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(Private Investigator Krish) on Vasantham Central.
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Since then, Kumar has appeared in various English television programs such as My Sassy Neighbour and Front he also hosted three seasons of Rusiyo Rusi, a travelogue cooking show, and played the titular character in the crime comedy series P.I.K. It would be eight years before he returned to television, starring opposite Hong Kong actress Carol Cheng in the English sitcom, Oh Carol!, in 2001. The show proved to be short-lived and ended its run after ten months when viewers complained about the liberal use of Singlish and perceived sexual innuendoes in the show. Kumar made his television debut in 1993 as one of the three hosts of The Ra Ra Show, a comedy chat show which started airing in April 1993. Kumar was also a regular performer at Chameleon Lounge Club on Dempsey Road. In 2007, he sold his share of the club and has since been performing three nights a week at 3-Monkeys Café. Kumar started performing at a theatre-bar called Gold Dust (of which he was part-owner) in Orchard Towers.
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Once a year, he had to perform his entire show for an audience of police officers before he was allowed to put it up for the public.Īfter moving to Far East Square in 2000, Boom Boom Room closed permanently in 2004. Because of the provocative nature of his shows, Kumar's performances were subjected to scrutiny and monitoring by the police. His cross-dressing which came about as a comic device and a gimmick eventually became his trademark as he came to be Singapore's most well-known drag queen with his caustic wit and biting observations about life in Singapore, particularly about politics, race, and sex. He wrote most of his own material and had initially started with clean jokes which proved unpopular, drawing chilly responses from his audience that led him to go with more risqué ones for which he is now known. At Boom Boom Room, Kumar's routines included song and dance, in addition to stand-up comedy. Kumar's big break came in 1992 when he was offered the starring role at the newly established Boom Boom Room in New Bugis Street which opened on National Day the same year. It was then when he realized comedy was his calling. In 1991, Kumar landed a gig at the now defunct Laughs Comedy Club in Tanglin Shopping Centre playing the role of an Indian drag queen. Two years later, he began a stint as an entertainer at Haw Par Villa. In 1987, after serving his conscription, Kumar had his first exposure to the entertainment industry at 22 years old as a singing waiter at Cheers! The Fun Pub at the Novotel Orchid. After his O levels, Kumar worked for six months as a cashier at a convenience store before enlisting for National Service, where he served as a combat signaler in the army and held the record for one of the fastest times in his cohort for the completion of the 2.4 km run. As a child, he aspired to be a classical Bharathanatyam dancer and joined the Indian Dance Society in his secondary school. He went to Cairnhill and Selegie Primary schools and later attended Monk's Hill Secondary School. Kumar grew up in a terrace house on Paterson Road with his parents, three siblings – three older sisters, and six dogs. When Kumar was four, his parents divorced he was raised by his mother's younger sister, Rani Vyarakannoo, a policewoman, who eventually became his step-mother. His father, Chinna Dorai, arrived in Singapore in the mid-1960s and worked as a caretaker for the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA). Kumar was born on 10 August 1968 in a South Indian Mudaliar family from Madras and a Singaporean mother.