Singapore's
concert for the dead goes online during pandemic
Send a link to a friend
[September 08, 2020]
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The studio
lights dim, the band begins to strum, and it's
showtime for a Singapore getai concert - a
popular form of entertainment in southeast Asia
that features songs, skits and over-the-top
costumes to celebrate the dead. |
Because of the coronavirus,
instead of being watched by a live audience of
thousands, the performance is taking place in a
studio and broadcast over the internet. The
livestream is a lifeline for performers like
Febe Huang, who earns her living staging getai
with her husband across the region.
"When this pandemic hit, there were two or three
months where we just didn’t have any income at
all," she said. "We started selling things
online so we had a little bit of a salary. And
now this livestreamed getai has started.”
Getai shows are mainly held during the Hungry
Ghost Festival in the seventh month of the lunar
calendar, when spirits of the dead are believed
to return to wander the Earth. Performers say
without the thrill of a live crowd, it's not
quite the same.
"Every year it’s the same feeling — when the
Hungry Ghost Festival comes, (everyone) is very
happy. But this year just feels a bit empty.
There’s no particular feeling,” said Sam Loo, a
veteran getai performer with 37 years of
experience.
Still, the online performances have proven
hugely popular, with some attracting audiences
of hundreds of thousands. Aaron Tan, founder of
a company that produces getai concerts, said the
hope is that new fans drawn to the online
performances will mean bigger audiences for live
shows when they reopen.
[to top of second column]
|
Ahead of a performance in a
recording studio this weekend, caretakers from
temples had brought in statues of deities. There
were food offerings for the gods, with cans of
Guinness beers and a bottle of Martell Cordon
Bleu cognac. Brightly dressed performers cracked
jokes and sang songs in Hokkien, the main
dialect of Southeast Asia's Chinese diaspora.
The livestreamed getai have kept performers in
the spotlight at a time when so many other
entertainment events are cancelled.
"So we treasure, we really cherish this
opportunity," said veteran getai performer and
comedian Liu Ling Ling.
(Reporting by Joseph Campbell and Edgar Su in
Singapore)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|