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Stella Kon
By Nureza Ahmad written on 2004-05-14
National Library Board Singapore
Comments on article: InfopediaTalk
Stella Kon (b.1944, Edinburgh,
Scotland - ), playwright, novelist, short story writer and
poet, is best known for her monodrama Emily of Emerald
Hill, which has been performed locally and
internationally. She is the winner of several playwriting
competitions in the early 1980s and her works are studied in
local and foreign universities. Stella currently resides in
Singapore.
Early life
Stella came to Singapore in 1948 at the age of
three. Her paternal great grandfather was Dr Lim Boon Keng,
while her maternal great great grandfather was Tan Tock Seng.
As a child, she lived in a mansion called Oberon at Emerald
Hill. She was educated at Raffles' Girls School, and later
on, at the University of Singapore.
Stella began creating stories when she was very young, at the
encouragement of her mother. Her mother used to write
down the stories that Stella dictated to her and she went
around showing her daughter 's stories to the aunts and
teachers. Stella affectionately calls her mother her first
'publisher'. Her first play that was performed in
school was The Fisherman and the King. It was written
when she was a Standard Three student in Raffles Girls'
School. Her amateurish works at this stage were influenced by
Enid Blyton and J.R.R. Tolkien which formed her staple
reading.
Stella's love for and early exposure to theatre came from
her parents. As a child, she watched her father, who was
involved in King Edward Hall productions, directed plays. Her
mother was a leading amateur actress in the local theatre in
the 1950s, going by the stage name, Kheng Lim. She studied at
the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts of London (RADA), where
Stella would accompany her mother to the theatre to watch the
latter's performances.
During her university days, Stella wrote short stories which
appeared in university publications, for instance,
Focus. Her first published work, Mushroom
Harvest, appeared in Lloyd Fernando's collection of
22 Malaysian Stories in 1962.
Stella left Singapore for Malaysia in 1967 after her marriage.
In Malaysia, she started writing plays, for children and
adults. In 1975, she wrote a collection of school-children
plays, including The Immigrant. She was in
Malaysia for about 15 years and then in Britain for about four
years where her children studied. In 1987, she came back to
Singapore.
Her writings
Stella's works centre on themes that are
distinctly Singaporean, such as national awareness, moral
values, cultural and social heritage, and personal integrity.
Readers will be able to identify with the Singaporean lifestyle
in her plays. Stella writes in order to re-create, in words,
the feelings of living in Singapore and being a Singaporean.
Thus, she portrays the consciousness of what it is like to be a
Singaporean. Stella derives her sources from the literary
tradition of China, India and Malaya. The Ramayana and Chinese
legendary figures are reflected in her works. Her Catholic
heritage and strong interest in fantasy are also evident in her
writing. Through her works, Stella has managed to express her
Asian cultural, religious and mythical roots and
heritage.
Emily of Emerald Hill
A classic which has already seen more than 40 different
productions in Singapore and Malaysia, and is arguably the most
performed play in both Malaysia and Singapore since 1985. It is
one of Singapore's most loved creations with many parts
intrinsic to Singapore identity: the search for true self, the
celebration of our heritage, the fighting spirit to overcome
odds through sheer perseverance, and the gritting of teeth, but
all couched in universal truths. Malaysian actress Pearly Chua
has played the part of Emily more than 60 times since 1990.
Leow Puay Tin, Margaret Chan and Ivan Heng have all reprised
the role of Emily.
From 2000 to 2001, the play went global, with performance in
the arts festivals in Hong Kong, Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide,
Perth, Auckland, New York, Hamburg, Berlin and Munich. In 2002,
the play was staged by Tan Tock Seng Hospital, with director
Chin San Sooi, and actress Pearly Chua, to raise funds for the
hospital's AIDS programme.
Awards
1979 : Winner, Singapore National Playwriting
Competition, for The Bridge
1982 : Winner, Singapore National Playwriting
Competition, for The Trial and Other Plays
1985 : Winner, Singapore National Playwriting
Competition, for Emily of Emerald Hill
1994 : Merit Award, Singapore Literature
Prize, for Eston
Works
1975 : The Immigrant and Other Plays
1977 : Emporium and Other Plays
1982 : The Trial and Other Plays
1982 : Dracula and Other Stories
1986 : The Scholar and the Dragon
1989 : Emily of Emerald Hill
1990 : Dragon's Teeth Gate
1992 : Portrait of a Nonya
1992 : Silent Song
1992 : The Bridge
1995 : Eston
2000 : A Breeding Pair
2002 : The Human Heart Fruit
2003 : Exodus (A Journey of Faith): a
musical
Family
Father: Dr Lim Kok Ann, grandson of Lim Boon
Keng.
Mother: Rosie Seow Guat Kheng, great granddaughter of Tan Tock
Seng.
Brothers: Su Min, Su Chong and Su Hui.
Sister: Sing Lim.
Children: Two sons, Mark and Luke, living in London and
Sydney.
Grandchildren: Six.
Author
Nureza Ahmad
References
Klein, R. D. (Ed.). (2001). Interlogue: Studies in
Singapore Literature (Volume 4, Interviews, (pp.179-197).
Singapore: Ethos books.
(Call no.: SING 809.895957)
Chow, C. (2002, September 2). The bibik is back for a good
cause. The Straits Times.
Kwok, K. (1999, May 19). Oh Emily, yours is a life worth
living. The Straits Times
Koh, B. P. (1996, March 4). Canadian university offers
Singapore literature course. The Straits
Times.
Mulchand, A. (2000, January 6). Emily antics for HK fest.
The Straits Times.
Mulchand, A. (2000, March 1). Emily goes out to the world.
The Straits Times, Life!, p. 2.
Oon, C. (2003, December 29). Eston is far from Fun. The
Straits Times.
Oon, C. (1999, November 4). Heng fills out Emilys kebaya.
The Straits Times.
Wong, T. (2002, May 23). Getting to the heart of the chiku.
The Straits Times.
Life! whats on: Exodus (a journey of faith). (2003, March 13).
The Straits Times.
Further Readings
Lord, R. (2002, July). Konfrontation and Konversion.
In Quarterly Literary Review of Singapore, 1(4).
Retrieved July 14 May, 2004, from www.qlrs.com/issues/jul2002/interviews/stellakon.html
Manuelrayan, A. (2001). Does Stella Kon explain her
society? Retrieved 14 May, 2004, from
www.emilyofemeraldhill.com/SK%20Paper%20by%20AM.html
National Bood Development Council. (2004, June 3). Stella
Kon. Retrieved May 14, 2004, from
www.nbdcs.org.sg/Writers/KonStella.htm
Stella Kon. (n.d.). Necessary Questions. Retrieved on
14 May, 2004, from SingaporeTheatreReviews.Net Web site:
singaporetheatrereviews.net/2002/gegrv3.html
The information in this article is valid as at 2004 and correct
as far as we are able to ascertain from our sources. It
is not intended to be an exhaustive or complete history of the
subject. Please contact the Library for further reading
materials on the topic.
Subject
Personalities>>Biographies>>Authors
Kon, S. (Stella), 1944- --Biography
Award winners--Singapore--Biography
Women dramatists--Singapore--Biography
Language and literature>>Drama>>English drama
>> Butterflies don't cry and other plays
>> Emporium and other plays
>> Silent song and other plays
>> The immigrant and other plays
>> Prize winning plays
>> The scholar and the dragon
>> A breeding pair
>> Eston