description
Object description
Lieutenant-General Sir William Slim, commander of 14th Army, is honoured with performances of traditional Burmese entertainments at Monywa, northwest of Mandalay, Burma.
Full description
A car arrives. Lieutenant-General Slim gets out and is saluted. A second car pulls up and Air Vice-Marshal Vincent, Air Officer Commanding RAF 221 Group, gets out. They are received by senior Civil Affairs officers, who before the Japanese invasion were responsible for the British colonial administration of Burma. Slim and Vincent walk together, escorted by two native Burmese bearers in traditional court dress (according to the dopesheet 'hidden from the Japanese and carefully kept for just this occasion') and carrying golden ceremonial parasols. A performance of a traditional dance; a man uses both hands to beat a cylindrical drum (possibly an 'ozi') suspended by a strap around his neck. Behind him two men dance. A brief view of a Burmese man in RAF uniform saluting. A crowd of Burmese civilian men and women. Some wear western-style hats, others more traditional headgear. Slim and Vincent watch the performance and confer with a Burmese man who is presumably acting as their translator. On the table in front is a tea pot, some fine china tea cups and a tin of condensed milk. An 'anyein pwe', or small play, is performed. The male troupe wear white make-up to exaggerate eyebrows and moustaches and each carries a bamboo cane topped with leaves. Other men play instruments to accompany the play; one appears to have a small pair of 'linkwin' (cymbals), another plays a wooden wind instrument with a wide base. Another has a simple 'wa letkote' clapper made from a split length of bamboo. A group of men play 'chinlon', a game or exercise aimed at keeping a small wicker or cane ball in the air for as long as possible without using one's hands (similar to 'keep-up' played as football training). Slim watches in the background. An ornately dressed female dancer performs on stage; on the backdrop the word 'Victory' can be read. A man plays a 'ci wain' or 'gong circle'. The audience watching the performance. A man plays a 'hne', or Burmese oboe. Slim and Vincent departing.
Physical description
35mm