Can he hack it? It's Mark Bautista's first foray into theater, but at least from the vocal chops he displayed at the recent presscon for TP's upcoming show, I'd say--yes, he can, and rather beautifully at that. Mark sounded darkly dashing in the difficult number Lawa, a song that tests the mettle of the typically tenor-voiced Ibarras that have sung it (Mark is a light baritone, I think--the musical's punishing top notes would be his great challenge). Another thing going for him: he looks so right for the part, his natty, well-scrubbed all-Pinoy countenance evoking the province-born, Europe-educated ilustrado character very plausibly. Watch (sorry for the messed-up sound, I think I was positioned too close to the speakers):
As for acting, let's hope he measures up as well. Mark alternates with Gian Magdangal--a mestizo, and a tenor--in the role, so the contrast in their Ibarras would be interesting to see. The luminous Cris Villonco is Maria Clara, a role originally played by Monique Wilson (with--surprise!--Regine Velasquez alternating). Audie Gemora was the Ibarra in that 1994 inaugural production; now, he's the director of the latest TP restaging.
In honor of Jose Rizal’s 150th birthday, "Noli Me Tangere: The Musical" will officially open Tanghalang Pilipino’s 25th theater season.
The critically acclaimed musical, adapted by Ryan Cayabyab from Rizal’s most famous work with libretto by National Artist Bienvenido Lumbera, will be restaged under the direction of theater luminary Audie Gemora. Costume design is by National Artist Salvador Bernal.
Leading the cast as Crisostomo Ibarra are singer/TV host Mark Bautista (alternating with Arnold Reyes--updated: Gian Magdangal) and Cris Villonco as Maria Clara (understudied by Tasy Garucha). Joining them are Jerald Napoles and Riki Benedicto (Elias), Al Gatmaitan and Reyes (Padre Salvi), Ring Antonio (Don Victorina), Garry Lim (Don Tiburcio) alternating with Jonathan Tadioan, Red Nuestro (Kapitan Tiago), Jenny Villegas (Tia Isabel), Angeli Bayani (Sisa) and Paolo Rodriguez (leproso).
The ensemble includes Jenny Garcia, Pamela Imperial, Janine Santos, Sherine Ann Koa, Hazel Maranan, Diana Sison, Kat Castillo, Martha Comia, Erick Arenas, Gino Ramirez, Chesko Rodriguez, Jejie Esguerra, Von Ryan Yu, Berl William Angeles, Paolo Rodriguez, Baron Barbers and Greg de Leon.
Comprising the artistic staff are Audie Gemora (director), Rody Vera (dramaturg), Ryan Cayabyab (composer and arranger), Bienvenido Lumbera (librettist), Jed Balsamo (musical director), Mio Infante (set designer), Salvador Bernal (costume designer), Eric Cruz (costume consultant) Katsch Catoy (lighting designer), Agnes Locsin (choreographer) and Christine Crame (dance master.
"Noli Me Tangere: The Musical" runs August 5-28, 2011 at the Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino (CCP Little Theater). Interested sponsors, show-buyers and block buyers may call Tanghalang Pilipino (632) 8323661 or 8321125 local 1620/1621, or CCP box-office 8323704.
[Photo: Pep.ph]
Friday, July 29, 2011
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
In brief, I dodged a bullet.
Note: This post might be TMI for some. Stop here if you're squeamish about talk of sex, HIV, condoms--or me talking about them.
The e-mail came out of the blue. Gibbs, it said, I'm going home. I have a problem, please help.
The letter-sender was a friend working abroad who had been going through anxiety attacks the past few weeks. After a bout of fever and what he thought was some weight loss, it entered his mind that he might now be HIV-positive. He had reason to fear. My friend, a self-made person, is usually a model of iron self-control and self-discipline, but as he told me, last December he had a moment of weakness--an instance of unprotected sex that was now, six months later, haunting him, rendering him depressed, lethargic, panicky. Were there any major symptoms of illness? None, he said. He had, in fact, taken a RAPID test that declared him "Non-reactive," meaning he didn't have the virus. But his anxiety persisted. He wanted a second, definitive opinion, and he wanted it in Manila, with a friend.
This is it, I thought. I had long danced around the idea of taking the test, for one simple reason: I was terrified. Despite my conscientious efforts otherwise, I have had occasional lapses of my own when it came to risky bedroom behavior. All these years the specter of the virus had seemed quite remote, abstract to me. I comforted myself in the thought that I was not into the alcohol-soaked scene, I didn't do drugs or Ecstasy parties and so had never lost my faculties in the haze of intoxication, had never frequented the bathhouse, took relatively good care of my health, and, at 40, has never had a major illness or health breakdown requiring hospital care.
But who knew, really? Those occasional lapses were troubling enough, but just this year the subject became alarmingly starker, more personal when a number of friends, and friends of friends, revealed they had gotten the virus. Too, the anecdotal stories were piling up--about otherwise young, healthy gay men around the metro who were suddenly getting sick or dropping like flies from suspicious-sounding causes, pneumonia chief among them. One moment you saw them hale and hearty at the gym or our (wholesome, I must assert) Fabcasters parties, the next you saw their Facebook accounts peppered with goodbye messages. Chilling.
There's no way around the truth: It's here. McVie and his partner Dan were the first in our circle to have themselves tested at the Makati Social Hygiene Clinic (at the 7th floor of Makati City Hall--test is free) and to blog about the experience. Migs and CC followed. (Tony and AJ had theirs much earlier.) I was the lone holdout, but I told them I wanted to do it six months after February this year, just to be sure--February being the last time I had engaged in unprotected contact (reluctantly, but let's not go there now), and with six months as the window period.
Truth to tell, I had absolutely no idea how I would react if the test proved positive. At the back of my mind, I knew it was a possibility--one friend swore he engaged in risky sex only once in his life, and yet he got it--but I couldn't get that far ahead in terms of imagining how my life would have to change if push did come to shove. It wasn't myself I was too worried about; I knew I could, surely after some period of self-anger, blame and regret, get around eventually to a sort of rapprochement with the new reality. It's the thought of telling the people around me, of having to burden them with my condition--my mother and family, especially--that cut at me deeply.
But my friend's plea to accompany him to the testing center forced the issue. I wanted to help him find some comfort, but at the same time I thought I needed to finally assuage my own fears. Sige, let's do it, I said--whatever the outcome, bahala na. Better find out now than when it'd be too late, when medicine and intervention would already be of little use because I had tarried far too long. The date was set for Tuesday early afternoon, but when it dawned cold and stormy and the metro drowning in floods, I asked my friend if he'd like to move it to the next day. Nope, he shot back, I don't think kaya ko pa patagalin 'to. Okay--my delaying tactic ineffective, we headed to Makati City Hall in the rain.
It was 1 p.m. when we arrived. The clinic was quite deserted--the only visitors were a group of bar girls who, we learned later, were having their regular medical check-up--a requirement by the Makati city government for them to ply their jobs in the city. Yoyie, the amiable nurse who ushered us into a private room, asked if it was okay to have our blood taken first before the counseling. We agreed. She gave us a form to fill up, taking care to let us know we didn't have to use our real names, if we so preferred. All the while, my friend was speechless and as white as a sheet. I was trying to be nonchalant, but the lunch I just had was doing cartwheels inside my gut. I plied Yoyie with questions, just to break the ice--she ended up telling me I didn't seem to need counseling anymore.
Another person joined us--Tita Tess, we were told her name was--and she proved to be as warm and helpful. She asked intimate questions, but in a way that sounded non-judgmental and was meant only to help her flesh out the discussion better. It would take 45 minutes before the results came out, said Yoyie--45 minutes? Jeezes Christ, McVie said it was only 15 minutes in their case!--but in the meantime, the two women talked to us about the disease, the options available for those who would come out positive, their experiences with other, often equally distraught visitors (unnamed, of course) who had gone through the same crucible of embarrassment and fright.
I was impressed and gratified at how Yoyie and Tita Tess were making us feel relaxed and comfortable--safe--at a moment of great personal foreboding for us, when something that could literally spin our lives into uncharted terrain was being processed in a room merely a few steps from where we sat, white-knuckled and barely breathing. Pretty soon, my friend became more at ease, opening up about the torment he'd been going through. The two women were sympathetic, Tita Tess even offering her personal phone number in case my friend needed to talk some more when he's back at his foreign posting.
Then, the moment of reckoning: Tita Tess scooted out and came back with two folded pieces of paper in her hand. A good sign, I thought, that she seemed about to give the results directly to us. Those who came off as "reactive," Yoyie had told us earlier, would have to get the results from a separate hospital after one more confirmatory test. Tita Tess went behind me and, without a word, handed me the paper. My friend grabbed his and opened it, eyes two big pools of dread. I raced down my own results to find the magic words, written neatly and legibly: NONREACTIVE. Fuck. Fuckshetohmygodthankyoulordsorryforthemurayeheeeeyaward! My friend likewise whooped it up and let out a looong sigh of relief. It had been our agreement: If he tested negative once again, he'd stop browbeating himself and let go of his apprehensions for good. Now he could.
I reread my test results a couple more times, then folded it and tucked it carefully in my wallet. This small--but nothing less than a badge to a new lease on life. We thanked Yoyie and Tita Tess profusely, hugging them tightly before leaving. Bless public servants like them. The afternoon remained dark, wet and gloomy, but as we stepped out, you could've sworn there was sunlight on our faces. The light of boundless relief, but also of sobering insight. In brief, I had dodged a bullet. I might not be so lucky the next time, so lesson learned: from now on, no to risky, irresponsible sexual behavior ever again.
Whew.
If you're like me who has had reason to doubt, please take the test. You owe it to yourself and your loved ones to find out early, and from there take control of your health and future. The one at Makati City Hall's Social Hygiene Clinic is confidential, accommodating, fast. But if you prefer an even more discreet environment, the Love Yourself Project can help.
The e-mail came out of the blue. Gibbs, it said, I'm going home. I have a problem, please help.
The letter-sender was a friend working abroad who had been going through anxiety attacks the past few weeks. After a bout of fever and what he thought was some weight loss, it entered his mind that he might now be HIV-positive. He had reason to fear. My friend, a self-made person, is usually a model of iron self-control and self-discipline, but as he told me, last December he had a moment of weakness--an instance of unprotected sex that was now, six months later, haunting him, rendering him depressed, lethargic, panicky. Were there any major symptoms of illness? None, he said. He had, in fact, taken a RAPID test that declared him "Non-reactive," meaning he didn't have the virus. But his anxiety persisted. He wanted a second, definitive opinion, and he wanted it in Manila, with a friend.
This is it, I thought. I had long danced around the idea of taking the test, for one simple reason: I was terrified. Despite my conscientious efforts otherwise, I have had occasional lapses of my own when it came to risky bedroom behavior. All these years the specter of the virus had seemed quite remote, abstract to me. I comforted myself in the thought that I was not into the alcohol-soaked scene, I didn't do drugs or Ecstasy parties and so had never lost my faculties in the haze of intoxication, had never frequented the bathhouse, took relatively good care of my health, and, at 40, has never had a major illness or health breakdown requiring hospital care.
But who knew, really? Those occasional lapses were troubling enough, but just this year the subject became alarmingly starker, more personal when a number of friends, and friends of friends, revealed they had gotten the virus. Too, the anecdotal stories were piling up--about otherwise young, healthy gay men around the metro who were suddenly getting sick or dropping like flies from suspicious-sounding causes, pneumonia chief among them. One moment you saw them hale and hearty at the gym or our (wholesome, I must assert) Fabcasters parties, the next you saw their Facebook accounts peppered with goodbye messages. Chilling.
There's no way around the truth: It's here. McVie and his partner Dan were the first in our circle to have themselves tested at the Makati Social Hygiene Clinic (at the 7th floor of Makati City Hall--test is free) and to blog about the experience. Migs and CC followed. (Tony and AJ had theirs much earlier.) I was the lone holdout, but I told them I wanted to do it six months after February this year, just to be sure--February being the last time I had engaged in unprotected contact (reluctantly, but let's not go there now), and with six months as the window period.
Truth to tell, I had absolutely no idea how I would react if the test proved positive. At the back of my mind, I knew it was a possibility--one friend swore he engaged in risky sex only once in his life, and yet he got it--but I couldn't get that far ahead in terms of imagining how my life would have to change if push did come to shove. It wasn't myself I was too worried about; I knew I could, surely after some period of self-anger, blame and regret, get around eventually to a sort of rapprochement with the new reality. It's the thought of telling the people around me, of having to burden them with my condition--my mother and family, especially--that cut at me deeply.
But my friend's plea to accompany him to the testing center forced the issue. I wanted to help him find some comfort, but at the same time I thought I needed to finally assuage my own fears. Sige, let's do it, I said--whatever the outcome, bahala na. Better find out now than when it'd be too late, when medicine and intervention would already be of little use because I had tarried far too long. The date was set for Tuesday early afternoon, but when it dawned cold and stormy and the metro drowning in floods, I asked my friend if he'd like to move it to the next day. Nope, he shot back, I don't think kaya ko pa patagalin 'to. Okay--my delaying tactic ineffective, we headed to Makati City Hall in the rain.
It was 1 p.m. when we arrived. The clinic was quite deserted--the only visitors were a group of bar girls who, we learned later, were having their regular medical check-up--a requirement by the Makati city government for them to ply their jobs in the city. Yoyie, the amiable nurse who ushered us into a private room, asked if it was okay to have our blood taken first before the counseling. We agreed. She gave us a form to fill up, taking care to let us know we didn't have to use our real names, if we so preferred. All the while, my friend was speechless and as white as a sheet. I was trying to be nonchalant, but the lunch I just had was doing cartwheels inside my gut. I plied Yoyie with questions, just to break the ice--she ended up telling me I didn't seem to need counseling anymore.
Another person joined us--Tita Tess, we were told her name was--and she proved to be as warm and helpful. She asked intimate questions, but in a way that sounded non-judgmental and was meant only to help her flesh out the discussion better. It would take 45 minutes before the results came out, said Yoyie--45 minutes? Jeezes Christ, McVie said it was only 15 minutes in their case!--but in the meantime, the two women talked to us about the disease, the options available for those who would come out positive, their experiences with other, often equally distraught visitors (unnamed, of course) who had gone through the same crucible of embarrassment and fright.
I was impressed and gratified at how Yoyie and Tita Tess were making us feel relaxed and comfortable--safe--at a moment of great personal foreboding for us, when something that could literally spin our lives into uncharted terrain was being processed in a room merely a few steps from where we sat, white-knuckled and barely breathing. Pretty soon, my friend became more at ease, opening up about the torment he'd been going through. The two women were sympathetic, Tita Tess even offering her personal phone number in case my friend needed to talk some more when he's back at his foreign posting.
Then, the moment of reckoning: Tita Tess scooted out and came back with two folded pieces of paper in her hand. A good sign, I thought, that she seemed about to give the results directly to us. Those who came off as "reactive," Yoyie had told us earlier, would have to get the results from a separate hospital after one more confirmatory test. Tita Tess went behind me and, without a word, handed me the paper. My friend grabbed his and opened it, eyes two big pools of dread. I raced down my own results to find the magic words, written neatly and legibly: NONREACTIVE. Fuck. Fuckshetohmygodthankyoulordsorryforthemurayeheeeeyaward! My friend likewise whooped it up and let out a looong sigh of relief. It had been our agreement: If he tested negative once again, he'd stop browbeating himself and let go of his apprehensions for good. Now he could.
I reread my test results a couple more times, then folded it and tucked it carefully in my wallet. This small--but nothing less than a badge to a new lease on life. We thanked Yoyie and Tita Tess profusely, hugging them tightly before leaving. Bless public servants like them. The afternoon remained dark, wet and gloomy, but as we stepped out, you could've sworn there was sunlight on our faces. The light of boundless relief, but also of sobering insight. In brief, I had dodged a bullet. I might not be so lucky the next time, so lesson learned: from now on, no to risky, irresponsible sexual behavior ever again.
Whew.
If you're like me who has had reason to doubt, please take the test. You owe it to yourself and your loved ones to find out early, and from there take control of your health and future. The one at Makati City Hall's Social Hygiene Clinic is confidential, accommodating, fast. But if you prefer an even more discreet environment, the Love Yourself Project can help.
Labels:
blogging,
here and there,
politics,
the lush life
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Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Badass impressions
Shakespeare's Richard III speech in the uncanny voices of Ricky Gervais, George W. Bush, Morgan Freeman, Simon Cowell, Jack Nicholson, Robert De Niro and a host of others--but especially Richard Burton's, whose majestic stentorian tones “impressionist” (what a puny word!) Jim Meskimen does to eerie perfection.
Labels:
here and there,
heritage,
movies,
theater,
tv/showbiz
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Sipat Lawin Ensemble brings back HARING +UBU-L XXX
Guerilla theater company Sipat Lawin Ensemble is restaging its device-work adaptation of French Playwright Alfred Jarry’s avant-garde play “Ubu Roi” from July 29 to August 6, 2011 at two venues.
Last year’s performance of “HARING +UBU-L” was a pre- and post-elections investigation of Philippine politics, culture and society. This year, “Haring +ubu-l” aims to revisit, re-investigate, and re-expose the subject of excesses and exploits as represented by the performers, the audiences and their consciousness.
“The title alone foretells the scatological humor involved. Yes, it is toilet humor brought to an extreme but well-thought out and intelligent level,” wrote Walter Ang for the Philippine Daily Inquirer. Or, as JK Anicoche, Artistic Director of Sipat Lawin Ensemble, puts it, “The medium is the message.”
Sipat Lawin Ensemble is a company composed of young Theater Arts alumni from the Philippine High School for the Arts, and their collaborators.
“HARING +UBU-L” runs July 29, 7 p.m.; and July 30, 3 p.m. and 7 p.m., at the Museum of Contemporary Art and Design, School of Design and Arts, DLS-CSB; and August 4, 5 and 6, 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. at Tanghalang Huseng Batute, Cultural Center of the Philippines.
Contact 0917-5008753 or 9645949, e-mail sipatlawin.ensemble@gmail.com or like on Facebook: Sipat Lawin Ensemble.
Last year’s performance of “HARING +UBU-L” was a pre- and post-elections investigation of Philippine politics, culture and society. This year, “Haring +ubu-l” aims to revisit, re-investigate, and re-expose the subject of excesses and exploits as represented by the performers, the audiences and their consciousness.
“The title alone foretells the scatological humor involved. Yes, it is toilet humor brought to an extreme but well-thought out and intelligent level,” wrote Walter Ang for the Philippine Daily Inquirer. Or, as JK Anicoche, Artistic Director of Sipat Lawin Ensemble, puts it, “The medium is the message.”
Sipat Lawin Ensemble is a company composed of young Theater Arts alumni from the Philippine High School for the Arts, and their collaborators.
“HARING +UBU-L” runs July 29, 7 p.m.; and July 30, 3 p.m. and 7 p.m., at the Museum of Contemporary Art and Design, School of Design and Arts, DLS-CSB; and August 4, 5 and 6, 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. at Tanghalang Huseng Batute, Cultural Center of the Philippines.
Contact 0917-5008753 or 9645949, e-mail sipatlawin.ensemble@gmail.com or like on Facebook: Sipat Lawin Ensemble.
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Monday, July 25, 2011
Via live Twitterage--Cinemalaya 2011 complete list of winners
Decided to try live-tweeting the Cinemalaya awards night, which meant I had to forego my usual videotaping of the winners' speeches. Ngaragan pala, but also exciting--it was a three-hour show, I couldn't go to the rest room at any time (I'm afraid I have incipient UTI now), my phone battery was threatening to fizzle out, the program itself had one intermission number too many, and I had to type fast but correctly! (sorry, OC). Also, while the CCP Main Theater didn't activate its signal jammers, it had no WiFi either, so I resorted to 3G, which kept dropping all the time. Still--nakaraos din, down to the very last winners! Here's the blow-by-blow account, in 140 characters or less. Thanks to everyone who tuned in and rah-rah-ed me on.
• And on that note, my live-tweeting signing off. Battery less than 10 percent, sheth!
• Note: d elephant in d room--rafa santos--wasnt booed, bt was given public forgiveness by eugene domingo on behalf of other theater actors.
• And there u have it---CINEMALAYA 2011!
• Best film new breed BABAE SA SEPTIC TANK, marlon rivera
• Best director new breed, MARLON RIVERA, babae sa septic tank
• Best film, showcase, BISPERAS, jeffrey jeturian
Best director, showcase, AUREAUS SOLITO, busong
• Best director, showcase, AUREAUS SOLITO, busong; best film, showcase, BISPERAS jeffrey jeturian
• Best director shorts, MILO TOLENTINO,nino bonito; best film shorts, WALANG KATAPUSANG KWARTO, emerson reyes
• Iisang bangka tayo, i mean. Now, tony boy cojuangco speaking--a rare sight. He hardly speaks publicly, hoarse from a medical condition.
• Spectacular performance by the dawn of iisang bansa tayo. Ageless jett pangan. N edgar allan guzman shirtless dancing w/ d troupe!
• Special jury prize new breed, NINO
• Kung hindi pako kumain ng tae di pa ako mananalo.--eugene domingo. Award!
• Best actor new breed EDGAR ALLAN GUZMAN ligo na u lapit na me; best actress EUGENE DOMINGO!!! babae sa septic tank
• Best supporting actor new breed ART ACUNA, nino; best supporting actress SHAMAINE BUENCAMINO, nino. Big applause for a radiant shamaine!
• Best production design new breed NINO, cinematography SAYAW NG 2 KALIWANG PAA, screenplay BABAE SA SEPTIC TANK (chris martinez!)
• Best sound new breed category AMOK, original score SAYAW NG DALAWANG KALIWANG PAA, editing AMOK
• Short films: best screenplay WALANG KATAPUSANG KWARTO, special jury prize HANAPBUHAY
• Ryan cayabyab singers performing...
• Battery halfway na lang, oh no! Don't die on me, demmit!
• Racquel v. so surprised to be called she didnt even get for which film she won best actress!
• Best actor directors showcase BEMBOL ROCO, isda; best actress RACQUEL VILLAVICENCIO, bisperas. Awsh, no special jury prize this year!
• Best supporting actress directors showcase JULIA CLARETE, bisperas
• Best supporting actor directors showcase JAIME PEBANCO, patikul
• No best screenplay award, directors showcase! Jury decision.
• Best production design BISPERAS, cinematography BISPERAS
• Benjamin tolentino, best editing, ISDA, crying onstage. Very young! Lovely sight.
• Directors showcase: best sound BUSONG, best orig score BUSONG (double win for diwa de leon!) best editing ISDA
• First set of new breed awards. Finally.
• Laurice guillen presenting d jurors, among them salvador bernal, mario o'hara, clodualdo del mundo n 3 foreign jurors
• Yes, it's WALANG KATAPUSANG KWARTO. Thanks @Grande_SoyMocha!
• Oh, directors' showcase filmmakers kasama din pala--jeturian, solito, alix jr, lamangan.
• Presentation of certificates to directors, new breed n short film categories. That's why a whole row was vacant, they were all backstage.
• Now, soprano camille lopez molina performing a new work, wid a guitarist n cellist. Proceedings off to a rather slow start.
• Jardin earlier: target audience for this year 50k, as of this afternoon, 53k already. Movies might also go to gateway, othr than greenbelt.
• Best film for children, PATIKUL
• Netpac award, BOUNDARY.
• Audience choice awardees: directors showcase PATIKUL, short film WALANG KATAPUSANG KWENTO, new breed ANG BABAE SA SEPTIC TANK
• Jardin: target audience 50k, as of this afternun it's now 53k viewers. Also, cinemalaya might also go to gateway, on top of greenbelt.
• Opening remarks by festival director nestor jardin: 'on its 7th year, we're still as excited...'
• Hosts intro'd -- angel aquino n paolo bediones, once upon a time hubby n wife in tv's kapten barbell, they say
• Cinemalaya awards night opens in 5 4 3 2...
• Will attempt to live-tweet d cinemalaya awards, hope they don't activate d theater's signal jammers. Ccp pleeeaze?
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'Ang dula bilang panitikan at ang dula bilang pagtatanghal'
Playwright Carlo Pacolor Garcia takes off from what I had written about his Virgin Labfest 7 entry, Isang Gabi Bago Magbukas ang ‘Portrait of the Artist as Filipino’ ni Nick Joaquin, to initiate a discussion on what he considers to be important distinctions between the play as written and the play as staged. Money quote:
Kung ang proseso ng pagsusulat ay isang uri ng pag-angkin, ang proseso ng pagsasaentablado ay gayundin. Sa Virgin Labfest, sampu ng iba pang mga produksiyong akin nang nasalihan, itinuturing ko itong napakahalagang ugnayang hindi maaaring isantabi, isang ‘di maaaring ipagwalang-bahalang ritwal tungo sa layuning makapagtanghal; akin pa nga itong magalak na inaanyayahan. Ngunit sa kasong ito, nais ko, bilang isang taong nagdesisyon nang ilaan ang kanyang buhay sa paglikha at sa pagtunghay nitong maganap, na ipanukala at kumiling sa prinsipyo’t estetika na ang proseso (kolaborasyon) ang nagtatakda ng pagkakabuklod ng panitikan (dula) at pagtatanghal, ngunit (!) hanggang do’n lamang ‘to’t sa huli nasa magkabilang dulo pa rin ang dula bilang panitikan at ang dula bilang pagtatanghal.
S’yanga, lagi’t lagi kong sinususugan ang binanggit ni Priscilla Legasto na ang teatro ang pinakamakapanlipunang uri ng sining, at sa pagbibigay-diin ko sa pagkakaiba ng dula bilang panitikan at bilang pagtatanghal ay maaaring kinatatalo ko ang katangian niyang ito, ngunit (!), sa tingin ko’y wala itong kaso: May pagsipat ang direktor at artista (entablado) na unabes naman talaga’y kaiba sa mandudula (papel) at sa pinakapunto pa lang nito, ang katunayang kontradiksiyon, nagkakaroon na ng linangan, ang potensiyal ng kolaborasyon tungo sa iisang tunguhin, sa iisang vision na dulot ng nasabing pagkakaiba (tunggalian). Sa mga nakaraan kong Virgin Labfest bilang isang mandudula, ang linangang iyon ay may sadyang kalinawan; sa Isang Gabi, hindi gaano—marahil sa ‘kin na ring aktibong pagpili na ‘wag makialam; marahil sa kagustuhan na ring makita ang kahihinatnan ng ‘di pakikialam. Kaya ba ito ang kinalabasan?
The rest of his manifesto called Paggigiit here.
Kung ang proseso ng pagsusulat ay isang uri ng pag-angkin, ang proseso ng pagsasaentablado ay gayundin. Sa Virgin Labfest, sampu ng iba pang mga produksiyong akin nang nasalihan, itinuturing ko itong napakahalagang ugnayang hindi maaaring isantabi, isang ‘di maaaring ipagwalang-bahalang ritwal tungo sa layuning makapagtanghal; akin pa nga itong magalak na inaanyayahan. Ngunit sa kasong ito, nais ko, bilang isang taong nagdesisyon nang ilaan ang kanyang buhay sa paglikha at sa pagtunghay nitong maganap, na ipanukala at kumiling sa prinsipyo’t estetika na ang proseso (kolaborasyon) ang nagtatakda ng pagkakabuklod ng panitikan (dula) at pagtatanghal, ngunit (!) hanggang do’n lamang ‘to’t sa huli nasa magkabilang dulo pa rin ang dula bilang panitikan at ang dula bilang pagtatanghal.
S’yanga, lagi’t lagi kong sinususugan ang binanggit ni Priscilla Legasto na ang teatro ang pinakamakapanlipunang uri ng sining, at sa pagbibigay-diin ko sa pagkakaiba ng dula bilang panitikan at bilang pagtatanghal ay maaaring kinatatalo ko ang katangian niyang ito, ngunit (!), sa tingin ko’y wala itong kaso: May pagsipat ang direktor at artista (entablado) na unabes naman talaga’y kaiba sa mandudula (papel) at sa pinakapunto pa lang nito, ang katunayang kontradiksiyon, nagkakaroon na ng linangan, ang potensiyal ng kolaborasyon tungo sa iisang tunguhin, sa iisang vision na dulot ng nasabing pagkakaiba (tunggalian). Sa mga nakaraan kong Virgin Labfest bilang isang mandudula, ang linangang iyon ay may sadyang kalinawan; sa Isang Gabi, hindi gaano—marahil sa ‘kin na ring aktibong pagpili na ‘wag makialam; marahil sa kagustuhan na ring makita ang kahihinatnan ng ‘di pakikialam. Kaya ba ito ang kinalabasan?
The rest of his manifesto called Paggigiit here.
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Floy Quintos' Fake returns August 17-21
The UP Playwrights’ Theater is mounting a limited return engagement of Floy Quintos’ new play “Fake” this August 17-21 at Teatro Hermogenes Ylagan, UP Diliman.
Praised by the Philippine Daily Inquirer as a “theater must-see,” “Fake” is the product of the tandem of award-winning playwright Quintos and theater icon Tony Mabesa, who directs the play.
The play offers a “rewardingly intense and insightful exploration of questions about truth, reality, make-believe and identity that have all-too-human, relatable implications,” wrote Dr. Jaime Laya in Manila Bulletin. “The acting of both seasoned thespians and newcomers alike, is excellent.”
AmadÃs Ma. Guerrero of the Inquirer also called the performances of the cast a “knockout.”
Acclaimed actor and director Joel Lamangan takes on the lead role of Jose Marco. Alternating for the role is the equally talented director, actor and artist Leo Rialp.
Gerard Pizarras and Bryan Tibayan alternate as Old Miguel, while Ross Pesigan appears as Young Miguel. Paul Holme plays William Henry Scott, with Ces Quesada and Alya Honasan alternating as Concepcion. Playing Sister Emily is Shamaine Centenera-Buencamino, with Olive Nieto serving as understudy for both the roles of Sister Emily and Concepcion.
Jerald Napoles appears as Lobo of Tasaday/Datu Kalantiao, with Jorge Gil Fernandez alternating for the role. Karen Gaerlan performs as La Loba Negra, and Richard Cunanan as George.
The artistic team includes 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” will be staged at Teatro Hermogenes Ylagan, UP Diliman, from August 17- 21, Wednesdays to Fridays at 7 p.m., and weekends at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. For tickets, call Cherry 0917-7500107 or the Dulaang UP Office 9261349, 9818500 local 2449 or 4337840.
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Saturday, July 23, 2011
Bergman-Bergman-Streisand: Shivers
From Playbill.com: On her newest solo recording, set for release Aug. 23, Tony and Oscar winner [Barbra] Streisand interprets the songs of her long-time collaborators and friends, Alan and Marilyn Bergman (”Yentl”).
The new album, which is also produced by Streisand, features ten Bergman songs the actress-director has never previously recorded. Among the song titles are “The Windmills of Your Mind,” “So Many Stars,” “Nice ‘n’ Easy” and “That Face.”
In addition, a deluxe edition will include ten additional, previously released performances of Streisand singing Bergman classics like “The Way We Were,” “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers,” “Papa Can You Hear Me?” and “Pieces of Dreams.”
And I thought she's recorded them all. Now I can't wait to hear her take on Windmills Of Your Mind. My favorite Alan and Marilyn Bergman lyrics, though, belong to another song--What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life. Especially those lines: And when you stand before the candles on a cake, oh let me be the one to hear the silent wish you make. Shivers. The song itself has been sung by everyone from Sarah Vaughan to Michael Bolton, but there's only one, really, who can interpret it as if the Bergmans had written the song originally for her, just for her and her sublime way with melody, lyric and feeling.
The new album, which is also produced by Streisand, features ten Bergman songs the actress-director has never previously recorded. Among the song titles are “The Windmills of Your Mind,” “So Many Stars,” “Nice ‘n’ Easy” and “That Face.”
In addition, a deluxe edition will include ten additional, previously released performances of Streisand singing Bergman classics like “The Way We Were,” “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers,” “Papa Can You Hear Me?” and “Pieces of Dreams.”
And I thought she's recorded them all. Now I can't wait to hear her take on Windmills Of Your Mind. My favorite Alan and Marilyn Bergman lyrics, though, belong to another song--What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life. Especially those lines: And when you stand before the candles on a cake, oh let me be the one to hear the silent wish you make. Shivers. The song itself has been sung by everyone from Sarah Vaughan to Michael Bolton, but there's only one, really, who can interpret it as if the Bergmans had written the song originally for her, just for her and her sublime way with melody, lyric and feeling.
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Wednesday, July 20, 2011
De La Salle-College of St. Benilde School for Design & Arts stages a Filipino Titus Andronicus
Opening this August 3 and running until August 5 is a presentation of William Shakespeare’s "Titus Andronicus" as the thesis production of the AB-Production Design and AB-Technical Theater program of the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde School of Design & Arts.
The play is directed and translated by Palanca award-winning playwright George De Jesus III. Translated into Filipino, this staging adheres to the visual styles and designs of the period when the Roman Empire is at its ebb. Although judged as Shakespeare’s most maligned play, the brutality and violence in "Titus Andronicus" conceals a deep understanding of human nature. The cycle of revenge and retribution is interpreted as the loss of reason and the decay of rationality, engendering a spectacle of violence that plunders what makes a human being human. It is a truth this production regards as relevant to this day.
First performed in the winter of 1594, "Titus" is seen as Shakespeare's bloodiest and most violent work, marked by a number of beheadings, a disembowelment, rape, dismemberment, murder, and cannibalism. Set during the latter days of the Roman Empire, the play tells the fictional story of Titus, a general in the Roman army, who is engaged in a cycle of revenge with Tamora, Queen of the Goths.
Featuring theater stalwarts Kalila Aguilos, Dax Alejandro, Joshua Deocareza, Nar Cabico, G.A. Fallarme, Derrick Gozos, Gwyn Guanzon, Russell Legaspi, Mara Marasigan, Jihad Mariano, Paolo O'Hara, Christian Parado, Paul Jake Paule, Gab Santos and Joel Saracho as Titus, the play will be shown at the SDA Theater at the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde School of Design & Arts along Vito Cruz, Manila.
Performance Dates are August 3, 4, and 5, 2011 with 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. shows. Ticket prices are at P150, 300 and 350. For tickets and other inquiries, please call or text: 0917-8387285, 0915-5059439, 0917-5020531, 0916-3256772.
The play is directed and translated by Palanca award-winning playwright George De Jesus III. Translated into Filipino, this staging adheres to the visual styles and designs of the period when the Roman Empire is at its ebb. Although judged as Shakespeare’s most maligned play, the brutality and violence in "Titus Andronicus" conceals a deep understanding of human nature. The cycle of revenge and retribution is interpreted as the loss of reason and the decay of rationality, engendering a spectacle of violence that plunders what makes a human being human. It is a truth this production regards as relevant to this day.
First performed in the winter of 1594, "Titus" is seen as Shakespeare's bloodiest and most violent work, marked by a number of beheadings, a disembowelment, rape, dismemberment, murder, and cannibalism. Set during the latter days of the Roman Empire, the play tells the fictional story of Titus, a general in the Roman army, who is engaged in a cycle of revenge with Tamora, Queen of the Goths.
Featuring theater stalwarts Kalila Aguilos, Dax Alejandro, Joshua Deocareza, Nar Cabico, G.A. Fallarme, Derrick Gozos, Gwyn Guanzon, Russell Legaspi, Mara Marasigan, Jihad Mariano, Paolo O'Hara, Christian Parado, Paul Jake Paule, Gab Santos and Joel Saracho as Titus, the play will be shown at the SDA Theater at the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde School of Design & Arts along Vito Cruz, Manila.
Performance Dates are August 3, 4, and 5, 2011 with 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. shows. Ticket prices are at P150, 300 and 350. For tickets and other inquiries, please call or text: 0917-8387285, 0915-5059439, 0917-5020531, 0916-3256772.
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Dulaang UP honors heroes, playwrights and National Artists on its 36th season
Dulaang Unibersidad ng Pilipinas (Dulaang UP) opens its 36th season with theme "Heroes, Playwrights and National Artists," in celebration of Dr. Jose P. Rizal’s sesquicentennial, Wilfrido Ma. Guerrero’s centennial and also as a Felipe Padilla de Leon pre–centennial tribute.
"RIZAL X," a collaborative work of young theater actors and artists, topbills the lineup of DUP’s 36th season. The play, directed by Dexter Santos, offers a bold take on Rizal’s life and works which parallel present political, social and cultural events. It will run July 20–August 14.
This production will be followed by the contemporary Filipino adaptation of William Shakespeare’s "Titus Andronicus" by Layeta Bucoy under the direction of Tuxqs Rutaquio, which will be staged September 14-October 2.
As the country continues to celebrate Rizal’s 150th birth anniversary, DUP stages the work of National Artists Felipe Padilla de Leon and Guillermo Tolentino--the Filipino Opera "Noli Me Tangere" (based on one of Rizal’s two classic novels), at the UP University Theater from November 24 to December 3. This production, directed by Alexander Cortez, is also one of the many pre-centennial activities for Felipe Padilla de Leon’s birth centennial next year.
At the same time, DUP resurrects its children’s theater through Rody Vera’s new play "Umuulan, Umaaraw, Kinakasal Ang Tikbalang," based on Gilda Cordero-Fernando’s short story, "The Magic Circle." With direction by Jose Estrella, it will run November 23-December 11.
The season closes with a tribute to Wilfrido Ma. Guerrero on his birth centennial, with the staging of Guerrero’s poetic drama "The Forsaken House" on February 8- 26, 2012. The play, to be directed by Tony Mabesa, is a poignant remembrance of a family through its joys and sorrows.
At the Teatro Hermogenes Ylagan, the UP Playwrights’ Theater will re-stage Floy Quintos’ "Fake" in August for a limited run from August 17 to 21, after a successful and acclaimed summer run.
For ticket inquiries, reservations, sponsorships and special bookings, call Cherry Bong Z. Edralin 0917-7500107, or the Dulaang UP Office 9261349, 9818500 local 2449 or 4337840.
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Sunday, July 17, 2011
VIRGIN LABFEST 7: Freedom, escape--exciting theater
Philippine Daily Inquirer, 07.18.2011
10 new plays preoccupied themselves with that central motif in ways that summoned verve, ambition and style, if not always insight
HOW MANY TIMES can one spin variations on the theme of entrapment and escape, the need to flee what has become a destructively unsettled--or its flip side, becalmed--state?
At the recent Virgin Labfest 7, which closed a couple of Sundays ago after a two-week run at the Cultural Center of the Philippines’ Tanghalang Huseng Batute, 10 new plays--nine one-act and one full-length production--preoccupied themselves with that central motif in ways that summoned verve, ambition and style, if not always illuminating insight, the iterations going the whole hog from the grimly highbrow to the unabashedly populist.
Not that they were aware of it, it appears. For the first time since its founding seven years ago, this annual festival of “untried, untested, unstaged plays” did away with concept pegs or themed titles for its play sets of three entries each, preferring to let the materials coalesce by themselves and the audience to find a common thread in them, if ever.
Still, while the resulting smorgasbord seemed random by virtue of the plays’ dissimilar stories, directorial treatments, and even performance styles, what emerged, quite serendipitously, was a unifying subject: freedom and flight.
It’s the existential question, for instance, at the core of the Labfest’s best entries--Rae Red’s “Kawala,” Dindong Novenario’s “Kafatiran” and Floy Quintos’ “Evening at the Opera”--all of them about characters stuck in some dead-end halfway zone, scuffling to wrest an inch or two of traction from their pinched, pallid existences for that long hoped-for leap into a more habitable realm.
‘Kawala’
In Red’s “Kawala,” directed by Paolo O’Hara, that premise is transformed into a vibrantly funny tale of an elevator boy who, after five years in his dreary job, finally has the chance to bolt out on the wings of his newly acquired college degree.
But on a fateful day when the other lift goes on the blink and the most colorful tenants of the high-rise he works in are forced to pack themselves into his tiny chamber, there to splatter out their secrets and messy private entanglements, Mr. Elevator Boy ends up looking at his station in life with fresh eyes.
Red’s dialogue could at times be obvious (“Masyado kasing delikado sa labas, mas ligtas dito sa loob,” went one), but on the whole it crackled with assurance and energy. And with only one-half of the stage as performance space, O’Hara masterfully maneuvered the action with the help of what amounted to be the Labfest’s tautest ensemble--Jerry O’Hara, Jelson Bay, Tess Jamias, Peewee O’Hara and Regina De Vera, and the gifted Cris Pasturan as the hapless elevator boy.
‘Kafatiran’
Imprisonment of a different sort, and era, informed Novenario’s audacious “Kafatiran,” about four Katipuneros on the eve of the Philippine Revolution wrestling with their shared secret--not the one about being insurrectos, but the kind that dared not speak its name.
In a dazzling feat of historical revisionism, Novenario ransacked the gay pop zeitgeist and seamlessly grafted some of its most recognizable totems and talismans to his period milieu, in the end proposing nothing less than the origins of, say, gay patois (the Katipunan’s manifesto rendered in a newly invented language); the queer penchant for embellishment and ceremony (the secret codes and rituals, the Santacruzan as proto-beauty pageant); and, most resonantly, the fighters’ dash into battle as the allegorical equivalent of coming out and coming to terms with one’s self, despite the odds.
In its sheer impudence, appeal to plausibility and bravura staging (by director JK Anicoche), “Kafatiran” came closest to the Labfest’s spirit of fresh, thought-provoking, taboo-breaking theater. Anicoche’s smartest move was to eschew camp, the default tack in material like this, for a rigorously un-ironic, ultimately more stirring, approach. Except for Ian Lomongo, who tended to fumble his lines, Acey Aguilar, Abner Delina, and especially newbie actor Marco Viaña, as the barely contained young Katipunero alive to the heaving world around him, were in fine form.
‘Evening at the Opera’
Meanwhile, Quintos’ “Evening at the Opera,” directed by Jomari Jose, revisited well-worn territory--the world of warlord politicians and their dutiful wives, in this case, the shrewd, sophisticated Miranda (Ana Abad Santos) and her desire to bring opera to the kapitolyo in her province, “Fitzcarraldo”-like.
Between the everyday thuggery of her governor-husband (Jonathan Tadioan) and the badgering of her long-dead mother (Frances Makil-Ignacio), present in her consciousness as the generational link to a sordid family legacy of public privilege and private emotional appeasement, Miranda struggles to negotiate a sacred place for herself, to find a shred of beauty in the gutter she’s in. (Why opera for their penurious town? rages her husband. “All that rage and hate and anger made beautiful, all the ugliness of human nature made bearable,” she says.)
While “Evening at the Opera” broke no new ground on the subject of politics and power, as a character study of an otherwise capable woman who has contorted herself into a grotesque life of complicitness and compromise, it was riveting and very nearly devastating. Abad Santos, Makil-Ignacio and Tadioan virtually seared the stage with their intensity (in Makil-Ignacio’s case, impeccable comic timing). And the smile on Makil-Ignacio’s face after her daughter repudiates her with a slap easily qualified as the creepiest scene in the Labfest.
‘Streetlight Manifesto’
The scarce pleasures and grating perils of cramped circumstances also coursed through two other strong entries, Mixkaela Villalon’s “Streetlight Manifesto,” and Rachelle Rodriguez and Wennielyn Fajilan’s “Kinaumagahan.”
In the former, a female gun-for-hire (Adrienne Vergara) chafes at the cheapness of her trade. She hates the lowlifes and desperadoes she’s being contracted to kill; her sights are set on becoming a Robin Hood for the poor, the dispossessed and the oppressed. “May prinsipyo ako! Gusto ko ng makabuluhang pagpatay!” she tells her cohort (Bong Cabrera), an easygoing hit-man with a liking for Hawaiian shirts, who promptly tries to nudge her back into place. “Hindi ka superhero, uy! Ni hindi ka nga hero. Ikaw ang kabaliktaran ng hero, ang hinahabol at hinuhuli ng mga hero para sila maging hero!”
“Streetlight Manifesto” featured a completely believable turn by Vergara as the party girl-attired assassin Gillian (Paolo O’Hara and Ness Roque completed the cast). Directed with flair by Ed Lacson Jr., it hummed with a hip, mordant sensibility--quite a rare voice from a debuting playwright. Its amoral playfulness, exploding now and then into savage violence, could only be called Tarantinoesque--not original by any chance, but bracing nonetheless when transposed to local culture.
‘Kinaumagahan’
Rodriguez and Fajilan’s “Kinaumagan” offered less exotic characters as protagonists: a young couple trying to make ends meet, and their relationship work, even as their respective jobs keep them mostly apart. He is a call center agent who works at night, she a nurse on duty in the mornings. In that tiny sliver of togetherness at sunrise just before she’s off to work and he to bed, they bicker and make love (or try to--fatigue’s a bummer), seesawing between the last vestiges of their immaturity and the grown-up disposition now required by their circumstances.
This slice-of-life set-up reads verily like a cliche, but the resulting play directed by Riki Benedicto was, in fact, buoyant and heartfelt. The two leads, Noel Escondo and Via Antonio, achieved an appealing chemistry, and their layered interaction conveyed both the burdens of their characters as well as the deliverance the couple has staked a claim to down the road.
‘The Valley Mission Care’
The Labfest’s most poignant performance, however, belonged to Siegfried Sepulveda in Russell Legaspi’s “The Valley Mission Care.” A lonely widower living in a US nursing home, hungry for stories from the recently arrived Filipino nurse (Mayen Estañero) assigned to him, Sepulveda’s cranky, frail-looking geezer convinces the nurse, against her better judgment, to help him leave the nursing home one night for an unexplained rendezvous he is adamant to fulfill on a desolate California beach at sunrise.
Missy Maramara’s staging of this plainspoken material was unwieldy, with fitful blackouts and awkward scene and set transitions. But the last minutes of the play—when the widower finally reveals, in a wordless gesture, why he has risked coming to this remote spot on this chilly morning—was profoundly moving. In that elegiac moment, the old man’s earlier admonitions to the nurse rang truest. “Why do you want to leave?” she protests. “The Valley gives you everything!” “You don’t need everything!” he bellows back.
‘Isang Gabi Bago Magbukas ang ‘Portrait of an Artist as Filipino’ ni Nick Joaquin’
All these preceding plays, incidentally, were of the one-act format. A full-length entry, the first in the Labfest, was submitted this year by Carlo Pacolor Garcia in the form of “Isang Gabi Bago Magbukas ang ‘Portrait of an Artist as Filipino’ ni Nick Joaquin.”
The production had the biggest cast in the Labfest--15 actors--and so director Paul Santiago’s most basic achievement was, as it were, to have whipped this straggly mass into a divertingly parodic if decidedly shallow whodunit-cum-valentine to the theater-making of old, with standout comic touches from Paolo Rodriguez and Che Ramos.
Garcia borrowed a signature Agatha Christie trope--all the various personages conspiring in on a murder that would now haunt them, as a storm and an unseen vengeful killer help to trap them inside a rundown theater while they rehearse for the opening of Joaquin’s landmark play--but the dialogue is winkingly smart-alecky. “You mean you’re doing this because you have mommy and daddy issues?” demands one when the murderer is revealed. “Why don’t you try acting?”
Too bad the play stayed mostly on that level, declining to mine the rich possibilities and implications of the pedigree to which it had attached itself.
Three more productions made their respective riffs on the notion of moving on and closure—or the lack of it: Juan Ekis’ “Requiem”; Patrick Valera’s “Mga Lobo Tulad Ng Buwan”; and Joey Paras’ “Bawal Tumawid, Nakamamatay.”
In each case, the play was directed by the playwright himself. And in each case, alas, the end results were less than galvanizing, making the three the weakest entries in the festival.
Coincidence, or a telling pattern? Interestingly, CCP Performing Arts department head Chris Millado, though not specifically addressing these works, had this to say in a pre-Labfest interview: “Next year, we will recommend that playwrights not direct their own plays. Based on my own experience, it would be better if you entrust your work to another creative mind. It enhances the work. Theater is a collaborative process. The writing process continues inside the theater.”
‘Requiem’
Take Ekis’ “Requiem,” which floundered on some basic weaknesses that another, more objective pair of eyes might have helped cure. The text was not only relitigating a hackneyed topic--incest, and how it renders its victims deeply dysfunctional, unable to escape the past--but it also telegraphed its theme, even the play’s dramatic structure, too broadly in the dialogue.
“Can I sleep here?” the playwright sister repeatedly asks her painter brother. Later, she says, “Ayaw mo kay Shakespeare, Chekhov, Brecht.” “I like Pinter,” replies the brother--baldly referencing “Requiem’s” own attempt at Pinteresque pauses and pregnant silences.
There were too many of them, unfortunately, dissipating instead of amplifying any sense of tension in the play. Adding to the tedium, the two leads (Joel Parcon and Frankie Pascua) were uninvolving, clearly despite their best efforts, and Ekis’ own direction was wan, unimaginative.
‘Bawal Tumawid, Nakamamatay’
If “Requiem” suffered from a case of dullness, Paras’ “Bawal Tumawid, Nakamamatay” had an overdose of the opposite. A rambling, overheated mass of fuzzy scenes and characters whose glib, punchline-drunk back-and-forth would not have been out of place in a comedy bar, this play was a virtual TV sitcom transplanted to the stage (a fact underscored by an actual product plug for Globe Telecoms jammed into the dialogue.)
The nominal story, about a girl (Kiki Baento) stuck in traffic while on her way to her estranged father’s funeral, and an old man with a tragic backstory with whom she bonds on that choked street corner, became a slender excuse for Paras’ cluttered staging; the actors’ all-over-the-place mugging (gasp, was that old man the venerable Leo Rialp?); and an incoherent melee for a finale that, had it also involved buckets of water thrown around, would have paid full measure to the material’s TV-comedy aspirations. The crowd lapped it up, though, so we’re happy to concede they saw something we didn’t.
‘Mga Lobo Tulad ng Buwan’
Finally, there’s Valera’s “Mga Lobo Tulad Ng Buwan,” an “elegy,” as the playwright called it, to the victims and survivors of the M/V Princess of the Stars, which sank a few years ago off the coast of Romblon amid a storm and became one of the worst sea disasters in recent memory.
Valera’s idea of honoring grief and ensuring eternal remembrance was through a work that bypassed accessible narrative, deploying instead mood, movement, visual allegory--the stark white stage blanketed with paper containing the names of the victims, for instance.
In this quasi-dream world, three women (Mary Jane Alejo, Kate Sabate and Chic San Agustin) cling to lamentation and memory for the kin and friends they lost at sea. Their characters, to be blunt about it, registered less as flesh-and-blood people roiled by real emotion, as constructs for the playwright’s high-toned reckoning of, and forced myth-making about, the disaster. (To rejoin the living and put their pain behind, the women pay fealty to a “sirena ng karagatan.”)
Valera’s theatricality, his imagination and willingness to defy convention are to be admired. But this bloodless, self-conscious exercise, its voice veering jarringly from the literal to the poetic, evinced not one true note from its ocean of abstracted anguish.
Ironically, it subverted the very thesis of Valera’s work, that, as one character put it, “Ang alaala ng trahedya ay walang talinhaga para sa mga nawalan” (“The memory of tragedy holds no metaphor for the bereaved”--Valera himself in his director’s notes). At 40 minutes or so, “Mga Lobo Tulad Ng Buwan” was nothing if not a blown-up metaphor.
[Photos 4-5 by Girlie Rodis; all other photos by Teresa Barrozo]
10 new plays preoccupied themselves with that central motif in ways that summoned verve, ambition and style, if not always insight
HOW MANY TIMES can one spin variations on the theme of entrapment and escape, the need to flee what has become a destructively unsettled--or its flip side, becalmed--state?
At the recent Virgin Labfest 7, which closed a couple of Sundays ago after a two-week run at the Cultural Center of the Philippines’ Tanghalang Huseng Batute, 10 new plays--nine one-act and one full-length production--preoccupied themselves with that central motif in ways that summoned verve, ambition and style, if not always illuminating insight, the iterations going the whole hog from the grimly highbrow to the unabashedly populist.
Not that they were aware of it, it appears. For the first time since its founding seven years ago, this annual festival of “untried, untested, unstaged plays” did away with concept pegs or themed titles for its play sets of three entries each, preferring to let the materials coalesce by themselves and the audience to find a common thread in them, if ever.
Still, while the resulting smorgasbord seemed random by virtue of the plays’ dissimilar stories, directorial treatments, and even performance styles, what emerged, quite serendipitously, was a unifying subject: freedom and flight.
It’s the existential question, for instance, at the core of the Labfest’s best entries--Rae Red’s “Kawala,” Dindong Novenario’s “Kafatiran” and Floy Quintos’ “Evening at the Opera”--all of them about characters stuck in some dead-end halfway zone, scuffling to wrest an inch or two of traction from their pinched, pallid existences for that long hoped-for leap into a more habitable realm.
‘Kawala’
In Red’s “Kawala,” directed by Paolo O’Hara, that premise is transformed into a vibrantly funny tale of an elevator boy who, after five years in his dreary job, finally has the chance to bolt out on the wings of his newly acquired college degree.
But on a fateful day when the other lift goes on the blink and the most colorful tenants of the high-rise he works in are forced to pack themselves into his tiny chamber, there to splatter out their secrets and messy private entanglements, Mr. Elevator Boy ends up looking at his station in life with fresh eyes.
Red’s dialogue could at times be obvious (“Masyado kasing delikado sa labas, mas ligtas dito sa loob,” went one), but on the whole it crackled with assurance and energy. And with only one-half of the stage as performance space, O’Hara masterfully maneuvered the action with the help of what amounted to be the Labfest’s tautest ensemble--Jerry O’Hara, Jelson Bay, Tess Jamias, Peewee O’Hara and Regina De Vera, and the gifted Cris Pasturan as the hapless elevator boy.
‘Kafatiran’
Imprisonment of a different sort, and era, informed Novenario’s audacious “Kafatiran,” about four Katipuneros on the eve of the Philippine Revolution wrestling with their shared secret--not the one about being insurrectos, but the kind that dared not speak its name.
In a dazzling feat of historical revisionism, Novenario ransacked the gay pop zeitgeist and seamlessly grafted some of its most recognizable totems and talismans to his period milieu, in the end proposing nothing less than the origins of, say, gay patois (the Katipunan’s manifesto rendered in a newly invented language); the queer penchant for embellishment and ceremony (the secret codes and rituals, the Santacruzan as proto-beauty pageant); and, most resonantly, the fighters’ dash into battle as the allegorical equivalent of coming out and coming to terms with one’s self, despite the odds.
In its sheer impudence, appeal to plausibility and bravura staging (by director JK Anicoche), “Kafatiran” came closest to the Labfest’s spirit of fresh, thought-provoking, taboo-breaking theater. Anicoche’s smartest move was to eschew camp, the default tack in material like this, for a rigorously un-ironic, ultimately more stirring, approach. Except for Ian Lomongo, who tended to fumble his lines, Acey Aguilar, Abner Delina, and especially newbie actor Marco Viaña, as the barely contained young Katipunero alive to the heaving world around him, were in fine form.
‘Evening at the Opera’
Meanwhile, Quintos’ “Evening at the Opera,” directed by Jomari Jose, revisited well-worn territory--the world of warlord politicians and their dutiful wives, in this case, the shrewd, sophisticated Miranda (Ana Abad Santos) and her desire to bring opera to the kapitolyo in her province, “Fitzcarraldo”-like.
Between the everyday thuggery of her governor-husband (Jonathan Tadioan) and the badgering of her long-dead mother (Frances Makil-Ignacio), present in her consciousness as the generational link to a sordid family legacy of public privilege and private emotional appeasement, Miranda struggles to negotiate a sacred place for herself, to find a shred of beauty in the gutter she’s in. (Why opera for their penurious town? rages her husband. “All that rage and hate and anger made beautiful, all the ugliness of human nature made bearable,” she says.)
While “Evening at the Opera” broke no new ground on the subject of politics and power, as a character study of an otherwise capable woman who has contorted herself into a grotesque life of complicitness and compromise, it was riveting and very nearly devastating. Abad Santos, Makil-Ignacio and Tadioan virtually seared the stage with their intensity (in Makil-Ignacio’s case, impeccable comic timing). And the smile on Makil-Ignacio’s face after her daughter repudiates her with a slap easily qualified as the creepiest scene in the Labfest.
‘Streetlight Manifesto’
The scarce pleasures and grating perils of cramped circumstances also coursed through two other strong entries, Mixkaela Villalon’s “Streetlight Manifesto,” and Rachelle Rodriguez and Wennielyn Fajilan’s “Kinaumagahan.”
In the former, a female gun-for-hire (Adrienne Vergara) chafes at the cheapness of her trade. She hates the lowlifes and desperadoes she’s being contracted to kill; her sights are set on becoming a Robin Hood for the poor, the dispossessed and the oppressed. “May prinsipyo ako! Gusto ko ng makabuluhang pagpatay!” she tells her cohort (Bong Cabrera), an easygoing hit-man with a liking for Hawaiian shirts, who promptly tries to nudge her back into place. “Hindi ka superhero, uy! Ni hindi ka nga hero. Ikaw ang kabaliktaran ng hero, ang hinahabol at hinuhuli ng mga hero para sila maging hero!”
“Streetlight Manifesto” featured a completely believable turn by Vergara as the party girl-attired assassin Gillian (Paolo O’Hara and Ness Roque completed the cast). Directed with flair by Ed Lacson Jr., it hummed with a hip, mordant sensibility--quite a rare voice from a debuting playwright. Its amoral playfulness, exploding now and then into savage violence, could only be called Tarantinoesque--not original by any chance, but bracing nonetheless when transposed to local culture.
‘Kinaumagahan’
Rodriguez and Fajilan’s “Kinaumagan” offered less exotic characters as protagonists: a young couple trying to make ends meet, and their relationship work, even as their respective jobs keep them mostly apart. He is a call center agent who works at night, she a nurse on duty in the mornings. In that tiny sliver of togetherness at sunrise just before she’s off to work and he to bed, they bicker and make love (or try to--fatigue’s a bummer), seesawing between the last vestiges of their immaturity and the grown-up disposition now required by their circumstances.
This slice-of-life set-up reads verily like a cliche, but the resulting play directed by Riki Benedicto was, in fact, buoyant and heartfelt. The two leads, Noel Escondo and Via Antonio, achieved an appealing chemistry, and their layered interaction conveyed both the burdens of their characters as well as the deliverance the couple has staked a claim to down the road.
‘The Valley Mission Care’
The Labfest’s most poignant performance, however, belonged to Siegfried Sepulveda in Russell Legaspi’s “The Valley Mission Care.” A lonely widower living in a US nursing home, hungry for stories from the recently arrived Filipino nurse (Mayen Estañero) assigned to him, Sepulveda’s cranky, frail-looking geezer convinces the nurse, against her better judgment, to help him leave the nursing home one night for an unexplained rendezvous he is adamant to fulfill on a desolate California beach at sunrise.
Missy Maramara’s staging of this plainspoken material was unwieldy, with fitful blackouts and awkward scene and set transitions. But the last minutes of the play—when the widower finally reveals, in a wordless gesture, why he has risked coming to this remote spot on this chilly morning—was profoundly moving. In that elegiac moment, the old man’s earlier admonitions to the nurse rang truest. “Why do you want to leave?” she protests. “The Valley gives you everything!” “You don’t need everything!” he bellows back.
‘Isang Gabi Bago Magbukas ang ‘Portrait of an Artist as Filipino’ ni Nick Joaquin’
All these preceding plays, incidentally, were of the one-act format. A full-length entry, the first in the Labfest, was submitted this year by Carlo Pacolor Garcia in the form of “Isang Gabi Bago Magbukas ang ‘Portrait of an Artist as Filipino’ ni Nick Joaquin.”
The production had the biggest cast in the Labfest--15 actors--and so director Paul Santiago’s most basic achievement was, as it were, to have whipped this straggly mass into a divertingly parodic if decidedly shallow whodunit-cum-valentine to the theater-making of old, with standout comic touches from Paolo Rodriguez and Che Ramos.
Garcia borrowed a signature Agatha Christie trope--all the various personages conspiring in on a murder that would now haunt them, as a storm and an unseen vengeful killer help to trap them inside a rundown theater while they rehearse for the opening of Joaquin’s landmark play--but the dialogue is winkingly smart-alecky. “You mean you’re doing this because you have mommy and daddy issues?” demands one when the murderer is revealed. “Why don’t you try acting?”
Too bad the play stayed mostly on that level, declining to mine the rich possibilities and implications of the pedigree to which it had attached itself.
Three more productions made their respective riffs on the notion of moving on and closure—or the lack of it: Juan Ekis’ “Requiem”; Patrick Valera’s “Mga Lobo Tulad Ng Buwan”; and Joey Paras’ “Bawal Tumawid, Nakamamatay.”
In each case, the play was directed by the playwright himself. And in each case, alas, the end results were less than galvanizing, making the three the weakest entries in the festival.
Coincidence, or a telling pattern? Interestingly, CCP Performing Arts department head Chris Millado, though not specifically addressing these works, had this to say in a pre-Labfest interview: “Next year, we will recommend that playwrights not direct their own plays. Based on my own experience, it would be better if you entrust your work to another creative mind. It enhances the work. Theater is a collaborative process. The writing process continues inside the theater.”
‘Requiem’
Take Ekis’ “Requiem,” which floundered on some basic weaknesses that another, more objective pair of eyes might have helped cure. The text was not only relitigating a hackneyed topic--incest, and how it renders its victims deeply dysfunctional, unable to escape the past--but it also telegraphed its theme, even the play’s dramatic structure, too broadly in the dialogue.
“Can I sleep here?” the playwright sister repeatedly asks her painter brother. Later, she says, “Ayaw mo kay Shakespeare, Chekhov, Brecht.” “I like Pinter,” replies the brother--baldly referencing “Requiem’s” own attempt at Pinteresque pauses and pregnant silences.
There were too many of them, unfortunately, dissipating instead of amplifying any sense of tension in the play. Adding to the tedium, the two leads (Joel Parcon and Frankie Pascua) were uninvolving, clearly despite their best efforts, and Ekis’ own direction was wan, unimaginative.
‘Bawal Tumawid, Nakamamatay’
If “Requiem” suffered from a case of dullness, Paras’ “Bawal Tumawid, Nakamamatay” had an overdose of the opposite. A rambling, overheated mass of fuzzy scenes and characters whose glib, punchline-drunk back-and-forth would not have been out of place in a comedy bar, this play was a virtual TV sitcom transplanted to the stage (a fact underscored by an actual product plug for Globe Telecoms jammed into the dialogue.)
The nominal story, about a girl (Kiki Baento) stuck in traffic while on her way to her estranged father’s funeral, and an old man with a tragic backstory with whom she bonds on that choked street corner, became a slender excuse for Paras’ cluttered staging; the actors’ all-over-the-place mugging (gasp, was that old man the venerable Leo Rialp?); and an incoherent melee for a finale that, had it also involved buckets of water thrown around, would have paid full measure to the material’s TV-comedy aspirations. The crowd lapped it up, though, so we’re happy to concede they saw something we didn’t.
‘Mga Lobo Tulad ng Buwan’
Finally, there’s Valera’s “Mga Lobo Tulad Ng Buwan,” an “elegy,” as the playwright called it, to the victims and survivors of the M/V Princess of the Stars, which sank a few years ago off the coast of Romblon amid a storm and became one of the worst sea disasters in recent memory.
Valera’s idea of honoring grief and ensuring eternal remembrance was through a work that bypassed accessible narrative, deploying instead mood, movement, visual allegory--the stark white stage blanketed with paper containing the names of the victims, for instance.
In this quasi-dream world, three women (Mary Jane Alejo, Kate Sabate and Chic San Agustin) cling to lamentation and memory for the kin and friends they lost at sea. Their characters, to be blunt about it, registered less as flesh-and-blood people roiled by real emotion, as constructs for the playwright’s high-toned reckoning of, and forced myth-making about, the disaster. (To rejoin the living and put their pain behind, the women pay fealty to a “sirena ng karagatan.”)
Valera’s theatricality, his imagination and willingness to defy convention are to be admired. But this bloodless, self-conscious exercise, its voice veering jarringly from the literal to the poetic, evinced not one true note from its ocean of abstracted anguish.
Ironically, it subverted the very thesis of Valera’s work, that, as one character put it, “Ang alaala ng trahedya ay walang talinhaga para sa mga nawalan” (“The memory of tragedy holds no metaphor for the bereaved”--Valera himself in his director’s notes). At 40 minutes or so, “Mga Lobo Tulad Ng Buwan” was nothing if not a blown-up metaphor.
[Photos 4-5 by Girlie Rodis; all other photos by Teresa Barrozo]
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tv/showbiz
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Friday, July 15, 2011
Audio preview: Rachel Ann Go as Ariel in The Little Mermaid
From the ever-reliable BroadwayWorld.com/Philippines: Atlantis Productions Inc. has just released an audio preview of singer-actress Rachelle Ann Go singing “Part of Your World" on its Facebook fan page that builds up to the theater company's upcoming production of Disney's “The Little Mermaid”--with Ms. Go playing the title role--from November 18 to December 11 at the Meralco Theatre.
I must say, this early, kung boses at boses lang--enchanting. More about the show here. And here.
I must say, this early, kung boses at boses lang--enchanting. More about the show here. And here.
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movies,
music,
showtime,
theater,
tv/showbiz
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Thursday, July 14, 2011
Ikaw, maARTe ka ba?
Love this video. And love the artists behind it.
This video campaign aims to take a closer look on how the arts can be applicable to our lives. Expressed by those who live, breathe and LOVE it--the Filipino Artists.
In a society that sees art as frivolous, and being ma-drama and maarte, we challenge to change the paradigm and change the meaning of art.
Thanks to the Theater Artists: Robbie Guevara, Ana Abad Santos, Carlos Canlas, Gab Santos, Stephanie Reese, Joel Trinidad, Reuben Uy, Bea Garcia, Caisa Borromeo, Jake Macapagal, Jenny Jamora, Topper Fabregas, Pam Imperial, Raul Montesa, Astarte Abraham, Teresa Herrera, Kakki Teodoro and JM Rodriguez
Produced by Mayk Juat, Jake Macapagal, Pam Imperial; directed by Mayk Juat; cinematography by Nix Lanas
This video campaign aims to take a closer look on how the arts can be applicable to our lives. Expressed by those who live, breathe and LOVE it--the Filipino Artists.
In a society that sees art as frivolous, and being ma-drama and maarte, we challenge to change the paradigm and change the meaning of art.
Thanks to the Theater Artists: Robbie Guevara, Ana Abad Santos, Carlos Canlas, Gab Santos, Stephanie Reese, Joel Trinidad, Reuben Uy, Bea Garcia, Caisa Borromeo, Jake Macapagal, Jenny Jamora, Topper Fabregas, Pam Imperial, Raul Montesa, Astarte Abraham, Teresa Herrera, Kakki Teodoro and JM Rodriguez
Produced by Mayk Juat, Jake Macapagal, Pam Imperial; directed by Mayk Juat; cinematography by Nix Lanas
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The Love Yourself Project
SIMPLY, IT'S TIME TO ACT.
Thirty years since the discovery of AIDS, the world appears to be ready to look at the epidemic with a more optimistic lens: the death rate is going down in many parts of the world, thanks to innovation in anti-retroviral treatment, and there’s a global decline in new infections...
Unfortunately, that spirit of optimism will not reach Philippine shores. Citing government reports, the United Nations said that the Philippines is one of the only seven countries worldwide that diverged from the global trend: the country is experiencing a sharp rise in HIV infection, from one new infection a day in 2007 to five to six a day in 2011. The Department of Health’s official HIV registry is not showing an unusual rise in HIV deaths, but stories of deaths among young men (who had sex with men) due to AIDS-related complications are circulating within the gay, bisexual and transgendered community. These deaths, mostly a result of late diagnosis of HIV status and failure to access treatment, are increasing but remain undetected because of stigma: families of those who perished refuse to report the real cause of death.
-- “An emerging epidemic”, by Jonas Bagas, Philippine Daily Inquirer, 10 June 2011
The Love Yourself Project, as its masthead explains, “aims to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS among the youth and the Men who have Sex with Men (MSM) sector in the Philippines, primarily through education and counseling. It is the first project by the VINN Advocacy group.”
Follow The Love Yourself Project here.
Ang HIV, wala pa mang gamot, mayroon ng solusyon. Pagmamahal sa sarili, pagmamahal sa kapwa. The first step really is to Love Yourself. [ManilaGayGuy]
Thirty years since the discovery of AIDS, the world appears to be ready to look at the epidemic with a more optimistic lens: the death rate is going down in many parts of the world, thanks to innovation in anti-retroviral treatment, and there’s a global decline in new infections...
Unfortunately, that spirit of optimism will not reach Philippine shores. Citing government reports, the United Nations said that the Philippines is one of the only seven countries worldwide that diverged from the global trend: the country is experiencing a sharp rise in HIV infection, from one new infection a day in 2007 to five to six a day in 2011. The Department of Health’s official HIV registry is not showing an unusual rise in HIV deaths, but stories of deaths among young men (who had sex with men) due to AIDS-related complications are circulating within the gay, bisexual and transgendered community. These deaths, mostly a result of late diagnosis of HIV status and failure to access treatment, are increasing but remain undetected because of stigma: families of those who perished refuse to report the real cause of death.
-- “An emerging epidemic”, by Jonas Bagas, Philippine Daily Inquirer, 10 June 2011
The Love Yourself Project, as its masthead explains, “aims to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS among the youth and the Men who have Sex with Men (MSM) sector in the Philippines, primarily through education and counseling. It is the first project by the VINN Advocacy group.”
Follow The Love Yourself Project here.
Ang HIV, wala pa mang gamot, mayroon ng solusyon. Pagmamahal sa sarili, pagmamahal sa kapwa. The first step really is to Love Yourself. [ManilaGayGuy]
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heritage,
politics,
readings,
the lush life
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Run for Rizal
As part of the continuing celebration of the 150th Birth Anniversary of Jose Rizal and History Week Celebration, the National Historical Commission of the Philippines and Animo Events Management Inc., will spearhead a fun run entitled “RUN RIZAL” on September 18, 2011.
The run will start and end at the Rizal Monument and will wind through Roxas Blvd. and Diosdado Macapagal Avenue. Runners can participate in the 3K, 5K, 10K, and 16K categories. Proceeds of this activity will be given to continue the preservation of the three Rizal Shrines administered by the NHC--the Rizal Shrine in Calamba, Rizal Shrine in Dapitan and Rizal Shrine in Fort Santiago.
Registration fee is P600 for 16K and P500 for 3K, 5K, and 10K (inclusive of singlet, timing chip and bib). There will be a promo for students, government employees and novice runners for the 3K category at P150 joining fee inclusive of timing chip and bib only.
Registration is open starting this July 29 at the following venues: NHCP main office in T.M. Kalaw St. Ermita, Manila; Quezon Memorial Shrine (QMS); and Quezon City Circle. Special medals will be given to all 16K runners and the first 100 medals will be given out to all male and female participants in the 3K, 5K, 10K categories.
You may reach Rovic Canono, Race Director at 9751317 for inquiries, or the NHCP Secretariat at 5239050 and 5231037.
To know more about Rizal@150 and the year-long activities, visit www.nhcp.gov.ph or call the National Historical Commission of the Philippines (02) 5249952.
The run will start and end at the Rizal Monument and will wind through Roxas Blvd. and Diosdado Macapagal Avenue. Runners can participate in the 3K, 5K, 10K, and 16K categories. Proceeds of this activity will be given to continue the preservation of the three Rizal Shrines administered by the NHC--the Rizal Shrine in Calamba, Rizal Shrine in Dapitan and Rizal Shrine in Fort Santiago.
Registration fee is P600 for 16K and P500 for 3K, 5K, and 10K (inclusive of singlet, timing chip and bib). There will be a promo for students, government employees and novice runners for the 3K category at P150 joining fee inclusive of timing chip and bib only.
Registration is open starting this July 29 at the following venues: NHCP main office in T.M. Kalaw St. Ermita, Manila; Quezon Memorial Shrine (QMS); and Quezon City Circle. Special medals will be given to all 16K runners and the first 100 medals will be given out to all male and female participants in the 3K, 5K, 10K categories.
You may reach Rovic Canono, Race Director at 9751317 for inquiries, or the NHCP Secretariat at 5239050 and 5231037.
To know more about Rizal@150 and the year-long activities, visit www.nhcp.gov.ph or call the National Historical Commission of the Philippines (02) 5249952.
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here and there,
heritage,
showtime
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Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Passing of the 'virgin' torch
Another bad pun--from one “virgin mader” to another. Right after the close of the very last play (Floy Quintos' Evening at the Opera) at the Virgin Labfest 7 last Sunday, VLF co-founder Rody Vera, the festival director for the last seven years, announced that he was now passing the baton to actor-director Tuxqs Rutaquio, who'll take the reins beginning VLF8 next year. An apt choice, Rutaquio himself being among the Labfest's clearest successes, one of a new breed of theater directors who cut their teeth on festival materials, in particular through his long-running partnership with playwright Layeta Bucoy which has resulted in some of the Labfest's most significant entries over the years, such as Ellas Inocentes and Doc Resureccion: Gagamutin ang Bayan. Good job, Rody Vera! And all the best, Tuxqs Rutaquio!
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Tanghalang Ateneo opens 33rd season with Sintang Dalisay
Tanghalang Ateneo opens its 33rd Season this July with Sintang Dalisay, a dramatic piece forged from two sources--the awit "Ang Sintang Dalisay ni Julieta at Romeo" written in 1901 by G D. Roke, and Rolando Tinio’s translation of William Shakespeare’s "Romeo and Juliet."
The adaptation is set in Sampurna, a fictional Muslim community, with the Mustafas and the Kalimuddins as two prominent families mired in an age-old hatred for each other. Caught in this family strife are Rashiddin and Jamila, two lovers, secretly married, who are forced to separate from each other after Rashiddin kills a member of the Kalimuddin clan to avenge the death of his cousin. A demand for justice, Rashiddin’s exile to Dapitan, a clandestine tryst, a missing letter and a plot that goes awry culminate in the death of the lovers and the reconciliation of the two families smothered in grief and regret.
Kalil Almonte plays Rashiddin while Tasha Tañada essays the role of Jamila. Zennon Gosalvez and Vannah Pacis are their understudies. The ensemble, doubling as chorus members and characters in the play, includes Ariel Diccion, Cindy Lopez, Brian Sy, Charles Yee, Joenel Garcia and Exzell Macomb.
Igal, the traditional dance of the Sama people, will serve as the production’s movement motif, taught to the cast by master teachers from Tabawan, South Ubian, Tawi-Tawi province. An ensemble of musicians from Kulintangang Ateneo and the University of the Philippines’ Kontemporaryong Gamelan Pilipino (Kontra-GaPi), will accompany the dance and the action of the play.
Ricardo Abad, who shaped the performance text together with Guelan Luarca, directs the production. Matthew Santamaria draws the dance and movement patterns from the lessons imparted by Tabawan experts Calsum Telso, Abdul Said K. Hailaya, Nur Perong, and Dalino Kamamih.
Pedro Abraham Jr. does the music and sound design, Meliton Roxas, Jr. handles lights design, Mike Parker works on graphic design, while National Artist Salvador F. Bernal does the honors for production design.
"Sintang Dalisay" runs July 13-16, 21-23 and 26-30, 7 p.m., with 2 p.m. shows on July 16, 23 and 30 (Saturdays), at the Rizal Mini-Theater, Ateneo de Manila University. A gala show for delegates of the International University Theater Association Conference is scheduled for July 20. For inquiries and reservations, contact Regina Aquitaña at 0915-1129301.
The production is staged in cooperation with the Ateneo Fine Arts Program and the Performing Arts Cluster.
The adaptation is set in Sampurna, a fictional Muslim community, with the Mustafas and the Kalimuddins as two prominent families mired in an age-old hatred for each other. Caught in this family strife are Rashiddin and Jamila, two lovers, secretly married, who are forced to separate from each other after Rashiddin kills a member of the Kalimuddin clan to avenge the death of his cousin. A demand for justice, Rashiddin’s exile to Dapitan, a clandestine tryst, a missing letter and a plot that goes awry culminate in the death of the lovers and the reconciliation of the two families smothered in grief and regret.
Kalil Almonte plays Rashiddin while Tasha Tañada essays the role of Jamila. Zennon Gosalvez and Vannah Pacis are their understudies. The ensemble, doubling as chorus members and characters in the play, includes Ariel Diccion, Cindy Lopez, Brian Sy, Charles Yee, Joenel Garcia and Exzell Macomb.
Igal, the traditional dance of the Sama people, will serve as the production’s movement motif, taught to the cast by master teachers from Tabawan, South Ubian, Tawi-Tawi province. An ensemble of musicians from Kulintangang Ateneo and the University of the Philippines’ Kontemporaryong Gamelan Pilipino (Kontra-GaPi), will accompany the dance and the action of the play.
Ricardo Abad, who shaped the performance text together with Guelan Luarca, directs the production. Matthew Santamaria draws the dance and movement patterns from the lessons imparted by Tabawan experts Calsum Telso, Abdul Said K. Hailaya, Nur Perong, and Dalino Kamamih.
Pedro Abraham Jr. does the music and sound design, Meliton Roxas, Jr. handles lights design, Mike Parker works on graphic design, while National Artist Salvador F. Bernal does the honors for production design.
"Sintang Dalisay" runs July 13-16, 21-23 and 26-30, 7 p.m., with 2 p.m. shows on July 16, 23 and 30 (Saturdays), at the Rizal Mini-Theater, Ateneo de Manila University. A gala show for delegates of the International University Theater Association Conference is scheduled for July 20. For inquiries and reservations, contact Regina Aquitaña at 0915-1129301.
The production is staged in cooperation with the Ateneo Fine Arts Program and the Performing Arts Cluster.
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May Pakpak Ang Oras at Iba Pang Mga Dula from Dulaang Laksambayanan, Inc.
For its second season, the theater group Dulaang Laksambayanan, Inc. presents "May Pakpak Ang Oras at Iba Pang Mga Dula," a restaging of the plays' successful run last March. The De La Salle University Department of Philosophy is underwriting the restaging for the benefit of Lasallian students, and as part of its Aesthetics Conference.
The featured plays are all written by American playwright David Ives. Translated to Filipino by members of Dulaang Laksambayanan, the plays are now titled "May Pakpak ang Oras," "Babel, Babel... Pa’no Ka Ginawa?," "Sure Thing" and "Abangan ang Susunod na Kabanata."
Audiences will catch a glimpse of life through plays that break reality in order to bring to light the realities of our time, and tackle issues relating the ephemeral quality of life and the struggle to rebel against fate, on the foundations of belief systems, on mistakes and relationships, and on the influence of media.
Directed by Joshua Lim So, with associate direction by Terrie Martinez, music composition and design by Mark Anthony Dacela, production design by Vaughn Calimag and lights design by Roman Cruz.
"May Pakpak Ang Oras at Iba Pang Mga Dula" will be on July 23, 7:30 p.m., at The Buoy Reastaurant (right across Century Park Hotel), 640 Pablo Ocampo St. (formerly Vito Cruz), Malate, Manila. Door price is at P250, with discounts are available for bulk purchases.
For more information, call Frances Santos at 0917-5562718, email dulaanglaksambayananinc@gmail.com, or add facebook.com/dulaang.laksambayanan.
The featured plays are all written by American playwright David Ives. Translated to Filipino by members of Dulaang Laksambayanan, the plays are now titled "May Pakpak ang Oras," "Babel, Babel... Pa’no Ka Ginawa?," "Sure Thing" and "Abangan ang Susunod na Kabanata."
Audiences will catch a glimpse of life through plays that break reality in order to bring to light the realities of our time, and tackle issues relating the ephemeral quality of life and the struggle to rebel against fate, on the foundations of belief systems, on mistakes and relationships, and on the influence of media.
Directed by Joshua Lim So, with associate direction by Terrie Martinez, music composition and design by Mark Anthony Dacela, production design by Vaughn Calimag and lights design by Roman Cruz.
"May Pakpak Ang Oras at Iba Pang Mga Dula" will be on July 23, 7:30 p.m., at The Buoy Reastaurant (right across Century Park Hotel), 640 Pablo Ocampo St. (formerly Vito Cruz), Malate, Manila. Door price is at P250, with discounts are available for bulk purchases.
For more information, call Frances Santos at 0917-5562718, email dulaanglaksambayananinc@gmail.com, or add facebook.com/dulaang.laksambayanan.
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Monday, July 11, 2011
Kung bakit kailangan nating mangahas lumabas
The most resonant lines from this year's breakout hit at the Virgin Labfest 7, Dingdong Novenario's Kafatiran. Bravo!
TONIO: Ayoko na ring lumabas. Dito sa loob maari kong gawin ang nais kong gawin, kung tatanggapin nyo ako. Mukha namang pare-pareho tayo ng kinagigiliwan. Ang paglikha, ang sining, lahat ng magaganda sa mundo. Ang mga munting larong-isip na minsan ay nahihirapan silang unawain sa labas.
OBET: Pag lumabas tayo’y susugpuin nila tayo. Duduraan, sasampalin, bubugbugin, pahihirapan.
KIKO: Ngunit di tayo pwedeng manatili lamang dito sa loob. Sa ating pananatili sa loob hinahayaan nating nakatago ang ating mga tunay na damdamin. Lalo nating itinatago kung sino tayo sa mga taong araw-araw nating kahalubilo, sa ating mga minamahal. Lalo tayong nalalayo sa kanila at lalo silang napapamahal sa isang taong hindi ako. Napapamahal sila sa aking balatkayo ngunit hindi sa tunay na ako.
OBET: Pag lumabas tayo sasaktan nila tayo. Hindi nila tayo maiintindhihan.
SIANO: Tama si Ka-Kiko. Ang ating paglabas ang unang hakbang upang tayo’y maintindihan. Ito ang unang hakbang para sa ating kalayaan. Maaaring maging madugo ang digmaan ngunit kung sa huli’y matitikman ko ang tamis ng kalayaan, titiisin ko ang mga dura, sampal, bugbog, at pasakit.
KIKO: Sa paglabas natin, nakatitiyak akong magkikita tayong muli. At nakatitiyak din akong makakahanap tayo ng iba sa ating pangkat na patuloy na hinahanap ang kalayaan...
TONIO: Ayoko na ring lumabas. Dito sa loob maari kong gawin ang nais kong gawin, kung tatanggapin nyo ako. Mukha namang pare-pareho tayo ng kinagigiliwan. Ang paglikha, ang sining, lahat ng magaganda sa mundo. Ang mga munting larong-isip na minsan ay nahihirapan silang unawain sa labas.
OBET: Pag lumabas tayo’y susugpuin nila tayo. Duduraan, sasampalin, bubugbugin, pahihirapan.
KIKO: Ngunit di tayo pwedeng manatili lamang dito sa loob. Sa ating pananatili sa loob hinahayaan nating nakatago ang ating mga tunay na damdamin. Lalo nating itinatago kung sino tayo sa mga taong araw-araw nating kahalubilo, sa ating mga minamahal. Lalo tayong nalalayo sa kanila at lalo silang napapamahal sa isang taong hindi ako. Napapamahal sila sa aking balatkayo ngunit hindi sa tunay na ako.
OBET: Pag lumabas tayo sasaktan nila tayo. Hindi nila tayo maiintindhihan.
SIANO: Tama si Ka-Kiko. Ang ating paglabas ang unang hakbang upang tayo’y maintindihan. Ito ang unang hakbang para sa ating kalayaan. Maaaring maging madugo ang digmaan ngunit kung sa huli’y matitikman ko ang tamis ng kalayaan, titiisin ko ang mga dura, sampal, bugbog, at pasakit.
KIKO: Sa paglabas natin, nakatitiyak akong magkikita tayong muli. At nakatitiyak din akong makakahanap tayo ng iba sa ating pangkat na patuloy na hinahanap ang kalayaan...
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Saturday, July 09, 2011
My point exactly.
STILL CLUELESS
[Inquirer editorial, 7.9.11]
The good bishops still don’t get it, do they?
The reactions so far of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines to the furor over some of its members having received luxury vehicles from the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office during the presidency of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo indicates that even the so-called moral leaders of this nation are not immune to misplacing their ethical bearings—if need be.
The clueless response: “I don’t know why they take it against us and make it appear scandalous,” by Davao Archbishop Fernando Capalla. The dilatory parry: “There are other beneficiaries who are not from the Catholic Church,” by Tandag Bishop Nereo Odchimar. The petulant riposte: “If P-Noy wants to get it, it’s ready,” by Basilan Bishop Martin Jumoad, referring to the Mitsubishi Strada he bought with a P1.1-million donation from the PCSO.
Then there’s the victim card: “The main intention of the PCSO is to destroy the credibility of the bishops,” by Lipa Archbishop Ramon Arguelles. Another variant: “This issue has already divided and damaged CBCP,” by Butuan Bishop Juan De Dios Pueblos, whose obsequious request for a P1.7-million Montero Sport was the most eyebrow-raising of the transactions. (For good measure, he also called President Aquino “vindictive,” blaming Malacañang for the straits he’s in.) Next—the non sequitur: “Is it because of the bishops’ position on the RH bill?” by Odchimar again. And, finally, the classic, hugely dispiriting, cop-out: The CBCP’s individual members are “directly” answerable to the Pope; CBCP itself, said Odchimar, cannot sanction erring bishops.
The Church leaders’ inability to recognize the gravity of the situation they’re in might, in time, turn out to be the more perverse and telling part of this still-unfolding saga. Perhaps, Pueblos and his colleagues remain stuck in the denial stage—unable to comprehend, unwilling to accept that their actions in this regard raise disturbing questions about the very foundation of their calling as ministers: their character and moral moorings. A church without moral ascendancy—one with leaders who, defying expectations, turn out to be perfectly willing participants and enablers in the kind of sleazy, slimy politics they so love to damn to high heavens in their homilies—is a church in serious trouble.
Receiving funds from the PCSO is not the main issue, although even there the Church already finds itself in a bind given its regular denunciations of gambling as an immoral activity. There is a good reason many private companies prefer to channel their charity efforts and donations through the Church. Groups like Caritas Manila have done a commendable job through the years in reaching out to the poor and dispossessed, and the Church is rightly seen as a conscientious, well-placed, highly organized entity that can ensure that endowments and offerings for the less privileged will reach their intended beneficiaries.
The devil, however, that the bishops seem terribly anxious to dodge with the flurry of distracting, extraneous details cluttering their outcries is this: They got their emoluments and vehicles from Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, who needed to have the Church by her side throughout her tumultuous, scandal-wracked reign. The PCSO donations did not happen within a vacuum, as a happy case of happenstance, with no strings attached and no payback expected. One of their own is forthright enough to admit it. Retired Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Oscar Cruz said it was “impossible” for Ms Arroyo to accommodate the bishops without some quid pro quo. “If this is to give to Church ventures, bakit ako hihingi dito sa gobyerno? Kapag humingi ka sa gobyerno, nakatali ang kamay mo.”
There’s the fly in the blessed ointment. At a time when the nation needed the moral strength and clarity of the Church as the Arroyo administration lurched from one outrageous impropriety to the next, where were its bishops? Being wined and dined, it now appears—showered with largesse, gifted with SUVs, comfortably set up in what would be called the “Malacañang diocese.” Was it “to buy their silence and cooperation?” wondered Fr. Oliver Mendoza, parish priest of San Fabian town in Pangasinan.
Mendoza needs only to read Pueblos’ letter to GMA, henceforth Exhibit A of this disgraceful moment in the local Catholic Church, to find the answer. For a brand-new 4×4 “as your birthday gift to me,” it said, “be assured of my constant support.”
[Inquirer editorial, 7.9.11]
The good bishops still don’t get it, do they?
The reactions so far of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines to the furor over some of its members having received luxury vehicles from the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office during the presidency of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo indicates that even the so-called moral leaders of this nation are not immune to misplacing their ethical bearings—if need be.
The clueless response: “I don’t know why they take it against us and make it appear scandalous,” by Davao Archbishop Fernando Capalla. The dilatory parry: “There are other beneficiaries who are not from the Catholic Church,” by Tandag Bishop Nereo Odchimar. The petulant riposte: “If P-Noy wants to get it, it’s ready,” by Basilan Bishop Martin Jumoad, referring to the Mitsubishi Strada he bought with a P1.1-million donation from the PCSO.
Then there’s the victim card: “The main intention of the PCSO is to destroy the credibility of the bishops,” by Lipa Archbishop Ramon Arguelles. Another variant: “This issue has already divided and damaged CBCP,” by Butuan Bishop Juan De Dios Pueblos, whose obsequious request for a P1.7-million Montero Sport was the most eyebrow-raising of the transactions. (For good measure, he also called President Aquino “vindictive,” blaming Malacañang for the straits he’s in.) Next—the non sequitur: “Is it because of the bishops’ position on the RH bill?” by Odchimar again. And, finally, the classic, hugely dispiriting, cop-out: The CBCP’s individual members are “directly” answerable to the Pope; CBCP itself, said Odchimar, cannot sanction erring bishops.
The Church leaders’ inability to recognize the gravity of the situation they’re in might, in time, turn out to be the more perverse and telling part of this still-unfolding saga. Perhaps, Pueblos and his colleagues remain stuck in the denial stage—unable to comprehend, unwilling to accept that their actions in this regard raise disturbing questions about the very foundation of their calling as ministers: their character and moral moorings. A church without moral ascendancy—one with leaders who, defying expectations, turn out to be perfectly willing participants and enablers in the kind of sleazy, slimy politics they so love to damn to high heavens in their homilies—is a church in serious trouble.
Receiving funds from the PCSO is not the main issue, although even there the Church already finds itself in a bind given its regular denunciations of gambling as an immoral activity. There is a good reason many private companies prefer to channel their charity efforts and donations through the Church. Groups like Caritas Manila have done a commendable job through the years in reaching out to the poor and dispossessed, and the Church is rightly seen as a conscientious, well-placed, highly organized entity that can ensure that endowments and offerings for the less privileged will reach their intended beneficiaries.
The devil, however, that the bishops seem terribly anxious to dodge with the flurry of distracting, extraneous details cluttering their outcries is this: They got their emoluments and vehicles from Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, who needed to have the Church by her side throughout her tumultuous, scandal-wracked reign. The PCSO donations did not happen within a vacuum, as a happy case of happenstance, with no strings attached and no payback expected. One of their own is forthright enough to admit it. Retired Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Oscar Cruz said it was “impossible” for Ms Arroyo to accommodate the bishops without some quid pro quo. “If this is to give to Church ventures, bakit ako hihingi dito sa gobyerno? Kapag humingi ka sa gobyerno, nakatali ang kamay mo.”
There’s the fly in the blessed ointment. At a time when the nation needed the moral strength and clarity of the Church as the Arroyo administration lurched from one outrageous impropriety to the next, where were its bishops? Being wined and dined, it now appears—showered with largesse, gifted with SUVs, comfortably set up in what would be called the “Malacañang diocese.” Was it “to buy their silence and cooperation?” wondered Fr. Oliver Mendoza, parish priest of San Fabian town in Pangasinan.
Mendoza needs only to read Pueblos’ letter to GMA, henceforth Exhibit A of this disgraceful moment in the local Catholic Church, to find the answer. For a brand-new 4×4 “as your birthday gift to me,” it said, “be assured of my constant support.”
Labels:
here and there,
heritage,
politics,
readings
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Friday, July 08, 2011
Boy Abunda and Ladlad present this weekend's Care Divas
The Philippine Educational Theater Association continues its run of Liza Magtoto and Vincent de Jesus’ blockbuster musical play, “Care Divas.” Directed by Maribel Legarda, the musical's performances at the PETA Theater Center on July 15 and 16 are sponsored by Boy Abunda’s Backroom, Inc., while July 17 is Ladlad Party List Night.
Already into its fourth rerun since opening last February, the musical “dramedy” is about five Filipino transvestites who work in Israel as caregivers during the day and as “show gays” at night, at the time of the intifada (the Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation).
The cast of “Care Divas” includes some of the biggest theater and television actors today such as Melvin Lee, Vincent de Jesus, Ricci Chan, Jerald Napoles, Dudz Teraña, Jason Barcial, Phil Noble, Buddy Caramat, Cecilia Garrucho, Paul Holme, Myke Salomon, Angeli Bayani, Dominic Miclat-Janssen, Eric Dela Cruz and Miguel Hidalgo.
The creative team behind the show includes costume designer John Abul, events and theater lighting designer Jon Jon Villareal, visual artist and set designer Leo Abaya and contemporary dancer and choreographer Carlon Matobato.
For inquiries and ticket reservations, call Backroom 4351098 or 9283121.
[Photo: Melvin Lee as Filipino caregiver Chelsea and Paul Holme as his Israeli patient Daddy Isaac in PETA's Care Divas]
Labels:
music,
politics,
showtime,
theater,
tv/showbiz
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Thursday, July 07, 2011
The Moment
The latest riveting shot by my high school batchmate, Manila Bulletin ace photojournalist Linuz Escandor:
Arman Tolentino hugs his wife, as their son Adam Tolentino, 3 yrs old was trapped inside their house while firemen did their best to fight the fire that engulfed the neighborhood in Florentina St. Sampaloc Manila. The boy was later found dead. [Caption his.]
And this, a perfectly captured moment--the opening image in his online portfolio:
Proud of you, Linuz!
Arman Tolentino hugs his wife, as their son Adam Tolentino, 3 yrs old was trapped inside their house while firemen did their best to fight the fire that engulfed the neighborhood in Florentina St. Sampaloc Manila. The boy was later found dead. [Caption his.]
And this, a perfectly captured moment--the opening image in his online portfolio:
Proud of you, Linuz!
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The Q&A Fabcast, parts 3-4
Parts 1-2 here.
Part 3: The one where caller and faithful Fabcast listener Ming Meows asks us, “Ngayong Independence Day [we recorded this on the evening of June 12], kelan ninyo nasabi sa sarili ninyo na 'malaya na ako?'” Hongnosebleed ha, Ming Meows! Haha. I'd call this part of the podcast the calm before the storm.
Download this fabcast (right click and save)
Music credits:
Free by Ultra Nate
Free As A Bird by The Beatles
Bailero by Sarah Brightman
Free Fallin’ by Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers
Part 4: The one where, ika nga ni Migs, all hell breaks loose, as caller Boy Shiatsu sends us into an argumentative and philosophical tizzy over his question: How do we perceive sex workers like him? Yes, he is (but one who writes and expresses himself very well! Check out his blog here.) That line of inquiry launches us into uncharted waters, as it were, as we are forced to confront issues of latent prejudice both personal and social, and notions of tolerance and acceptance, condescension versus honest opinionating, etc. Balitaktakan galore--I think I almost burst a vein here. But how swell to do this with friends and end up none the worse for wear--only wiser, perhaps, and more forgiving of each other's viewpoints.
Download this fabcast (right click and save)
Music credits:
Bad Girls by Donna Summer
Short Dick Man by Gillette & 20 Fingers
Let Me Tickle Your Fancy by Jermaine Jackson
Super Bass by Nicki Minaj feat. Ester Dean
PLUS: From the archives--What makes a gigolo?
Part 3: The one where caller and faithful Fabcast listener Ming Meows asks us, “Ngayong Independence Day [we recorded this on the evening of June 12], kelan ninyo nasabi sa sarili ninyo na 'malaya na ako?'” Hongnosebleed ha, Ming Meows! Haha. I'd call this part of the podcast the calm before the storm.
Download this fabcast (right click and save)
Music credits:
Free by Ultra Nate
Free As A Bird by The Beatles
Bailero by Sarah Brightman
Free Fallin’ by Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers
Part 4: The one where, ika nga ni Migs, all hell breaks loose, as caller Boy Shiatsu sends us into an argumentative and philosophical tizzy over his question: How do we perceive sex workers like him? Yes, he is (but one who writes and expresses himself very well! Check out his blog here.) That line of inquiry launches us into uncharted waters, as it were, as we are forced to confront issues of latent prejudice both personal and social, and notions of tolerance and acceptance, condescension versus honest opinionating, etc. Balitaktakan galore--I think I almost burst a vein here. But how swell to do this with friends and end up none the worse for wear--only wiser, perhaps, and more forgiving of each other's viewpoints.
Music credits:
Bad Girls by Donna Summer
Short Dick Man by Gillette & 20 Fingers
Let Me Tickle Your Fancy by Jermaine Jackson
Super Bass by Nicki Minaj feat. Ester Dean
PLUS: From the archives--What makes a gigolo?
Labels:
here and there,
podcasts,
politics,
the lush life
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Wednesday, July 06, 2011
Daniel, you're a star in the face of the sky...
On top of being on the Hollywood A-list, he does serious theater, sings and dances in musicals (or at least in one--so far), has successfully evaded becoming tabloid fodder despite all that fame and money, and appears to have a good, well-adjusted head on his shoulders. Further proof: this revelation. What's not to love?
Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe has revealed that he was so worried about his drinking that he vowed to give it up and has become teetotal.
The 21-year-old actor told GQ magazine that his life went off the rails for a time when he turned 18 and was filming "Harry Potter and The Half-Blood Prince."
“I became so reliant on (alcohol) to enjoy stuff,” he said in an interview to be published in GQ's August edition. “There were a few years there when I was just so enamored with the idea of living some sort of famous person's lifestyle that really isn't suited to me...”
Radcliffe, who says he has not touched a drop of alcohol since August last year, admitted that he would love to be a person that goes to parties and has a couple of drinks but that just doesn't work for him.
“I do that very unsuccessfully. I'd just rather sit at home and read, or talk to somebody that makes me laugh,” he added. “There's no shame in enjoying the quiet life.” [Emphasis mine.]
Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe has revealed that he was so worried about his drinking that he vowed to give it up and has become teetotal.
The 21-year-old actor told GQ magazine that his life went off the rails for a time when he turned 18 and was filming "Harry Potter and The Half-Blood Prince."
“I became so reliant on (alcohol) to enjoy stuff,” he said in an interview to be published in GQ's August edition. “There were a few years there when I was just so enamored with the idea of living some sort of famous person's lifestyle that really isn't suited to me...”
Radcliffe, who says he has not touched a drop of alcohol since August last year, admitted that he would love to be a person that goes to parties and has a couple of drinks but that just doesn't work for him.
“I do that very unsuccessfully. I'd just rather sit at home and read, or talk to somebody that makes me laugh,” he added. “There's no shame in enjoying the quiet life.” [Emphasis mine.]
Labels:
music,
readings,
theater,
tv/showbiz
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'Last year sa Virgin Labfest, you are what you earn, sacred heart, etc.'
[Napakagandang pagninilay-nilay tungkol sa mga mas me saysay na bagay sa buhay ng isang makasining na tao. Reposted with permission from playwright Allan Lopez's FB.]
Napanood ko ang lahat ng mga set sa Virgin Labfest VII sa loob ng isang linggo. For the first six years, meron palaging isang set na namimiss ko.
Timely na din siguro na makumpleto ko sa wakas ang labfest. Kasi feeling ko ito ang “graduation” year ko. Earlier this year, nabanggit ni Rody Vera na pinagiisipan nila ideya na bigyan ng cap ang dami ng beses na ifefeature ang iisang writer--halimbawa’y kapag nakaapat ka na, sa full-length ka na lang puwede. Di ko alam kung naging formal na guideline ito sa kanilang pagpili (o kung magiging guideline? di ako aware sa totoo lang kung ito ba'y kanilang iimplement), pero naniniwala ako ng bonggang bongga sa pinanggagalingan nito. Kung may impluwensya man ako sa kanilang selection process, ito ang aking isusuggest very strongly. Gusto ko rin kasi makapanood ng mga bagong akda mula sa mga bagong manunulat--maski iyong sa unang sipat e hindi ko magugustuhan. Malaking bahagi din yan ng charm ng isang laboratory festival.
Kaya ayun, tinuturing kong graduation year ito. May full-length musical akong niluluto tungkol sa buhay factory, pero malabong matapos ko ito sa isang taon (mabagal kasi ako magsulat). Kaya siguro kung papalarin akong isama sa labfest sa isang taon, malamang sa mga reading na lamang.
Pero nandoon pa rin ako sa isang taon, bilang audience. Mabuti na lang nauso na ang festival pass.
Hinding hindi ko kakaligtaan ang mga susunod na VLF, unless bigla akong mamatay o magkataong nasa ibang bansa. Nakakahiya mang aminin, ang dalawang linggo ng labfest ang isa sa mga highlight nitong mga nakaraang taon. Maski noong dalawang taon na hindi ako kasama, siya pa rin ang highlight.
E kasi medyo boring naman ang buhay ko (ito yung bahaging nakakahiyang aminin) – buhay empleyado. Ang Lunes hanggang Biyernes ay nakalaan para sa walong oras na pagupo sa harap ng isang desk. Siyempre nandun na ang ilang oras ng pagcommute sa bawat araw. Lalo na ngayon, sa Batangas ako pumapasok. Sa isang factory, tangina. Tapos sa Las Pinas nakatira--na gaya nga ng sabi ng kaibigan ko, isang “inconvenient” na lugar, lugar kung saan maski taksi kung minsan ayaw puntahan. Kapag Sabado naman, kailangan mong maglaba. Kapag Linggo, kung minsan tatamarin ka na lumabas. Kaya siguro sa opisina namin, uso ang popular entertainment at mga bagay na mabilis--mga soap, mga hollywood na pelikula, mga mall, mga fastfood, online shopping, twitter, paulit-ulit na joke ng Showtime at Eat Bulaga, canned laughter, buong hapon ng tsismisan sa The Buzz, planned vacation tuwing nagsasale ang mga airline, discount coupons sa internet, pagkain sa labas sa araw ng suweldo, marami pang iba.
Ganyan lang. Buong taong routine. Kung minsan, nagmamahal ka. Kung minsan, hindi. Pero ganyan lang talaga kasimple.
Kaya siguro hindi uso sa karamihan ng mga kakilala ko ang mga bagay na makasining. Kasi hindi naman swak ito sa kalimitang tinitignan nila bilang entertainment--halimbawa, panonood ng mga usong sine, pagshoshopping, pagkain sa labas. Ang buhay ng empleyado kasi, naisip ko, is all about being a consumer too. Kasi ang nakukuha mo sa pagbibigay ng buhay mo, pera. Siyempre iikot din ang mga choices mo sa pera. May consumer’s choice kasi sa mga bagay na popular, maski iisang bagay lang naman ang pinaguusapan. Halimbawa, kung manonood ka ng sine, puwede kang manood sa IMAX kung marami kang pera, o sa sinehang 3D. Kapag dito ka, kunwari may latoy na ang walang kalatoy-latoy na kuwento, kasi mas feel mo ang special effects. Maski sa araw ng pahinga mo, nakasakay ka sa mantra ng bagong henerasyon--YOU ARE WHAT YOU EARN. Parang mousetrap ang mantra na ‘yan e. Mousetrap na kasing ganda ng isang first class hotel. Madaling maging kumportable.
Kung minsan nawawala ang paghahanap ng “truth.” Ang laking salita niya, ang hirap idefine. Siguro masyado na ko matagal na empleyado, papunta na ko doon sa lugar kung saan hindi na tinatanong kung ano ang truth. O beauty. O tama at mali. O irony. O drama. O life. O relationships. O pag-ibig. Kumikita naman ako, kumakain ang pamilya ko. Bakit ko pa kailangan isipin ang mga bagay na iyan?
But I am ahead of myself. Iyan lang naman ang future version sa isang bangungot. Fortunately, nandun pa rin ako sa miminsang naghahanap ng “truth,” kung ano mang feel kong definition noon sa panahong maisip ko. Iniisip ko rin kung ano nga ba ang kahulugan ng beauty. At tama at mali. At irony. At drama. At life. At relationships. At pag-ibig. Lalo na itong huli. Tweetums kasi ako.
Kaya high na high ako kapag may pagkakataong nakakasawsaw ako sa anumang may kinalaman sa sining. Kasi ano ba naman ang sining kundi ang pagmumuni-muni sa mga tanginang bagay na ito, na maski anong gawin mo hindi mo mabibili.
Sa lahat ng mga karanasang makasining, pinakapaborito ko ang teatro, non-commercial theater please, kasi kung minsan pakiramdam ko isang paligo lang ang lamang mga broadway-broadway sa mga pelikula ng Star Cinema at Showtime, pero that’s just me, maski broadway-broadway puwede na rin, basta teatro, pero sana yung non-commercial, yung tinatawag na Immediate theater ni Peter Brook, o Peter Brooks. Nakalimutan ko kung may s nga ba o wala ang kanyang apelyido.
Wag n’yo na lang tanungin kung bakit. Magulo naman akong kausap, sa mga nakakilala. Basta labis akong nageenjoy sa mga bagay na raw. ‘Yung pang Batute, o anumang black box. ‘Yung first time itinatanghal. ‘Yung kinailangang magisip at magkasundo (o maski hindi nagkasundo) ang manunulat, direktor, mga artista, nagusap at nagisip kung ano nga ba ang truth, pati na rin ang lahat ng mga bagay na karugtong nito na nabanggit ko kanina. Siguro dahil sa ganitong lugar, nandiyan ang mga taong nagtanong. Mga taong marahil nakakulong din sa isang mousetrap, sa sarili nilang mga buhay, pero dahil sa pangangailangang magpalabas at magkaroon ng saysay sa sasandaling magkasama kayo sa teatro, e nagtanong. Hindi ko alam kung mahalaga kung nasagot nila ang mga katanungan nila, pero iyong pagtatanong mahalaga na iyon. At least para sa akin.
Naaalala ko ang isang train ride sa BART noong nasa Bay Area ako. Magkaharapan ang upuan doon, apatan. Nakaupo sa harap ko ang isang babaeng napakaganda. Ibang klaseng ganda. Hindi iyong tipong makikita mo sa mga fashion magazine--pandak kasi siya at medyo chubby. Basta sa isip ko, napakaganda. Pinakamagandang babaeng nakita ko pa nga, sabi ko sa sarili ko, noong nakaupo ako sa harap niya sa train. Tahimik siyang nakadungaw sa bintana, maski wala ka namang makikita doon dahil nasa underground segment kami. Hindi ko alam kung titinitigan niya ang sarili niya, o may malalim na iniisip, pero sa isip ko, lalo lamang itong nagpapaganda sa kanya. Nakasuot siya ng blouse na medyo mababa ang cleavage. Napakalusog ng kanyang mga suso, o maganda ang push ng kanyang bra. Hindi na mahalaga. Basta napakakaaya-ayang tignan. Siya iyong tipo ng taong kapag humihinga ay umaalsa ng bahagyang bahagya ang dibdib. Lahat naman tayo, umaalsa ang dibdib. Pero may mga tao na mas kaaya-ayang panoorin ito--ang pag-alsa at baba ng mga suso. Siya iyong ganoong klaseng babae. Corny ha. Patawad. Pero sa totoo lang, maiisip mo, ang ritmo ng kanyang paghinga ay kasabay ng sarili mong paghinga. At ito ang dahilan kung bakit mapapatitig ka. Hindi lamang sa dibdib kundi sa kanya. Sa pagitan ng kanyang mga suso, may peklat ng operasyon. Iisipin mo, heart surgery siguro. Hidi mo mawari kung heart surgery nga lang ba, kasi hindi mo na makikita ang ibabang bahagi ng peklat. Natatago na ito ng butones. Nandun na sa bahagi ng kanyang suso na hindi mo na dapat makita. Na ayaw na niyang ipakita. Ito. Ito ang kanyang center. Center ng kanyang kagandahan. Sabi ko, sana may zipper. Kung may zipper ang peklat, puwede mong buksan. Gusto ko makita nag kanyang puso. Sana nilabas na lang niya ang kanyang puso. Parang sacred heart. Pero maski na hindi nakalabas, maski hindi siya ang sacred heart, iyon ang naging sentro ng kanyang kagandahan.
May dala akong digital camera noon. Sa totoo lang, gusto ko siya kunan ng larawan. Ipagpapaalam ko ng maayos. Papayag naman siguro. Pero hindi ko tinanong. Tumitig lamang ako. Bumaba siya sa Embarcadero station. Naiwan akong magisa--literally, magisa sa train. Inisip ko, kanina lang nandirito ang babaeng may pilat sa dibdib na may pagkagandagandang suso at pagkagandaganda ring mukha. Ngayon wala na siya. Putangina.
Pero nagpapasalamat ako at nakita ko siya. Nasa ala-ala ko naman siya. Wala man akong picture, nasa isip ko siya. Naiwan man akong mag isa sa train, nasa isip ko na siya. Si Beauty. Wala akong maisip na ibang pangalan, pero ok na rin.
This may not make sense to some, pero ang dahilan kung bakit mahalaga ang babaeng iyon sa buhay ko ay siya ring dahilan kung bakit mahalaga ang teatro sa buhay ko--teatrong kasama ako bilang manunulat, at teatrong napapanood ko. Maski iyong mga teatro na hindi ko gaano gusto. There's just that love na nasa live performance na mahirap tumbukin, pero alam mong nandoon.
Ang lahat ng mga kakilala kong kapwa manunulat, direktor, artista, ay iba-ibang bersyon ng babaeng iyon. Nakakulong man ako sa mousetrap, ipagsisigawan ko pa ring mabuhay ang empathy, ang compassion, ang pag-ibig, ang katotohanan, ang teatro!
Napanood ko ang lahat ng mga set sa Virgin Labfest VII sa loob ng isang linggo. For the first six years, meron palaging isang set na namimiss ko.
Timely na din siguro na makumpleto ko sa wakas ang labfest. Kasi feeling ko ito ang “graduation” year ko. Earlier this year, nabanggit ni Rody Vera na pinagiisipan nila ideya na bigyan ng cap ang dami ng beses na ifefeature ang iisang writer--halimbawa’y kapag nakaapat ka na, sa full-length ka na lang puwede. Di ko alam kung naging formal na guideline ito sa kanilang pagpili (o kung magiging guideline? di ako aware sa totoo lang kung ito ba'y kanilang iimplement), pero naniniwala ako ng bonggang bongga sa pinanggagalingan nito. Kung may impluwensya man ako sa kanilang selection process, ito ang aking isusuggest very strongly. Gusto ko rin kasi makapanood ng mga bagong akda mula sa mga bagong manunulat--maski iyong sa unang sipat e hindi ko magugustuhan. Malaking bahagi din yan ng charm ng isang laboratory festival.
Kaya ayun, tinuturing kong graduation year ito. May full-length musical akong niluluto tungkol sa buhay factory, pero malabong matapos ko ito sa isang taon (mabagal kasi ako magsulat). Kaya siguro kung papalarin akong isama sa labfest sa isang taon, malamang sa mga reading na lamang.
Pero nandoon pa rin ako sa isang taon, bilang audience. Mabuti na lang nauso na ang festival pass.
Hinding hindi ko kakaligtaan ang mga susunod na VLF, unless bigla akong mamatay o magkataong nasa ibang bansa. Nakakahiya mang aminin, ang dalawang linggo ng labfest ang isa sa mga highlight nitong mga nakaraang taon. Maski noong dalawang taon na hindi ako kasama, siya pa rin ang highlight.
E kasi medyo boring naman ang buhay ko (ito yung bahaging nakakahiyang aminin) – buhay empleyado. Ang Lunes hanggang Biyernes ay nakalaan para sa walong oras na pagupo sa harap ng isang desk. Siyempre nandun na ang ilang oras ng pagcommute sa bawat araw. Lalo na ngayon, sa Batangas ako pumapasok. Sa isang factory, tangina. Tapos sa Las Pinas nakatira--na gaya nga ng sabi ng kaibigan ko, isang “inconvenient” na lugar, lugar kung saan maski taksi kung minsan ayaw puntahan. Kapag Sabado naman, kailangan mong maglaba. Kapag Linggo, kung minsan tatamarin ka na lumabas. Kaya siguro sa opisina namin, uso ang popular entertainment at mga bagay na mabilis--mga soap, mga hollywood na pelikula, mga mall, mga fastfood, online shopping, twitter, paulit-ulit na joke ng Showtime at Eat Bulaga, canned laughter, buong hapon ng tsismisan sa The Buzz, planned vacation tuwing nagsasale ang mga airline, discount coupons sa internet, pagkain sa labas sa araw ng suweldo, marami pang iba.
Ganyan lang. Buong taong routine. Kung minsan, nagmamahal ka. Kung minsan, hindi. Pero ganyan lang talaga kasimple.
Kaya siguro hindi uso sa karamihan ng mga kakilala ko ang mga bagay na makasining. Kasi hindi naman swak ito sa kalimitang tinitignan nila bilang entertainment--halimbawa, panonood ng mga usong sine, pagshoshopping, pagkain sa labas. Ang buhay ng empleyado kasi, naisip ko, is all about being a consumer too. Kasi ang nakukuha mo sa pagbibigay ng buhay mo, pera. Siyempre iikot din ang mga choices mo sa pera. May consumer’s choice kasi sa mga bagay na popular, maski iisang bagay lang naman ang pinaguusapan. Halimbawa, kung manonood ka ng sine, puwede kang manood sa IMAX kung marami kang pera, o sa sinehang 3D. Kapag dito ka, kunwari may latoy na ang walang kalatoy-latoy na kuwento, kasi mas feel mo ang special effects. Maski sa araw ng pahinga mo, nakasakay ka sa mantra ng bagong henerasyon--YOU ARE WHAT YOU EARN. Parang mousetrap ang mantra na ‘yan e. Mousetrap na kasing ganda ng isang first class hotel. Madaling maging kumportable.
Kung minsan nawawala ang paghahanap ng “truth.” Ang laking salita niya, ang hirap idefine. Siguro masyado na ko matagal na empleyado, papunta na ko doon sa lugar kung saan hindi na tinatanong kung ano ang truth. O beauty. O tama at mali. O irony. O drama. O life. O relationships. O pag-ibig. Kumikita naman ako, kumakain ang pamilya ko. Bakit ko pa kailangan isipin ang mga bagay na iyan?
But I am ahead of myself. Iyan lang naman ang future version sa isang bangungot. Fortunately, nandun pa rin ako sa miminsang naghahanap ng “truth,” kung ano mang feel kong definition noon sa panahong maisip ko. Iniisip ko rin kung ano nga ba ang kahulugan ng beauty. At tama at mali. At irony. At drama. At life. At relationships. At pag-ibig. Lalo na itong huli. Tweetums kasi ako.
Kaya high na high ako kapag may pagkakataong nakakasawsaw ako sa anumang may kinalaman sa sining. Kasi ano ba naman ang sining kundi ang pagmumuni-muni sa mga tanginang bagay na ito, na maski anong gawin mo hindi mo mabibili.
Sa lahat ng mga karanasang makasining, pinakapaborito ko ang teatro, non-commercial theater please, kasi kung minsan pakiramdam ko isang paligo lang ang lamang mga broadway-broadway sa mga pelikula ng Star Cinema at Showtime, pero that’s just me, maski broadway-broadway puwede na rin, basta teatro, pero sana yung non-commercial, yung tinatawag na Immediate theater ni Peter Brook, o Peter Brooks. Nakalimutan ko kung may s nga ba o wala ang kanyang apelyido.
Wag n’yo na lang tanungin kung bakit. Magulo naman akong kausap, sa mga nakakilala. Basta labis akong nageenjoy sa mga bagay na raw. ‘Yung pang Batute, o anumang black box. ‘Yung first time itinatanghal. ‘Yung kinailangang magisip at magkasundo (o maski hindi nagkasundo) ang manunulat, direktor, mga artista, nagusap at nagisip kung ano nga ba ang truth, pati na rin ang lahat ng mga bagay na karugtong nito na nabanggit ko kanina. Siguro dahil sa ganitong lugar, nandiyan ang mga taong nagtanong. Mga taong marahil nakakulong din sa isang mousetrap, sa sarili nilang mga buhay, pero dahil sa pangangailangang magpalabas at magkaroon ng saysay sa sasandaling magkasama kayo sa teatro, e nagtanong. Hindi ko alam kung mahalaga kung nasagot nila ang mga katanungan nila, pero iyong pagtatanong mahalaga na iyon. At least para sa akin.
“There's just that love na nasa live performance na mahirap tumbukin, pero alam mong nandoon”
Naaalala ko ang isang train ride sa BART noong nasa Bay Area ako. Magkaharapan ang upuan doon, apatan. Nakaupo sa harap ko ang isang babaeng napakaganda. Ibang klaseng ganda. Hindi iyong tipong makikita mo sa mga fashion magazine--pandak kasi siya at medyo chubby. Basta sa isip ko, napakaganda. Pinakamagandang babaeng nakita ko pa nga, sabi ko sa sarili ko, noong nakaupo ako sa harap niya sa train. Tahimik siyang nakadungaw sa bintana, maski wala ka namang makikita doon dahil nasa underground segment kami. Hindi ko alam kung titinitigan niya ang sarili niya, o may malalim na iniisip, pero sa isip ko, lalo lamang itong nagpapaganda sa kanya. Nakasuot siya ng blouse na medyo mababa ang cleavage. Napakalusog ng kanyang mga suso, o maganda ang push ng kanyang bra. Hindi na mahalaga. Basta napakakaaya-ayang tignan. Siya iyong tipo ng taong kapag humihinga ay umaalsa ng bahagyang bahagya ang dibdib. Lahat naman tayo, umaalsa ang dibdib. Pero may mga tao na mas kaaya-ayang panoorin ito--ang pag-alsa at baba ng mga suso. Siya iyong ganoong klaseng babae. Corny ha. Patawad. Pero sa totoo lang, maiisip mo, ang ritmo ng kanyang paghinga ay kasabay ng sarili mong paghinga. At ito ang dahilan kung bakit mapapatitig ka. Hindi lamang sa dibdib kundi sa kanya. Sa pagitan ng kanyang mga suso, may peklat ng operasyon. Iisipin mo, heart surgery siguro. Hidi mo mawari kung heart surgery nga lang ba, kasi hindi mo na makikita ang ibabang bahagi ng peklat. Natatago na ito ng butones. Nandun na sa bahagi ng kanyang suso na hindi mo na dapat makita. Na ayaw na niyang ipakita. Ito. Ito ang kanyang center. Center ng kanyang kagandahan. Sabi ko, sana may zipper. Kung may zipper ang peklat, puwede mong buksan. Gusto ko makita nag kanyang puso. Sana nilabas na lang niya ang kanyang puso. Parang sacred heart. Pero maski na hindi nakalabas, maski hindi siya ang sacred heart, iyon ang naging sentro ng kanyang kagandahan.
May dala akong digital camera noon. Sa totoo lang, gusto ko siya kunan ng larawan. Ipagpapaalam ko ng maayos. Papayag naman siguro. Pero hindi ko tinanong. Tumitig lamang ako. Bumaba siya sa Embarcadero station. Naiwan akong magisa--literally, magisa sa train. Inisip ko, kanina lang nandirito ang babaeng may pilat sa dibdib na may pagkagandagandang suso at pagkagandaganda ring mukha. Ngayon wala na siya. Putangina.
Pero nagpapasalamat ako at nakita ko siya. Nasa ala-ala ko naman siya. Wala man akong picture, nasa isip ko siya. Naiwan man akong mag isa sa train, nasa isip ko na siya. Si Beauty. Wala akong maisip na ibang pangalan, pero ok na rin.
This may not make sense to some, pero ang dahilan kung bakit mahalaga ang babaeng iyon sa buhay ko ay siya ring dahilan kung bakit mahalaga ang teatro sa buhay ko--teatrong kasama ako bilang manunulat, at teatrong napapanood ko. Maski iyong mga teatro na hindi ko gaano gusto. There's just that love na nasa live performance na mahirap tumbukin, pero alam mong nandoon.
Ang lahat ng mga kakilala kong kapwa manunulat, direktor, artista, ay iba-ibang bersyon ng babaeng iyon. Nakakulong man ako sa mousetrap, ipagsisigawan ko pa ring mabuhay ang empathy, ang compassion, ang pag-ibig, ang katotohanan, ang teatro!
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Tuesday, July 05, 2011
On the apology to the theater community, etc.--last na talaga, pramis, so help me gozh!
Rafa Santos' second apology, this time directed at the theater community, is quite a stirring read (here). Independent of his now infamous words on TV, it holds hope that, much as he stumbled terribly on his use of language, he might also find some measure of redemption in it. The letter is well-written, expressive and clear (if a tad obsequious--understandable). I'd like to believe he wrote all of it, and that he was completely sincere in the writing of it, especially the lines I found most resonant: We are blessed to be able to work with you [directed at theater actors]. You are the life in our characters and the weight in our conflicts.
May this incident, indeed, lead to change in the working conditions, and new-found respect, for our theater artists.
Postscript: Sorry, can't help it--the dimmest, most muddled reaction to this issue I've read so far, on the other hand, has got to be from former actor and now reportedly indie-film and events producer Carlo Maceda, whose statement quoted in Pep.ph can't be copy-pasted so I'm retyping it here verbatim, down to the wayward 'o' and apostrophe. Do read up to the last line:
He will be fine. A lot of people in the industry are like that and they became superstars. Maganda bawi nyan later, hero na hero ang plot. Pabugbog muna sa simula, tapos magcha-charity event na yan. Change of heart kuno kuno.
And then, if we buy it, instant success, just add water. Very good publicity work. Bonggang slant, twist and slide. And if we boycott the film, sayang naman yung work nung mga theater actors, as some claim they just want to be recognized. Sky Flakes na nga lang binayad di pa natin panonoorin?
But before we point fingers, who is really to blame? Is it the actors who allowed themselves to be treated that way? Is it really the director who just described his observation, tapos nagagalit lahat kasi the truth hurts?
Is it our forefathers who defined our nature as a race? Or is it the small budget that was given kaya everybody is getting a Sky Flake's share? Or let's just blame our parents kasi sometimes we loose our manners?...
Hindi sa I agree. It is funny. We got angry because sometimes we just can't handle the truth. MALALIM 'yung sinabi niya at matapang siya for putting it out. Looking beyond the obvious, we can find wisdom.
After all, it's for art's sake. And if you are reading this and you are still angry, have a Sky Flakes, you'll see it's not that bad at least hindi ka tataba.
------------------------------
Where to begin? Sky Flakes na nga lang binayad di pa natin panonoorin? Our forefathers [defining] our nature as a race? It's for art's sake? WTF. And LOL. Talk about piling crap on crap.
Further affiant sayeth naught.
May this incident, indeed, lead to change in the working conditions, and new-found respect, for our theater artists.
Postscript: Sorry, can't help it--the dimmest, most muddled reaction to this issue I've read so far, on the other hand, has got to be from former actor and now reportedly indie-film and events producer Carlo Maceda, whose statement quoted in Pep.ph can't be copy-pasted so I'm retyping it here verbatim, down to the wayward 'o' and apostrophe. Do read up to the last line:
He will be fine. A lot of people in the industry are like that and they became superstars. Maganda bawi nyan later, hero na hero ang plot. Pabugbog muna sa simula, tapos magcha-charity event na yan. Change of heart kuno kuno.
And then, if we buy it, instant success, just add water. Very good publicity work. Bonggang slant, twist and slide. And if we boycott the film, sayang naman yung work nung mga theater actors, as some claim they just want to be recognized. Sky Flakes na nga lang binayad di pa natin panonoorin?
But before we point fingers, who is really to blame? Is it the actors who allowed themselves to be treated that way? Is it really the director who just described his observation, tapos nagagalit lahat kasi the truth hurts?
Is it our forefathers who defined our nature as a race? Or is it the small budget that was given kaya everybody is getting a Sky Flake's share? Or let's just blame our parents kasi sometimes we loose our manners?...
Hindi sa I agree. It is funny. We got angry because sometimes we just can't handle the truth. MALALIM 'yung sinabi niya at matapang siya for putting it out. Looking beyond the obvious, we can find wisdom.
After all, it's for art's sake. And if you are reading this and you are still angry, have a Sky Flakes, you'll see it's not that bad at least hindi ka tataba.
------------------------------
Where to begin? Sky Flakes na nga lang binayad di pa natin panonoorin? Our forefathers [defining] our nature as a race? It's for art's sake? WTF. And LOL. Talk about piling crap on crap.
Further affiant sayeth naught.
Labels:
blurbage,
here and there,
theater,
tv/showbiz
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Monday, July 04, 2011
Dexter Santos' Rizal X promises to be not your typical Rizal play
It’s not your typical Rizal play. Not “Fili.” Not “Noli.” Not Rizal straight out of a textbook. Dulaang UP’s “Rizal X” is a breed all its own.
Conceptualized, choreographed and directed by Dexter Santos, who returns fresh from his hugely successful “Orosman at Zafira,” “Rizal X” promises to surprise even the most avid theatergoer and inspire even the most hardcore Rizal fan. DUP’s 36th Theater Season opener is a fitting tribute to our national hero’s birth sesquicentenary.
“Rizal X” aims to re-introduce Rizal to the times we live in through a mélange of mixed media popular to this generation such as video, vignettes, and music, intertwined with the more traditional staples of theater--songs, dance, monologues, scenes, and poetry to form a production which Santos hopes to be “a total theater experience.”
Actress and TV host Bea Garcia, who plays various roles in the production, describes “Rizal X” as the “antithesis” of text-based, historic and difficult to understand Rizal plays. “It speaks a language that all of us--the young and the not-so-young alike, can understand and relate to,” she says.
Though made up of several individual segments, the play is all about one message. As actor Reuben Uy, who essays the role of Rizal, puts it: “Rizal lived, loved and laughed like the rest of us, and being like him, there lives a hero in each and every one of us just waiting to come out.”
“Rizal X” hopes to inspire us in believing that we can be Rizal in our own little way. It aspires to serve as a reminder that Rizal is not a distant memory trapped in the dusty papers of a book or in cold busts and monuments, but a warm and palpable presence that is still and will always be a source of pride and inspiration to each and every Filipino. That what he was able to do for the country in his time, we can also do today. Rizal will never be passé; his life and works is an infinite playlist, the relevance of which transcends time and space.
The cast includes Reb Atadero, Natasha Cabrera, Red Concepcion, Jules dela Paz, Alchris Galura, Bea Garcia, Jean Judith Javier, Yanah Laurel, Maita Ponce, Reuben Uy and the Dulaang UP Ensemble.
“Rizal X” showcases the creations, across various media, of Dong Abay, Gerson Abesamis, Manix Abrera, Aiess Alonso, Chips Beltran, Layeta Bucoy, Winter David, Jopy Arnaldo, Malee Matignas, Deo dela Cruz, Al Garcia, JM de Guzman, Vlad Gonzales, Adi Lopez, Joaquin Pedro Valdez, Floy Quintos, and Rene Villanueva.
The artistic team includes William Elvin Manzano for music and lyrics; Happy Days Ahead for the musical arrangements; Katte Sabate and Chic San Agustin as head writers and dramaturgs; Leeroy New for scenic design; Voltaire De Jesus for lighting design; Mitoy Sta. Ana for costume design; Janine Santos as musical director; Ohm David as technical director; Jojit Lorenzo for photography and Tuxqs Rutaquio for poster design.
“Rizal X” runs July 20-August 14, 2011 at the Wilfrido Ma. Guerrero Theater, 2nd floor Palma Hall, UP Diliman, Quezon City, from Wednesdays to Fridays at 7 p.m. and at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. during weekends. For tickets, call Cherry 0917-7500107 or the Dulaang UP Office 9261349, 9818500 local 2449 or 4337840.
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