplifier.

Four 12-volt batteries power the added accessories, which have the bike weighing about 15kg, said Mr Peter.

He spent around $6,000 buying and modifying his bicycle.

It took him about three weeks to do it up, a job which he took on himself, with the exception of the soldering done by his godson.

Mr Peter said his wife and two children, a son and daughter, are supportive of his hobby and find it interesting.

Mr Peter's friends also noticed what he was doing and were inspired to follow suit.

They too began to brighten up their bicycles. Some who did not own electric bicycles even bought their own to customise.

One of them, Steven Law, 46, said that his family is surprised by his hobby because it is unusual.

"I feel very proud and happy when people ask to take photos with us," said Mr Law, a restaurant's assistant chef.

The group of seven friends now go cycling every weekend, usually around Chinatown and Clarke Quay.

They cycle at night for about three hours, returning home around 10pm.

While cycling through Chinatown, the men are often stopped by passers-by asking to take photos.

Drivers often wind down their windows at traffic lights to take photos of the bicycles.

Some even honk at the cyclists to get their attention and compliment them on their rides.

"I always feel happy to talk about my bike with them and let them take pictures of it," said Mr Peter.

The group usually park their bicycles somewhere in Clarke Quay and turn on their sound systems, filling the air with the melody of Chinese music such as xinyao.

The effect is akin to a mobile disco as people nearby start dancing to the music.

Besides adding colour to other peoples' lives, Mr Peter also gets a good workout from his weekly rides as he lives in a three-room Housing Board flat in Boon Keng, which is 5km from Chinatown.

~News courtesy of The New Paper~

Friday, 20 February 2015

Wednesday, 18 February 2015

Friday, 13 February 2015

Singapore Airlines reduces fuel surcharges

Singapore Airlines reduces fuel surcharges

Flagship carrier Singapore Airlines (SIA) said on Thursday (Feb 12) that it will reduce its fuel surcharge for tickets issued on or after Feb 26, 2015.

The reduced fuel surcharges will apply to Singapore Airlines and SilkAir flights, SIA said in a news release. They will see decreases of between US$5 (S$6.80) and US$83 (S$113) per sector.

The airline noted that fuel prices have declined in recent months, but said jet fuel continues to account for a significant percentage of the SIA Group expenditure.

~News courtesy of Channel News Asia~

New duty-free retailer opens at Changi Airport

New duty-free retailer opens at Changi Airport



SHOPPERS' DELIGHT: The Shilla Duty Free shop at Changi Airport Terminal 1. To celebrate the grand opening of its stores yesterday, Shilla, which moved to the airport more than four months ago, is offering special discounts and free gifts.

Duty-free shoppers at Changi Airport now have a far wider array of cosmetics and perfumes to choose from.

Across the three terminals, there are 182 brands, including about 80 which are available at the airport for the first time and 26 which cannot be found anywhere else in Singapore.

These include Aromatica, Ghost Perfume and Jean Louis Scherrer Perfume, said South Korean firm Shilla Duty Free.

To celebrate the grand opening of its new stores yesterday, Shilla, which moved into Changi Airport more than four months ago, is offering special discounts and free gifts.

The airport retailer which has stores in South Korea, Macau and now Singapore had ousted incumbent Nuance Watson in January last year in a hotly contested fight to run the airport's 19 perfume and cosmetic stores.

Nuance Watson had run the stores for more than a decade before that.

It is a lucrative business with total sales from such items, as well as liquor and tobacco, hitting about $900 million last year - about half the airport's total annual receipts from shopping and dining.

Shoppers have more to look forward to, said Shilla.

By June, a new double-storey outlet at Terminal 3 will offer facials and beauty consultation services as well as accommodate an in-house cafe.

Business analyst Reena Soh, 28, who travels frequently, said: "Every airport you go to, you get the usual international brands, so for a change, it's nice to have a good selection of South Korean items as well."

Changi Airport Group's senior vice-president (airside concessions) Ivy Wong, said that with Shilla, Changi has strengthened its retail value proposition for both Singaporean shoppers as well as international travellers.

"The suite of newly revamped beauty stores by The Shilla Duty Free positions Changi as the best location in Singapore and the region to shop for beauty products," she said.

Mr Jason Cha, a senior executive vice-president at Shilla Duty Free, said the launch of the stores at Changi is a "significant and valuable" milestone for the firm.

"As an international hub for travellers, Singapore is the perfect location to create a beauty epicentre for the region, and we are confident that our expansive offering will be warmly welcomed," he said.

To celebrate the grand launch, Shilla flew in its ambassadors, South Korean pop stars TVXQ and Chinese actress and model, Angelababy, who created quite a stir among fans.

~News courtesy of My Paper~

Monday, 9 February 2015

Singapore's familiar sights recreated in the form of gardens

Singapore's familiar sights recreated in the form of gardens

Some familiar sights in Singapore will come alive at the HortPark this September. Fifty community gardening groups have paired up with staff from the National Parks Board to create garden displays in celebration of Singapore's 50th birthday.

From the kampungs of yester years to an iconic dragon-themed playground - these were recreated in the form of gardens about 200 square metres each.

Artist's impressions of the five gardens are on display at an event organised by the NParks on Sunday (Feb 8). The gardens' creators hope to get Singaporeans to reflect on the nation's past and also envision its future as Singapore celebrates its Golden Jubilee.

One such project focuses on recycling and roof top gardens, in a bid to encourage more creative and sustainable gardens in Singapore. The gardens will be constructed from June this year.

~News courtesy of Channel News Asia~

Friday, 6 February 2015

Stretch of Orchard Road to close for 'Pedestrian Night'

Stretch of Orchard Road to close on Saturday for 'Pedestrian Night'


Part of Orchard Road will be closed to motorists from 6pm to 11pm this Saturday. 

The stretch between Scotts Road and Bideford Road will be shut to host the 'Pedestrian Night On Orchard Road' - an event organised by the Orchard Road Business Association and Singapore Tourism Board.

During the closure,, access will only be granted to police and emergency vehicles.

Parking restrictions along peripheral roads will be strictly enforced and vehicles found parking indiscriminately and causing obstruction will be towed away, police said on Tuesday.

~News courtesy of Straits Times~