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Alfian Sa'at

Singaporean playwright, poet, and writer (born 1977)

In this Malay name, there is no family name. The name Sa'at is a patronymic, and the person should be referred to by the given name, Alfian.

Alfian bin Sa'at (born 18 July 1977), commonly known as Alfian Sa'at, is a prolific Singaporean playwright, poet, and writer. He is known for penning a body of plays, poems, and prose that often tackle issues considered taboo in the island-state, such as race, sexuality, and politics. Alfian has received a number of national literature awards, such as the 2001 Young Artist Award and three Life! Theatre Awards for Best Original Script. Alfian is the resident playwright of theatre group W!LD RICE.

Contents

  • 1 Biography
    • 1.1 Early life
    • 1.2 Career
  • 2 Works
    • 2.1 Plays
    • 2.2 Prose
    • 2.3 Poetry
  • 3 Awards
  • 4 References
  • 5 External links

Biography

Early life

Alfian bin Sa'at is a Muslim Singaporean of Minangkabau, Javanese and Chinese Hakka descent. An alumnus of Tampines Primary School, Raffles Ins*ution, and Raffles Junior College, Alfian was the chairman of the drama societies, both known as Raffles Players, in both RI and RJC. He also took part in the Creative Arts Programme twice – once at fifteen, and a second time at seventeen – both times under the mentorship of Haresh Sharma. He has since returned to the programme as an occasional mentor. During his two years at RJC, Alfian received the Kripalani Award for Outstanding Contribution to Creative Arts. Alfian attended medical cl*es at the National University of Singapore but did not graduate.

Career

In 1998, Alfian published his first collection of poetry, One Fierce Hour at the age of twenty-one. The book was acclaimed as "truly a landmark for poetry " by The Straits Times, and Alfian himself was described by Malaysia's New Straits Times as "one of the most acclaimed poets in his country... a prankish provocateur, libertarian hipster".A year later, Alfian published his first collection of short stories, Corridor, which won the Singapore Literature Prize Commendation Award. Seven of the short stories from the collection have since been adapted for television. In 2001, he published his second collection of poetry, A History of Amnesia, which was hailed by The Straits Times as "one of the most powerful collections by a Singaporean" in addition to being shortlisted for a Kiriyama Asia-Pacific Book Prize. Alfian won both the inaugural National Arts Council-Singapore Press Holdings Golden Point Award for Poetry in the same year, as well as the National Arts Council's Young Artist Award for Literature.

Alfian's plays, written in both English and Malay, have received broad attention in both Singapore and Malaysia. They have also been translated into German and Swedish, and have been read and performed in London, Zurich, Stockholm, Berlin, Hamburg and Munich. His first play was produced when he was 19, and he has had a long *ociation as a playwright with theatre group The Necessary Stage as well as with Teater Ekamatra, a Malay theatre group known for articulating minority concerns in Chinese-majority Singapore.

Alfian is currently the resident playwright of theatre group W!LD RICE.

In 2015, Nadirah was selected by The Business Times as one of the "finest plays in 50 years" alongside productions by Goh Poh Seng, Michael Chiang and Haresh Sharma and others.

In 2016, it was reported that sex.violence.blood.gore, a play he co-wrote, and his short story collection Malay Sketches is on the reading list of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, while the University of York has his poem "Singapore You Are Not My Country" and West Virginia University his selected poems on their reading lists. In particular, the University of York's Dr Claire Chambers noted that this was because Alfian "introduces non-Anglophone words and concepts, and puts together words in an expressive portmanteau style".

Works

Plays

Awards

  • 1995 – Kripalani Award for Outstanding Contribution to Creative Arts
  • 1998 – Commendation Award by the Malay Language Council for Causeway
  • 1999 – Singapore Literature Prize Commendation Award for Corridor
  • 2001 – Golden Point Award for Poetry
  • 2001 – Young Artist Award for Literature
  • 2005 – Life! Theatre Awards for Best Original Script for Landmarks: Asian Boys Vol. 2
  • 2006 – FRONT Award
  • 2010 – Life! Theatre Awards for Best Original Script for Nadirah
  • 2014 - Life! Theatre Awards for Best Original Script for Kakak Kau Punya Laki (Your Sister's Husband)

References

    External links

    • Naif's journal – The blog of Alfian Sa'at