The actor's skin was darkened to depict an Indian man and a Malay woman wearing a headscarf
Singapore: An advertisement featuring an actor of Chinese origin with his skin darkened to portray different races has sparked anger in multi-ethnic Singapore, prompting an apology from the country's state-owned broadcaster.
Race is a sensitive issue in Singapore, home to ethnic Chinese, ethnic Indians and Muslim Malays, as well as a large number of expatriates from all over the world.
The ad, part of a government-initiated campaign for cashless transactions in the tech-savvy city-state, featured actor Dennis Chew from broadcaster Mediacorp as four characters.
His skin was darkened to depict an Indian man, he put on a headscarf to act the part of a Muslim woman, and he also portrayed a Chinese man and a Chinese woman.
Each character was shown holding a plate of food paid for electronically.
"Brownface in a Singaporean ad in 2019. I thought we already went over this," magazine editor Ruby Thiagarajan said on Twitter, in a post that had been retweeted nearly 3,000 times by Monday.
"Brownface" or "blackface" are terms referring to the practice of darkening an actor's skin to portray a person of a different race.
Mediacorp, through its celebrity management arm The Celebrity Agency, apologised "for any hurt that was unintentionally caused".
"The message behind this advertising campaign is that e-payment is for everyone".
The broadcaster, in a statement issued jointly with advertising agency Havas Worldwide, added the actor was chosen as he was "well-known for his ability to portray multiple characters in a single production in a light-hearted way".
They would not confirm whether the ad had been pulled but it had disappeared from a website as well as some public places where it was displayed last week.
Most of the criticism centred on how the ad had used just one actor from the country's main ethnic group, rather than getting other performers to play the different roles.
"They could have hired an artist for every single race?? Is it really hard?" one Twitter user said.
However other social media users said they thought there was nothing wrong with it, and people should not be oversensitive.
"This ad reflects Chew's creativity immensely... There is definitely no tinge of racism here," one person wrote on Facebook.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)