The travails of the Samsui women were portrayed in
Samsui Women, a Singaporean television drama series produced by
Singapore Broadcasting Corporation in 1986, which has widely been considered as one of the best dramas Singapore has produced over the years. There was also a theatrical play by The Finger Players, called
Samsui Women: One Brick at a Time, held at the
Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay. Another depiction of the Samsui women were portrayed in the 2023 Chinese television drama
Sisterhood produced by
China Central Television and streamed on
iQIYI network, which depicted the story about two young women who travelled from the Sanshui District to Nanyang to become among the Samsui women.
Controversial mural of Samsui woman smoking In April 2024, a mural of portraying a Samsui woman taking a
smoke break and holding cigarette was painted on an external wall of a conserved shophouse in Chinatown by Singapore-based American artist, Sean Dunston. In May 2024,
Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA), the national authority regulating the use of conserved shophouses, ordered to have the cigarette erased as it was "not aligned with Singapore’s
anti-smoking policy stance". URA stated that an operating permit renewal applied by the landlord may be denied if the request was not compiled. Additionally, they had received anonymous feedback stating that the depiction was "offensive" that the character depicted "looks more like a prostitute". Public reaction to the news was supportive of the depiction, with some stating that the depiction could be considered historically accurate. URA further deliberated after the public outcry, and eventually allowed the mural to remain as it is, while fining the landlord for not following procedures before painting the mural. ==References==