
By K. F. Tang
"MR STORYTELLER" Lee Dai Soh died of a
heart attack on Wednesday night.
The popular Cantonese raconteur, who for 40 years
thrilled radio and Rediffusion listeners with his
colourful Chinese gongfu and historical epics like
the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, was 77 years old.
Many Singaporeans may remember Mr Lee as the
storyteller with a flair for personal asides, which
he used to spice up his stories while not disrupting
their flow.
Family members said Mr Lee, whose real name was
Lee Fook Hong, complained of a pain in his chest at
about 5 pm and wanted to see a doctor.
He sat down to wait an hour or so in his Havelock
Road Block 22 flat as the clinic would not be open
before 6.30 pm. He collapsed on the sofa at about
6.15 pm while watching a television programme.
His family applied medicated oil on him and called
the ambulance but Mr Lee died before help came.
Mr
Lee's popularity waned with the advent of television
in the 60s. The Speak Mandarin Campaign further
reduced his airtime and he retired from broadcasting
in Singapore in 1982.
But Mr Lee remained a storyteller to the end,
working with Radio Australia, for which he made his
last recording on Tuesday.
Mr Lee's daughter from his first marriage, Madam
Lee Yun Han, 44, a teacher, recalled: "My father
started his storytelling career sitting on a box
under a tree in Chinatown, telling a story in the
time it took a joss-stick to burn."
Mr Lee was also an accomplished Cantonese opera
actor, who only stopped acting about five years ago
because of rheumatism.
"He was especially fond of impersonating
women on stage," Madam Lee added.
Mr Lee was active in clan association work and was
a director of Tung On Wui Kun in New Bridge Road,
where he has been telling stories weekly since May
1987.
Born in Singapore, Mr Lee grew up in the Tanjong
Pagar area. He received only a primary education from
Yeung Ching School in Club Road but he loved books.
A retired mechanic, 77, who only wanted to be know
as Mr Fan, who was Mr Lee's senior by one year at
Yeung Ching, recalled in Cantonese:
"He was a self-educated man. He collected and
read books. They inspired him."
Three shelves full of books in Mr Lee's bedroom
attest to his unceasing search for knowledge. It was
only six months ago that Mr Lee bought a 10-volume
set of the Chinese edition of the Encyclopaedia
Britannica.
His son, Mr Lee Chee Leong, 40, who works in a
bank, said: "My father would never throw away
books."
Madam Meng Yeow Hoh, 61, Mr Lee's second wife,
said in Cantonese: "I believe he has left notes
on what should be done with his books. Some are to be
given to friends, some to libraries.
"He also wanted the rarer books to be buried
in a time capsule, to be opened in 300 years'
time."
Mr Lee leaves behind two widows, three children
and two grandsons.
He never
failed the many who consulted him on things Chinese,
says friend
A FRIEND who last spoke to master storyteller Lee
Dai Soh on Tuesday, the day he died, remembers him as
a "walking encyclopaedia" on things
Chinese.
Mr Poon Ee Seng, 42, a stage designer for Chinese
operas, said many people consulted Mr Lee on Chinese
customs and history and difficult Chinese
expressions.
"He never failed anyone. If he did not know,
he would look it up and tell them," said Mr Poon
in Mandarin yesterday.
He remembers Mr Lee as a big-hearted man who did
not put on any airs.
Mr Poon first listened to Mr Lee's stories on
Rediffusion even before he was old enough to go to
school.
He followed in Mr Lee's footsteps by also going to
Yeung Ching School 35 years later.
Mr Poon, a member of the Tung On Wui Kun
association, of which Mr Lee was a director, said Mr
Lee's stories have left their mark on him.
"I had no fear of Chinese history or language
in school. He stories helped me learn and love
them."
He loved in particular the euphemisms which his
mentor liked to use, for example: "African
monk", which translates in Cantonese to hak
yun chang to mean "disgusting".
"His death is a great loss -- to his friends
and to those who love Chinese history," he said.
First
published in The Straits Times, March 24, 1989
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