mavis hee arrested...
This story was printed from TODAYonline
Singer Mavis Hee arrested, sent to IMH after uproar Wednesday •
June 28, 2006 SINGAPORE
singer Mavis Hee was arrested last Thursday after she barged into a guest room at a six-star hotel in the Marina area, according to a local Chinese evening newspaper. The 31-year-old Hee tailed the guest — a stranger — from the hotel lobby to the guest room, before barging into the room. She started making a noise and even told the shocked guest in English: "Call me God!"
Three hotel staff came to the guest's aid, the newspaper reported. The police were later called in and arrested her. As she remained agitated and unable to express herself coherently in custody, the police referred her to the Institute of Mental Health (IMH) the next morning.
The sweet-faced singer released her first album in 1994 and was often placed on the same pedestal as Kit Chan and Tanya Chua who were known for their wide appeal in the region. Hee gained stardom for her ballads such as Regret, Moonlight In The City and Nocturnal People.
She reportedly turned down a chance to sign a contract with famed Taiwanese music composer Jonathan Lee, just to continue her successful partnership with local composer Chen Jia Ming. But her close ties with him later sparked off speculation that she was embroiled in a love affair with the married Chen, said the newspaper.
Hee — who was one of the bridesmaids at Zoe Tay's wedding in 2001 — faded from the limelight in 2002.
WHOAH...SHIT HAPPENS EH....
PITY THOU..HER SONGS WERE PRETTY NICE
2 comments:
--FROM A TAIWAN NEWSPAPER--
a teenager, angry at her boyfriend for being fierce to her earlier in the day, sneaks up to him while he is watching world cup match and she farts on him, and too hard accidentally laosai splatter all over his face. they breakup in the end
why singapore newspaper so boring one hur
A LAWYER was trying to undermine a police officer's credibility during a cross-examination.
Lawyer: Officer, did you see my client fleeing the scene?
Officer: No, sir. But I subsequently observed a person matching the description of the offender running several blocks away.
Lawyer: Officer, who provided this description?
Officer: The officer who went to the scene.
Lawyer: A fellow officer provided the description of this so-called offender. Do you trust your fellow officers?
Officer: Yes, sir, with my life.
Lawyer: With your life? Let me ask you this then, officer. Do you have a room where you change your clothes in preparation for your daily duties?
Officer: Yes, sir, we do.
Lawyer: Do you have a locker in the room?
Officer: Yes, sir, I do.
Lawyer: Do you have a lock on your locker?
Officer: Yes, sir.
Lawyer: Why is it, then, that if you trust your fellow officers with your life, you find it necessary to lock your locker in a room you share with them?
Officer: Sir, we share the building with the court complex and sometimes lawyers have been known to walk through that room.
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