Joel Tan

G*D IS A WOMAN, Wild Rice, Singapore 2023

Praise

”Hilariously foulmouthed… No one is safe from [Joel Tan’s] razor-sharp gaze… Marketed as a play about cancel culture, it’s really a deeper, existential dive into art, making and meaning.”
The Straits Times

SYNOPSIS

A work of art is censored in Singapore. An irate playwright wants revenge. He writes a petition to trap the conservative lobbyists responsible by starting a suicidal campaign to cancel Ariana Grande’s upcoming concert. Because this is Singapore, everything goes tits up, and Ariana Grande may or may not be involved.

In a whirlwind of competing petitions, frantic Zoom calls between Los Angeles and Singapore, and whispered conversations at the golf course, the campaign to save the concert comes up against the most powerful people in Singapore: the easily offended.

Straddling the line between political satire and yesterday’s news, G*D IS A WOMAN is based somewhat on true events and wagers that the stupid events of this play could happen tomorrow. After all, when a country hands the reins of determining acceptable speech to a cabal of right-wing lunatics, all that remains is absurdity.


Production History

G*d is a Woman was first written with a seed commission from Pangdemonium, and first produced by Wild Rice. The first performance was at the Ngee Ann Kongsi Theatre on 8 September 2023.

Cast: Benjamin Chow, Brendon Fernandez, Munah Bagharib, and Zee Wong

Director: Ivan Heng

Associate Director: Sim Yan Ying “YY”

Stage Manager: Caroline Ruth Liew

Set Designer: TK Hay

Lighting Designer: Tai Zi Feng

Sound Designer: Daniel Wong

Multimedia Designer: Brian Gothong Tan

Costume Designer: Theresa Chan

Choreographer: Ryan Ang

Hair Designer: Ashley Lim

Make-Up Designer: Bobbie Ng

Props Master: Joyce Gan

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NO PARTICULAR ORDER, Ellandar Productions & Theatre503, London 2022

Praise

”Heralds a fiery new talent in Joel Tan… No Particular Order reminds you how boringly safe and naturalistic most theatre remains.
The Evening Standard

PLAYTEXT

No Particular Order, Nick Hern Books.

SYNOPSIS

“A despot has come to power.”

The society is listless, submissive and scared.

But beneath every violation of civil autonomy, there are humans, behind every resistance to power, there are individuals. And these people are not different to us but identical, they are not heroic or remarkable, but ordinary.

This prescient portrait of global politics and rise of authoritarianism is told from an unnamed place and spans 320 years, delivering snapshots of both a recognisable world and visions of the future. Through the lives of ordinary people – ornithologists, bureaucrats, soldiers, and tour guides No Particular Order charts the fall, rise and continuation of a nation, always asking the same question “Is it empathy, or power, that endures?”


Production History

No Particular Order was first produced in an amateur production by the Oxford School of Drama at Southwark Playhouse, London, on 21 July 2021, and first produced in a professional production by Ellandar Productions and Theatre503 at Theatre503, London, on 31 May 2022.

Cast: Jules Chan, Pandora Colin, Pia laborde-Noguez, Daniel York Loh

Director: Joshua Roche

Designer: Ingrid Hu

Lighting Designer: Clare O’Donoghue

Sound Designer & Composer: Sarah Sayeed

Video Designer: Erin Guan and Isabel Sun of Vroom Lab Theatre

Producers: Iskandar إسكندر R. bin Sharazuddin, Mingyu Lin 林铭宇

Production Manager: Patricia Gilvaia

Stage Manager: Rose Hockaday

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TANGO, Pangdemonium, Singapore 2017

Praise

Tango keeps shifting the ground and in so doing, it evades the curse of the earnest, the blight of the politically correct, the tedious predictability of the social justice warrior…. Preaching to the choir is easy. Instead, Tango aims for something riskier, rarer – implicating its audience.”
Arts Equator

“A mesmeric showcase of world-class talent... Tan balances all this drama beautifully in a pithy, pacy and elegant script... He achieves such balance by showing both sides to every predicament, tenderly stripping away layer upon layer of hypocrisy while leaving hard truths that stick in the craw.”
The Straits Times

Playtext

Collected in British East Asian Plays, Aurora Metro Press.

SYNOPSIS

“It was a rainy day, and I’d gone home with a note stuck to my backpack which read FAT FAGGOT.”

Two gay Londoners, Kenneth and Liam, and their son, Jayden, relocate to Singapore to spend time with Kenneth’s ailing dad. It’s not a happy situation. Kenneth has a dark hate-hate relationship with Singapore, and the city’s tetchy policies around homosexuality present towering administrative hurdles. Then, a homophobic encounter with an elderly waitress launches the family into a social media war between ideological factions. Meanwhile, Poh Lin, the waitress, is caught in the same storm, and weathers it with her closeted nephew, Benmin. 


Production History

Tango was commissioned by Pangdemonium Theatre Company in Singapore and was first performed at the Drama Centre from 19th May to 4th June 2017. 

Director: Tracie Pang

Set Design: Kwok Wai Yin

Lighting Design: James Tan

Sound Design: Jing Ng

Costume Design: Tracie Pang

Stage Manager: Leah Sim

Cast: Koh Boon Pin, Emil Marwa, Lim Kay Siu, Lok Meng Chue, Karen Tan, Benjamin Chow, Ruzaini Mazani, Dylan Jenkins

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CAFE, Twenty Something Theatre Festival, Singapore, 2016

Praise

“Over the course of an hour and forty-five minutes, I was gripping the edge of my seat, watching the actions five characters holed up in a hipster café while the world outside them goes to hell.”
The Online Citizen 

“You wouldn't think it from the humdrum title, but Joel Tan's Café is possibly the creepiest, canniest, most cunning play of the year…. Slowly and subtly, the scares creep in. The terror builds up. When the finale arrives, it is unexpected, implosive and profound.”
The Business Times

PLAYTEXT

Café, Math Paper Press.

synopsis

“The spam. You finished counting the spam?”

Five people, staff and customers, are stuck in one of an infinite number of hip Singapore cafés while an unexplained horror wracks the world outside. Over five short acts, a madness sets in. The cafe and all reality is eaten away by a nightmare of banality and tedium, leaving only a well of deep ennui, paralysing apathy, and horrifying cruelty familiar to anyone living in the city-state.


production history

Café was commissioned by the 20-Something Theatre Festival, and produced by Mok Cui Yin. It was first performed at the Goodman Arts Centre Black Box from the 16th to the 19th of June, 2016.

Director: Chen Yingxuan

Lighting Design: Petrina Dawn Tan

Set Design: Sara Chan, Chen Yingxuan

Sound Design: Ryann Othniel Seng

Stage Manager: Geraldine Ang

Cast: Zee Wong, Jasmine Xie, Erwin Shah Ismail, Ellison Tan, Joshua Lim

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MOSAIC, M1 Fringe Festival, Singapore 2015

Praise

...sharply critiques our obsession with the past, revealing its hollowness and contradictions… Mosaic is beautiful, admirably complex and disturbing. It offers no solutions to its crises, leaving viewers with a knot of angst in their chests.”
The Straits Times

PLAYTEXT

Collected in Joel Tan Plays Volume 1, Checkpoint Theatre.

synopsis

“Maybe it’s a good thing they’re tearing down this playground. I mean. The playground means shit. If you forget, you forget, right?”

The night before it’s due for demolition, an 80s-era mosaic playground in Singapore is beset with a protest event.

Misguided heritage activist Sharon has dragged her perennially-suffering boyfriend Hanis along to her sit-in and no one else on the Facebook event has turned up. Except a mysterious guy called Rong Cheng who brings with him a terrifying sob-story, and Hanis’s best friend, Wong, who picks at the last fraying threads of Sharon and Hanis’s toxic relationship.

What starts out as a night of heritage activism turns into angsty millennial drama in this play that excavates the insincere heart of Singaporean nostalgia and finds a young generation’s ambivalence about progress and the future. 



production history

Mosaic was restaged by Take Off Productions at the M1 Fringe Festival 2015 with a revised script, and opened at the National Museum Gallery Theatre on 22 January 2015 with the following company:

Director: Chen Yingxuan

Set Designer: Aaron Yap

Light Designer: Petrina Dawn Tan

Sound Designer: Ryann Othniel Seng

Cast: Julie Wee, Erwin Shah Ismail, Yap Yi Kai, John Cheah

Mosaic was first commissioned by Lit Up 2013, and opened at the Aliwal Arts Centre Multipurpose Hall on 20 July 2013 with the following company:

Director: Chen Yingxuan

Set & Light Designer: Hay Teow Kwang

Sound Designer: Joel Tan

Cast: Yap Yi Kai, Mohd Alfian Ahmad, Audrey Lim, Ethan Chia


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THE WAY WE GO, Checkpoint Theatre, Singapore 2014

Praise

“Joel Tan... has created here a rich portrait of the pleasures and pains of love. He shows the ability to skilfully handle nuance and write characters that feel authentic and proudly Singaporean.”
Crystal Worlds

PLAYTEXT

Collected in Joel Tan Plays Volume 1, Checkpoint Theatre.

synopsis

“When the time has run out to make things right, god, you think, what was it all for? A little privacy? A little space? Stupid.”

Legendary principal of the Convent of Our Lady of Lourdes, Agatha Mao, has cast a long shadow. When she dies, students young and old return to pay tribute alongside the greatest loves of her life, Violet, her best friend and colleague, and Edmund, her late-life lover and greatest disappointment. There’s also Gillian, a one-time naughtiest girl of the school, and Lee, her one-time girlfriend. Together, through memory, fellowship, and grief, the ensemble enact a story of love and regret in all their forms.


production history

The Way We Go was first produced by Checkpoint Theatre, 2014.

Director, Producer: Claire Wong

Production Stage Manager: Lu Huen

Set Designer: Tolis Papazoglou

Lighting Designer: Petrina Dawn Tan

Sound Designer: Shah Tahir

Assistant Set and Lighting Designer: Shiv Tandan

Hair and Makeup: Joyce Yeo and Zennie

Costume Coordinator: Soo Hong Ling

Cast: Lydia Look, Neo Swee Lin, Patrick Teoh, Julie Wee, Chng Xin Xuan

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