I forgive Rui En
I too was once accused of hitting a parked motorbike and running away
I met Rui En once.
Although the actress didn't knock over my parked motorcycle with her black BMW, it felt like she did.
That was how unpleasant the experience was.
She's not reputed for being the "ice queen" of Caldecott Hill for nothing.
And it's not because she likes to dress up like Elsa from Frozen.
This was years ago, when I was developing a new TV series for Channel 5 at Mediacorp and auditioning actresses for the lead role.
Rui En showed up. I gave her the audition script and some direction.
Then she just walked out.
Huh? What happened?
That was the moment when I felt like my parked motorcycle was knocked over by her black BMW.
At least Mr Bahrom Sarmiten, the owner of said motorcycle, said she offered him $2,000 to compensate for the damage.
Rui En didn't offer me any cash for the aborted audition - or even an explanation.
I never found out why she bolted. I have auditioned many actors and actresses in my time, but this had never happened before or since.
I wasn't angry with her, just stunned and confused.
Was it something I said?
Or the way I said it?
Maybe she thought I didn't know who she was.
So I could relate to Mr Bahrom.
After Rui En hit his bike, she started to drive away and Mr Bahrom ran after her.
The car stopped after a few metres and he banged on the car window.
She got out and asked him: "Do you know who I am?"
He didn't.
Like me, Mr Bahrom probably doesn't watch much Channel 8, where Rui En is a big star.
I actually know of Rui En from her Channel 5 shows like the body-switching dramedy Chemistry and inter-racial marriage sitcom Archar!, where she replaced Steph Song in the second season.
Hard to imagine now but the "ice queen" of Caldecott Hill also used to co-host Gotcha!, the Candid Camera rip-off on Channel 5, long after Moe Alkaff left.
It's possible Mr Bahrom has seen these Channel 5 shows, but they were a very long time ago.
So it's quite understandable that he didn't know who Rui En is.
WON'T RUN
But is it possible that when she asked him whether he knew who she was, she didn't mean "Do you know what a big star I am? Don't you watch TV?"?
She later said that what she really meant was: "Do you know who I am, I live upstairs and won't run."
She also explained that when Mr Bahrom stopped her from driving off, her intention was to "move my car to a traffic-free spot before addressing the matter".
Despite suffering frostbite from my briefer-than-expected encounter with Rui En during the non-audition, I believe her.
I was once also accused of hitting a parked motorbike and running away.
So I could relate to Rui En too.
What happened to me was, after parking my car in the open-air HDB car park, I ran to my block because it was starting to rain.
Minutes after reaching home, there was a loud banging on my door.
I opened the door to see what I would describe as a small lynch mob out for blood - mine.
It was one of the scariest moments of my life and I've watched The Conjuring 2 trailer.
A neighbour had seen me reversing my car into a parked motorcycle which toppled onto another bike. One of the bikes belonged to her relative.
She then saw me running off, which in her mind was proof of my guilt even though I just trying to avoid getting wet.
I wasn't aware that I had hit anything, a claim which the lynch mob understandably found hard to believe.
I wanted to point out that if I had really wanted to run away, wouldn't I have just driven off instead of leaving my car and running home on foot?
But I suspect such nuanced logic would be lost on a lynch mob.
To appease them, I let them show me the toppled bikes and I promised to compensate the owners.
I didn't have to tell them "I live upstairs and won't run" because as they had demonstrated, they did know where I live and I couldn't run.
In the end, I paid the owners of the bikes a couple of hundred bucks for the damage, which was less than the $700 that Rui En was fined on Friday for careless driving.
I guess I should count myself lucky I wasn't charged for careless driving too.
I'm just grateful I wasn't lynched.
But just as the mob let me live, I forgive Rui En for her non-audition.
I eventually cast Michelle Chong in the role.
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