
Singapore is not always somewhere that you would associate with being a barrel of laughs, but our visit there gave Mrs Reiver and me the best laugh we have had for a long time. There is much potentially depressing now with virtually all traces of the old Singapore subsumed by the concrete and steel vision of a premium brand led capitalist playground. The hawker food continues to provide welcome relief, and before attending the contemporary dance performance at the pineapplesque Esplanande arts centre we fortified ourselves with a rapid kway teow.
The performance was billed as ‘contemplating irretrievable loss in an age of unimaginable speed and technology..’ – I nearly irretrievably lost my cool when we couldn’t buy the tickets at the published price even at the venue (an agency fee applied everywhere) – advertising standards anyone??
I would have to say in its defence that there was some very elegant and poised dancing but for most of the performance Mrs Reiver and I had to sit apart as we were suppressing the desire to burst out laughing whilst everyone around was being desperately earnest. The performance was in a series of episodes with enigmatic titles, but this is my version of what I experienced:
1. Man gets tangled up in curtains and struggles to change the duvet
2. Extras from Star Trek (Class M planet captain, mid 22nd century technology) do the Singapore jumping the queue dance
3. Elegant women does the sweeping the path dance ( Stomp was much better in this respect – yes I am just a philistine)
4. Javanese dancer replicates the atmosphere at St Pauli when the home team gets a corner by rattling his keys above his head for 5 minutes
5. Formation ‘Ministry of Silly Walks’ team strut their stuff
6. Man in sheep mask emerges, pushes around a few hanging umbrellas and imitates the sound of someone throwing up after a heavy night on the Toon continuously for 5 minutes – it must have been a very bad pie!
7. Elegant women now does the carpet fitter dance struggling with an annoying bump in the carpet
8. Everyone struggles to get home after a night out doing the ‘You’re my best mate – I Love You’ dance – where they have to pick up their mates after falling over after a couple too many
9. Sick sheep does the ‘When you can walk on the rice paper and leave no trace’ dance
Written out this makes about as much sense as it did on the night. We had a short dilemma in choosing whether to go to this or see Rod Stewart – the available Rod tickets being a ridiculous £180 each resolved that pretty swiftly. No matter how silly Mr Stewarts haircut or however much he wiggled his bum he could never have provided a fraction of the entertainment we got. FYI – Officially the sheep being sick episode was titled
‘I am not the goat – I am the meaning of the goat’ – there is nothing further to say.