An Indonesian singer known for performing with live snakes has died after being bitten by a king cobra onstage.
Irma Bule, 29, is not a household name in the English-speaking world. But in Indonesia, she is known as a singer of dangdut, a pop fusion of folk, South Asian film music, and rock and roll that rose to prominence in the 1980s.
“With
its nasal, melismatic vocal style and propulsive hand drum rhythms,
dangdut is in many ways a music of the Islamic world,” Jeremy
Wallach wrote in “Sonic Modernities in the Malay World,” though
“most dangdut songs deal with non-religious, sentimental themes, and
the genre is frequently denounced as sinful and morally corrupting by
strict Muslims in Indonesia.”
Though
once banned by the government, the style is now considered passe — so
much so that Bule’s penchant for performing with king cobras (Ophiophagus hannah), reticulated pythons (Python reticulatus) and boa constrictors, as Reptiles Magazine noted, was thought a bit of a “gimmick” that brought a grisly end.
“Dangdut
is such an oversaturated musical genre in Indonesia that it’s not
surprising how many artists employ gimmicks in their act to stand out
from the rest,” Cocunuts Jakarta, one of a network of sites
that covers urban areas in Asia, wrote. “Unfortunately, dangdut singer
Irma Bule’s deadly gimmick, combined with her dedication to showmanship,
led to her untimely death.”
Bule was performing in a village in
West Java when she was presented with a king cobra that was supposed to
have been defanged. It was not.
“My daughter might not have known
that the snake that was given to her for the show was a dangerous
cobra,” Bule’s mother, Encum, told an Indonesian outlet quoted by the Daily Mail. (Indonesians sometimes do not have surnames.) “She was told she could wear it, even though its mouth was not closed with duct tape.”
This information proved tragically wrong.
“In the middle of the second song, Irma stepped on the snake’s tail,” Ferlando Octavion Auzura, who witnessed the attack, told an Indonesian news outlet. “The snake then bit Irma in her thigh.”
Cocunuts Jakarta posted a video that purportedly documented the attack:
A bite from a king cobra is, to say the least, very serious. The
snakes can grow up to 18 feet long and, as their name implies, are a
force to be reckoned with.
“It seems unfairly menacing that a
snake that can literally ‘stand up’ and look a full-grown person in the
eye would also be among the most venomous on the planet, but that
describes the famous king cobra,” according to National
Geographic. “… When confronted, they can raise up to one-third of their
bodies straight off the ground and still move forward to attack. They
will also flare out their iconic hoods and emit a bone-chilling hiss
that sounds almost like a growling dog.”
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