Necessary Nuance: Best Of (His Story)

 By Kathy Rowland

(1010 words, 10-minute read)

Siti Khalijah Zainal in "Best Of"
Siti Khalijah Zainal in Best Of. Photo by Alan Lim

 Best of (His Story) is a monologue set on a crowded stage. A young man, alone in an apartment decorated by his wife, reflects on his marriage on the day his divorce is to be finalised in the syariah court.

He is kept company by the familial expectations, social conditioning and religious obligations that have shaped his views on marriage. Ghosting the stage, is his wife. For many in the audience, this was not merely a feat of the imagination, but an act of recollection.

The play is a companion piece to Haresh Sharma’s widely praised, Best Of (2013), in which said wife, played by Siti Khalijah Zainal takes the audience into her struggles against the religious bureaucracy of the syariah court and an unresponsive husband. The wife is a feisty young modern Malay woman who, in her sky-high heels and fashionable dress, is presented as a model of emancipation. Sharma’s finely crafted script, in the hands of the incandescent Siti Khalijah, stages an unambiguously sympathetic character.

The husband, played by Sani Hussin, does not evoke such easily recognisable sentiments. In keeping with the religious teachings passed on to him by his grandfather and father, he had assumed that upon marriage he would gain moral authority over his wife, indeed that it was his obligation to guide her. Such was not the case. Faced with her assertiveness and independence, he retreats into silence, dooming a previously loving, equitable relationship.

Sani Hussin in "Best Of (His Story)"
Sani Hussin in Best Of (His Story). Photo by Crispian Chan.

As his story progresses, it becomes clear that the central conflict in the relationship is an internal one: located within the husband rather than between the couple. He vacillates between being the patriarchal husband seemingly endorsed by his religion, and his awareness that these norms are no longer acceptable. (When a friend refers to women as property, he is rightly appalled.) Engulfed by a sense of male entitlement and yet sentient enough to feel discomfited by it, the husband struggles to find his way in a world of shifting values. Sani Hussin got off to a shaky start but captured the character’s internal struggle through a kinetic energy, a purposeful asymmetry to Siti Khalijah’s self-assured, sedentary delivery in Best Of.

After the divorce is granted in court, his loss and regret is palpable. He admits that his wife deserves the agency she demands. Yet, when he cries out “I want to be that man!” we’re not exactly sure if he is referring to the clearly defined role prescribed by tradition or the version that comes without a set of clear instructions. The play ends with him dancing a traditional Malay dance, at the behest of his two best friends, the campy Clifford and the über bad-boy, Lokman. His solitude is highlighted by the fact that the dance is usually performed as a group number. As the lights go down, and the music plays on, we are left wondering what the future holds for the husband.

Both monologues, directed by Alvin Tan, form a three-way conversation between the two characters and the audience. On the most obvious level, Best of and Best of (His Story) are highly personal accounts of the breakdown of a marriage.

Sani Hussin in "Best Of (His Story)"
Sani Hussin in Best Of (His Story). Photo by Crispian Chan.

On another level, the works continue The Necessary Stage’s critically praised tradition of taking on topical issues through performance. Best of (His Story) and Best Of are about the Malay-Muslim community in Singapore, and were written with input from the performers, and after considered research on divorce in the community. With these two English-language plays, the company stakes an intermediary position to “present a slice of life for the Malay minority in Singapore to a larger audience”[1].

It’s a big responsibility. Both monologues steer close to issues commonly highlighted about the Malay-Muslim community nationally: the high divorce rate, mounting piety, gender imbalances. That makes sense on one hand. Both plays add nuance and give human face to headlines and statistics. But, even as the plays are presented as an intervention, they also cements these issues as key identifiers of a minority community for a largely non-Malay audience.

Further, rather than a she-said, he-said structure, presenting two sides of a divorce, the two works are hinged on a dichotomy of emancipation vs. religious practices and tradition, here cleaved to Islam. Perhaps I’m quibbling, but there is a distinction to be made between institutional religion, which is an instrument of the patriarchy, and issues of faith. That is never fully addressed in the play.

Sani Hussin in "Best Of (His Story)"
Sani Hussin in Best Of (His Story). Photo by Crispian Chan.

In fact, Best of (His Story) comes at a point where the breakdown of social structures and changes in values has seen a resurgence of religious fundamentalism and a reassertion of traditional gendered roles across societies and cultures. The gains made by women have reached (in some sectors of the male imagination), a tipping point that has turned the patriarchy into the subaltern.

The stunning election of Donald Trump as the 45th President of the United States is but one visible manifestation the sense of crisis in (white) masculinity. Movements such as the Surrendered Wife and Quiverfull, are extreme examples of a larger movement amongst Evangelical Christians, which demonstrates that the issues faced by the couple here are not a unique feature of Malay-Muslim gender relations.

Sani Hussin in "Best Of (His Story)"
Sani Hussin in Best Of (His Story). Photo by Crispian Chan.

Best of (His Story), to its credit, does allude to these complexities. The husband’s two moments of real anger are not directed at his wife. Rather, he is frustrated by the indifference of the police towards the proselytizing Christians at the MRT station, and by the representation of Malays in the national media as underachieving and prone to divorce.

Unfortunately, the minority/majority dynamics of its themes and the conditions of the play’s consumption yolk it to an unwieldy burden of representation. As a work that attempts to elucidate across communal lines, Best of (His Story) goes some distance in challenging preconceived notions, but perhaps, not far enough.

 

 


[1] See Divorce from a Man’s View” by Akshita Nanda http://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/arts/see-divorce-from-a-mans-view

The Necessary Stage’s Best Of (His Story) by Haresh Sharma was directed by Alvin Tan and featured Sani Hussin. It was staged at the Necessary Stage’s Black Box from 2 – 13 Nov 2016.

This review was developed as part of an Art Writing Workshop by The Guardian’s Theatre Critic, Lyn Gardner, organised by the NAC Singapore.

 

 

Selected Previews and Reviews of Best Of (His Story)

The Necessary Stage: Exploring The Other Perspective On ‘Best of’ by Teo Dawn (popspoken)

The Necessary Stage takes on Gender Issues in the Malay-Muslim Community” by Reena Devi (Today Online)

A Divorcee Tells His Story” by Helmi Yusof (Business Times)

Hard to Appreciate Divorcee’s Inner Turmoil” by Akshita Nanda (Straits Times)

See Divorce from a Man’s View” by Akshita Nanda (Straits Times)

“Theatre Review: Best of (His Story)” (Buro247)

About the author(s)

Kathy Rowland is the Managing Editor of ArtsEquator.com, a registered charity that she co-founded with Jenny Daneels in 2016. The site is dedicated to supporting and promoting arts criticism with a regional perspective in Southeast Asia. Kathy has worked in the arts for over 25 years, working in the areas of critical writing and arts advocacy, with a special interest in media platforms for the arts. She is the Project Lead for ArtsEquator’s Southeast Asian Arts and Culture Censorship Documentation Project, launched in 2021. She has written extensively on censorship of arts and culture in Malaysia. She was a member of the International Programme Advisory Committee of the 8th World Summit on Arts and Culture, 2019.

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