The Singapore Grip: ITV drama called 'harmful' and 'deeply upsetting'

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The cast of The Singapore GripImage source, PA Media
Image caption,

A promotional image featuring the main cast members of The Singapore Grip

A new ITV drama set in Singapore during World War Two has been called "harmful" and "upsetting" by an advocacy group for British East and South East Asians.

Beats called The Singapore Grip "a kick in the teeth, external" to those it represents.

Based on JG Farrell's 1978 novel, the six-part drama follows a family of wealthy Britons living in Singapore.

In response, its writer said it was actually "an attack on colonialism" and showed "the corrupt practices and casual racism of the ruling elite".

Screenwriter Sir Christopher Hampton said "any fair-minded viewer" would "easily understand" this. The trilogy of books to which The Singapore Grip belongs is "perhaps the most celebrated attack on colonialism by a British novelist in the 20th Century", he said.

"Its very subject is possibly the greatest catastrophe to befall the British Empire during its decline, a disaster the colonists were themselves squarely responsible for," he added.

David Morrissey, Luke Treadaway and Charles Dance star in the drama, which begins on ITV on Sunday.

Image source, PA Media
Image caption,

Sir Christopher Hampton won an Oscar in 1989 for Dangerous Liaisons

Last week ITV released a trailer, external, which juxtaposed scenes of farcical interactions between its British stars with explosive images of Singapore under attack from the Japanese in 1942.

The promo prompted widespread criticism on social media, with one commentator calling it "colonial history told through a white gaze, external" and another dismissing it as "a rose tinted soap".

Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Front Row, actor Daniel York Loh said the drama reflected Farrell's "1970s male mindset" and that Singapore's Asian population had been "almost completely erased" in the two episodes he had seen.

"Every time we see the sole East Asian female character and every time we go into what feels like an Asian setting, we get these kind of keening erhus and guqins and flutes," he continued, referring to Chinese musical instruments.

In his statement, Sir Christopher described the character in question - "mysterious Chinese refugee" Vera Chiang - as "the most sympathetic and resourceful of the central characters".

It is she, he went on, who educates Treadaway's Matthew Webb "to the corrupt practices and casual racism of the ruling British elite".

Actress Elizabeth Tan, who plays Vera, told the London Evening Standard this week that she was "a wonderful example of a three-dimensional female character, external".

Image source, PA Media
Image caption,

Elizabeth Tan said it was "rare" to see a character like Vera in a period drama

According to Beats, which stands for British East and South East Asians working in the Theatre and Screen industries, the character's "main dramatic function" is to "cast a 'spell' over the story's white male conscience".

"The other Asian characters are merely heavily accented ciphers, silent chauffeurs, exotic dancers, giggly prostitutes, monosyllabic grunts and half-naked Yogis," the organisation continued.

"Asian womanhood is represented as lurid temptation and subservient availability.

"That a public service broadcaster should so casually engage in this type of harmful (non)representation, with no care for its real world consequences is deeply upsetting."

It said The Singapore Grip was another example of UK broadcasters' "generic stereotyping and aggressive tokenism".

JG Farrell, a friend of Sir Christopher, completed The Singapore Grip a year before he drowned in a fishing accident in Ireland.

Sir Christopher is best known for his 1985 play Les Liaisons Dangereuses and its 1988 film version Dangerous Liaisons, for which he won an Oscar for best adapted screenplay.

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