Benny Lim Explained

Benny Lim
Birth Date:1980 4, df=yes
Birth Place:Singapore
Occupation:Theatre practitioner and educator
Education:Doctor of Philosophy, University of Glamorgan
Nationality:Singaporean

Benny Lim (born 1980, in Singapore) was the artistic director of the now defunct the Fun Stage, a non-profit theatre group in Singapore.[1] He obtained a Doctor of Philosophy from the Division of Drama, University of Glamorgan (now known as the University of South Wales) in 2012.

Biography

In 2001, at the age of 21, he founded the Fun Stage and has since held on to the record as the youngest artistic director of a theatre company in Singapore.[2] In 2006, one of Benny's plays, Existence, was published in Singapore.[3] Existence was written in 2003, inspired by the poetry of Cyril Wong, as a response to Leslie Cheung's suicide. The play was mentioned in Time magazine (10 August 2003) as a story that "portrays the love of two young Singaporean men for each other as doomed".[4] In 2015, Benny co-curated Umbrella Festival, an arts festival in Hong Kong,[5] in response to city's Umbrella Movement.

Censorship

Benny's works often deal with social-political issues within a postmodern society. In 2004, Benny organized the Lovers' Lecture Series, which was not given a go-ahead by the Public Entertainment Licensing Unit (PELU) under the Singapore Police Force.[6] In 2005, Benny collaborated with artist Brian Gothong Tan on a devised play, Human Lefts. The content of the play, which was on the issue of the death penalty, was given a total ban by the Media Development Authority of Singapore (MDA).[7] [8]

Notes and References

  1. http://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/webarchives/wayback/20101001152607/http://www.thefunstage.org/profile.php The Fun Stage's website archived by the National Library Board, Singapore
  2. http://singaporerecords.com/arts-and-entertainment-2/ Arts and Entertainment section, Singapore Book of Records – Updated March 2016
  3. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/298366216 The book's information on WorldCat
  4. Price, David Clive (10 August 2003). "Singapore: It's In to Be Out". Time.
  5. Web site: Umbrella Festival . . 7 September 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160921122619/http://timeout-admin-node1.candrholdings.com/art/events/72075/umbrella-festival.html . 21 September 2016 . dead .
  6. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2004/mar/11/gayrights.books Article from The Guardian – dated 11 March 2004
  7. https://sites.google.com/site/artsengagesg/censorship-accounts#TOC-2005:-Total-ban-of-content---Human-Lefts Arts Engage website
  8. http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/singapore-bans-execution-references-in-play/2005/12/03/1133422142237.html Article from The Sydney Morning Herald – Dated 3 December 2005