Spicing up Chingay 2020 with male pole dancers, sky runners

Parade will include more unusual performances as organisers try to appeal to younger audiences

Above: Sixteen-year-old Loke Mun Len (centre), from The School of Dance, dressed as an energetic bumblebee during a performance at the Chingay 2020 media preview yesterday at the People's Association Headquarters in Jalan Besar. About 6,000 volunteer perf
Above: Sixteen-year-old Loke Mun Len (centre), from The School of Dance, dressed as an energetic bumblebee during a performance at the Chingay 2020 media preview yesterday at the People's Association Headquarters in Jalan Besar. About 6,000 volunteer performers will take part in Chingay next year. ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG
Above: Pole dancer Louis Sue, 26, will lead an all-male seven-man pole dancing troupe at the parade on Jan 31 and Feb 1 next year.
Above: Pole dancer Louis Sue, 26, will lead an all-male seven-man pole dancing troupe at the parade on Jan 31 and Feb 1 next year. ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG
Above: Stilt walker Lim Jun Hao, 17, from Tian Eng Dragon and Lion Dance Centre, will be performing at Chingay for the first time next year.
Above: Stilt walker Lim Jun Hao, 17, from Tian Eng Dragon and Lion Dance Centre, will be performing at Chingay for the first time next year. ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG

It is not going to be just about lion dances and colourful floats at Chingay next year.

Remote-controlled flying dragons, performers in metallic gold and silver bouncing around on sky runners, and male pole dancers will be making an appearance as organisers of the parade, in its 48th year, try to appeal to younger audiences.

In a media preview yesterday at the People's Association Headquarters in Jalan Besar, organisers revealed that more unusual performances will be included in the parade on Jan 31 and Feb 1 next year at the F1 Pit Building.

Among other things, an all-male seven-man pole dancing troupe will perform stunts such as the human flag - where each dancer will hold his body perpendicular to the pole, and synchronise this to music featuring Chinese elements.

The leader of the group from PXD Pole Studio, Mr Louis Sue, 26, said: "For Chingay to want to see a full guy team performance is quite refreshing... In the past, people would shy away maybe because it's not common, (but) there are a lot more pole dancers now and more people are seeing it as a fitness sport."

Chingay has attracted a consistent crowd of about 70,000 to 90,000 per night every year and organisers said the latest additions were meant to attract an even wider audience.

A spokesman for the People's Association said: "We view pole dancing... (as) a healthy sport. By involving more diverse groups with different talents and passions, we are providing them with a platform and can also reach out to more diverse audiences."

During the media conference, Chingay 2020 executive committee chairman and group director of partnership Jeanie Tan said: "We also know that young people have evolved and taking on purely traditional elements is very tough.

"We hear from many of the partners that we work with that we need to inject new elements."

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These will include contemporary acts interspersed with the traditional performances. For instance, dragon dancers will perform with a remote-controlled flying dragon whizzing above them, and traditional stilt walkers will be joined by performers in metallic costumes bouncing on sky runners.

Ms Lim Zhen Rong, 24, works in publishing and has been to the parade three times. She said: "It'll be a spectacle and it sounds like utter craziness, but why not? Parades are supposed to be fun, extravagant and surprising."

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The theme for next year's parade is Colours In Harmony, and about 6,000 volunteer performers, aged five to 82 from Singapore and the region, will showcase Singapore's diversity through their performances.

Ms Tan said: "(It will) definitely be colourful and cultural, and you will be able to feel a lot of community spirit when you come to Chingay next year."

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on November 29, 2019, with the headline Spicing up Chingay 2020 with male pole dancers, sky runners. Subscribe