What do Physics, three bears and a stroke have in common?
Take a journey with Elaine, a middle-aged Physics teacher, as she explains the
theory of relativity using the metaphor of three bears and a train, and devises
a plan to turn back time and save her ailing father from physical
determination.
Written by gifted playwright Jean Tay, Everything but the Brain was
first developed at the Playwrights’ Cove at The Necessary Stage in 2001 and
staged by Action Theatre in 2005. It won Best Original Script in The
Straits Times’ Life! Theatre Awards in 2006.
“Jean’s adroit handling of themes, from the origins of genius to gene
heritage and the tyranny of Time, makes Everything but the Brain one
of the best things seen on stage here in a while.” —The Straits Times
“One of the more thoughtfully constructed original shows to come out of
Singapore in recent times.” —The Business Times
About the Author
Jean Tay’s stage plays have been performed in
Singapore, the US, the UK and Italy, and include The Shape of a Bird (2016), It
Won’t Be Too Long: The Cemetery—Dusk (2015), Senang (2014), Sisters (2013), Boom (2008,
2009, 2012), Everything but the Brain (2005, 2007,
2013), Plunge (2000), The Knot (1999)
and Water from the Well (1998). In addition, she has written
the books for the musicals The Great Wall: One Woman’s Journey (2017), The
Admiral’s Odyssey (2005), the NUS Centennial musical Man of
Letters (2006), and children’s musical Pinocchio (2010).
Everything but the Brain and Boom (both
published by Epigram Books) have been used as O-Level and N-Level literature
texts for secondary school students. The Knot was awarded 1st
prize for Action Theatre’s 10-minute Play Competition 2010 and selected as a
finalist for the Actors Theatre of Louisville’s 10-minute Play Contest. Tay has
been nominated four times for Best Original Script for the Life! Theatre Awards,
and won for Everything But the Brain in 2006. Her prose
fiction has received honours as well: the 1997 Weston Undergraduate Prize for
Fiction for “The Story”, as well as 1st and 3rd prizes for the National Arts
Council’s Golden Point Award in 1995 and 2001, respectively.
Tay graduated in 1997 with a double-degree in creative
writing and economics from Brown University, attended the month-long
International Playwriting Residency in 2007 (organised by the Royal Court
Theatre in London), and participated in LaMama’s International Playwrights’
Retreat in Umbria, Italy in 2010. She served as resident playwright at the
Singapore Repertory Theatre (SRT) from 2006–2009, and helmed SRT’s Young
Company Writing Programme from 2012–2016. She was also involved in the 2015
NDP: Majulah Singapura, Singapore’s Golden Jubilee, and the 2017 Home Team Show
and Festival as scriptwriter.
Currently, she teaches playwriting as an adjunct lecturer at
Nanyang Technological University, and conducts playwriting masterclasses at the
Victorian College of the Arts (University of Melbourne) for students in the
Master’s of Writing for Performance programme. She is also the founding
Artistic Director of Saga Seed Theatre, set up in 2015 to bring Singaporean
stories to the stage, and to provide a platform to showcase and nurture local
talent.