The San Pedro Festival(The Feast of St. Peter) will be held at the Malacca Portuguese settlement in Ujong Pasir, Melaka.
Held annually in end of June, this festival is celebrated by the decendents of the Portuguese in Melaka.
It will be held from tomorrow to Sunday.
International tourists from Macau, Indonesia and Sri Lankaare expected to attend.
When Tourism-melaka Privileges eDiscount card business partners sign up with us, each establishment will be given a sticker.
This sticker will be put in front of their premises so that our Tourism-melaka Privileges members can recognise them.
If you ask any Malaysian when our country first gained independence, most people will be able to tell you it was Aug 31, 1957. But did you know when and where that date was announced?
It was on Feb 20, 1956, at Padang Bandar Hilir in Melaka. Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra, who was then Chief Minister of the Federation of Malaya, announced the date of independence to a crowd of around 100,000 gathered at the padang (field) by the seaside, prompting passionate and loud cries of “Merdeka!”.
This lesser known historical tidbit forms the opening scenes of Rasa Melaka The Musical, a theatre production celebrating the history and culture of the state.
Held in conjunction with Visit Melaka Year 2019, and supported by the Melaka state government, the show will combine music, state of-the art effects with an original storyline to tell a heartfelt story of Melaka.
Two born-and-bred Melaka boys – brothers Deric, 41, and Easee Gan, 32, – will bring this musical to life as the director/playwright and producer respectively.
Rasa Melaka The Musical will run at the Panggung Bangsawan Melaka till next October. Photo: Panggung Bangsawan Melaka
Rasa Melaka The Musical will run daily at Panggung Bangsawan Melaka till next October.
“Last November, Easee received a call from Panggung Bangsawan Melaka after we completed the five-hour theatre show (Richard Wagner’s) The Ring Of The Nibelung at KLPac. This year being Visit Melaka Year, the Panggung Bangsawan Melaka team invited Muka Space to create a story of Melaka. Only after we submitted the proposal did they realise we were from Melaka,” says Deric, who grew up with his brother in the Ujong Pasir area, near the Portuguese Settlement.
“We did considerable research for this show. We’re both from Melaka, but after we started this project, we realised our knowledge of the state wasn’t enough to tell this story,” adds Deric, who together with Easee, are the co-founders of Klang Valley-based theatre group Muka Space.
The award-winning Muka Space, formed in 2013, has produced and presented several community-based arts shows as well as contemporary theatre productions at KLPac through the years, including Richard III (2016), Peking Man (2017) and The Ring Of The Nibelung (2018).
Last year, Muka Space and the Malaysian Puppetry Association collaborated in a series of street puppet theatre shows (The Story Of Ah Loy) in Kuala Lumpur.
A people’s story
“Rasa Melaka is a brand new experience for our Muka Space team! There are many challenges from scriptwriting and auditioning to the production. The experience goes beyond satisfaction as our main objective is to nurture Malaysian performing arts. We very much appreciate all the help from people in Melaka, from research to the audition process, helping spread publicity, and buying tickets to support the show,” says Deric.
Rasa Melaka features a rotating cast of 12 actors playing 120 characters. Photo: Muka Space
The cast of Rasa Melaka was selected from open auditions and subsequently workshop auditions, which drew more than 250 hopefuls. Rasa Melaka, which took shape in six months, is a special project for the theatre company’s founders. It is a homecoming, of sorts.
“It was a huge experience for me … learning about myself, my hometown. Things I considered very normal, turned out to be very interesting, when we learnt the story behind them,” says Easee.
Rasa Melaka features a rotating cast of 12 actors playing 120 characters in a roughly one hour story.
The musical, featuring 12 songs, tells the story of three friends of different races: Malay girl Melia, Hokkien boy Lak, and Chetti (Indian Peranakan) girl Kashvi.
Panggung Bangsawan Melaka (formerly the old Cathay cinema to locals) is an apt place to tell this warmhearted tale.
Journey of three friends
“Rasa Melaka is performed in various languages as spoken by the main characters. We also have Lak’s Peranakan (baba nyonya) wife, and other ethnic groups in the musical.
“So we do get to see not just different languages, but how the characters talk to each other (whether serious, poignant or comical moments), as well as when they’re speaking to each other in a group, or united as one people. And then also as the three (main) characters grow from their first appearance as young children to being grandparents in their 60s,” elaborates Deric.
A scene that gives the masses a glimpse of old fashioned trishaws once seen in Melaka. Photo: Muka Space
“For research, I referred to numerous books and websites. I even paid visits to historical sites, walked the streets and alleys. Of course, not to forget, I went to Kampung Chetti to talk to the people there about the Chetti community, their back story and challenges they faced through the years. In our efforts to obtain more information, we were fortunate to be supported by the local press, who provided us with photos and write ups,” he adds.
Rasa Melaka‘s story is told in a prologue with the three acts, beginning with the Merdeka date announcement in 1956. It then centres on several important events in Melaka’s history: a great flood in 1971, a major water crisis in 1990, and finally, the announcement of the city as a Unesco heritage site in 2008.
Deric says having many of the story’s major events involving was an intentional touch.
“It’s all about the Melaka river. There’s where the Melaka trees, which give the city its name, can be found. And the river is a big part of the memories of the local people,” he explains.
Shaping the music
The music for the show is composed by Jacqueline Teng, Toh Shir Ling and Andrew Lim. This is the first time the three have worked on a full-length musical.
“It’s a musical that shifts timelines, so we have many music styles on board. From uplifting 1960s-era pop-sounding music to folk-based songs,” says Teng.
The music, Teng notes, would be different depending on the eras of the story. Scenes in the 1950s, for example, would be mostly golden oldies, while the 1970s would have radio pop themes and the 2008 scenes feature hip hop.
“There’s one very interesting song called Long Long Ago, taken from a scene where one of the lead characters brings her friend from abroad all around town. The song is sung during the trishaw ride, while the scene introduces different (Melaka) sights. We think it’s very fun, you can imagine a lot of things through it,” says Toh.
“There’s also a song about the Melaka River, which I really like very much. It’s a very nostalgic song, containing many details which will remind us of the past,” adds Lim.
The show’s producers hope that Rasa Melaka will prove to be an entertaining watch. Just like Mud The Musical: The Story Of Kuala Lumpur, which still stands as the local theatre scene’s longest running musical (over 2,000 shows from 2014 to 2017), there is a lot of expectation to see that Rasa Melaka The Musical hits the ground running, attracting both locals and tourists.
“It’s a tribute to the people of Melaka, a story that takes the viewers beyond the tourist brochures,” says Easee.
Teng fully agrees that it’s important to know our roots.
“I think a lot of us don’t really know what an amazing place Melaka really was. It was such a culturally significant place. You need to really experience it for yourself. Once, thousands of people used to come here and trade. Now it’s just a tourist spot. It’s time some real Melaka stories were retold,” concludes Teng.
Rasa Melaka The Musical will run at Panggung Bangsawan Melaka, 20, Jalan Munshi Abdullah, Kampung Jawa in Melaka till Oct 15, 2020. For tickets, call Panggung Bangsawan Melaka (06-281 1666) or Muka Space (011-1360 9939). More info: www.rasamelaka.com.
Read more at https://www.star2.com/culture/2019/06/16/art-rasa-melaka-panggung-bangsawan-melaka-muka-space/#Ye5dM2VZQzLBVVDf.99
Melaka International Cruise Terminal project to be completed next year
Published 20 hours ago on 11 June 2019
152
MELAKA, June 11 — The RM682 million Melaka International Cruise Terminal, which is part of the Melaka Gateway project, is expected to be completed by September next year.
Datuk Michelle Ong, chief executive officer of the deep-sea port project’s developer KAJ Development Sdn Bhd, said piling works started yesterday and this was critical because three test piles — measuring 53m, 45m and 43m in length — would identify the design of the entire terminal.
“The piling project is expected to take three days. Once piling works are completed, the design of the terminal will be completed and the project can take off. The sea depth is 13 to 15m, which forms a natural harbour, and therefore no further dredging is required,” she said in a statement.
Last year, KAJ Development’s port operating licence for the Melaka Gateway and cruise terminal jetty was cancelled, but the company appealed against the government’s decision.
Ong said the company regained its operating licence last month, getting the support of the central government and the state government.
“The terminal project will accelerate from now,” she said, adding that the international cruise terminal would be completed in September 2020 or earlier.
The piling project for the Melaka International Cruise Terminal was officially launched yesterday by Tourism, Arts and Culture Ministry secretary-general Datuk Isham Ishak.
Ong said KAJ Development expected tourists arriving at the state by cruise ships to spend a minimum of US$200 (RM835) each, which would enhance the state’s revenue and even that of the country.
“We have also requested the state government to set up an agency to register local vendors who are keen in bunkering facilities at the port,” she said.
According to her, the company aims to become the leader in the domestic maritime industry and plans to open a maritime university for the benefit of local students.
She said on its completion, the Melaka Gateway project would create 45,000 to 60,000 jobs. — Berna
The 362m long Oasis of the Seas cruise can berth at the cruise jetty
PUBLISHED 9 JUNE 2019
MALAYSIA (Sin Chew Daily) -The largest cruise jetty in Southeast Asia is scheduled to complete in September 2020 for Oasis class cruise ship to berth. The jetty is occupying 8.3 acres (3.36 ha) of land and 800m walkway for passenger to board on the cruise.
The space is big enough to accommodate four cruise ships to berth and the capacity of 20,000 passengers.
JEKS BMC is the main contractor for the project, a joint venture between local and Australia companies using 90% of construction materials from Malaysia.
Representatives of KAJ Development Sdn Bhd (KAJD), the master developer of Melaka Gateway and JEKS arranged a media tour to visit the site of the passenger terminal.
Qiu Fen Wei, the project general manager of Melaka Gateway said more than 50 cruise ships drop by Malacca each year but lack facilities to berth. The cruise ships only remain in the centre of the sea without entering Malacca. The cruise jetty will attract more ships and tourists to Malacca and in favour of the tourism development in the state.
He said Oasis of the seas with the length of 362m and passenger load of 9,000 can dock at the external berth while the 340m long Freedom of the seas with the capacity of 4,500 people at the internal berth.
The internal and external berth would be constructed in the first phase of the project while another set in the second phase. Piling works scheduled on 10 June would test the bearing capacity to decide on the specifications of final design for the jetty.
According to KAJ Development Sdn Bhd’s plan the Melaka Gateway will be constructing a total of five jetties. Cruise ship jetty is the project for the first island, while yacht and ferry terminals are still pending. A business and financial hub would be built in the second island while a deep sea jetty for third island and cargo jetty for the fourth island.
Tourists like visiting historical buildings and going for rides in the colourful trishaws in Melaka. — Filepic
MELAKA: The state has recorded 4.79 million tourist arrivals in the first three months of this year compared to 4.07 million during the same period last year, said Melaka Chief Minister Adly Zahari.
He said the increase of 17.49% was very encouraging to Melaka which was targeting 20 million tourists this year in conjunction with Visit Melaka Year 2019.
Read more at https://www.thestar.com.my/metro/metro-news/2019/06/03/more-tourists-flocking-to-melaka/#IPjrKPDYzkIsdmzz.99
New, longer route for Malacca River cruise starting November
03 JUN 2019 / 14:18 H.
MALACCA: The Malacca River and Beach Development Corporation will improve the service of Malacca River Cruise (MRC), including by expanding the existing route to make a new and longer one, in a bid to attract more visitors.
Its CEO, Azlan Abidin said the new route would cover a distance of 10km in total from Pengkalan Rama Jetty to Malacca Sentral, beginning November or December this year.
He said the existing route only covered a distance of 4.5km from the Pengkalan Rama Jetty to the Malacca River Square.
“The cruise on the new route will take 1 hour and 45 minutes. A water taxi service is also expected to be introduced as an alternative for the public and tourists alike to avoid traffic congestion in the city.
“This is part of Phase Two of the Malacca River Cleaning and Beautification Project to create more tourist attractions in the state,” he told Bernama.