Vagina Monologues makes debut in conservative Myanmar where sex remains taboo subject
- The feminist play aims to normalise conversations about women’s bodies and sexual consent, even if it makes people uncomfortable
- Its co-director says Myanmar women grow up not cherishing their bodies and are “mainly taught their body is like a disgusting object”.

Papu, pi pi, sapat – the slang for female genitalia elicits giggles during a rehearsal for Myanmar’s first-ever Burmese-language Vagina Monologues, as the country’s conservative image is shaken up onstage and online.
This week a production of Eve Ensler’s famed feminist play opens in Yangon and includes two showings in the local language.
Its exploration of issues around sexual consent, body image and genital mutilation made it revolutionary in the 1990s when it premiered in New York, and interpretations have spanned the globe since.
In Myanmar, where sex is still a taboo subject, co-director Nandar says she hopes to “normalise conversations about women’s bodies” even if it makes people uncomfortable.

“Women grew up here without cherishing their bodies because they were mainly taught their body is like a disgusting object,” the 24-year-old from northern Shan State says.