— D I G I T A L P R O G R A M M E —


THESE LINES WE DRAW...

THESE WALLS WE BUILD...



26 — 28 May 2022

School of the Arts (SOTA) Studio Theatre


WRITTEN BY

JEAN TAY


DIRECTED BY

OLIVER CHONG


DEVISED & PERFORMED BY

ITI'S 2022 GRADUATING COHORT

PLAYWRIGHT'S NOTE

Jean Tay

For a while now, I have been fascinated by the impact of quarantines on human relationships, as a way to control and contain contagious diseases and “undesirable” elements in the population. As part of the National Library Board’s Creative Residency, I have started exploring the history of quarantine in Singapore, and old hospitals and quarantine sites here.


One of the sites which stood out to me was the Trafalgar Home, Singapore’s old leper asylum, formerly situated in Yio Chu Kang. Delving into the history of the site and oral interviews from inmates, I realised that there was a wealth of hidden and heartbreaking stories here, of families broken apart and untold suffering in the face of a then-incurable disease, but also stories of unexpected comfort and relationships forged within the asylum itself. What kind of fear would make a parent reject their child and break up families? What kind of sickness would drive people to ostracise each other, to the extent of taking away their freedom, or even dehumanising them? These were some of the questions I wanted to explore when researching the subject.


I am very grateful to ITI for the opportunity to explore this project with such a passionate and dedicated group of final-year students. It was great fun sowing the seeds for this production with all of them, who gamely dived into the improvisation exercises to help create these memorable characters. I was also privileged to work with director Oliver Chong to bring this piece to the stage, and thankful for his rigour and patience in helping me shape and tighten the piece, as well as bringing the characters to life. Thanks also to Clarisse, Cindy and the rest of the production team and the creative designers who spared no effort in recreating this asylum.


One final note, while this piece was originally inspired by a historical leper asylum, when moving the piece from history to the stage, the fictional disease portrayed has evolved into quite a different animal altogether. Liberties have been taken in dramatising the impact of the disease as well as the actual leper asylum, to situate it in the realm of the imagination. Personally, I like to call it a cross between my version of historical fiction and a zombie flick, but I’ll leave it to the audience to decide.


DIRECTOR'S NOTE

Oliver Chong

Leprosy, also known as Hansen's disease, is an infectious disease that is believed to be one of the longest existing diseases in human history. It is a chronic illness that has historically caused its sufferers to be ostracised by society for thousands of years. A cure only became available in the late 1940s.


Just like the rest of the world, the disease carried a social stigma in Singapore. 8,500 leprosy patients were registered from 1950 to 1995, and they were shunned by their family, friends and society. Living as outcasts, they could only return to society after a cure was found. However, not all of them chose to.


The segregation of leprosy sufferers in colonies and asylums was a common practice around the world. The Lepers’ Ordinance that was passed in July 1897 in the Straits Settlements allowed the authorities to confine leprosy sufferers indefinitely in asylums to prevent the spread of the disease.


In 1926, four wards for female patients were built on the Trafalgar rubber estate off Yio Chu Kang Road. A site for male patients was constructed four years later, with both sites then being collectively known as the Singapore Leper Asylum. To prevent them from escaping and infecting the rest of society, security guards armed with rifles guarded the gates. In 1950, the asylum was renamed the Trafalgar Home.


Cross-referencing leprosy and the Trafalgar Home with the pandemic and quarantine facilities now, the knee-jerk reaction of rounding up and ostracising the unknown and its carriers remains the same. It is a defence mechanism in the name of the greater good. The question remains as to whether we have done better in compassionate quarantine and isolation.


Moving along with the development of the pandemic as we rehearse, we have observed that it is the impact of the disease on our livelihoods and ways of life. The disruptions, the reaction, and the overreaction of society that is no less detrimental to the interests and mental health of most people, is unequivocally no less frightening than contracting the disease itself.


Confronting the massive social problems caused by the coronavirus requires policies built on compassion, solidarity and justice. And it is with compassion that we can forge ahead in solidarity to uphold justice.

CREDITS

CAST

  • BAI LING
    Daisy Zhao Xiaoqing

  • DANIEL
    Ismael Gallaza Pantao

  • ASHISH
    Kaleem Zafar

  • ALBERT
    Karlwinn

  • BEE LIAN
    Ng Yuan Ci

  • JOE
    Oliver S. K. Wu

  • LEE
    Peh Jun Kai

  • DIA
    Ruthi Lalrinawmi

  • AHMAD
    Wan Ahmad

  • CHAN
    Will Wong Keng Ip

  • GENEVIEVE
    Wong Jin Yi

  • BRYN
    Jemima Dunn

  • DIRECTOR & SET DESIGNER
    Oliver Chong

  • PLAYWRIGHT
    Jean Tay

  • LIGHTING DESIGNER
    Faith Liu Yong Huay

  • SOUND DESIGNER
    Sandra Tay

  • COSTUME COORDINATOR
    Lim Chin Huat


  • PRODUCTION MANAGER
    Clarisse Ng

  • STAGE MANAGER
    Cindy Sng

  • ASST. STAGE MANAGER
    Sheavon Perera

  • SOUND OPERATOR
    Lim Cheng Yi

  • SURTITLE OPERATOR
    Rhian Hiew Khai Chin

_______

  • With special thanks to

Audio Resources Pte Ltd
Eve Tan
Tay Ining

ITI students work as a professional company in their third year, and undertake ticketed public performances. These Final Year Productions are an integral part of the ITI curriculum.

CAST

• Daisy Zhao Xiaoqing

: xiaoqing.daisy@gmail.com


Daisy Zhao Xiaoqing is a performer-practitioner based in Singapore, originally from Dalian, China. She started her stage journey at a young age when she was part of a Chinese dance ensemble. She has received training in playback theatre, puppetry, Commedia dell'Arte, and embodiment training.


Prior to ITI, Daisy worked as an early childhood educator in theatre arts with The Learning Connections, Young People’s Performing Arts Ensemble, as a puppeteer in Junction Tree with Mediacorp, and as an event host and magician with the Mighty Magic Lab.


Her acting credits span both theatre and screen; she has performed in The Silly Girl and The Funny Old Tree (Young People’s Performing Arts Ensemble), Cabaret (The Stage Club), Tibby and the Tiger-Bunny (The Learning Connections). She also acted in the TV series Beyond Light Years produced by Shanghai GCOO Entertainment. Daisy is a core member of Long Time No See (好久不见) Playback Theatre.


After graduation, Daisy plans to continue giving back to the community through playback theatre and her work in early childhood education. She hopes to create her own works and continue rediscovering herself and the world through theatre.


Daisy is a beneficiary of the ITI Scholarship, Tan Chay Bing Education Fund Scholarship and the Möbius Fund, a revolving loan fund for actor-students.

Ismael Gallaza Pantao

✉: ismaelpantao1030@gmail.com

Ismael Gallaza Pantao is a theatre practitioner from General Santos City, Philippines. He is an alumnus of Sining Kabpapagariya Ensemble, the official performing arm of Mindanao State University (General Santos City).


He began his artistic journey as a cultural performer, actor, host, director, and theatre facilitator for youth-oriented programmes. As a performer, he has toured to other parts of the Philippines and represented his country at international festivals.

His awards include the General Santos City Youth Achievers Award (2009) for being one of the city’s bearers of excellence in the field of performing arts, and the Sultan Kudarat Awardee for Culture and Arts (2016).


Ismael is also part of inITIate PH, a collective he formed together with ITI alumni and his fellow classmates. Their inaugural devised play, COALateral, premiered at the 16th TANGHAL National University and Community-based Theatre Festival.


He came to ITI to search for his own meaning and values to live by as an actor. In the future, Ismael plans to continue his work as an actor and director. He also intends to share what he has learnt with the theatre communities in the Philippines and educate young people to be artists with purpose.


Ismael is a beneficiary of the Möbius Fund.

Kaleem Zafar

: kaleem.zafar002@gmail.com


Kaleem Zafar is an actor from Mathura, Uttar Pradesh. His journey in the arts began by doing children’s theatre with the street theatre group Sanket Rangtoli.

Kaleem graduated from Madhya Pradesh School of Drama with a Diploma in Dramatic Arts and completed a year-long internship where he conceptualised and directed numerous original works. He has been involved in various national festivals in India as a performer and coordinator, and taught acting at the National School of Drama in New Delhi.

Aside from theatre, Kaleem has experience in acting on screen. His credits include Before Life After Death and Delhi Crime.

After graduation, Kaleem plans to continue acting on stage and screen. He also intends to work as an arts educator and continue finding himself through theatre.

Kaleem is a beneficiary of the Möbius Fund.

• Karlwinn

: paitankarlwinn25@gmail.com


Karlwinn is a performance maker and teacher. He is a member of inITIate PH, a pan-Philippine artist collective composed of ITI alumni and students. Prior to ITI, he worked as a theatre specialist in the Special Program in the Arts and the Arts & Design Track of Diplahan National School, Department of Education-Philippines.


His recent works include COALateral, presented at the 16th TANGHAL National University and Community-based Theatre Festival. In 2019, he made his playwright debut with Unsay Koneksyon sa Iring? at the Cultural Center of the Philippines’ Extra Virgin Labfest.


Karlwinn was awarded the Most Outstanding Greenducator of Region IX-Philippines for his contributions in using theatre as a tool to raise awareness of environmental issues and educating youth on the conservation of wildlife and natural resources.


To better himself as an artist, Karlwinn decided to study at ITI. After graduation, he plans to continue making theatre as well as collaborating with various artists and institutions.


Karlwinn is a beneficiary of the Möbius Fund.

Ng Yuan Ci

: petslover.ycn@gmail.com


Ng Yuan Ci is a theatre practitioner from Malaysia and a graduate of the Drama and Visuals Department (Theatre Major) of New Era University College.


Before deciding to further develop her skills at ITI, she independently practised performance, direction and design. She committed herself to three years of freelance and backstage work, where she performed and participated in puppet shows, children’s plays and urban festivals. She also completed a theatre internship with Sun Son Theatre, a cross-disciplinary performance troupe in Taiwan in 2017.


She has travelled to various parts of China to perform in works such as Wizard of Oz (China-ASEAN (Nanning) Theatre Week), and Dragonland as a shadow puppeteer. In Malaysia, she performed in Hoong Siamang Hoong which was nominated for Best Group Performance at the 16th BOH Cameronian Arts Awards, Don’t Let Writer Know: Mulan Mulan and The Story of Ah Loy (Urbanscapes 2018).


After ITI, Yuan Ci hopes to continue expanding her experience in performing arts no matter where she finds herself. She hopes her work can continue to move, connect, and inspire people while also giving her the opportunity to travel the world.

Yuan Ci is a recipient of the Tan Chay Bing Education Fund Scholarship and a beneficiary of the Möbius Fund.

Oliver S. K. Wu

: gordonwu1992@hotmail.com


Oliver S. K. Wu is an actor from Macau. He studied at the School of Theatre (formerly known as the School of Drama) under the Macao Conservatory.

His credits include The Sea, Miss Du Shi Niang, Bury the Dead, Ubu Roi, The Shadow Box and various puppet shows for children. When not performing, he teaches drama and hosts events.

To pursue the arts as a full-time profession, Oliver left his hometown and enrolled in ITI to hone his skills.

After graduating, Oliver plans to carry on as an actor and director. He also intends to further his training in physical theatre and deepen his craft as a movement artist.

Oliver is a beneficiary of the Möbius Fund.

Peh Jun Kai

: pehjunkai21@gmail.com


Peh Jun Kai is a theatre-maker, actor and playwright from Singapore. His artistic journey began at 15 when he participated in an improvisational comedy workshop. Since then, he has been drawn to theatre as a means to connect with himself and society.


Jun Kai is actively involved in playback theatre, working with Long Time No See (好久不见) Playback Theatre and The Community Theatre (TCT), a youth group by Beyond Social Services. With TCT, he performed in The Block Party (M1 Peer Pleasure Festival 2019).


After graduation, Jun Kai plans to continue training, collaborating and creating impactful stories.

Jun Kai is a recipient of the Tan Chay Bing Education Fund Scholarship and a beneficiary of the Möbius Fund.

Ruthi Lalrinawmi

: ruthilalrinawmi@yahoo.com


Ruthi Lalrinawmi is an actor from Mizoram, India. Her affair with the stage began when she performed in Beauty is the Beast at an arts festival as an undergraduate at Mizoram University. She then went on to pursue postgraduate studies in the performing arts at the University of Hyderabad.


In university, she performed in several productions such as The Trojan Women and Raaz ki Baat. Ruthi also facilitated workshops on actor training in her hometown and worked with students on an original play based on the folk tale Liandova Te Unau.


Ruthi’s desire to deepen her understanding of theatre and her journey in it drew her to ITI. After graduation, she intends to work as a practitioner and develop the arts scene in her home region.


Ruthi is a recipient of the Tan Chay Bing Education Fund Scholarship and a beneficiary of the Möbius Fund.

Wan Ahmad

: mdriduan.wan.ahmad@gmail.com


Wan Ahmad (a.k.a. Muhammad Riduan) is an actor and arts educator. An alumnus of Temasek Polytechnic, he began his theatre journey in the school’s theatre group, Teatro.


Since then, he has worked with companies such as The Necessary Stage, Main Tulis Group and Toy Factory Productions. His works include Off Centre, Rumah Dayak, ETA: 9 MIN (Singapore Writers Festival 2019), SKIN (The Wright Stuff Festival 2021), Alkesah and Bangsawan Tajul Gaspar. He is currently an instructor for Teatro.


Wan came to ITI to expand his knowledge and evolve as a multidisciplinary artist.


He plans to continue pursuing his journey in all aspects of theatre and television in Singapore and abroad. Wan also intends to debut his own collective, Teater Artysan.


Wan is a recipient of the Tan Chay Bing Education Fund Scholarship and a beneficiary of the Möbius Fund.

Will Wong Keng Ip

: culinarylemon@gmail.com


Will Wong Keng Ip is a performer from Macau. An alumnus of the School of Theatre (formerly known as the School of Drama) under the Macao Conservatory where he was taught by ITI alumni Jose Ku Ieng Un and Maria Au Mong Chao, Will seeks to experience different art forms.


In his works, Will took on various roles such as freelance actor, musical performer, acapella singer, stilt walker, lights and sound operator and stage manager. He also worked with The Funny Old Tree Theatre Ensemble before coming to ITI.


His credits include My Princess (Macau Fringe Festival), Expo 2010 Shanghai China, Our Town, The Silly Girl and the Funny Old Tree and The Boat People Saga. In 2019, he was the assistant stage manager of Kaléidoscope, a joint collaboration by various international theatre collectives and directed by Shaghayegh Beheshti, a core member of Théâtre du Soleil.


In Singapore, Will was in the production team of alumni Regina Toon (a.k.a. ​​Ora 晰月) and Wendy Toh’s Viddsee original short film, Heart Shape 莲蓉包.


After graduating, Will intends to work as an actor, director and arts educator.


Will is a beneficiary of the Möbius Fund.

Wong Jin Yi

: whenyouonlyhaveone@gmail.com


Wong Jin Yi is an actor and theatre practitioner based in Singapore. She was part of Young & W!ld’s graduating cohort of 2019, performing in their showcase Anything Can Happen/Something Must Happen. She has also performed in productions by NUS Stage, most notably The City Remembers (2018) and The Golden Record 2.0 (2019).

Jin Yi has conducted workshops in Viewpoints, in collaboration with the Playwright’s Commune (2021).

She came to ITI to further her understanding of the origins of theatre and to become acquainted with her body as an instrument for creation. To this end, she continues to pursue training in movement forms outside of those taught at ITI, including Odissi at Chowk and Taiji.

Jin Yi plans to expand her interest in theatre-making by pursuing avenues of playwriting and directing in addition to performing. She aims to create work that reflects the complexities of the human condition.

Jin Yi is a recipient of the ITI Scholarship and a beneficiary of the Möbius Fund.

Jemima Dunn

(Special Placement Student from Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts & New Colombo Plan Scholar)

: jemimadunn13@gmail.com


Jemima Dunn is a Performing Artist from Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Her passion for performance began in high school, where she took part in school productions and finished at the top of her drama class upon graduating. Jemima is passionate about physical theatre and aims to create thought-provoking pieces that confront social and political issues, incorporating a team of artists with unique perspectives and experiences on these topics.


In the course of completing her Bachelor of Performing Arts at the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA), she received the New Colombo Plan Scholarship to complete her degree with Intercultural Theatre Institute. One of her performance highlights was taking part in Generator, a WAAPA showcase where she performed in a scene from her original work I Hate Missing Sunsets. Outside of theatre, Jemima enjoys singing and songwriting, and hopes to release her music professionally in the coming year.


Jemima plans to explore directing and film acting upon graduating and is also excited to put her performance making skills to the test. She hopes to take part in projects that can facilitate important discussions between creatives and their audience, as well as demonstrate theatre’s ability to positively impact our world.

ITI Graduands' Headshots by Bernie Ng

CREATIVE TEAM

Jean Tay
Playwright

Jean Tay graduated in 1997 with a double-degree in creative writing and economics from Brown University, USA. For her fiction, she has won the Weston Prize for Fiction from Brown, as well as NAC’s Golden Point Short Story competition. Plays produced include Water from the Well, The Knot, Plunge, Everything But the Brain, Boom, Sisters, Senang and The Shape of a Bird. Her plays have been performed in Singapore, US, UK, and Italy. She was nominated four times for Best Original Script for The Straits Times Life! Theatre Awards, and won for Everything But the Brain. Her plays Everything But the Brain and Boom are published by Epigram Books, and have both been used as ‘O’ and ‘N’ Level literature texts for secondary school students. Jean is the founding Artistic Director of Saga Seed Theatre, set up in 2015 to bring Singaporean stories to the stage, and provide a platform to showcase and nurture local talent.

Oliver Chong
Director

Oliver Chong is a multi-award-winning and published playwright, director, actor and designer. Some of his memorable works include Every Brilliant Thing, A Fiend’s Diary, Roots, I’m Just A Piano Teacher, Cat, Lost & Found, The Book of Living and Dying, Citizen Pig and Citizen Dog. His numerous nominations at The Straits Times Life! Theatre Awards include Production of the Year and Best Director for I’m Just a Piano Teacher; Production of the Year for Off Centre; Best Director and Best Script for Citizen Pig; Best Actor for Roots, Invisibility/Breathing and Art, Best Supporting Actor for ITSY – The Musical, Flare, Best Ensemble for Senang, Shit Hole, First Family, Rashomon, and A Cage Goes in Search of a Bird respectively, and Best Set Design for Twisted, Citizen Dog and A Fiend’s Diary.

Oliver was the resident director of The Finger Players (2004–2018) and is currently a core member of the company. He was also the founding member of A Group of People (2008–2012). Oliver is the founder and artistic director of ODDCROP Productions (2019 – present). His published works include Roots, The Book of Living and Dying, I’m Just A Piano Teacher and Cat, Lost & Found.

Faith Liu Yong Huay
Lighting Designer

Faith Liu trained at The Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts in Lighting Design (2016), under the National Arts Council Arts Scholarship (Postgraduate). In September 2017, she co-founded 微 Wei Collective with theatre practitioner Neo Hai Bin. They recently staged Being: 息在 commissioned by the M1 Singapore Fringe Festival 2022 , where she designed the set and lights.

Faith is interested in how breath is given to spaces, objects and bodies with light. She is honoured to have worked on numerous theatre and dance productions in Singapore.

Portfolio: liuyonghuay.tumblr.com

Sandra Tay
Sound Designer

Sandra is a Singapore-based independent sound engineer and designer.

Since leaving her information technology job as a systems programmer in 2000, Sandra has been learning and providing technical and creative audio services for theatres, touring productions, corporate events and school shows.

She is often involved in the conceptualising, planning, setting up and operating of local and international shows. As a designer, her works merge digitalised effects with naturalistic foleys. Her designs are cinematic, bold and exploratory with contemporary sensitivity.

Some of her design credits include: Sensing the Dark: A journey of sound without sight (Flipside, Julian Wong, 2018), PROJECT Utopia (The Theatre Practice, 2019), Four Horse Road (The Theatre Practice, 2020), A Dream Under The Southern Bough: Existence (SIFA, Toy Factory Productions, 2021), The Crab Flower Club (Toy Factory Productions, 2022). Aside from theatre, Sandra is the replay engineer for major events such as SEA Games Opening & Closing Ceremony (2015) and National Day Parade (2010–2021).

Sandra holds a Masters Degree in Creative Industries (Music & Sound) from Queensland University of Technology under the NAC Arts Bursary (Overseas). This is her first collaboration with Intercultural Theatre Institute.

Lim Chin Huat
Costume Coordinator

Lim Chin Huat is a cross-disciplinary artist who has over three decades of experience as a creator, performer, designer and educator. In particular, he is known for his stunning visual creative and unconventional collaborative works. Chin Huat has worked with Toy Factory Theatre Ensemble (1990-1996), and later, as co-founder and artistic director of ECNAD (1996-2013). He is a faculty member at ITI teaching Movement.

A prolific creator, his works range from dance, theatre, music, installation and design. His works were seen and presented at the Singapore Arts Festival, Belgrade International Theatre Festival, Vienna Arts Festival’s Asia Village, New Zealand Festival of Asia, Yogyakarta Asia Interaction, Quanzhou Maritime Silk Road Arts Festival, Kuala Lumpur Actor Studio, Beijing Chaoyang Cultural Centre, Esplanade, Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre, Substation SeptFest, Gardens by The Bay Opening, Mercedes-Benz Asia Fashion Award, Artwine Festival, Singapore River Festival and Teochew Festival. Chin Huat is a recipient of the Young Artist Award (2000) and NAFA Distinguished Alumni Medal (2019).

ABOUT ITI


Intercultural Theatre Institute (ITI), based in Singapore, is a three-year, practice-based, professional actor training programme founded on a rigorous, intercultural learning methodology with a view to producing original, contemporary theatre.

The school began as the Theatre Training & Research Programme (TTRP), founded in 2000 by renowned dramatist Kuo Pao Kun (1939–2002) and current Director T. Sasitharan – both Cultural Medallion recipients. It is shaped by Kuo Pao Kun’s vision of intercultural learning that draws from a matrix of traditional theatre systems and modern theatre-making.

ITI’s distinguished alumni include Yeo Yann Yann, winner of two Golden Horse Awards for her performances in Wet Season and Ilo Ilo and International Emmy Award nominee for her role in Invisible Stories; Peter Sau, recipient of the 2011 Young Artist Award and several Life! Theatre Awards; Felimon Blanco, recipient of the 2013 Most Outstanding Zambosurian Award (Philippines); and Sankar Venkateswaran, recipient of the 2019 Shankar Nag Theatre Award, presented to theatre all-rounders under the age of 40 who embody the spirit of service to theatre in India.

SUPPORT ITI


ITI is an independent theatre school founded on the belief that theatre has little meaning if it is not connected to life and society. Through the years, ITI has developed critically and socially engaged artists who are capable of working across cultural, linguistic, social and national boundaries, and who have contributed meaningfully to their cultures and communities.

ITI is a registered charity and an approved Institution of Public Character (IPC), and more than 60% of its income has to come from fundraising. Donations to ITI are eligible for 250% tax exemption and dollar-to-dollar matching by the government’s Cultural Matching Fund.

Your donations will make a critical difference and support ITI in its seminal work.

“I was trained to be not only a good actor but also a better person. So to those who want to make a difference, please consider supporting a student in ITI and we will make this world a better place using the arts”

~ Denise Mordeno Aguilar ‘14

Peter Sau (‘03, Singapore) is the founder of Project Tandem, a training programme for disabled performing artists. He is also associate director and cast member of And Suddenly I Disappear: The Singapore/UK ‘d’ Monologues, the first disability-led theatre project created between Singapore and the UK. Peter is a recipient of the 2011 Young Artist Award and the Best Actor Award at the 2015 Life! Theatre Awards.

Sankar Venkateswaran (‘06, India) is the founder and artistic director of Theatre Roots & Wings. He has set up a cultural space in Attappady, Kerala, where he works with the impoverished indigenous communities. Sankar is a recipient of the International Ibsen Scholarship 2013, Aditya Vikram Birla Kalakiran Puraskar 2016 and Shankar Nag Theatre Award 2019.

Denise Mordeno Aguilar (‘14, Philippines) is the artistic director of Pasundayag Theatre Company, secretary of the National Committee on Dramatic Arts and the Mindanao designated coordinator of Women Playwrights International. She is a recipient of the Lambago Art Award 2016, in recognition of her outstanding work as a theatre artist and her invaluable contribution to the development of arts and culture in Cagayan de Oro City, Philippines.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

CHAIRMAN

  • Mr Arun Mahizhnan
    Special Research Adviser, Institute of Policy Studies


MEMBERS

  • Prof Kwok Kian Woon
    Associate Vice President (Wellbeing), Nanyang Technological University

  • Mr Chew Kheng Chuan
    Independent consultant in philanthropy

  • Mr Tan Tarn How
    Playwright; Adjunct Senior Research Fellow, Institute of Policy Studies

  • Ms Winifred Loh
    Director, LeadForte Consulting

  • Dr Nazry Bahrawi
    Assistant Professor of Southeast Asian Literature and Culture, University of Washington

ACADEMIC BOARD 2020-2023

  • Prof Erik Ehn
    Playwright
    Visiting Professor, Department of Theatre and Dance, University of New Mexico

  • Dr Quah Sy Ren
    Associate Professor, School of Humanities, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

  • Dr Frances Barbe
    Associate Dean (Performance)
    , Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts

EXAMINATION BOARD 2020-2023

  • Mr Aarne Neeme, AM (Order of Australia)
    Director and educator

  • Dr Paul Rae
    Associate Professor, Head of School of Culture and Communication, University of Melbourne

  • Mr Noushad Mohamed Kunju
    Director, actor and educator
    Associate Professor, Department of Theatre Arts, Sarojini Naidu School of Arts & Communication, University of Hyderabad

  • Mr Peter Sau
    Director, actor and educator

  • Mr Nelson Chia
    Artistic Director, Nine Years Theatre, Singapore

FINAL-YEAR PRODUCTIONS 2014-2021

THANK YOU FOR BEING A PART OF ITI'S JOURNEY

FRIENDS OF ITI

  • Christopher Chen

  • Clarissa Oon

  • Eddie Ong

  • Felipe Cervera

  • Heng Guan Hou

  • Isis Koh

  • Jacky Foo

  • Kenry Peh

  • Koh Hui Ling

  • Estate of Kong Kam Yoke

  • Lee Sia Ang

  • Lim Mei Yin

  • Lin Sh Liang

  • Lina Yu

  • Low Sze Wee

  • Manuela Panos Gissler

  • Natalino Busa

  • Noorlinah Mohamed

  • Phan Ming Yen

  • Sai Ram Nilgiri

  • Toh Bao En

  • Vidula Verma

  • Wang Liansheng

  • Xie Shangbin

  • Yeow Kai Chai

  • Yong Shu Hoong

And other Friends who wish to remain anonymous

PRINCIPAL DONORS

  • Lee Foundation

  • Sim Wong Hoo

  • Stephen Riady


GRANT-MAKERS

  • Lee Foundation

  • Tan Chay Bing Education Fund

  • Kuo Pao Kun Foundation

  • Chew How Teck Foundation

  • Hong Leong Foundation

  • Kwan Im Thong Hood Cho Temple

  • U.S. Embassy, Singapore

  • Arts Fund

  • JCCI Singapore Foundation Limited, in association with Japanese Chamber of Commerce & Industry, Singapore


PARTNERS

  • APC Hosting Pte Ltd

  • CornerStone Wines

  • Gim Tim Group of Restaurants

  • gush

  • Pangolin Films Pte Ltd

  • Pek Sin Choon Pte Ltd

  • RJ Paper

  • Suntec Singapore

  • The Prestigious. Bespoke Tailors

  • Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts

ITI ANGELS INITIATIVE

  • Tommy Koh

  • Alan Chan

  • Alvin Lin

  • Albert Chiu

  • Annabelle Yip

  • Arun Mahizhnan

  • Benson Puah

  • BinjaiTree

  • Charlotte & Yew Lin Goh

  • Chew Kheng Chuan

  • Chua Lee Hoong

  • George Yeo

  • Georges Barbey

  • Ho Ren Hua

  • Kathy Lai

  • Koh Tai Ann

  • Kong Eng Huat

  • Kwok Kian Woon

  • Lawrence Wong

  • Leonardo Drago

  • Ng Shin Ein

  • Ong Pang Boon

  • Pak Geok Choo

  • Philip Jeyaretnam

  • Pierre Lorinet

  • Prabhat Ojha

  • Roger Fluri

  • Roopa and Shiv Dewan

  • Samuel Seow

  • Sat Pal Khattar

  • Tharman Shanmugaratnam

  • Vincent Choy

  • William & Judith Bollinger

And other Angels who wish to remain anonymous

ITI Angels Initiative has also received contributions from Nicholas Goh and Wang Gungwu