Getai singer aims to educate fans on LGBT issues with Pink Dot ambassadorship

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Local veteran getai singer Liu Ling Ling had never heard of Pink Dot before she was named one of its ambassadors this year.

But being the mother of a three-year-old boy spurred the 53-year-old on to accept the role.

Launched in 2009, Pink Dot is an annual non-profit event in support of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community here. This year’s edition will be held on June 4 at Hong Lim Park at 3pm.

Liu, who made headlines for giving birth at 50 after undergoing artificial insemination, told The New Paper in Mandarin at Pink Dot 2016’s media session on Thursday: “Given my age, I don’t know how many years I have left to be with my child.

“But I want (him) to grow up in a society with love, because only then can he be happy.”

Pink Dot 2016’s other celebrity ambassadors are TV host-writer Anita Kapoor and rapper Shigga Shay. (See report on right.)

Previous years’ ambassadors included actors Kumar, Lim Yu Beng and Sebastian Tan, actresses Sharon Au, Michelle Chia and Patricia Mok, and YouTube stars Munah and Hirzi.

REUNION

This year’s ambassadorship marked a reunion of sorts for Liu and Shigga Shay, 23. They co-starred in Royston Tan’s musical-comedy movie 3688 as mother and son last year.

Liu said excitedly: “We didn’t know that we would meet each other again as ambassadors.

“I immediately asked Shigga if he was straight and he said that he liked girls to death!”

While this year will be her first time attending Pink Dot, Liu said of her friends and family in the LGBT community: “We have many people in this industry who are LGBT.

“I’ve seen conflicts arise simply because they are LGBT. They have been stared at and provoked for no reason and I’ll have to console them.”

Liu sees the ambassadorship as a chance to educate her fans, who are mostly made up of the elderly.

She said: “Most of them are not afraid of their child being LGBT, but rather, fearful of having to answer to their relatives. Precisely because the elderly don’t understand LGBT, the onus is on me to explain to them how we can become a more tolerant society.”

krystalc@sph.com.sg


This article was first published on April 23, 2016.
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