[Above: Mr Tan Boon Thye (right), 59, with Mr Han Tong Juan, 70, remember their ex-boss, Mr Tang, who was found murdered in his flat in Sydney, Australia, on Friday. Mr Tang used to be the owner of the now-defunct Russian restaurant Troika.]
Fri, Mar 19, 2010
The New Paper
By Zaihan Mohamed Yusof
THEY ran a Russian restaurant so popular, you had to book well in advance for a table. Mr Tang Ching Yung, 98, and his wife Clara, 92, were restaurateurs who ran the now defunct Russian restaurant Troika.
It first opened in Bras Basah Road in 1963 and became an overnight success.
The restaurant was very popular with British army personnel stationed here in the early 1960s. From then on, the clientele was made up of mostly Singaporeans and American sailors who loved the fancy, fine-dining experience.
Here, the rich and famous mingled over Russian dishes like borscht and shashlik.
The business ran until 1983 when Mr Tang sold it, complaining that at 71, he was too old to manage the restaurant.
In 1983, they moved to Australia. Their last home was an exclusive district in Sydney. But now Mrs Tang has been charged with her husband's murder. He was found on Friday night with head injuries. His wife is believed to be suffering from dementia.
Former employees described the pair as a loving couple.
Mr Tang was like a father-figure to staff, said a former employee Mr Tan Boon Thye, 59.
Several former employees of Mr Tang's had pooled their money together to open Shashlik, a Russian restaurant in Far East Shopping Centre, after Troika closed down.
Mr Tan said that Mr Tang and his wife would often have their lunches and dinners at Troika.
He was a gracious man, said Mr Tan.
The now defunct Russian restaurant Troika
Customers always first
"When he was having his dinner, he would give up his table when he saw more customers coming into the restaurant for their evening meals," added Mr Tan. "He didn't need to do that but he believed that the customer always comes first."
The couple used to live at Cairnhill Mansion where Mr Tan would occasionally fix Mr Tang's lightbulbs in his home.
Mr Tan added: "Like any normal couple, they had their arguments... But they were usually over small things.
"His wife would complain that she did not like to eat a particular dish or she would tell her husband not to eat too much of a certain dish because of his health."
Another of their former employees Mr Han Tong Juan, 70, found it hard to accept the news when interviewed last night at Shashlik.
He said Mr Tang and his wife made a "nice couple".
But when it came to work, Mrs Tang was strictly business.
Mr Han said: "He (Mr Tang) was easy-going. His wife was a little fierce and paid a lot of attention to details, which kept most of the staff on their toes whenever she was around."
Mr Han first worked at Troika when he was 24, and like some of Mr Tang's former employees, stayed in the business and remained close to him even after they moved to Australia.
Former staff didn't want the legacy of their famous Russian fare to die out.
So when Troika went out of business in 1985, the staff pooled money together and opened Shashlik in 1986.
Mr Tan, who was originally hired by Mr Tang as a clerk, said: "He (Mr Tang) was like a grandfather to many of us who used to work for him (at Troika).
"The 12 staff members (at Shashlik), who knew Mr Tang, are surprised that his wife has become the suspect. Nothing in the past would suggest Mrs Tang would be capable of such a thing."
When Mr Han first heard the news, he thought his ex-employer's death was due to an attempted robbery.
Other than a daughter, Mr Tan said he was not aware that the couple had other children or relatives in Singapore.
Sadly, the daughter died of cancer in 1985 after the family moved to Australia, said Mr Tan.
From then on, it was Mr Tang's two grandchildren who looked after the couple.
But Mr Tang still kept in touch with his friends in Singapore.
Whenever he visited China or Hong Kong, Mr Tang would make it a point to stop over in Singapore.
His wife would accompany him on his annual visits here starting from 1988.
Said Mr Tan: "Even in their 80s, they were still travelling on their own. They had more energy than your average senior citizens."
Mr Tang, who was a graduate of St John's University in Shanghai, China, would return to Shanghai to attend his university's alumni gatherings.
However, in the last 10 years, Mr Tang stopped visiting Singapore. But he kept in touch with Mr Tan through letters and telephone calls.
More recently, Mr Tang preferred to write letters because his hearing was deteriorating, said Mr Tan.
The last time he spoke to Mr Tang was in January this year. Mr Tang had requested his former employee to buy medicated ointment for him.
He sounded fine, and there was no hint that anything was amiss with Mr Tang's 70-year marriage, Mr Tan said.
In the years after leaving Singapore, Mr Tang would confide in Mr Tan and disclose some of the regrets he had.
Said Mr Tan: "His (Mr Tang's) biggest regret was that he could not hold on to Troika any longer. He had to sell his business because he felt that his age was catching up with him."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mr Tang found with head injuries
THE Australian police found Mr Tang's body in his flat after relatives had contacted them last Friday night (Sydney local time 9.40pm).
The victim was found with head injuries. Police then arrested Mrs Tang, who apparently suffers from dementia, said Mr George Tsoi, a family friend quoted in The Daily Telegraph.
Mr Tsoi described Mrs Tang as a "very, very gentle person who loved her husband very much" and "wouldn't hurt a chicken".
Mr Tsoi first learnt a week ago that Mrs Tang had been suffering from dementia when she went missing from home.
Later, she had tried to check into a hotel using her bank card.
Mr Tsoi added that the couple's granddaughter took her home to stay with her for the weekend.
She then sent Mrs Tang home last Monday, Mr Tsoi told reporters.
Earlier on the night of the murder, Mrs Tang had asked Mr Tsoi to help look for a retirement village for the couple.
Mrs Tang is now in police custody. Her lawyer is trying to get her hospitalised.
He told reporters that "she has serious medical problems and is in a poor and confused state".
[email protected]