Director, producer and screenwriter Joanna Bowers and lawyer, poet and playwright Amanda Chong discuss centring women’s experiences, empowering women’s voices and the importance of diversity on the page, stage and screen—and behind the scenes
When Barbie was released in cinemas in July last year, it broke records, going on to become the largest global opening for a female-directed movie and the highest-grossing film of 2023 worldwide. Its enthusiastic reception wasn’t unexpected; it was in line with an increasing interest in women’s stories.
While Barbie was ringing in the box office receipts worldwide, a parallel cultural moment was taking place in the Lion City. Amanda Chong’s play Psychobitch, telling the story of a journalist whose tech CEO fiance asks her to explain to him the four times she has cried in public, which she goes on to do through an infographic-filled presentation charting her menstrual cycle, took to the stage in Singapore in August. In its opening weekend, it sold out a three-week run, added an additional show, which sold out in five minutes and crashed the website, and then released a limited number of standing tickets, for which people queued for up to eight hours.
It was a remarkable achievement for a piece of theatre and another reflection of that growing appetite for stories that centre women and their lived experiences, subvert stereotypes and present them in more nuanced portrayals.
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“It made me think that because there’s been a long history where women’s voices have not been centred, when we have these opportunities, there is such a hunger for storytelling by women,” says Chong, a lawyer by day who started out as a sex crimes prosecutor. Writing began as an outlet, initially through poetry, and has become a place where she explores the themes of gender and power. She went on to write plays, which include #WomenSupportingWomen, an exploration of sexual violence which was staged in Singapore in 2022 and in the UK the following year, and which, along with Psychobitch, will be part of a trilogy telling women’s stories in Singapore.
“When I started out as a poet, there was this sense of feeling that the concerns that I write about were not as significant as what men are writing about,” says Chong. Things are slowly changing. “To be in a world where you really see that work created by women is given that weight and it’s achieving critical acclaim gives me a lot of hope for the future of women telling stories.”
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