Saturday, April 30, 2011

Rama at Sita on video--the return! (p. 1)


Yes, the video clips, wiped out by Youtube when my old account was unceremoniously closed, are now back online. I'm reposting them in batches, so do stay tuned for the rest of the excerpts.

The clips are made available online by special arrangement with Franco Laurel and Ayen Munji-Laurel of ML Entertainment, owners of the copyright to the musical. No DVD copy of the musical, whether bootleg or original, is available commercially, so--thank you, Franco and Ayen, for this wonderful gift to Pinoy musical theater fans.

From my original entry on these musical excerpts: For those who caught the production at the UP Theater, here's a chance to relive its magic. For those who missed it, now's the time to watch, from dazzling opening number to exhilarating finale, the most-talked-about theater event of that long-ago season.

This video captures the closing performance of the musical on the evening of March 6, 1999, with Ariel Rivera as Rama, Chiqui Pineda as Sita, John Arcilla as Rama's brother Lakshmana, Robert Sena as the villain Ravana, Jaya as Ravana's sister Soorphanaka, Mr. Laurel as Rama's youngest brother Bharata, and Edward Granadosin as Rama's teacher Vishmavitra.


A sampling of the raves:

More than just a visual spectacle. Never have we seen such a case of stage pomp and pageantry. -- Mary Ann Bautista and Ricky Gallardo, Philippine Daily Inquirer

Certainly one of the best local musicals we've ever seen. First-rate production values, fabulous sets and costumes, lots of spectacle. Lani Misalucha is superb as Sita, with a sparkling voice really meant for theater. The revelations for us are Franco Laurel as Bharata, Rama's younger brother (he shines in his solo number, 'Kaya Ko') and Nonie Buencamino who performs with devilish energy as the villainous Ravana. -- Mario Bautista, The Manila Times

A mesmerizing musical! --Monique Buensalido, The Philippine Star

Chiqui Pineda is effectively touching in 'Rama at Sita'... May Bayot's performance as the female villain only served to affirm her reputation as an outstanding performer. -- Nestor Torre, Philippine Daily Inquirer

1. Sadyang Pinagtagpo--Edward Granadosin, Chorus. In the kingdom of Ayodhaya, the guru Vishmavitra narrates Rama's decision to seek a righteous life by following his dharma (sacred duty), which will lead him to his great love, Sita.




2. Huwag Takasan--Ariel Rivera. Rama prays to the gods Vishnu (Bimbo Cerrudo) and Shiva (Girl Valencia) and agrees to seek his destiny in the city of Mithila, accompanied by his brother Lakshmana.




3. Kaya Ko--Franco Laurel. Rama's youngest brother Bharata sings of his frustration at not being allowed to join his brothers' journey outside the kingdom.




4. Halina Sa Mithila--Ariel Rivera, John Arcilla, Edward Granadosin, Michael Williams, Gelo Francisco, Zebedee Zuniga, Chorus. Rama's party arrives in Mithila in grand style, the prince astride an elephant. (Watch for that amazingly life-like pachyderm!)




5. Kay Dami ng Babae--John Arcilla, Chorus. The roguish Lakshmana is enchanted by the many beautiful women in Mithila. In the market, he catches a glimpse of Sita, unknown to him the daughter of Mithila's king Janaka, and is instantly smitten.




6. Sana'y Siya Na Nga--Chiqui Pineda, John Arcilla, Ariel Rivera. But so is Rama, who, upon seeing the princess inside a temple, professes his love for her. King Janaka then invites the brothers to take part in a contest of strength, the prize of which is Sita. Rama wins the competition, and Sita, more drawn to Lakshmana in the beginning, accepts her destiny as Rama's bride-to-be.



The original cast album of Rama at Sita had Lani Misalucha singing this gorgeous ballad with Ariel Rivera and John Arcilla. Here's an audio clip:



More coming up!

Sam Concepcion is Peter Pan, Michael Williams is Captain Hook in Stages and Rep's Peter Pan


Singer-actor-TV host Sam Concepcion is set to star in Stages and Repertory Philippines’ production of “Peter Pan,” which goes onstage September 29-October 30 at the Meralco Theater. Veteran actor-director Michael Williams will play Captain Hook.

“Peter Pan” serves as Sam’s musical theater comeback after headlining the successful run of High School Musical, where he played the role of Troy Bolton.

“I am excited to perform in a musical once again. After all, it has been around three years,” shared Sam. “I am looking forward to all the flying scenes and performing all the wonderful songs from the musical.”

“Peter Pan,” the spectacular musical by Stiles and Drewe and the late Willis Hall, relives Sir James Barrie’s timeless tale of the boy who never grew up.

Sam adds that this production, to be directed by Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo and Jaime Del Mundo, will not just be an enjoyable experience, but also an inspiring one.

“Peter Pan” also marks a milestone because it is the first time that Stages and Repertory Philippines are co-producing a show.

For interested blockbuyers and sponsors, please contact Stages 02-8181111 loc. 225.


Thursday, April 28, 2011

Official list of Virgin Labfest 7 plays announced

Virgin Labfest director Rody Vera has announced the 13 plays chosen for the seventh edition of the Virgin Labfest, which shall run from June 29 to July 10, 2011:

One-act plays
Bawal Tumawid, Nakamamatay by Joey Paras
Kafatiran by Ricardo Novenario
Kawala by Rae Red
Kinaumagahan by Rachelle Rodriguez and Winnielyn Fajilan
Mga Lobo Tulad ng Buwan by Pat Valera
Opera by Floy Quintos
Requiem by Christian Vallez
Streetlight Manifesto by Mixcaela Villalon
The Valley Mission Care by Russel Legaspi

Full-length work
Isang Gabi Bago Magbukas ang 'Portrait of the Artist as Filipino' ni Nick Joaquin by Carlo Pacolor Garcia

Full-length works for staged reading
Chiaroscuro by Lito Casaje
Hermano Pule by Layeta P. Bucoy
House of Candles by Nicolas B. Pichay

Congratulations to the chosen playwrights!

More Care Divas!


After a smash 42 shows the Philippine Educational Theater Association’s musical dramedy “Care Divas” is back for more performances at the PETA Theater Center on May 6, June 10 and 17, July 8, 15, 22 (8 p.m.); and May 7-8, June 11-12, 18-19, July 9-10, 16-17, 23-24 (3 p.m./8 p.m.)

“Care Divas,” with script by Liza Magtoto, music and lyrics by Vince de Jesus and choreography by Carlon Matobato, is directed by PETA Artistic Director Maribel Legarda. The show was inspired by general life-stories of OFWs who work as care givers of elderly Jews in the morning and pursue their own personal dreams as drag performers at night.

The cast includes theater veterans Melvin Lee, Vincent De Jesus, Phil Noble, Buddy Caramat, Dudz TeraƱa, Jason Barcial, Eric dela Cruz and PETA president Cecilia Garrucho. It also features guest artists such as Paul Holme, Ricci Chan, Jerald Napoles, Myke Salomon, Angeli Bayani together with emerging actors Miguel Hidalgo and Dominic Miclat-Janssen.

For inquiries and ticket reservations, contact PETA Marketing and Public Relations Office 7256244, 4100821 or 0917-5642433, or e-mail petatheater@gmail.com.


PLUS: Walter Ang's comprehensive, nuanced appraisal of Care Divas here. My own capsule take here.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Fabcast: And we're complete again!

Short and sweet, because it's really just to welcome back one of our dear, dear friends, on a Sunday afternoon filled with, as McVie puts it, “the celebration of life family, friendship, faith and the bucolic beauty of Pililia, Rizal.” Tony adds: “Finally complete after a long time, the fabcasters greet everyone a happy easter! This maybe our shortest podcasts but definitely one of our sweetest.”

And The Boy Who Lived himself, AJ: “Last Easter Sunday, we got the chance to do a reunion podcast as I was able to join the rest of the FabCasters in a quick podcast. My family threw a small gathering at my sister’s place in Pililla, Rizal (where I’m currently staying to recuperate) to celebrate my mom’s birthday and to celebrate the new life that was bestowed upon me by the Lord--a thanksgiving gathering. Friends and family came. And since the FabCasters are both friends and family to me (and to my mom who loves the FabCasters dearly!), they all came and joined us... It was a celebration of life! And what better way to celebrate life than to do a podcast wherein all FabCasters are complete!”

To life, indeed!

Music credits: Tubthumping by Chumbawamba
Il Mio Cuore Va
by Sarah Brightman
Together Forever by Rick Astley

Download this fabcast (right click and save)

Monday, April 25, 2011

Susan Calo-Medina's top 10 local destinations, new travel magazine, atbp.


Who better to ask for a rundown of the best places to go to in the Philippines than the Travel Time doyenne herself, Susan Calo-Medina? The occasion for the asking was the recent mini-presscon for her new magazine (which I had written about here since, well, the latest issue has me as one of the contributors).

Tita Susan, as she's called by everyone, has tramped back and forth all over the archipelago that she said she can't count anymore the number of local places she's been to. Her TV show has continuously aired since 1986, and her archives are complete--all episodes accounted for, the copies stored in a climate-controlled room in her house. These episodes, by the way, are available for free to students doing research; they just have to shoulder the copying costs.

Launching a travel magazine, she explained, was a natural progression--it makes the perfect companion to the TV show. A book will take too much time away from the program, and she wouldn't want to have someone ghost-write it. But a magazine she can do. And not just any magazine, but one that's practical, useful, “not into celebrities but one that ordinary people can relate to while it also celebrates the beauty of our country, much like the TV show,” said Tita Susan. Hence its newsstand price of only P125--“so more people can afford it.”

I didn't dare ask the lady her age, but for someone who's been a fixture on local TV for 25 years now, Tita Susan seems ageless, remarkably spry. How does she do it? She gets by on 6 hours' sleep, does Pilates, goes to the gym, and otherwise eats whatever is in front of her, she said.

So--her top 10 local destinations, in no particular order:

Pinatubo. “Only 45 minutes' trek to the crater, but what a stunning view.”
Donsol, Sorsogon. “It's an out-of-body experience to see the huge butanding swimming under you.”
Batanes. “Raw, rugged, isolated, dramatic vistas.”
Banaue. “All of us, of course, have to see the Banaue Rice Terraces.”
Bohol. “It has everything, from heritage and hotels to adventure, beaches and great people.”
Palawan. “All those rivers, islands, nature!”
Tawi-tawi/Jolo. “Beautiful beaches; and there's this island, Ungus Matata, about an hour away from Tawi-Tawi's capital Bongao, that produces the most beautiful mats in the world.”
Samar. “The largely undiscovered Sohoton Caves in Basey, Samar.”
Surigao Norte/Sur. “Hiking, surfing, seafood.”
Pampanga. “A food tour of Pampanga is a must!”

There's more. While she's also logged hundreds of miles all over the globe, Tita Susan said there remained places she's dying to visit. A surprise, for instance, that, for one reason or the other, she hasn't made the trip to Angkor Wat, Cambodia. Here are 12 or so of her dream destinations for now.

• Luang Prabang, Laos
• Angkor Wat, Cambodia
• Annapurna, Nepal
• Iguazu Falls, South America
• Victoria Falls, Southern Africa
• Machu Picchu, Peru
• Borobudur, Indonesia
• Ayers Rock, Australia
• Patagonia, Chile
• Libya
• North Vietnam
• All the US National Parks

PLUS: More about the magazine's latest issue--

Tourism personality Susan Calo Medina takes travelers to interesting places within and around the metro with the second issue of Susan Calo Medina’s Travel Time--The Magazine.

Carrying the theme “So Near, Yet So Far,” the April-June 2011 issue of the magazine features three major destinations that are easily accessible from Metro Manila: “Hidden Subic” (Cover Story) and “Baler If You Dare” (Featured Destination), both written by Ricky Lopez, and “Resort Town San Pablo” (Detour), by Floy Quintos.

Packed with articles full of fun and useful information and striking images, Susan Calo Medina’s Travel Time--The Magazine, also features “Heat and Dust: Surprise and Surrender in Incredible India” (Letters From Abroad). Written by Gibbs Cadiz, the article takes travelers to the fascinating sights and pure magic of nearby India.

“Children and Festivals" (Folio) gives readers four pages of colorful fiesta images from various photographers. Meanwhile, Lito Zulueta takes art lovers to places filled with masterpieces in “Art in Manila: Accessible Treasures” (Soul). Alya Honasan shares how to dive right in “The Conscientious Diver” (Thrill). “A 24-Hour Feast” (Flavors) features the Mercato and Banchetto food markets.

Also, Rose Libongco recounts her many years in the tourism industry in “Memoirs of a PR Woman” (Memo). And, finally, Tita Susan samples the gastronomic fare in London’s Borough Market in her section, “Travels With My Aunt.”

Before planning your vacation, make sure to check out the tips found in the magazine’s regular sections. In Quick & Easy, there's “Escape to Balay Indang in Cavite for Under P3,000.” Or, find out how to best prepare for your beach trip in “An Insider’s Guide to Bikinis and Waxing” (Dossier). Celebrate your achievements with “Graduation Getaways” (By Demand). Pick up some tips on getting to your destination safely in “Land Travel 101” (Savvy). Enjoy the benefits of Hydrotherapy in “Water, Water Everywhere!” (Whole). Be a planet saver in “Back to Bayong” (Travel Green). And prepare to look like a million bucks sporting ukay-ukay fashion in “H’wag Wag Wag?” (Market).

Susan Calo Medina’s Travel Time--The Magazine, retails for only P125 and is available in Powerbooks, Fully Booked, Filbar’s, Book Sale, SM Hypermarket, Wilcon Builder’s Depot and National Bookstore outlets nationwide. It is also distributed in the US and Canada by Genesis Direct Distribution, Inc. Grab your copy now!


Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Tony Mabesa directs Fake, a new Floy Quintos play


Now on its 25th Year, the UP Playwrights' Theater (UPPT) presents a new play, “Fake,” written by award-winning playwright Floy Quintos and directed by UPPT and Dulaang UP founding artistic director Tony Mabesa.

The play runs May 4-15 at the Teatro Hermogenes Ylagan, Faculty Center, U.P. Diliman, Quezon City, Wednesdays to Fridays at 7 p.m., and 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on weekends.

“Fake” play delves into the final days in the life of Professor Jose Marco, a man who successfully foisted the major historical forgeries the Code of Kalantiao and La Loba Negra on an unsuspecting Filipino public in the mid-20th century. His forgeries were so widely accepted that the authenticity of the Code of Kalantiao was never doubted and was taught in schools, until the fake works were exposed by the renowned historian Henry Scott.

“Fake” uses history to examine our need as a people to cling and believe in something bigger than ourselves, something even bigger perhaps than truth.

The cast includes the accomplished actor and director Joel Lamangan, who takes on the role of Jose Marco. Alternating for the role is Leo Rialp, who was last seen in the romantic comedy film, “Babe, I love You.”

Gerard Pizzaras and Bryan Tibayan alternate as Old Miguel, while Angelo Pesigan appears as Young Miguel. Paul Holme plays William Henry Scott. Ces Quesada and Alya Honasan alternate as Concepcion, Jose Marco’s wife.

Playing Sister Emily is Shamane Centenera-Buencamino; Olive Nieto serves as understudy for both the roles of Sister Emily and Concepcion. Jerald Napoles appears as Lobo of Tasaday/Datu Kalantiao, alternating with Jorge Gil Fernandez. Karen Gaerlan is La Loba Negra, and Richard Cunanan is George.

Comprising the artistic team are set/costume designer Dante Nico Garcia, technical director Ohm David, lights designer Meliton Roxas Jr., stage manager Raymond Vergara, assistant director/dramaturg Emmanuel Feliciano, poster/photo designer Dino Dimar and sound designer Arkel Mendoza.

“Fake” runs May 4-15 at the Teatro Hermogenes Ylagan, Faculty Center, U.P. Diliman, Quezon City, Wednesdays to Fridays at 7 p.m., and 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on weekends.

For tickets, call Cherry 0917-7500107 or the Dulaang UP Office 9261349, 9818500 local 2449 or 4337840.



Monday, April 18, 2011

How Stages' The Light in the Piazza would have looked, courtesy of set designer Joey Mendoza

Would have--because the word right now is, the production has been scuttled--postponed to a still unannounced later date. There is no official word yet from Stages on the reason behind the show's cancellation, news of which came as quite a surprise considering how far the producers had gone in pre-production and marketing.

It had already hosted, for instance, an intimate presscon to announce the casting of Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo as Margaret Johnson, the role that won for Victoria Clark the Best Actress trophy at the 2005 Tony Awards. Karylle, cast as Margaret's daughter Clara, had also performed songs from the musical before prospective buyers, in tandem with guest actor Fred Lo who stood in for the American actor who was supposed to fly in and play the young Italian Fabrizzio, Stephen Mark Lucas.

Had it pushed through, this Light in the Piazza would have also featured the scenery designed by acclaimed NY-based Filipino set designer Joey Mendoza, whose last work in Manila had been the beautifully stylized set for Repertory Philippines' Little Women late last year. Joey has given me kind permission to post his Piazza sketches on this blog, along with his brief notes, which I find a perfect complement to his images. Ah, too bad we're not seeing this ravishing scenery realized onstage this year. [Slideshow of enlarged images here.]

Colonnade


Tableau open


Uffizi


Tie shop


Cafe


Hotel


Rome


Piazza


Church


Joey, verbatim:

Credit should also go to Jaime del Mundo who is/was the production director. The set, of course, was designed to conform to the Meralco Theater's rather unusual features. Mr. del Mundo wanted me to suggest that the show “is bits of Margaret Johnson's memory”--her first line in the show (to the audience): “What happened here? I played a tricky game in a foreign country... What did I do?”

The set is anchored in a Florentine piazza--each scene morphing from the basic set. Scrim panels, with fragments of paintings from the Uffizi museum--with a Madonna- and-child motif--give a nominal suggestion of location. They are blurry and at times opaque. It is, of course highly romanticized--and ubiquitously bathed in golden light--except when they are briefly in Rome where the light is harsh. The star, of course is, well, “the light.”


Rockwell's Urban Bazaar, Power Plant's Disney mall display


Rockwell’s annual Urban Bazaar runs this year on April 15-17 and April 29-May 1, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., at the Rockwell Tent. The bazaar offers unique gift items, home dĆ©cor, trendy dresses and clothes, sweets and food stuff, sports gear and baby things. Chic picks from Naked Sun, Suelas, Summersault, Soak, Ichigo and a lot more are all on display at Rockwell Tent and the Power Plant bridgeway.

This year, the tent has a sun-kissed beachfront feel. Stall after stall carries hip swimwear or cool cotton blouses, quirky fashion accessories, sandals, bags, shades and other summer must-haves.

Food and refreshments include Bubble Tea Boy, chicken wings at Sunrise Buckets, ice cream and milk teas, cocktails and juices. Isaw, fish balls and peri-peri chicken are available, as are capoeira and reggae performances in the afternoon.

For more information, call 8981702 or visit www.facebook.com/PowerPlantMall.

Also, Rockwell’s Hawaiian-flavored summer takes on a Disney twist as Stitch brings his special presence to The Power Plant Mall on April 11-26.

Designed and set up by MINDstyle, a leading lifestyle and art toy collectible company with an expansive network of licenses from Disney, the mall display brings back the Disney tale of a young Hawaiian girl and her search for a perfect pet, who just happens to be the galaxy's most wanted extraterrestrial--Stitch.

Gigantic Stitch art figures are on display amidst tropical trees, island rocks and totem poles, greeting mallgoers from one end of the mall to another.

“The Power Plant Mall is all about innovation and novelty, and the MINDstyle brand offers products that are internationally recognized and sought after by the most avid collectors worldwide. This MINDstyle display at The Power Plant will delight Disney fans of all ages,” says Malou Pineda, VP and General Manager for Retail, Rockwell Land.

Call 8981702 or visit www.facebook.com/PowerPlantMall.


Friday, April 15, 2011

Pilar Pilapil, just hours earlier at the presscon for The Vagina Monologues


Actress and former beauty queen Pilar Pilapil was allegedly abducted by two armed men and stabbed at least five times before dumping her in a grassy lot in Antipolo City, police said. Senior Superintendent Manuel Prieto, Rizal provincial director, said Pilapil, 60, was now confined at the Medical City Hospital in Pasig City but her medical condition was unknown. (Full report here.)

Shocking--but doubly shocking for us who, just yesterday afternoon, had met and talked to Ms. Pilapil during the presscon for a new production of The Vagina Monologues, scheduled to run April 29-30, 8 p.m., at Teatrino, Greenhills. Ms. Pilapil would have led a coterie of actresses from TV, movies and the stage for this nth staging of playwright Eve Ensler's signature work--among them Giselle Sanchez, Kalila Aguilos, Angeli Bayani, Mailes Kanapi, and two former Pinoy Big Brother housemates, Princess Manzon and Rica Paras.

A work long identified with Monique Wilson's New Voice Company, which had mounted several editions of the monologues over the years, this year's TVM is being produced and directed by MiaDulce D'Bayan, a graduate of Music (major in piano and percussions) who has directed a number of small productions for a local performing arts group, and who also co-produced Gil Portes' Cinemalaya award-winning film, Two Funerals.

Mia said she was inspired to apply for the license to re-stage The Vagina Monologues after a close friend of hers showed up black-and-blue from her boyfriend's beating. In varying degrees, many in the cast, she revealed, have also had the occasional scary brush with violence, battery and discrimination. Proceeds of this Vagina Monologues will go not only to Ensler's worldwide V-Day movement against violence directed at women and children (this year's spotlight is on the women of Haiti) but also, and more urgently, to the Women's Crisis Center-Manila.

Pilar Pilapil with veteran show-biz watchers Mario Bautista and Ricky Lo

Ms. Pilapil, along with the other actresses present, read excerpts from their assigned monologues, then talked about how and why they got involved in the project. It bears stating--Ms. Pilapil is not only beautiful and elegant in her 60s, she is also articulate and opinionated. To a question from the floor--but, man, how moldy could this line of questioning be?--whether men are ready to see women talking straight about their vaginas, Ms. Pilapil quickly and loudly retorted, “They should be! Even before they touch a woman, they should know what their responsibilities are, what it is they're getting into!” Or words to that effect.

What horrific irony, then, that merely hours after talking about the need to fight violence against women, she'd end up robbed, mauled, stabbed and left for dead by still-unidentified men. While she's now recuperating at the hospital, there's been no word about whether The Vagina Monologues itself would push through, as Mia herself said on TV that what's important right now is space and privacy to allow Ms. Pilapil to recover fully. (We'll post updates as they come.) Our prayers are with this brave woman and her family.

Here is Ms. Pilapil, vibrantly alive, doing an excerpt from her monologue, I Was There in the Room, about a grandmother's thoughts as she watched the birth of her grandchild. The TV newscasts, as is their wont, could only show seconds-long snippets. This is her complete moment.



Thursday, April 14, 2011

Kooky Korea

At the bargain shopping district of Myeongdong, while the hordes swarmed over several blocks' worth of incredibly diverse merchandise--shoes, clothes, cosmetics, bags, watches, street food, gadgets, etc., with many shops even employing megaphone-wielding barkers to lure shoppers into their stores--three girls hold aloft banners advertising... free hugs. Sweet of them. (If they were guys, I'd have lined up. Grin.)

A stall dedicated to everything halyu--Korean pop culture and its constellation of adored young celebrities. Typical ice-breaker from Koreans we met: Is Sandara Park really popular in the Philippines? (Yes--was). She's so cute! She's really big here!

Young Korean men are into cosmetics big-time, it seems. It's the flawless faces of male teen idols that lord it over beauty outlets such as The Face Shop, Tony Moly, It's Skin and Holika Holika, and these shops are also packed with male shoppers of all stripes. Those packets sold in bins at big discounts? They're face masks for men--peddled, of course, by an androgynous-looking male pop quintet.

For a Dog Cafe, how else to get people in than have Snoopy's twin dance on the street?

Meanwhile, ignored by the crowd and manning a deserted stretch, the cat sulks.

In its home country, the brand known to the world for state-of-the-art TV, smartphones and home appliances is also apparently into fashion retail.

Enlighten me--where'd the V-flashing come from, and how did it become a Korean trademark? Here, mother and son pose with a member of a martial-arts/comedy troupe from a long-running blockbuster show called Jump!--an amazing blend of acrobatics, martial arts, slapstick comedy--and, among the men, runaway abs. (I have pictures! Later.) V for Vongga?

Who says punk is dead? In full regalia, this guy (or girl, I couldn't tell) I saw at the swanky mall Noon Square wordlessly obliged me with a pose. Later on, I saw him/her get up and noticed not only that the person was a midget, but one leg was also deformed. He/she limped away, bristling genially like an armadillo. There's self-assurance for you.

The loveliest expression I saw of the kooky, lighthearted Korean spirit? This priceless 16th-century porcelain bottle with brown rope design, at the National Museum. The faux rope is a witty, charming touch, and suggests that, even in ancient times, the ancestors of present-day Koreans knew how to have fun.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

One-man show Defending the Caveman, starring Joel Trinidad, returns May 6-21

"Defending the Caveman," starring Joel Trinidad, will have a rerun on May 6, 7, 13, 14, 20, and 21, 2011 at 8pm at the Carlos P. Romulo Theater, RCBC Plaza Building, Makati.

The longest running solo one-man show in Broadway history, "Defending the Caveman "is a hilariously insightful play about the ways men and women relate. Couples will roar with laughter and nudge each other as they recognize themselves being described in the play.

Trinidad, who will entertain viewers in this one-man show, is known for his acting stints in "Avenue Q and Spelling Bee," as a playwright ("Breakups and Breakdowns") and founding member of the comedy group Silly People's Improv Theater or SPIT.

Stand-up comic Rob Becker wrote "Defending the Caveman" over a three-year period, during which he made an informal study of anthropology, prehistory, psychology, sociology and mythology, resulting in a play with funny insights on contemporary feminism, masculine sensitivity and the erogenous zones.

"Defending the Caveman" is now a worldwide phenomenon, having played in over 35 countries in more than 16 different languages--and still counting. Produced by CTE Productions, the production is directed by Michael Williams and Cathy Azanza-Dy.

Contact 2150788, 09175378313 or cteshows@gmail.com. Tickets also available at Ticketworld (891-9999). Recommended for adult audiences only.


Tuesday, April 12, 2011

How F. Sionil Jose changed my life

The film director Sidney Lumet, who died this week at the age of eighty-seven, changed my life. At a dinner party, when I was twenty-six and, as a sideline, writing about theatre in an East Side giveaway paper for ten dollars a column, he took me aside and told me he liked my stuff and to keep at it. His faith is something I have always carried with me. -- John Lahr in The New Yorker

Sorry to leech off that story--it's only that I have a similar tale to tell. In 2003 or thereabouts, I had begun covering theater, and one of the very first productions I reviewed was Tanghalang Pilipino's Mass, adapted by Rody Vera from the F. Sionil Jose novel. It starred the film/TV actor Yul Servo and was directed by Chris Millado. I called it, in a nutshell, “at once powerful and frustrating, mythic and opaque.” (The full review here.)

Shortly after that, to my trepidation, I got a call from a man identifying himself as Mr. Jose's secretary. The author of the book whose stage adaptation I had just panned was said to be inviting me to visit him at his fabled Solidaridad bookshop in Ermita, Manila. Chris, a friend of mine who was a big fan of Mr. Jose, asked if he could tag along. I agreed, because I thought I would need the support once Mr. Jose, said to be a blunt talker, began unleashing his tirade on me.

When we arrived, we were led up to Mr. Jose's sanctum sanctorum on the second floor. To my surprise and utter relief, he greeted me heartily, told me to make myself comfortable, and began asking about my work, my background and my interests. Then he said: “I invited you here just to tell you that I like what you're doing. Keep it up. You should write more.”

And with that, my head was spinning. Did I hear that correctly? It was right I had brought Chris along. Always the better talker, he engaged Mr. Jose in animated conversation, reminding him they had, in fact, met once, in the US, when Mr. Jose had a talk at Stanford University and Chris drove from San Francisco to have his F. Sionil Jose books signed by his favorite author. I half-listened to them while my head processed the thought that Mr. Jose, a National Artist for Literature, said he read me and liked what he read.

Someone else came along soon after--Igan D'Bayan of The Philippine Star. We were treated to lunch at a nearby restaurant, Mr. Jose taking the effort to walk the distance, aided by a cane--and afterwards, to shots of brandy you couldn't say no to. The purpose of the invite became clearer: Igan and I were both covering the Arts/Culture scene for our respective papers, and Mr. Jose apparently wanted to offer a personal, encouraging pat on the back for what we were doing.

I didn't say it, but I was moved. This man was already a giant in Philippine literature--one of the country's true greats. He didn't have to do this. But he did.

His faith, to pilfer John Lahr's words, is something I have always carried with me.

Wednesday, April 06, 2011

Fabcast! Chona, childhood, chenes...

My co-Fabcasters will do the talking this time.

CC: This fabcast started out as a podcast about the gay accessory known as “fag hag”. then it evolved to be about one particular fag hag, mgg's fag hag (because she was the only one in attendance). Then it became a fabcast about something else. The twists and turns of live recording. LOL.

Part 1A
Download this Fabcast (right click and save)

Music credits:
Por Una Cabeza by Carlos Gardel
Memory by Sarah Brightman
You’re In My Heart, You’re In My Soul by Rod Stewart

McVie: Here is the second half of part 1, where the Fabcasters and several members of the peanut gallery share their “turning pink” growing up memories... Click and join the fun!

Part 1B
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Music credits:
Do You Remember When by the J. Geils Band
The One You Love by Glenn Frey
Born This Way by Lady Gaga

Migs: Here now is the last installment of the Chona Fabcast--where we hear Chona talk, and thus understand why we initiated and lubricated the discussion with our own childhood gay tell-tale stories (see Part 1 and Part 2). Listen and get to know Chona up close and personal, and you’ll find out why we love her so much. Chona! We love you!

Part 2
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Music credits:
Born This Way by Lady Gaga
Baby Elephant Walk by Rene Touzet
Careless Whispers by George Michael
Frenesi–Twist by Les Elgart & His Orchestra
Sa Ugoy Ng Duyan by Basil Valdez with The San Miguel Philharmonic Orchestra
Mama by Spice Girls

Auditions for Dulaang UP's Rizal X, to be directed by Dexter Santos


Dulaang UP's upcoming musical production of "Rizal X," to be directed by Dexter Santos ("Orosman at Zafira"), is looking for a young male lead and strong ensemble players (16-25 years old) who can sing, move and play a musical instrument.

The auditions are on April 28-29, 5-8 p.m., at the Wilfrido Ma. Guerrero Theater, Palma Hall, UP Diliman. Registration begins at 4:30 p.m. An upright piano will be available during the auditions.

Interested actors are required to:

1. Sing and play a contemporary pop-rock number in English and Tagalog with the musical instrument of their choice.

2. Perform a dance or movement piece that will showcase their strength and versatility (classical ballet, contemporary dance, hip-hop, etc.)

3. Read a monologue from the musical.

4. Bring their current photo and resume.

For more information, contact Nick Guila 0915-1916384 or visit the Facebook page--Rizal X.


Group exhibit by UP College of Fine Arts freshman class


A group exhibition entitled "Fresh Meat" opens on April 9, 2011, 6 p.m., at Sining Kamalig Gallery, Level 4 (beside Mandarin Suites) Gateway Mall, Araneta Center, Cubao, Quezon City.

"Fresh Meat" will feature the works of promising young artists from the College of Fine Arts, University of the Philippines Diliman, from the freshman class of Professor Nestor Olarte Vinluan.

The participating artists are: Ara Villena, Arsenise Fuentes, Brisa Dominguez, Camille Quintos, Carlo de Laza, Chloe Dellosa, Ella Mendoza,Francine Lima, England Hidalgo, Giell Herrera, Hanielyn Cruz, Ian Fabro, Jasmine Santos, Jason Pasion, John Blanco, Karla Aggarao, Katrina Gosiengfiao, Miguel Puyat, Pau Villanueva, Ren Lopez, Romeo Ramos and Wendel Robles.

Their works range from mixed media to paintings on canvas and works on paper.

The exhibition will be on view until April 27, 2011. Gallery hours are 12-9pm. The public is invited.

For more information, contact Sining Kamalig at siningkamalig@gmail.com or siningkamalig@multiply.com, or contact May at 0919-2656223.


[Artwork: Fallen, by Carlo De Laza]

Monday, April 04, 2011

13 shows in five weeks--it’s local theater’s days of plenty

Philippine Daily Inquirer, 04.04.2011

Not only was the number remarkable, but the variety, too--from glitzy musicals to intense dramas


A FUNNY THING happened on the way to the summer break. Ordinarily a fallow period as the local theater companies gird themselves for their summer workshops, this year’s first quarter saw something different: a glut of productions opening one after the other and running simultaneously, making this period certainly the busiest and most prolific local theater has seen in years.

Within a five-week stretch, from early February to mid-March, some 13 different shows were playing at the metro’s disparate venues. Not only was the number remarkable, but the variety, too--from glitzy musicals and star-studded plays to plain-spoken campus works that demanded as much attention for the homegrown sense of daring they promised, and the often top-flight professional talent they attracted.

There were five new major productions (Peta’s “Care Divas,” Repertory Philippines’ “The Joy Luck Club” followed by “The 39 Steps,” Upstart Productions’ debut effort “Breakups & Breakdowns,” Atlantis Productions’ “Next to Normal”); four returning shows from seasons past (Tanghalang Pilipino’s “ZsaZsa Zaturnnah,” 9 Works Theatrical’s “Rent,” Dulaang UP’s “Orosman at Zafira” and “Amphitryon”); and four campus-based works (Dulaang Sibol’s evergreen “Sa Kaharian ng Araw,” Dulaang Laboratoryo’s “Cyrano: Isang Sarsuwela,” Ateneo BlueRep’s “Hair,” UP Department of English and Comparative Literature’s “Screen: Macbeth”).

Count them--a dozen and one productions. Not all first-rate, of course, but the fact they were playing all at the same time made for a gratifying and all-too-rare buffet of choices. What’s a professional theatergoer like us to do? Devote weekend after weekend to chasing after these shows, most of which played for a measly three weeks and then were gone.

Given this embarrassment of riches--and at the risk of encroaching on Amadis Ma. Guerrero territory and his quarterly “report card” on the performing arts for this paper--we’ve managed capsule appraisals of the major entries in this ersatz theater festival of sorts.


Next to Normal
What Lea Salonga said about this production is spot-on. “The best... Atlantis has presented in its many years of producing theater,” she wrote. The material itself (music by Tom Kitt, book and lyrics by Brian Yorkey) is a winner--a raw, riveting musical that succeeded in rewriting the boundaries of the genre (a family coping in ways absurd and heartbreaking with the matriarch’s bipolar condition—how downbeat and un-Broadway musical could you get?) while also stretching the capabilities of any cast brave enough to take on the lacerating, propulsive pop-rock score.

The cast director Bobby Garcia assembled was nothing if not stout-hearted. This early, the year’s finest performance by an actress in a musical might already be in the hands of Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo, whose Diana Goodman was a moving, astounding turn--so soon after her Mrs. Lovett in Rep’s “Sweeney Todd,” the latest high-water mark in a musical-theater career already unparalleled hereabouts. She had excellent company in Jett Pangan, Felix Rivera, Markki Stroem, Jake Macapagal and newbie Bea Garcia, whose poise and force onstage marked her out as a leading lady to watch.


Care Divas
For sheer must-see pull, this original Filipino musical, which had its closing encore performance only last night, gave “Next to Normal” tough competition as the quarter’s standout production. Like the Tony-winning musical, Peta’s “Care Divas” successfully mined a most unlikely subject matter--about five Filipino caregivers in intifada-era Israel moonlighting as drag queens, their craftily conceived club numbers, by the way, highlighting Vince de Jesus’ nimble work on the music and lyrics.

Liza Magtoto’s perceptive script and Maribel Legarda’s tight staging combined to serve up a rambunctious, flamboyantly entertaining yet poignant work. It wasn’t without flaw--a scene or two that pushed the sexual-political polemic felt risibly contrived--but the overall peppiness of the proceedings, boosted by the piquant performances of the cast led by Melvin Lee, Jerald Napoles (alternating with Ricci Chan) and De Jesus himself, eventually sanded off the rough edges to a (literally) glittering, sequin-flecked finish.


The Joy Luck Club
A talky, unwieldy stage adaptation (by Susan Kim) of the Amy Tan novel that benefited tremendously from Anton Juan’s judicious textual restructuring and expansive direction.

He and Repertory Philippines cobbled together an elite group of actors--Pinky Marquez, Frances Makil-Ignacio, Jay Valencia Glorioso and Rebecca Chuaunsu as the Chinese mothers; Ana Abad Santos, Cris Villonco, Jenny Jamora and Lily Chu as their American-bred daughters--to tell this story of intergenerational conflict and rapprochement. Their performances, notably those of Villonco, Marquez and Glorioso, were sharp enough to hack through the thicket of the script and offer moments of clarity and insight.

Juan’s trademark visual flair, enabled by Ohm David’s versatile, evocative bamboo-inflected set and John Batalla’s supple lighting, worked overtime to charge this long-winded would-be epic with heft and heart. The result: a triumph of poetic staging over banal material.


Breakups & Breakdowns
A promising but not particularly satisfying original work from Joel Trinidad, who wrote this four-character musical, with Rony Fortich supplying the music. Game, earnest performances came by way of Carla Guevara-Laforteza, Jenny Jamora, Emy Alcid-Trinidad, Reuben Uy and Trinidad himself, who, whatever might be said of the work itself, deserves kudos for staging this material, even establishing a new theater company (Upstart Productions) to underwrite it.

But, yes--the musical itself? A rather wan effort. While Trinidad showed a knack for uncorking zippy dialogue and quirky characters, “Breakups & Breakdowns” had the self-conscious feel of a TV sitcom, its too-episodic punchline-blackout setup denying the play any emotional center. The inorganic talk (Girl: “There’s an intruder in the house!” Boy: “What is this, Buckingham Palace?”) reflected a confusing geography. Playwright on the rise? New York perhaps. Yet a downpour, and there’s a flood. Manila? Who are these people?

The two strongest singers--Guevara-Laforteza and Alcid-Trinidad--sang Fortich’s sweet-sounding if slight score with gleaming voices. Much of the rest of “Breakups & Breakdowns,” alas, was as flat and diagrammatic as the first lines of its opening song: “Boy meets girl, and girl meets boy and...”


The 39 Steps
Rep’s follow-up to “The Joy Luck Club,” this busy, belabored farce, directed by Ana Abad Santos, aroused the occasional chuckle, but came off mostly as a foggy slog to those unversed in Hitchock lore and filmography. Adapted by Patrick Barlow from both the John Buchan novel and the subsequent Hitchcock film, the veddy British play had the quality of an in-joke--conspiratorial but also exclusionary.

There were cleverly staged allusions and sequences--the nasty birds, for instance, and the iconic “North by Northwest” pursuit. But by the final scene, and despite the yeoman exertions by the cast--Michael Williams, Juliene Mendoza, a comebacking Lisa Infante-Robinson and a hilariously shape-shifting Rem Zamora--the silliness remained small-bore, refusing to soar into the sublime.


The reruns
In brief: TP’s “ZsaZsa Zaturnnah,” having gone from cult musical to frequently trotted-out warhorse, sidestepped staleness with Pinky Amador helping reinvigorate the show as the new Queen Femina. None of the three Dodongs, though--Red Anderson, Rocky Salumbides and Prince Stefan--could sing, at least in musical-theater terms.

Some of the best singing, whether in this or any other season, emanated from another venue: the cavernous SM Mall of Asia CenterStage, where Dulaang UP’s “Orosman at Zafira” had relocated for a commercial out-of-UP run. Unsteady on its first weekend, the neo-ethnic pageantry, directed by Dexter Santos, would eventually regain breathtaking potency on the wings of its turbo-charged choreography, as well as Maita Ponce, Tao Aves, Jean Judith Javier and Nazer Salcedo’s definitive vocals.

9 Works Theatrical’s “Rent,” on its third run, was a much-improved show, the cast visibly more settled into their characters. But for every Job Bautista whose Angel had curdled into mannerism, there was the hungry vitality of new member Mian Dimacali, her fresh take on Maureen quite the show-stopper.

At UP’s Guerrero Theater, meanwhile, Jose Estrella’s remounted “Amphitryon,” Von Kleist’s play adapted into a blend of high-toned and colloquial Filipino by Jerry Respeto, was in beguiling, fine-tuned form. The final sequence that had pinwheel foliage fluttering in the air was a virtual coup de theatre--grandeur and enigma conjured through inspired stagecraft.


The campus productions
For theater at its most direct and disarmingly heartfelt, one needed to trek to the Ateneo de Manila High School, where Onofre Pagsanghan’s Dulaang Sibol, more than half a century later (Pagsanghan himself is in his 80s), continues to make the case for the virtues of naĆÆf theater. The recently restaged “Sa Kaharian ng Araw,” operating on the youthful cast’s unmiked voices, homespun costumes and scenery, and purity of expression, still entranced the senses.

For “Screen: Macbeth,” Anton Juan’s devised production of the Bard’s most streamlined play based on Judy Ick’s dramaturgy, the pendulum swung to the opposite end. Something leaden and ponderous this way came. The airy touch Juan had exhibited in “The Joy Luck Club” just weeks earlier was now nowhere to be seen, replaced by a return to heavy-handed symbolism and strained metaphor.

Some of it rang true--Lady Macbeth (Ick) as a prototypical Imelda, for instance, her shoes firebombing the stage from above to announce her arrival. But for a play characterized by a hurtling, visceral sense of doom, this one lumbered along in fits and starts, intellectualized to an arid degree and freighted all the more by a cast that seemed to speak in different tongues. Only Teroy Guzman (as Macbeth), Ricky Abad (Duncan) and Jamie Wilson (Macduff) sounded remotely intelligible.

Disclosure: We saw only half of Ateneo BlueRep’s “Hair,” so it’s not in consideration here. However, another student musical, an original one, had a brief run at the GSIS Theater. “Cyrano: Isang Sarsuwela” was the graduation thesis of UP student Pat Valera, restaged with a new cast from its beginnings at the University of Asia and the Pacific late last year.

As we wrote in our blog: “He still seems to be finding his footing, voice and style as a director, but as a dramaturg, Valera is leading the way among his peers, from his work on ‘Orosman at Zafira’ to the thoughtful, thorough effort he put into adapting Rostand’s ‘Cyrano de Bergerac’ to the Philippine milieu circa 1940s. The show itself needed pulling together, but the material was ambitious enough and plausible enough--one of the best new adaptations we came across last year.”

The rerun featured more assured performers, but on the night we watched, Nicco Manalo’s performance as Cyrano floundered on his ragged voice. A pity, because the songs, by William Elvin Manzano (words by Valera), were one of the show’s strongest elements--raucous, eloquent and melodic, able to goad the narrative along even as they also sounded ready to bolt the orbit of Filipino musical theater and rock primetime radio.

Photo credits:
1. PETA
3. PETA
4. Repertory Philippines
8. Chris Lagman


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