“You’re on TV!” my wife told me over the
phone, calling from a Toyota dealership where she was having her car serviced. A friend of hers had texted that she was
watching me on TV. I soon realized that it was a repeat of the Past Present Future Episode 5: Writing Natives episode
on TV Sarawak that featured Golda Mowe, author of such novels as Iban
Dream, Iban Journey and Iban Women that I had
blogged about.
After interviewing Golda a few years ago, I had been asked to take part in a documentary
about her writing life. The filming for my part was
done at my house, which made it convenient. Unfortunately, I missed the actual program
but I was glad that at least someone I knew watched it (or a at least a repeat
version of it).
I told my wife to let her friend know that I would be available for autographs.I’m
still waiting…
—Borneo Expat Writer
My other Interviews with First Novelists:
Ivy Ngeow author of Cry of the Flying Rhino, winner of the 2016 Proverse Prize. Preeta Samarasan, author of Evening is the Whole Day, finalist for the Commonwealth Writers Prize 2009. Chuah Guat Eng, author of Echoes of Silence and Days of Change.
Congrats to Golda
Mowe on being featured on Past Present Future Episode 5: Writing Natives,
which aired 4 August 2021 on TV
Sarawak (TVS).
Having come across
my author-to-author interview with Golda, Deborah Christopher, who studied Cinematography at Universiti Malaysia
Sarawak (UNIMAS) where I taught for a number of years, asked me if I was interested
in being interviewed for a documentary featuring Golda Mowe. Golda, from Sarawak, is the author of the
novels Iban Dream, Iban Journey and Iban Women.
Blue Lotus 15
Deborah
is the co-producer for a documentary series named Past, Present, and Future, a
project funded by TVS.Each episode highlights
different stories of Sarawak personalities who have incorporated their culture and
traditions from the past into their present (and future) careers or projects.
I
was glad to hear that Golda Mowe was being featured since she is underappreciated
and deserves a wider audience.I was impressed
by her discipline, her persistence and her willingness
to rewrite.Many Malaysian writers do
not seem to want to put in the extra work, thinking it is good enough for
Malaysia.The good ones, like Golda and
others that I have interviewed who want to attract an international audience,
know better.
Due
to the on-going pandemic, the project was delayed.Then last year the film crew nearly got
locked down in Sibu while interviewing Golda.Meanwhile, I made a list of things to do before
the filming: reread Iban Dream
andpurchase and read the other two novels in theseries; prepare for the interview by coming
up with something interesting to say; make notes, reminders of what I need to do
the week and the day before the shoot (including domestic chores—sweeping,
dusting, cleaning the living room); and more reminders for the morning of the
shoot itself (arrange mythology books on table, make sure I have handy
everything I may need—water bottle, pen and notebook, outline of my talk in
case I go blank.
After reading Golda’s
three novels, I learned a lot about Iban myths, their fears and dreams, their
omens and taboos, their customary laws (cannot refuse a visitor if he makes a
request to stay at your longhouse and cannot refuse food offered to you), the
significance of weaving patterns (and the harmful risks of trying to weave
above your skill level) and also retribution, an obligation to take avenge if
one of your relatives was killed.Also,
that the ideal matrimonial match should be between a feared headhunter and a
gifted weaver.
For
the documentary I was asked to talk about Golda, her writing, and her life
journey, which got me to thinking in terms of The Writer’s Journey, Mythic Structure for Writers, a book by Christopher Vogler, which I picked up at a writing conference in Maui, along with a companion
book, Myth and the Movies, Discovering the Mythic Structure of 50
Unforgettable Films by Stuart Voytilla.
Vogler, inspired by
the work of Joseph Campbell, author of Hero with a Thousand Faces, discusses the use of archetypes such as the Hero, the
Mentor, the Threshold Guardians, the Herald, the Shapeshifter (gods and
demons), the Shadow and the Trickster.Also
the Mystic Structure and Stages of the Journey:Ordinary World; Call to Adventure; Refusal of the Call; Meeting with the
Mentor; Crossing the First Threshold; Tests, Allies, Enemies; Approach to the
Innermost Cave; Ordeal; Reward (Seizing the Sword); The Road Back;
Resurrection; Return with the Elixir.
This mystic
structure can be applied to nearly every story from adventures to romance to
slapstick comedy, even to animation such as Disney’s The Lion King.
To prepare myself
for the documentary, I broke my presentation into four parts: (1) Golda’s use
of mythology; (2) her plots and themes; (3) her personal writer’s journey and how
we met (MPH workshop that I conducted in 2009); and (4) her writing in Sarawak and
publishing in Singapore.I had written a
blog about publishing books in Malaysia and Singapore.
A common theme in all
three of Golda’s novels is the hero being made a scapegoat or an outcast—you
against the world (both visible and invisible). The hero, even as a child, is often forced to
undertake the ‘hero’s journey’, like Tarzan, or Mowgli in The Jungle Book,
or Simba in The Lion King, often cast out unfairly by society.In Golda’s Iban Dream, the child
Bujang, is raised by an orangutan…destined to be a great warrior. All three novels are connected by a cursed
family line and each hero/heroine sets out to prove that they are not
cursed, to right wrongs.
Deborah and Jeremy
Emang (the producer and director), along with the rest of the crew, Shawn and
Elisha, arrived at my house for the half-day shoot.They proceeded to set up the camera and
lights and the rest of their equipment in one section of our living room, aimed
at me sitting at a round table and with several coffee
table books on mythology and lost cities, lost empires, including Homer’s The
Iliad and The Odyssey,with a nice backdrop
of collected items from my travels.
Once the filming
began, I proceeded to talk about
Golda’s personal hero’s journey as a writer and her own
mystic journey, some of which I had learned from my research from my previous
interview.
Then I spoke
about the hero’s journey within her stories and how it dates back to ancient
Greeks, which she, coincidentally talked about during her own segment.When most people think
of mythology, they often limit themselves to Greek and Roman mythology, dating back
to the Trojan War.But every culture has
their own mythology, and Golda Mowe wrote about the Iban mythology that is important
to her.She writes about what she knows,
what she has learned, and from her meticulous research to get the details of her
rich Iban heritage correct.It’s these details
that make her fantasy novels palpable.As a reader, we are caught up in their journeys, their quests, their
battles with demons and headhunters.
I continued to talk
until I heard an all too familiar jingle from an ice-cream truck.Knowing that sound equipment for the filming could
pick it up, I took a much-needed break and drink of water.We waited several minutes until the vendor made
his rounds and took away his jingle.
I picked up where I
left off and continued to say what I felt needed to be said on Golda’s
behalf.I had done my homework and was
well prepared.After the interview, Jeremy
told me that he had written a list of questions but I had answered all of them
as I spoke, so there was no need to interrupt me.He could relax, check off each
unasked question, and concentrate on the filming.
Jeremy Emang
A few weeks later, Deborah
contacted me to borrow my three Golda Mowe books for another shot (since Golda
was still in Sibu) and promptly returned the books.During the actual documentary, I appeared
four times; however, I was bleeped only once.What I said was the right word for the context (bullsh…ing). I thought they would cut it from the actual
documentary.Instead, I have my first
recorded ‘bleep’ caught on film, a badge of honor.
Although I didn’t
get a chance to meet Golda again, it was good to see her on film.Since she did all
the hard work, the research and writing her books, she deserves all the credit
for her well written books about Ibans in Sarawak.I wish her all the
best with her writing and hope she continues her hero’s journey that all
writers must undertake if they dare to dream and write and see their work published.
—Borneo Expat Writer
My other Interviews
with First Novelists:
Ivy
Ngeow author of Cry of the Flying Rhino, winner of the 2016 Proverse
Prize. Preeta
Samarasan, author of Evening is the Whole Day, finalist
for the Commonwealth Writers Prize 2009. Chuah
Guat Eng, author of Echoes of Silence and Days of
Change.