Thursday, July 30, 2009

Their 'counterinsurgency.' Our revolution.

“Iraq look[s] less like either Vietnam or World War II--the analogies that politicians and pundits keep closest at hand--and more like an amalgamation of the Korean War and America’s McKinley-era counterinsurgency in the Philippines. Like Iraq, those were murky, bloody conflicts that generated long-term benefits but enormous short-term costs. Like Iraq, they were wars that Americans were eager to forget about as soon as they were finished.”

-- Ross Douthat, “The War We’d Like to Forget”, in the NYTimes

After the Battle of Mount Dajo, March 9, 1906. [Source]

“The 'McKinley-era counterinsurgency' wasn't a counterinsurgency so much as a war of conquest. The U.S. was fighting for control of the islands after promising them their freedom from the Spanish. It was extremely bloody, accomplished with great and indiscriminate violence. If we're to take counterinsurgency as a war among the people to win their allegiance through providing for their welfare and aspirations, this was the opposite. We just killed a lot of Filipinos until they quit fighting, particularly after the leader of the insurgent band, Emilio Aguinaldo, was captured. The U.S. turned the Philippines over to a form of 'self-government' that was really a different form of domination at the hands of the military and private American corporations. It did, however, work, in the sense that the U.S. was not militarily challenged in any significant way for decades.”

-- Spencer Ackerman, “Why’d The Philippines Work Out So Well For Us?”


While we're at this, hand over those Balangiga bells now, will you?

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Stand by for the firestorm

Just announced: seven new National Artists, including National Commission on Culture and the Arts executive director Cecile Guidote Alvarez for theater, and Magno Jose Carlo Caparas for visual arts and film.

Discuss.

(The others: Manuel Urbano, also known as Manuel Conde, for film and broadcast arts [posthumous]; Lazaro Francisco, literature [posthumous]; Federico Aguilar Alcuaz, visual arts, painting, sculpture and mixed media; Francisco “Bobby” Mañoza, architecture; and Jose “Pitoy” Moreno, fashion design)

Ateneo BlueRep's Tick, Tick... BOOM! opens Aug. 5

Opening Ateneo Blue Repertory’s 18th Season is "Tick, Tick... BOOM!," an autobiographical pop-rock musical by Jonathan Larson, the acclaimed creator of "Rent."

It follows the story of Jon, a struggling composer in New York. He works as a waiter in a diner and lives in a ratty apartment waiting for his big break. His best friend, Michael, has a corporate job and earns big money while his girlfriend, Susan, is looking for stability.

Now on the cusp of turning 30 years old, Jon anxiously faces a dilemma: Should he just pursue a sensible career, or persist with his ambition?

"Tick, Tick... BOOM!" is Bea Garcia’s directorial debut. A BlueREP alumna, she has done extensive professional work in theater, television and film, most recently as the assistant director of BlueREP’s "Bare."

Joining her in the production team are BlueRep members Divine Maderal as production manager, Jio Javier as assistant director and choreographer, Pauline Gaerlan as musical director, Ea Asuncion as head stage manager, and Dindin Reyes and Mela Tan as costume designers. Martin Malabanan is set designer and Miyo Sta. Maria is technical director.

The production boasts a talented, all-BlueREP cast: Jaime Barcelon, Marc Baluyan, and Ejay Yatco take turns as Jon. Bym Buhain, Ivan Aldover and Mikey Javier take turns as Michael. Mian Dimacali, Laura Cabochan and Justin Pena alternate as Susan.

Ateneo Blue Repertory, one of the accredited organizations in Ateneo de Manila University, is the premiere college musical theater organization in the country. Possessing a diverse pool of talented performers and an impressive repertory of shows, BlueREP has delighted audiences with productions that celebrate the spirit of the young Filipino. Some of its previous productions include "Bare," "Bat Boy," "Footloose" and Disney’s "High School Musical."

The show runs August 5-August 22, 2009, every Wednesday to Saturday 7-9 p.m. at Ateneo de Manila University’s Rizal-Mini Theater. For more information on tickets, sponsorship and show buying, please contact Bym Buhain 0917-5010729.

"Tick, Tick... BOOM!" is made possible through a licensing agreement with Music Theatre International Enterprises, Inc.


Monday, July 27, 2009

Socially engaged theater--minus the speeches

Philippine Daily Inquirer, 7.27.2009

The best offerings of this year’s Virgin Labfest talked politics without seeming to


NEW DRAMATIC WORKS THAT ARE “topical but freshly imagined”--that was our plea two years ago at the end of our omnibus review of that season’s Virgin Labfest.

We meant plays that examined society as much as the self in contemporary light, stripped of easy sloganeering or default flag-waving. Stories that combined public urgency with private griefs in ways that avoided the simplistic Manichean comforts of tidy talking points or grim propaganda.

Plays, in other words, that engaged the times while remaining true works of drama rather than bald sociopolitical theses or full-throated screeds.

It is our happy duty to report that the best offerings of this year’s Virgin Labfest were that kind--fresh works of vitality, insight and imagination that reflected the present unblinkingly, without being blinded by it.

This the plays achieved by shrewd sleight of hand. They talked politics without seeming to. They swung the light away from a pat, easily masticated presentation of “issues” to the more ambiguous terrain of complicated individuals--recognizable human beings--erupting in hurt, doubt, rage, bafflement, joy and remembering, as these people struggled to make sense of the public, communal domain of their lives.

The political, in short, rendered in powerfully personal terms.

Layeta Bucoy’s “Doc Resureccion, Gagamutin ang Bayan,” for example--the Labfest standout, and, incidentally, the latest noteworthy collaboration between Bucoy as playwright and Tuxqs Rutaquio as director.

Bucoy’s template in the last two Labfests had been the dark domestic drama. Both “Ellas Inocentes” in 2007 (also that year’s finest entry) and “Las Mentiras de Gloria” in 2008 were about fetid secrets buried in middle-class sibling relationships.

Panoramic view
In “Doc Resureccion,” that hermetic two-character set-up has been replaced by a five-member extended family set against a more panoramic social milieu.

Jonathan Tadioan, Crispin Pineda and Riki Benedicto in Layeta Bucoy's “Doc Resureccion, Gagamutin ang Bayan,” directed by Tuxqs Rutaquio

A well-off doctor is running for town mayor; his ne’er-do-well fisherman cousin, bearing the same surname, is paid by the incumbent in a cynical move to game the system by confusing voters and stealing votes away from the appealing upstart.

Now the doctor is back in the dump he had fled long ago, begging the cousin and his family to withdraw from the race. By implication, his starched good intentions, fancy catchphrases and improved station in life give him a greater right to the town’s seat of power than his cousin’s more dubious motivations.

That, in any case, appeared to be the scheme. Until the play, with its increasingly savage dialogue, took a shocking turn near the end, involving a fish hook and a ripped-out eyeball.

It was a blindsiding, nightmarish punctuation to Bucoy’s incrementally constructed image of a body politic corroded to the core by lifelong class inequalities and hatreds, stoked in turn for Machiavellian ends by shadowy puppeteers.

An unsparing vision, “Doc Resureccion” had the searing smell of truth—helped along by the strongest cast assembled for a Labfest entry this year, led by young actors Jonathan Tadioan and Riki Benedicto.

Sympathetic ear
Another festering political flashpoint, the unresolved disappearances of activists, got a sympathetic ear in two plays, Nicolas Pichay’s superb “Isang Araw sa Karnabal” and Reuel Molina Aguila’s affecting if talky “Maliw.”

Like “Doc Resureccion,” these plays were a reproach—subtle but unmistakable—of the poisonous political air that has seeped into and warped many lives and families in this country. There were no speeches to that effect, though. Only anguish, pained laughter, choked-back memories.

In “Isang Araw sa Karnabal,” expertly directed by Chris Millado and marvelously played by Skyzx Labastilla and Paolo O’Hara, Pichay sketched in precise, tragicomic strokes the dysfunctional interaction of two people scarred for good by their desaparecido experiences (the girl her father, the boy a brother).

General Palparan’s name was mentioned; he was never seen, but like a malevolent ghost, he and what he stood for was the inevitable ghoul at the end of the carnival tunnel, forever haunting the lives of these two characters.

Bembol Roco and Gigi Escalante in Reuel Molina Aguila’s “Maliw,” directed by Edna Vida Froilan

A similar spectral presence spooked the otherwise placid household in “Maliw,” directed by Edna Vida Froilan. In the aftermath of a lost daughter’s 30th birthday, a husband and wife (Bembol Roco--excellent--and Gigi Escalante--hammy) would finally confront, through tears and bitter hand-wringing, the void left by their daughter’s abduction years ago.

“Araw-araw may darating na sirena,” rued the mother, refusing to forget. By the play’s cathartic end, she would take the first tentative steps toward letting go and rejoining the land of the living.

Thought-provoking
Politics of a different sort--the gender and cultural kind--made a welcome, thought-provoking appearance in Sheilfa Alojamiento’s play about lesbianism, “Boy-Gel ang Gelpren ni Mommy.” Alojamiento is a Davao-based writer, and this play, directed with assured quirky charm by Carlo Pacolor Garcia, was her debut in the Labfest.

Karenina Haniel, Che Ramos and Unika Zapata in Sheilfa Alojamiento’s “Boy-Gel ang Gelpren ni Mommy,” directed by Carlo Pacolor Garcia

Mom, long separated from Dad, is taking in a new lover who looks like a girl but dresses and moves like a boy and is named Jun (June, it turns out). The kids, a boy and a girl, are confused. Who’d be the man of the house?

“Si Mommy ang boy, siya ang mas matanda at naghahanap-buhay,” says the bossy elder kid--just one of the play’s telling lines.

In an inspired bit of casting, the boy was played by a girl--Karenina Haniel, who proved to be remarkably plausible in the role even as she remained evidently of the female species. At its best, her straight-faced gender-bending furthered the play’s point about the changing, malleable nature of common gender pegs.

Ineffectual
For every one of these plays, though--works that dissected the here and now in intensely human terms--there were others that sought to frame the debate in stridently literal or allegorical ways, to largely foiled result.

Bong Cabrera, Gi-an Ronquillo, Jerald Napoles and Paolo Rodriguez in Liza Magtoto's “Paigan,” directed by Sigrid Bernardo

Liza Magtoto placed racism, colonialism and empire-building in the crosshairs of her play “Paigan.” Taking off from a historical footnote--an African-American infantryman who deserted his unit and sided with Aguinaldo’s forces during the Fil-American War in the 1900s--“Paigan” offered two Filipino guerillas in a tug-of-war over ideals, innocence, empathy, the atavistic urge to oppress the Other.

Should they turn the deserter over to the Yanks for a hefty reward, or does he deserve protection for his like-minded rejection of the imperialist war?

A rich premise, and director Sigrid Bernardo’s vaudeville approach to the material--masks and fanfare and farce--seemed apt at first. Defying, however, the play’s insistence on its historical grounding, the passages that came out were hectoring and heavy-handed, jarringly contemporary from one line to the next.

“Magkaiba man tayo ng kulay, magkapareho ang kasaysayan natin,” went one argument between the two Filipinos, now devalued from characters worth caring about to mere soapboxes.

“Naniniwala siyang kaya nating magsarili,” went another. “Siya” referring to Fagen, the black soldier, in a platitudinous bid to project modern attitudes to an era-specific figure and conscript him as a partisan for latter-day polemical skirmishes.

Grave lament
Something else other than anachronistic dialogue hobbled Rogelio Braga’s “So Sangibo a Ranon na Piyatay o Satiman a Tadman,” a grave lament on the bloody history of Mindanao done in a bluntly abstract vein.

Paolo Rodriguez, Mayen Estanero and Roence Santos in Rogelio Braga's “So Sangibo a Ranon na Piyatay o Satiman a Tadman,” directed by Riki Benedicto

A young man agonizes over his unrequited passion for a hooker. The woman, of course, is Mindanao--her rape at an early age by her soldier father the ravishment of a proud, unbowed region. And the glum, angry idealist learning of her horrific past stands for every Muslim radicalized, or about to be, by war and brutality.

Despite its tense, clenched tenor, movement--the lack of it--defined this play. Braga’s text was dense and roundabout, the line “Eto na ang huling gabing pagkikita nila,” for instance, underlined as pivotal simply by having it repeated and bounced around among the characters.

A military raid on a village was a brief spark; in a mini coup de théâtre, first-time director Riki Benedicto orchestrated the set piece with a blacked-out stage scored to screams and slashing flashlight beams.

But that moment of adrenaline wasn’t enough to rouse the play from its becalmed, deadweight sense of self-regard. In the end, it would abandon whatever adherence it had to that fundamental tenet of storytelling--“Show, don’t tell”--by having the young man read a letter that tallied up the whole politics of the play.

There it was: in place of inconvenient drama, a manifesto.

Good rule
“Politics in literature does its business best when we are least aware of its presence,” reminded the British writer--and politician!--Sir Ferdinand Mount in a lecture to the Royal Society of Literature in London. “Politics works when it is lost in art.”

More art, less politics. A good rule--as in life, so on the stage that purports to reflect it.

Cinemalaya 2009--Smorgasbord of winners

Best Film, Full-length Feature
Last Supper No. 3, directed by Veronica Velasco and Jinky Laurel

Best Film, Short Feature
Bonsai, directed by Borgy Torre III

Best Director, Full-length
GB Sampedro, Astig

Best Director, Short
Dexter Cayanes, Musa

Special Jury Award, Full-length
Colorum, directed by Jon Stefan Ballesteros
Ang Panggagahasa Kay Fe, directed by Alvin Yapan

Special Jury Award, Short
Blogog, directed by Milo Tolentino

Special Mention
Engkwentro, directed by Pepe Diokno

Best Actor
Lou Veloso, Colorum

Best Actress
Ina Feleo, Sanglaan

Best Supporting Actress
Tessie Tomas, Sanglaan

Best Supporting Actor
Arnold Reyes, Astig

Best Screenplay, Full-Length
Vic Acedillo, Nerseri

Best Screenplay, Short
Mark Philipp Espina, Behind Closed Doors

Best Production Design
Benjamin Padero, Mangatyanan

Best Cinematography
Pao Orendain, 24K

Best Original Scoring, Full-Length
Dinig Sana Kita

Best Sound, Full-length
Astig

National Council for Children's TV Award
Dinig Sana Kita, directed by Mike Sandejas

NetPac Award
Baseco Bakal Boys, directed by Ralston Jover

Audience Choice Award, Full-length
Dinig Sana Kita

Audience Choice Award, Short
Tatang, directed by Nico Hernandez

Note: Nope, I didn't make it to the awards night. Floods and rain marooned me in Waterworld, er, Makati. Thanks to Ernest, though, I was getting a heads-up on the winners via text. Thanks, man! Congratulations to the winners! (Nearly everybody, as you can see.)

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Dulaang UP presents Frank Wedekind's Lulu

“Lulu” is a story of a person who has no qualms about the body and its sexual needs.

Lulu, an alluring woman in the English version and a captivating transsexual in the Filipino version, is a being able to explore and express her desires without compromise or guilt. Adored and lusted by men, women and creatures of the world, she takes them on a dance of bodily freedom, of the mind’s liberation and utter ecstasy.

But like any other person, Lulu searches for other human beings who can accept and understand her seemingly deviant nature. In her hunt, she meets a myriad of “civilized beasts”: painters, writers, the educated and the ignorant, the rich and the poor, the young and the dying--many upright and honorable by day but transformed into hungry animals in the dark.

Lulu embraces each person only to find him or her weak and forever trapped by man's idea of propriety.

Che Ramos and Tuxqs Rutaquio topbill the play as Lulu. Also in the cast are Acey Aguilar, Angeli Bayani, Alexander Cortez, Jules de la Paz, Ian Lomongo, Jojit Lorenzo, Missy Maramara, Paolo O'hara, Meynard Penalosa, Andoy Ranay, Gabs Santos, JC Santos and Randy Villarama.

Direction and choreography by Dexter M. Santos, Filipino Translation by Joel Saracho, production design by Tuxqs Rutaquio, lights design by John Batalla, dramaturgy and additional text by Patrick Valera, sounds design by J Victor Villareal, photography and poster design by Jojit Lorenzo and poster art direction by Carlo Vergara.

“Lulu” runs Aug 5-Aug 23 at the Wilfrido Ma. Guerrero Theater, UP Diliman.

THIS PRODUCTION CONTAINS SCENES AND MATERIAL STRICTLY FOR MATURE AUDIENCES.



Saturday, July 25, 2009

Teaser

New dramatic works that are “topical but freshly imagined”that was our plea two years ago at the end of our omnibus review of that season’s Virgin Labfest.

We meant plays that examined society as much as the self in contemporary light, stripped of easy sloganeering or default flag-waving. Stories that combined public urgency with private griefs in ways that avoided the simplistic Manichean comforts of tidy talking points or grim propaganda.

Plays, in other words, that engaged the times while remaining true works of drama rather than bald sociopolitical theses or full-throated screeds.

It is our happy duty to report that the best offerings of this year’s Virgin Labfest were that kind—fresh works of vitality, insight and imagination that reflected the present unblinkingly, without being blinded by it.


-- “Socially engaged theaterminus the speeches,” in the coming Monday issue of the Inquirer. PLUS: “My favorite Virgin Labfest 5 performances” appears as a sidebar.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Screenings, lecture on Japanese silent cinema at UP Film Institute

On July 31, Friday, Larry Greenberg, a Japanese silent film expert and CEO of Digital Meme (the company responsible for restoring and conserving Japanese silent films), will show his varied collection of Japanese anime and silent films at the University of the Philippines Film Institute.

Initial screenings of selected Japanese Anime Classic Collection will be held at 5 p.m. at the Ishmael Bernal Gallery, followed by a lecture at 7 p.m. to introduce Japanese films to Filipino moviegoers.

Other films in DVD format to be featured include "Kodakara Sodo" (Kid Commotion), "Orizuru Osen" (The Downfall of Osen) and "Oatsurae Jirokichi Koshi" (Jirokichi the Rat), with original narration by katsudo benshi, or motion picture narrators with original musical live scoring.

All films will be shown with English subtitles.
Admission is free. Screenings will be held from August 5 (Wednesday) to 7 (Friday), 4-7 p.m. at the Videotheque mini-theater, 2nd Floor, UP Film Institute, UP-Diliman, Quezon City.

This event is presented by the Japan Foundation, Manila, in cooperation with the Embassy of Japan and the UP Film Institute as a culminating event of the Philippines-Japan Friendship Month celebration. For detailed screening schedules and inquiries, visit www.jfmo.org.ph or call (+632) 8116155 to 58.


Fresh faces headline Gantimpala Theater's Florante at Laura

Gantimpala Theater opens its 32nd season with "Florante at Laura," with Migui Moreno and Jhen Olivar playing the lead characters under the direction of Soxie Topacio.

Florante at Laura is a Philippine literary classic; an "awit" made into a play and presented using the theater form of the "komedya."

Tony Espejo, artistic director, explains, "Beyond the romantic story between Florante and Laura, Aladin and Flerida, Balagtas' "awit" is a well-disguised commentary on the ills of the society during the Spanish regime. It may be situated in the fictional kingdom of Albania, but the conditions it depicts were realities taking place in the Philippines during its years of struggle for freedom. Despite the freedom that we experience now, the ills are still around and, sadly, continue to escalate. We hope the eyes and minds of the young will be opened with regard to these realities. Through this play, we hope that they become more vigilant in doing their share to make our nation great again."

For his part, Moreno says he is "excited and nervous" to do the role. "Excited because, this is my first time to work with Gantimpala Theater. When I auditioned, I had no expectations. I was willing to take any part for as long as I'd be given the chance to work with them. Being Florante comes as a really big surprise."

Another lucky first-timer is Olivar, who happens to be a professional ramp, commercial and fashion model prior to bagging the role.

She shares, "When I auditioned for Gantimpala, I was not expecting anything and I did not even expect that I will pass the audition because it is my first time. To my surprise, I got the role of Laura, and it's not just a simple role, it's a lead role. I will play Laura from the heart and I'm really positive about the outcome."

Also in the cast, representing the Christians, are Perry Escaño (Adolfo), Jose Jeffrey Camañag (Haring Linceo), Richard Manabat (Duke Briseo), Roselle Buenaventura (Reyna Floresca), Billy Parjan (Antenor), Glendel Dacumos and Alfred Urieta (alternately portraying Menandro), with Abner Delina Jr and Raymond Talavera (alternately playing Batang Florante/Tagapagsalaysay).

Playing the Moors are by Berl Angeles (Aladin), Marjorie Lorico (Flerida), Alex Guerrero (Sultan Ali-Adab), Molts Meneses (Osmalik), and Vic Ferrer (Emir).

Helping Soxie bring the kingdoms of Albania and Persia to life are Roeder Camañag (assistant director), Joseph Mattheu (lights design), Norman Peñaflorida (set design), Gardy Labad (music composer), Noel Cabangon (arranger), Nemi Pagtakhan/ Alex Guerrero (choreographers/speech coaches), Pamela Hundana (production manager), and Michael King Urieta (stage manager).

Performances are slated on August 1 (6 p.m.) Open Air Auditorium, in Luneta, Manila, August 7, 8, 9, 14, 15 and 16 (10 a.m./2 p.m.), AFP Theater in Quezon City and August 21, 22, and 23 (10 a.m./2 p.m.), SM Southmall in Las Piñas.

For information, bookings and ticket reservations, call 8995745, 8963503 or 4745198.


Monday, July 20, 2009

Touché.

Michael Billington on theater criticism, from his book One Night Stands: A Critic's View of Modern British Theatre:

“On the whole, I believe critics are born, not made: possibly because of some temperamental deficiency or innate shyness, many of us discover at an early age that we prefer to be among the watchers than the watched... Critics are always accused of being failed actors, dramatists or directors; it's nearer the truth to say that we find our emotional energies released by appraising the work of others.

“What exactly gives one the right to criticise? The short answer is: absolutely nothing. You can get a degree in Drama at various universities... but there are no diplomas licensing you to practice. Rightly so: criticism is not comparable to computing or dentistry. In the end, you earn the right to be a critic by the passion, commitment, moral zeal and verbal facility you bring to the job.

“Criticism, to me, is not the last word: simply part of a permanent debate about the nature of the ideal theatre.

“Just how close should we get to the practitioners? I suppose there are two extreme answers to the question. One is to see the critic as the public's champion, who should refuse to be contaminated by contact with the profession he or she is writing about. The other is to say we're all in the same business and that it's therefore OK to mingle freely with people outside office hours.

“My own course is to steer a prudent middle way. I've no wish, even if I were asked, to attend theatre parties, frequent rehearsals or sup late night with the stars... Bedding down with the people you write about is the shortest way to professional castration. On the other hand, it's useful occasionally to talk to directors of theatres about artistic policy or theatrical economics.

“In short, I see the critic neither as totally detached outsider nor as hob-nobbing insider, neither as man from Mars nor stage-door Johnny: more as a permanent occupant of a Pinteresque no-man's-land always in danger of getting caught in enemy cross-fire.”


Sunday, July 19, 2009

BRB

Barely breathing with a slew of Cinemalaya films and plays to catch, on top of pending writing deadlines. Be back in a bit. See you at CCP.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Auditions for new PETA musical play

PETA is holding auditions for its 42nd theater season production of "Si Juan Tamad, Ang Diyablo at ang Limang Milyong Boto" (a musical comedy on virgin voters and the 2010 presidential elections).

When: July 25, Saturday (invitational) and July 26, Sunday (open audition), 3 p.m.-7:30 p.m.

Where: Studio A & B, 3rd floor, PETA Theater Center, Eymard Drive, Bgy. Kristong Hari, E. Rodriguez, Q.C. (back of Quezon City Sports Club).

Prepare 2 memorized songs (English or Filipino, slow and fast) with minus one cd. Be ready to dance and read from the script. Bring 2x2 colored photo.

Roles up for grabs:
1. YOUNG MALE LEAD – 21 years old, charming, can sing and dance well, good comic timing
2. TWO FEMALE ENSEMBLE – 20 yrs and above, to play multiple roles, can sing & dance well, good comic timing
3. TWO MALE ENSEMBLE – 20 yrs and above, to play multiple roles, can sing & dance well, good comic timing

(Note: ENSEMBLE cast to play leads and second leads. YOUNG MALE LEAD is the only fixed role in the musical.)

Music and libretto by Vincent A. De Jesus. Contributing writers are Liza Magtoto and Anj Heruela, with set design by Boni Juan and direction by Phil Noble.

If interested, please call or text 0917-8834203 to set time of arrival before coming to audition.

Rehearsal period: August to mid-September 2009
Opening: Mid- September 2009 (subject to slight change), to go on tour until first quarter of 2010

[via Vince]


Thursday, July 16, 2009

Here's to the ladies who lunch, aren't they a gas.

Arts presscon, lunchtime. Two society dames seated in front of me at a round table, obviously bored, obviously trying to stay above it all. Small talk, BIG voices. The name TonyBoy is mentioned by the emcee.

SD1: Isn't TonyBoy the one with the actress as kabit?

SD2: Yah! She's a bundle.

SD1: Whyyyy? What do you mean?

SD2: Ay, there's a picture of her kissing another guy, and it's all over the cell phones!

SD1: Weeell, she's an actress, that's what they do!

SD2: Yah. Celebritees!

Dear Anonymous, before you throw a hissy fit again, know one thing: I don't seek them out, they find me--delicious overheard conversations, I mean. Or maybe I just have the nose, or ear, for them. Real-life dialogue--the unexpected kind, usually--is often funnier, more telling than constructed ones, and damn if all I can do in its presence is laugh the laughter of the clueless. What am I a writer for, anyway, if not to find the quirky and satirize the absurd?

Anyway, the same conversation, this time followed by my thought balloons.

SD1: Isn't TonyBoy the one with the actress as kabit?

[Hellur, her name's Gretchen! As if you didn't know, ganown? As if you're different from the rest of us and you don't read Ricky Lo or Yes! Magazine?]

SD2: Yah! She's a bundle.

[Naaks, a bundle talaga ha.]

SD1: Whyyyy? What do you mean?

[Ashushu, isa pa 'tong kunwari walang kamuwang-muwang.]

SD2: Ay, there's a picture of her kissing another guy, and it's all over the cell phones!

[Mwahaha, hoy, that's so last year pa ha! Or two years ago pa ata. Oops, ba't mo alam yan, aver? Aminin!]

SD1: Weeell, she's an actress, that's what they do!

[Judgmental!?]

SD2: Yah. Celebritees!

[Yah, and society women are so gracious and refined they don't make tsismis, no never not at all, this is merely passing the time, look at the two of you with your prim pearls and pious Bobby Novenario blouses you're not the type to talk trash or be blunt, que horror y barbaridad to think otherwise 'no?]

Four new plays from DLSU's Harlequin Theatre Guild

De La Salle University's Harlequin Theater Guild presents "Playfest 2009: Box (Buksan ang Kamalayan)," a showcase of four new original plays written by the troupe's members.

This production runs July 29-30, 2009 (6:30 p.m.), July 31 (3 and 6:30 p.m.) and August 1 (3 p.m.) at the William Shaw Little Theatre, DLSU Manila. Ticket price is P150.

PANAKIP BUTAS by Dennise Endri D. Lozada: Malaking problema ang hindi makakain ng ilang araw kaya naman masaya na ang magkaibigang Bongbong Inosencio at Nardo Gayamo sa trabaho ng pagdidikit ng poster na hawak ang ekspektasyon para sa pera. Ngunit sa panahon ng eleksyon, hindi lamang pera at pagkain ang kailangang mahanap, may mga makikilalang bigating institusyon at isang kawi- wiling istorya ng dalawang binatang nawawala sa mundo ng desisyon, kapangyarihan, at pag-asa ng pagbabago.

ANINAG by Immy Belle Rempis: Ang dula ay umiikot sa storya ng buhay ni Rosa ( isang OFW pinay sa Saudi), ang naiwang niyang pamilya sa Pilipinas, at ang paghahanap nito ng hustisya para sa kanyang sinapit. Para kay Rosa at sa kanyang mga anak, umuulan subalit umaraw parin; patunay na sa gitna ng dilim, may pag-asa pa rin.

JEEP NI... by Carmi Mora: Si Juana ay matagal ng naghintay magparehistro para makaboto pero nang patungo na siya sa City Hall hindi inaasahang nasiraan ang jeep na kanyang sinasakyan. Habang naghahanap siya ng paraan para makaalis, kasama ng apat na iba’t-ibang uri ng tao na kasabayan niya papuntang City Hall, mayayanig ang kaniyang paniniwala na matagal ng tinatag ng kanyang ina simula pagkabata niya.

ANG BAGONG BAYANI by Nina Bunsoy: Kwento ng kapalaran ni Maltha Mendoza, isang babae na pinilit ng kapalaran upang magtrabaho bilang OFW. Iniwan niya ang kanyang pamilya upang makipag-sapalaran sa Saudi Arabia, kung saan siya naipit sa pagitan ng batas sa banyagang lupa at ng pangaabuso ng kanyang mga amo. Ang mga pangyayari ito ay nagbigay-daan sa pagkawala ng kanyang bait at unti-unting pagbitaw sa mundo ng realidad.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Orangutan-watching in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah


The trek to the viewing platform on ascending jungle terrain is hot and humid. Insect repellant is strongly recommended. The good news is, the walk takes only about 10 minutes. That's because the nature preserve is still within the lush 400-acre property of Shangri-la's Rasa Ria Resort in Kota Kinabalu.

Since the resort is a bit far from the city center (about 45 minutes' ride by bus), it's designed to be a self-contained luxury destination where all amenities are within easy reach. Rasa Ria has its own cove and beachfront, 18-hole golf course, hiking trails and nature preserve, the latter maintained in partnership with the Sabah government.

The preserve's star attraction is Borneo's most famous animal, the orangutan, a threatened member of the family of great apes. Its natural habitat fast disappearing, the orange-haired animal is also decreasing in number. The nature preserve seeks to stem the tide by providing baby orangutans rescued from poachers or abandoned by their mothers in the wild to grow up inside the sprawling preserve for a few years until they reach maturity, after which they will be released in the jungle, in another part of Borneo, and allowed to survive on their own.

Orangutan-watching is scheduled twice a day in Rasa Ria, one in the morning and one in the afternoon, coinciding with the animals' feeding time. Bananas and fruits are left near the viewing platform, and pretty soon the baby apes--six in all at this time, though only three showed up--swing into view, oblivious of the humans gawking at them. [Video below]

Orangs are arboreal creatures, meaning they spend most of their time atop trees, and move around by swinging on branches, vines, etc. using their long, powerful limbs. Visitors watching them are confined to the viewing platform and are not allowed to touch the animals--for good reason. Though they are shy and gentle, they are very strong creatures. They sometimes grab at cameras, shades, hats. Worse, get too close and you might be at the receiving end of poop or piss as the ape flies high above you.

More about the orangutan (its name is also spelled orang utan--in Malay, “man of the forest”--but I'll go for the more common one-word usage): “According to research psychologist Robert Deaner and his colleagues, orangutans are the world's most intelligent animal other than humans, with higher learning and problem solving ability than chimpanzees, which were previously considered to have greater abilities. A study of orangutans by Carel van Schaik, a Dutch primatologist at Duke University, found them capable of tasks well beyond chimpanzees’ abilities--such as using leaves to make rain hats and leakproof roofs over their sleeping nests. He also found that, in some food-rich areas, the creatures had developed a complex culture in which adults would teach youngsters how to make tools and find food.”

As I Facebooked afterwards: On the orangutan trail, a ranger asked, “First time to visit your cousins?”. After seeing three baby orangs, I'm all for the family relation.



Tuesday, July 14, 2009

If only it ain't so damn scary

“I want you to get swept away. I want you to levitate. I want you to sing with rapture and dance like a dervish. Be deliriously happy. Or at least leave yourself open to be. I know it’s a cornball thing but love is passion, obsession, someone you can’t live without. If you don’t start with that, what are you going to end up with? I say fall head over heels. Find someone you can love like crazy and who’ll love you the same way back. And how do you find him? Forget your head and listen to your heart… Run the risk, if you get hurt, you’ll come back. Because, the truth is there is no sense living your life without this. To make the journey and not fall deeply in love--well, you haven’t lived a life at all. You have to try. Because if you haven’t tried, you haven’t lived… Stay open. Who knows? Lightning could strike.”

-- Anthony Hopkins as Bill Parrish in Meet Joe Black

[h/t: Migs and Ian]

[Photo: Boy jumping into the sea on Barry Island, Wales, by Vincent J. Musi/National Geographic]

UP Playwrights' Theater presents Anton Juan's Dead Stars and Sepang Loca

Celebrating the centennial of the Department of English and Comparative Literature and the 50th anniversary of the Department of Speech Communications and Theater Arts, the UP Playwrights' Theater, on its 21st theater season (2009–2010), proudly presents a twinbill offering: “Dead Stars,” Paz Marquez Benitez’s celebrated 1925 short story in English adapted for the stage by Anton Juan, and “Sepang Loca,” Amelia Lapeňa Bonifacio’s landmark theater piece--both under Anton Juan's direction.

The twinbill production opens July 21, 2009 and will run until August 1, 2009 at the 130-seater Teatro Hermogenes Ylagan, 1st Floor, Faculty Center, University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City. Weekday shows at 7 p.m., weekend shows at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.


After his successful “Hinabing Pakpak ng Ating mga Anak” last July 2008, Juan returns to the UP stage with his dramatic adaptation of “Dead Stars,” acknowledged as the first Filipino modern short story written in English. The play, which centers on hypothetical love in a colonial state, collapses time and point of view in an impressionist dramatic narrative. Author Paz Marquez Benitez was the mentor of many Filipino literary masters and National Artists in Literature.


“Sepang Loca,” meanwhile, lays bare the cruelty of a village and the damnation of a village fool by its religious but self-righteous folk.

The cast includes some of Philippine theater's finest actors such as Teroy Guzman, Ana Abad Santos, Judy Ick, Earl Ignacio, Edna Mae Landicho, Fonz Deza, Ces Aldaba, Lexie Schulze, Lillibeth Nacion-Puyot and the Dulaang UP ensemble.

Joining Juan in the artistic team are Patrick Valera (dramaturgy and assistant direction) and Meliton Roxas, Jr. (set and lights design). Special period costumes are provided by Boy Domingo and Edgar San Diego.

Tickets at P250. Special group and student discounts are available. For inquiries and ticket reservations, call 9818500 local 2449/2451, 9261349 or telefax 4337840. Or contact Ozette Manguerra- Cauilan, Marketing Director, 0919-4281399 or e-mail infinite_supply@yahoo.com.

Visit the Dulaang UP office at Room 136, Palma Hall, University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City, or the website at ww.upd.edu.ph/~dup.


Writer's Bloc resumes play-reading sessions, invites interested playwrights

The Writer's Bloc, Inc., an independent group of emerging and established playwrights, invites interested parties to join its regular reading sessions of new plays every other Sunday afternoon starting August 2, 2009.

Plays read and discussed during these sessions will be considered for presentation in the group's numerous activities, like the annual Virgin Labfest and for future publication initiatives.

The Bloc also offers playwriting workshops to interested groups and institutions. The Sunday sessions, however, are free of charge.

For inquiries, please e-mail Rody Vera or Alvin Dacanay at thewritersblocinc@yahoo.com.ph or writersblocinc@gmail.com.



PLUS: Some Writer's Bloc members with celebrated Asian-American playwright David Henry Hwang (M. Butterfly): (standing, from left) Debbie Ann L. Tan, Alfonso I. Dacanay, Dennis Marasigan, J. Dennis C. Teodosio, Layeta P. Bucoy, Jose Victor Z. Torres. (Sitting, from left) Rence Tomas, Rody Vera, David Henry Hwang, Nicolas B. Pichay, Allan B. Lopez.

[Photo: Alfonso I. Dacanay]

Monday, July 13, 2009

Virgin Labfest 5 blog contest: We have winners!

Thirty-five entries from twenty-two bloggers (some did multiple reviews for the different sets of plays they watched). More than good enough for me!

I had planned to give prizes only to the first to third placers, but the generally high caliber of most of the blogs submitted put me in a bind. I had to recognize honorable mentions, too, I felt. Fortunately, the gods heard my prayer. Elmar Ingles of the National Commission for Culture and the Arts approached me at the CCP one evening and handed me a thick package. Books, he said--use them as additional prizes for your blog contest.

And that's how I can now afford to reward not only my top 3 choices but also nine other honorable mentions, each of whom will likewise get a gift. (Details of major prizes here and here.)

Criteria
A note on my choices: I had two basic criteria for this contest--quality of insight and clarity of expression, whether in English or Filipino. I just wanted to know what went on in one's head while watching a VL play, and how he or she would now describe it, present it, frame it, argue with or concur with it in the form of a blog entry.

Whether I agreed with one's point or not was not a consideration. Many bloggers who made it to the list, in fact, offered opinions divergent from mine; in the end, how well-thought out and and how well-expressed an opinion was were the only things I looked at. Of course, throw in a dash of humor, a fleck of wit and attitude to one's basic articulation and the deal was sealed for me.

I invite you to read through all the blog entries submitted here--winner and non-winner alike--and take heart in the thought that we do have an engaged, alert, intelligent audience out there. And many of them young, too. Know hope.


Additional prizes
1. Writ.Hop: New Writers Speak Up, edited by Ricardo De Ungria and Erlinda Alburo: “A collection of essays presented by critics and young writers in two national conferences held under the auspices of the NCCA,” this volume includes pieces by Timothy Montes, Wendell Capili, Lilledeshan Bose, Lakambini Sitoy, Francis Macansantos, Luna Sicat, Rebecca Anonuevo, Alvin Yapan, Michael Obenieta, Rolando Tolentino et al.

2. Vibora!, by F. Sionil Jose: “This brief but thoughtful novel challenges the reader to make judgment--at his own moral peril,” from the National Artist for Literature and the Philippines' most widely translated author.

THE WINNERS

First prize
Proletartist: (Prize: Preview Art book, Sinta! anthology, Virgin Labfest anthology, Bilog CD)

Second prize
MossGreenTrunks: (Prize: pair of Havaianas, Sinta! anthology, Virgin Labfest anthology, Bilog CD)

Third prize
Wandering Commuter: (Prize: Zen Zest gift pack, Sinta! anthology, Bilog CD, The Rene O. Villanueva Children's Reader)

Honorable mentions
1. Buena Bernal (Prize: Bilog CD)
2. Erasmusa (Prize: Bilog CD)
3. Eros (Prize: The Rene O. Villanueva Children's Reader)
4. John Ryan Pecabar: (Prize: Writ.Hop)
5. Rhodge (Prize: Writ.Hop)
6. Abaniko (Prize: Writ.Hop)
7. FabulousJV (Prize: F. Sionil Jose's Vibora!)
8. Acrylique (Prize: F. Sionil Jose's Vibora!)
9. Rollie dela Cruz (Prize: F. Sionil Jose's Vibora!)

How to get your prizes
Please drop by the Inquirer office (Yague corner Mascardo Sts., Pasong Tamo, Makati City) so I can personally give you your prize. But before you do that, e-mail me at gibbs_c@yahoo.com and let's agree on the time and date. See you.

Thank you to everyone who joined in whatever way--by sending entries, donating prizes, spreading the word, leaving comments, or by plain keeping this blog company with your (much-appreciated) lurking. Maraming, maraming salamat. Sa uulitin!

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Game boys

Overheard from two Don Bosco high school students (their uniforms said so) in front of me in the jeepney:

Boy 1: Kainggit si Miranda ano, di nag-aaral, pa-Dota Dota lang, pumapasa sa test. Anlupet.

Boy 2: Sana ganun din tayo... Sana nga me test din sa Dota.

Boy 1: Ayputa, yayariin ko 'yan, ako topnotcher dyan!


PETA offers free tickets to 20 bloggers

In connection with the opening of its latest production, “Noli at Fili Dekada 2000 (Dos Mil),” PETA is inviting bloggers to watch its performances for free.

Bloggers need to send their names, contact numbers and a link to their sample blog to
petampro@yahoo.com. PETA will choose the top 20 bloggers, who will be notified by e-mail.

The lucky bloggers chosen will get a chance to watch “Noli at Fili Dekada 2000 (Dos Mil)” for free, on the condition they write a review of the play to avail of the season pass.

Backstage passes, special house seats and an exclusive interview with the director and cast of PETA’s productions are also up for grabs.

The season’s line-up of plays includes, aside from “Noli at Fili,” “Ismail at Isabel,” a play about children’s rights written by Rody Vera and directed by Maribel Legarda (August 28-October 4), and “Boto,” musical comedy on Philippine Elections written by award-winning librettist Vince de Jesus together with Liza Magtoto and Anj Heruela and directed by Phil Noble (February 5-March 7, 2010).

Deadline for applications is on July 26, 2009. For inquiries, contact PETA Marketing at 4100821, 7256244, 0917-8044428, petampro@yahoo.com or www.petatheater.com


Thursday, July 09, 2009

Rare video: Michael Jackson/Jackson 5 bantering with Bob Hope

The song numbers preceding and following this TV moment are on YouTube (Get It Together and Dancing Machine, respectively), but both excerpts omit the brief interlude when comedian Bob Hope saunters up to the brothers and banters with them.

The repartee is obviously scripted, but note how the script is a crisp comic gem--much preferable, if you ask me, to the inane, vapid chitchat that passes for TV talk these days. In the realm of Bob Hope, then America's king of one-liners, not even the few minutes between musical numbers should be left to idle blather. His back-and-forth with the Jackson brood is sharp and fast and funny (young Michael gets some of the best lines), and notable for poking fun even at himself:

BH: I can't get over you, guys. Television, concerts, records--you're always working!

J5: Well, you gotta make it while you can. The public is fickle and musical trends change so fast.

BH: I know. I heard of one group that became obsolete before they could get off the bus.

MJ: You're lucky you're a comedian, Mr. Hope. People seem to laugh at the same things for years.

BH: [Beat] That's all we need--a midget Don Rickles.


[Don Rickles--curmudgeonly comic and actor famous for his insults.]

The interlude lasts less than 3 minutes before the brothers launch into their hit song Dancing Machine, but is packed with great zingers like that. Watch.

I've looked closely--this isn't on YouTube yet, so let this be my own contribution to the ever-growing heap of MJ memorabilia online. So long, Michael!



Indie filmmaker Raya Martin in Artist Talk at Lopez Museum


The Lopez Memorial Museum welcomes acclaimed experimental filmmaker Raya Martin, who will discuss the relation between film and history, and other aspects of independent filmmaking in the Philippines, on July 18, 2009.

The 25-year old Martin is the first Filipino to be accepted at the prestigious Cinefondation Residence of the Cannes Film Festival and the first Filipino to have two entries at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival (“Independencia” and “Manila”).

Martin says, “The history of our cinema tells the history of our country. Movies become historical accounts of a people’s struggle in a particular period. When a movie studio ceases to exist, it marks the death of an historian. What we are left with are the memories of a memory maker. We only stand before what was there that was not ours.”

His video installation called “WMB” is one of the featured works in the exhibition “Double Take,” ongoing at the Lopez Memorial Museum’s main gallery until September 25, 2009. He will be using “Huk sa Bagong Pamumuhay,” a production of LVN Pictures, as he goes into the history of film.

Born in 1984, Martin graduated in 2005 from the University of the Philippines Film Institute with a degree in filmmaking. He began receiving accolades for his work at a very young age. In 2004, his short film “Bakasyon” won the Ishmael Bernal Award for Young Cinema at the Cinemanila International Film Festival and his documentary on Batanes called “The Island at the End of the World” won best Documentary film prize at the .mov 2005 film festival.

Also in 2005, he completed his first feature film, “Indio Nacional.” In the same year, he was granted a prestigious residency in Paris at the CineFondation, a program for young filmmakers organized under the auspices of the Cannes International Film Festival. In 2007, he was named Best Director for his film “Autohystoria” at the 2007 Cinemanila International Film Festival. His film “Independencia” was the first Filipino film to be selected to the Un Certain Regard section of the Cannes Film Festival, and his film with Adolfo Alix Jr., “Manila,” was also shown.

Artist Talk on July 18 (Saturday) is from 2-4 p.m. Fee is P120 per person. For inquiries, call Fanny 6312417 or e-mail admin@lopez-museum.org.


One-night-only The Vagina Monologues at RCBC Theater

After its 15th anniversary offering, “The Male Voice,” the New Voice Company--in cooperation with Women In Maritime Philippines (WIMAPHILS) Association and SMART Link--revisits its internationally acclaimed production, Eve Ensler’s “The Vagina Monologues,” with a special one-night-only performance on July 31, 7:30 p.m., at the Carlos P. Romulo Theater, RCBC Plaza, Makati City.

New Voice's production of “TVM” has been repeatedly performed in Japan, Singapore and Hong Kong, and all over the country.

Directed by NVC Associate Artistic Director Rito Asilo with light design and technical direction by Martin Esteva, the exciting new batch of actresses who will breathe life into Ensler’s well-loved monologues includes Juno Henares (“The Good Body,” “Into the Woods”), Lily Chu (“Cabaret,” “Falsettos The Musical”) and Missy Maramara (“Into the Woods,” “Stop/Kiss”).

The show will raise funds for WIMAPHILS' various projects that aim to involve women in issues affecting the maritime industry. NVC Artistic Director is Monique Wilson and NVC Executive Producer is Rossana Abueva.

For tickets, call 8981173.


Wednesday, July 08, 2009

My favorite Virgin Labfest 5 performances

The paper has prior claim to my omnibus Virgin Labfest review, so for this corner I'll focus on the performances instead--those that thrilled me, moved me, jolted me out of my seat or had me rapt in thought while filing out of the theater.

The plays' imposed brevity--all one-act, about 35-45 minutes maximum--is, from my experience of watching the Labfest in the last four years, no deterrent to bursts of acting prowess that can stand side by side with performances in more elaborate full-length productions with longer rehearsal time and greater resources.

More, many of this year's crop of breakthrough performers are, like the plays they brought to urgent life, also “untried and untested”--fresh faces and talents a generation or two away from the rarefied stature of superstar thespians like last year's Shamaine Centenera-Buencamino and Tommy Abuel, or the combined Irma Adlawan-Nonie Buencamino juggernaut in the 2006 Labfest.

That new actors are breaking through is yet another sign that the festival is doing significant work pump-priming the local theater industry. Come yearend, I hope the names below will make it to various citation lists.

ACTRESSES
1. Skyzx Labastilla, for her layered, pitch-perfect portrayal of a complex, confounding young woman coping with horrors both personal and political in Isang Araw sa Karnabal.

2. Mayen Estanero--remarkable range, from the subtle, streetwise charm of her love-starved saleslady in Ang Mamanugangin ni Rez to the ferocity of her trashed-up character in So Sangibo A Ranon Na Piyatay O Satiman A Tadman.

3. Mailes Kanapi--another double-duty actress, in Kitchen Medea and Hate Restaurants, both of which banked heavily on her ability to ground loony, flailing, easy-to-overdo characters in something intimate, organic--touching.

4. Marjorie Lorico, thoroughly engaging as a bubbly teacher with a lot of things in her distracted mind in Ang Huling Lektyur ni Misis Reyes.

5. Karenina Haniel--inspired casting, not only because she played the part of a boy in a play about gender fluidity and confusion (in Boy-Gel and Gelpren ni Mommy), but also because she was excellent in it.

6. Angeli Bayani--a supporting part as the foul-mouthed wife in Doc Resureccion, Gagamutin ang Bayan, but textured and authentic to the core. You could practically smell her from your seat.

ACTORS
1. Jonathan Tadioan, nothing short of magnificent as the raging, murderous cousin in Doc Resureccion, Gagamutin ang Bayan. More character actor than conventional leading man, he stamped the stage with his riveting combustibility.

2. Riki Benedicto, with his choirboy mien and warm presence a worthy toe-to-toe counterpoint to his explosive co-star in Doc Resureccion, Gagamutin ang Bayan.

3. Paolo O'Hara--effortless Everyman stance and comic timing, plus great chemistry with Skyzx Labastilla in Isang Araw sa Karnabal.

4. Bembol Roco--acting distilled to wistful, heart-tugging artlessness in Maliw. (One of Philippine cinema's great actors but a relative newbie in theater, Mr. Roco appears to be bringing a lifetime's worth of lessons on the art of intensified stillness to the stage, to go by his performance here and in Kung Paano Maghiwalay earlier in the year.)

ENSEMBLES
1. Doc Resureccion, Gagamutin ang Bayan--powerful, compelling turns from everyone in the cast. The tightest multi-character work in the festival.

2. Isang Araw sa Karnabal--the play, already a fine piece of work, finds extra lift from its two leads' seamless interaction.

3. Boy-Gel ang Gelpren ni Mommy--deadpan oddball tone winningly sustained throughout by a cast all cued to the same spirit, resulting in a strikingly fresh and funny take on a delicate subject.

PETA brings back Noli at Fili Dekada 2000 (Dos Mil)

Opening PETA’s 42nd Theater Season is “Noli at Fili Dekada 2000 (Dos Mil),” back for a re-run.

The play, which revamps and contemporizes Rizal’s classics, is written by noted academic and scholar Nic Tiongson. “It is Tiongson’s keen understanding of Rizal’s works that enables him to invest his work with imagination and creativity”, one critic said.

“Noli at Fili Dekada 2000 (Dos Mil)” features an assortment of young and veteran actors: Lex Marcos, Robert Seña, Bembol Roco, Bodgie Pascua, Jack Yabut, Julia Enriquez, Buddy Caramat, Jojo Atienza, Jeffrey Hernandez, Joel Saracho, Marichu Belarmino, Joshua Deocareza, Upeng Galang-Fernandez, Ian Segarra, She Maala, Neomi Gonzales, George de Jesus, Raffy Tejada, Joel Molina, Jess Evardone, Ryan Alfonso and Paolo Rodriguez.

The production runs every Friday, Saturday and Sunday (10 a.m. and 3 p.m.) on July 17-August 9, 2009 at the PETA Theater Center. For inquiries, contact PETA Marketing at 4100821, 7256244, 0917-8044428, petampro@yahoo.com or www.petatheater.com


Monday, July 06, 2009

Virgin Labfest blog contest: Deadline extended, one more prize

[Update: Winners here]

1. I've been receiving very good entries to the Virgin Labfest blog contest, so I'm extending the deadline to this coming Friday, July 10. I'll announce the winners within that weekend. Quick, send me those entries now by posting on the comment section here! And please help spread the word about the deadline extension.


2. Palanca Hall of Fame playwright Nicolas Pichay has donated CDs of the original cast recording of a Filipino musical play called Bilog (Le Cercle) to add to our prizes. Bilog, written by Mr. Pichay with musical direction by Vincent De Jesus, was choreographed and first staged by Paul Morales for the defunct theater company Dulaang Talyer in 1995. It has been restaged three times, garnering two Aliw Award nominations (for Best Play and Best Director) along the way and reaching its brightest moment in 2003 when it was invited to perform at a European theater festival in Avignon, France--the first Filipino play to achieve that distinction.

Like the Sinta! anthology, Bilog's soundtrack CD is another collector's item, because it is not found in record stores anywhere. It features peformers John Abul, Charyl Chan, Connie Lauigan-Chua, Nor Domingo, Herbert Go, Cynthia Culig-Guico, Teresa Jamias, Donna Miranda, Julius Mocorro, Dwight Rodrigazo, Nazer Salcedo and Naomi Villa.

Bilog further fattens our prize pot, which now also includes books donated by playwrights Allan Lopez and Rody Vera on top of the original gift packs I'm offering. All three winners of the blog contest will get a copy of the CD (in pristine condition, unopened and still in its plastic packaging).

Thank you, Mr. Pichay!

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