Noordin Hassan | |
Honorific Prefix: | Yang Berbahagia Datuk |
Honorific Suffix: | DSPN AMN |
Birth Name: | Noordin Hassan |
Birth Date: | 18 January 1929 |
Birth Place: | Penang, Malaysia |
Occupation: | Playwright |
Language: | Malay |
Nationality: | Malaysian |
Alma Mater: | University of London |
Period: | 1962–1966 |
Awards: | Malaysian National Laureate (1993) |
Years Active: | 1970s-present |
Noordin Hassan (born January 18, 1929, Penang) is a Malaysian playwright and Malaysian National Laureate.
He received his secondary education in Malaysia, higher education in England (University of London, 1962–1966). He also followed the course of drama at Newcastle University (1976).[1]
He wrote and performed on the basis of his plays more than 30 productions, in which social criticism takes imaginative fantastic-allegorical, sometimes absurdist forms. To enhance the attraction, he resorts to the techniques of the traditional Malay theater, boldly introduces verses, music, songs, clownish interludes ("No grass in the wind", 1970, "Do not kill butterflies", 1978; "This night the tortoise cried", 1994 etc.).[2] Author of the concept of "theater of faith" (teater fitrah). Considering artistic creativity as an act of worshiping God and knowledge of God, he subordinates this subject to the plot and aesthetics of his works, widely resorting to Islamic symbolism and allegory. Among the plays of Islamic content is the play "Cindai".[3]