Tony Espejo, Artistic Director of Gantimpala Theater announces that “Our 34th season’s first touring production is 'Sino Ka Ba, Jose Rizal?' We are producing this in cooperation with Musical Theater Philippines. Gerald Santos and RJ Jimenez will alternately portray the role of our national hero.”
“It is fitting to stage this musical now. We can learn so much from his history, most especially the great relationships he had with his mother Doña Teodora, brother Paciano and sisters; his devotion to the academe and the ardor for the written word; the romances that added color to his years and the nationalistic fervor he had for the country and how he stirred the consciousness of his fellowmen through his novels, 'Noli Me Tangere' and 'El Filibusterismo'.”
“We are very fortunate that two of the country’s finest singers are playing the lead,” adds Espejo. “Gerald, the balladeer, is visceral in his portrayal, while RJ, the acoustic artist, invests a lot of refreshing emotions in his interpretation.”
Santos first gained prominence as the second season grand winner of GMA 7's Pinoy Pop Superstar. First tagged as the boy balladeer, the young man has made his revivals of the pop ditties “Hanggang” and “Kahit Isang Saglit” more popular than their original renditions.
“Being part of a theater production is like attending a performing arts class,” says the theater first-timer. “Every day there is something new to learn, from memorizing your lines and blockings. There is also the choreography and songs you must remember. There is something so vibrant about the dynamics of theater actors. Lahat sila disiplinado. At sobra silang matilungin sa katulad kong baguhan sa teatro.”
“I am very happy for the opportunity to play Dr. Rizal,” says Santos, now a TV5 talent. “I will not deny that at first, it made me very nervous because we all know how larger-than-life is his persona. So on my part, I did a lot of research, read materials about him para naman mas kilala ko na siya. Another fear was, my forte is pop so ibang-iba yung discipline to do musical-theater numbers. Pasalamat ako talaga sa vocal coach at co-actors ko. Working with Gantimpala Theater is an experience I will always treasure. This musical made me realize how much Dr. Rizal loved our country in particular and his country men in general. We must continue to keep his legacy burning, knowing the fact that the problems that were evident during his times persist.”
Also playing Rizal is RJ Jimenez, the former scholar of Pinoy Dream Academy who is the voice of the hit song, “Miss Kita Pag Tuesday.”
“Literally, my jaw dropped when they said to me I am doing Rizal; para siyang ‘whoa’ moment!” says the guitarist and singer. “When the shock faded, my first concern was, am I vocally equipped to do this, and secondly, paano ko bibigyan ng buhay ang Pambansang Bayani, I am no way near how he looks!”
“Just like Gerald, thankful ako kay teacher Agnes (Barredo) because she was able to teach me techniques on how to properly use my voice. Ngayon nga when I do recordings for jingles, pansin ko, my voice is fuller, stronger.”
“Being Rizal is emotionally taxing especially when all the conflicts of his life happen and these emotions are very new to me. Sobrang thankful ako sa director namin, lalo na kay Sir Tony at kay Allain, the associate director, kasi ang tiyaga nila, they really bring out our best... Now that I have done Rizal, I realize that we can all follow his footsteps. True, they are such big shoes to fill. Nevertheless, we must really do something for our country. Bayan natin ito. Dapat magtulong-tulong tayo para mas maging masagana at maligaya ang buhay nating lahat.”
TV actress Kathleen Hermosa essays the role of Josephine Bracken, while theater newbie Ellrica Laguardia plays Leonor Rivera. Playing the elder brother Paciano is veteran theater actor Ronald Concepcion. Comedienne and singer Kakai Bautista portrays Neneng, Rizal’s sister, and O-sei-san, the Japanese girlfriend.
Assisting Espejo are Nonoy Gallardo (book, music and libretto); Gean Allain de Leon (associate director); Joey Nombres (lights designer); Eric Cruz(set designer); Raul Nepomuceno Jr. (choreographer); Agnes Barredo (vocal coach); April Anne Dolot (stage manager); and Del Cayetano (production manager).
Performances are on September 3, 10 a.m./2 p.m., EXPO Filipino, Pampanga; September 23, 10 a.m./2 p.m., Ynares Gym, Antipolo; and October 14-15, 10 a.m./2 p.m., AFP Theater in Quezon City.
For more information, call the Gantimpala Theater Office 8995911/9985622 or visit www.gantimpalatheater.multiply.com or www.facebook.com/gantimpala
Friday, August 26, 2011
UPLB SamaSining mounts Filipino adaptation of Rizal's Junto Al Pasig
UPLB SamaSining, in cooperation with the Theatre Communication class of this semester, will be staging Eljay Deldoc’s Filipino adaptation of Jose Rizal’s "Junto al Pasig" at the NCAS Auditorium, University of the Philippines Los Baños, on August 31-September 3, 3 p.m. and 7 p.m.
The play will be directed by Dennis D. Gupa, with original music by Marie Angelica Dayao.
During the teenage years of Dr. Jose Rizal, he wrote "Junto al Pasig" as a commissioned work for the feast of the patroness of Ateneo, the Our Lady of Immaculate Conception. The play was first performed by Rizal’s schoolmates on the December 8, 1880 at the Ateneo Municipal de Manila, with music written by a Spanish Professor, Blas Echegoyen.
In celebration of the 150th birthday of Rizal, "Junto al Pasig," or "Sa Tabing Pasig," a mostly forgotten and unknown work by the national hero, will be given life in a play that aims to rethink Rizal and gain a new perspective on colonialism, psychology and religion at the time this text was written.
Tickets are P200 each. For inquiries, contact Sophia Osorio 0917-2097350.
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Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Hey, Mr. Producers! aka the Transformers Fabcast
Transformers, because as you would soon hear from our latest podcast, our two guests are who they are and where they are right now because, at one point in their recent lives, they made a fateful decision to pivot into a new, uncharted direction, risking the fear of the unknown for a chance to find their bliss--as they have, happily.
I'm talking of award-winning movie producers/filmmakers Raymond Lee (Ang Pagdadalaga ni Maximo Oliveros, Zombadings I: Patayin si Shokot si Remington) and Alemberg Ang (Ang Panggagahasa Kay Fe, Ang Sayaw ng Daliwang Kaliwang Paa), two fab individuals who are proof that going for your dreams may not make you necessarily rich, but will certainly make you happier, more productive and more fulfilled. In the case of Raymond, that has meant a major major--as in bonggang bonggang--transformation in mindset, lifestyle and fashion sense. On Alem's part, it has required, at the very least, abandoning his former high school teacher's life for the thrill of bringing his and bosom friend Alvin Yapan's dream indie movies to life.
Of course, we had an ulterior motive, too, for interviewing these two. They're behind the two movies (Ang Sayaw ng Daliwang Kaliwang Paa and Zombadings) that The Love Yourself Project will be featuring back-to-back in a fund-raising screening later tonight, Tuesday, at SM Megamall Cinema 9. But bago 'yan, tara na't makihuntahan!
Part 1
Download this Fabcast (right click and save)
Music credits:
Ikaw Ang Miss Universe Ng Buhay Ko by Hotdog
I Just Want To Make Love To You by Etta James
Girl, You’ll Be A Woman Soon by Urge Overkill
La Molina by Yma Sumac
Now We Are Free by Hans Zimmer and Lisa Gerrard
I'm Not A Girl, Not Yet A Woman by Britney Spears
Part 2
Download this Fabcast (right click and save)
Music credits:
My Kinda Girl (feat. Nelly) by Pitbull
Peace by George Winston
Je Me Donne A Qui Me Plait by Brigitte Bardot
Carmina Burana-1. Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi: O Fortuna by Carl Orff
...And Then I Kissed Him (from Pearl Harbor soundtrack) by Hans Zimmer
Part 1
Download this Fabcast (right click and save)
Music credits:
Symphony No. 5, Allegro con brio by Ludwig Van Beethoven; Christoph Von Dohnanyi and the Cleveland Orchestra
The Shadow Of The Past (from The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring soundtrack) by Howard Shore
Waltz Of The Flowers (from The Nutcracker Suite) by Peter Tchaikovsky
El Tango De Roxanne (from Moulin Rouge soundtrack) by Ewan McGregor, Jose Feliciano & Jacek Koman
Part 2
Download this Fabcast (right click and save)
Music credits:
Dancing With Tears In My Eyes by Ultravox
Symphony No. 6 ‘Pastorale,’ Cheerful gathering of country folk--Allegro by Ludwig Van Beethoven; Christoph Von Dohnanyi and the Cleveland Orchestra
The De Lesseps’ Dance (from the soundtrack of Shakespeare In Love) by Stephen Warbeck
Waltz Of The Flowers (from The Nutcracker Suite) by Peter Tchaikovsky
Many Meetings” (from The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring soundtrack) by Howard Shore
I'm talking of award-winning movie producers/filmmakers Raymond Lee (Ang Pagdadalaga ni Maximo Oliveros, Zombadings I: Patayin si Shokot si Remington) and Alemberg Ang (Ang Panggagahasa Kay Fe, Ang Sayaw ng Daliwang Kaliwang Paa), two fab individuals who are proof that going for your dreams may not make you necessarily rich, but will certainly make you happier, more productive and more fulfilled. In the case of Raymond, that has meant a major major--as in bonggang bonggang--transformation in mindset, lifestyle and fashion sense. On Alem's part, it has required, at the very least, abandoning his former high school teacher's life for the thrill of bringing his and bosom friend Alvin Yapan's dream indie movies to life.
Of course, we had an ulterior motive, too, for interviewing these two. They're behind the two movies (Ang Sayaw ng Daliwang Kaliwang Paa and Zombadings) that The Love Yourself Project will be featuring back-to-back in a fund-raising screening later tonight, Tuesday, at SM Megamall Cinema 9. But bago 'yan, tara na't makihuntahan!
Part 1
Music credits:
Ikaw Ang Miss Universe Ng Buhay Ko by Hotdog
I Just Want To Make Love To You by Etta James
Girl, You’ll Be A Woman Soon by Urge Overkill
La Molina by Yma Sumac
Now We Are Free by Hans Zimmer and Lisa Gerrard
I'm Not A Girl, Not Yet A Woman by Britney Spears
Part 2
Music credits:
My Kinda Girl (feat. Nelly) by Pitbull
Peace by George Winston
Je Me Donne A Qui Me Plait by Brigitte Bardot
Carmina Burana-1. Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi: O Fortuna by Carl Orff
...And Then I Kissed Him (from Pearl Harbor soundtrack) by Hans Zimmer
Part 1
Music credits:
Symphony No. 5, Allegro con brio by Ludwig Van Beethoven; Christoph Von Dohnanyi and the Cleveland Orchestra
The Shadow Of The Past (from The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring soundtrack) by Howard Shore
Waltz Of The Flowers (from The Nutcracker Suite) by Peter Tchaikovsky
El Tango De Roxanne (from Moulin Rouge soundtrack) by Ewan McGregor, Jose Feliciano & Jacek Koman
Part 2
Music credits:
Dancing With Tears In My Eyes by Ultravox
Symphony No. 6 ‘Pastorale,’ Cheerful gathering of country folk--Allegro by Ludwig Van Beethoven; Christoph Von Dohnanyi and the Cleveland Orchestra
The De Lesseps’ Dance (from the soundtrack of Shakespeare In Love) by Stephen Warbeck
Waltz Of The Flowers (from The Nutcracker Suite) by Peter Tchaikovsky
Many Meetings” (from The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring soundtrack) by Howard Shore
Labels:
careers,
movies,
podcasts,
politics,
tv/showbiz
| Reactions: |
Monday, August 22, 2011
Powerful new Noli, hardworking Sweet Charity
Philippine Daily Inquirer, 08.22.2011
Luster and lucidity in the first, gloss and energy in the second
THE LAST TIME Tanghalang Pilipino staged the Cayabyab-Lumbera musical-theater adaptation of Rizal’s novel “Noli Me Tangere,” the result was vastly underwhelming.
Paul Morales’ 2005 production featured one forlorn piano as live accompaniment, uniformly unmiked voices, a gargantuan set that cramped everything else on stage, and listless direction which rendered Rizal’s convoluted tale more ponderous than ever.
“As a musical,” we wrote, “[this] ‘Noli’ is, finally, an aural failure, unable to wrap the theater in the aching sweetness of Cayabyab’s music or the sonorousness of Lumbera’s language.”
Only six years later, Audie’s Gemora’s restaging of the musical, ongoing until Aug. 28 at CCP’s Little Theater, goes a long way toward restoring much-needed luster and lucidity to this essential work. “The simpler, the better” seems to be Gemora’s mantra. As in his production of “Equus” for Repertory Philippines last year, this “Noli” stands as a model of narrative and emotional clarity--devoid of high-concept flourishes, but able to find its musical and psychological acuity in the crisp, crystalline retelling of the sad fate of Crisostomo Ibarra.
No longer does “Noli” feel like an episodic cavalcade of the book’s highlights. New additional text by Rody Vera helps to weave the material into a tighter, more logic-driven whole.
The juxtapositions are mostly canny. Padre Salvi’s discovery of Damaso’s incriminating letters, for instance (a newly written scene), is placed in counterpoint to the river-picnic episode at which Ibarra and Elias vanquish a crocodile. As the ensemble upstage shrieks, “May buwaya!,” Salvi (Al Gatmaitan, forceful), thunderstruck on a downstage corner at Damaso’s revealed lechery, mutters, “Anak ka ng buwaya!”
Similarly, late in the play, by simply repeating the ensemble movement earlier associated with the town leper on the now-outcast Ibarra, a sense of elegant foreshadowing and symmetry is realized between the two figures. And when Don Tiburcio and Doña Victorina (Garry Lim and Ring Antonio), after their scenery-chewing song-and-dance, strike a pose before a vintage camera, the throwaway image becomes a witty dig at celebrity culture, circa 1800s.
Damaso’s secret letters now travel through the narrative as an astute unifying device, carrying with them the story’s undercurrents of intrigue, betrayal, seduction, thwarted love and skullduggery. Mio Infante’s multi-stepped platform of a set entombed in what looks like a giant warehouse or a dungeon amplifies the sense of entrapment and oppression (the costumes are by National Artist Salvador Bernal).
In this stark landscape, and with Gemora’s apparently meticulous work on his actors’ characterizations, Rizal’s enduring characters (excepting the reliably caricatured De de Espadaña couple, the Thenardiers of their time) feel simultaneously archetypal and specific, familiar yet fresh.
Striking opposites
The two Ibarras make for striking opposites. Gian Magdangal is tall, mestizo, cosmopolitan, with a sweet, high tenor that rides Cayabyab’s torrential, occasionally dawdling music with beguiling ease. His alternate, the pop singer Mark Bautista in his musical-theater debut, has a darker, thicker voice that takes on a strained, scuffed quality in the high notes, though its mid-register sounds burnished.
Magdangal’s is the nuanced turn, but Bautista seems uncannily right for the part--compact, dusky, intense, in a manner that hints more easily at his character’s eventual transformation into the vengeful Simoun in “El Filibusterismo.”
They both find a comely object of affection in Cris Villonco’s splendidly sung Maria Clara. The immaculate tones of Villonco’s ingenue days have given way to a more tensile sound, transforming her character from the frail, simpering damsel of popular imagination into a young woman of intelligence and bright promise.
Her capitulation, thus, to Padre Salvi’s trickery attains a heightened sense of true tragedy--a moment topped only by her and Ibarra’s parting near the end, when this “Noli’s” purity of narrative has so roped you in that the “Pamamaalam” scene rises to a particularly ravishing peak of emotion and musicality.
That effect, we surmise, would have been even more pronounced had “Noli” opted for live orchestration. The recorded music sounds flat in places, though the ensemble’s clarion singing, as well as those by individual players such as Angeli Bayani (Sisa) and Red Nuestro (Kapitan Tiago), help mask that deficiency.
Tanghalang Pilipino is clearly working within constrained means. Props to it then, and to Gemora, for a production that, overall, feels anything but.
(“Noli Me Tangere” runs until Aug. 28 at CCP’s Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino [Little Theater]. Call 8323661, 8321125 local 1620/1621, or 8323704.)
‘Sweet Charity’
Bautista isn’t the only pop star attempting to earn musical-theater cred at the moment. Over at RCBC Plaza’s Carlos P. Romulo Theater in Makati, singers and TV hosts Nikki Gil and Kris Lawrence are headlining 9 Works Theatrical’s effervescent production of the musical “Sweet Charity,” directed by Robbie Guevara.
This version takes after the 2005 Broadway staging with Christina Applegate as the childlike dance-hall hostess Charity Hope Valentine--itself an updating of the original 1966 production directed and choreographed by the legendary Bob Fosse, with book by Neil Simon, music by Cy Coleman, lyrics by Dorothy Field, and starring Fosse’s incomparable muse, Gwen Verdon.
It’s important to remember that provenance, if only to understand how “Sweet Charity” has arrived to us in its more or less gentrified state. The source material, Federico Fellini’s 1957 film “Nights of Cabiria,” had Giulietta Massina playing a plucky, eternally optimistic streetwalker in Rome.
That gritty character became a less threatening dancer-for-hire in 1960s New York in Fosse’s “Sweet Charity”--though, by keeping Verdon sheathed in a slinky black dress, Fosse retained the sexual edge of the material. (“I want her in a plain black dress, and she’ll wear it the entire time,” was Fosse’s instruction to costume designer Irene Sharaff.)
When the musical was made into a film in 1969, also directed by Fosse, Edith Head kept the iconic black dress for star Shirley MacLaine. The template was being sported as late as 1986, in a Broadway revival with Debbie Allen, where the actress graced posters and billboards in the same dress and pose--arched back, flexed foot--Verdon had made famous two decades ago.
In the 2005 restaging, however, the black dress was banished. Applegate came out in a fire-engine red slip. And for the local iteration, the look has become downright tame--magenta and red, but in dainty empire-cut frocks (costumes and psychedelic-pop scenography also by “Noli’s” Infante) which make Gil’s character more girl-next-door sweetheart than the eight-year veteran of the Fandango Ballroom she’s supposed to be.
And yet, irrespective of the pallid dress, Gil is amazing. Make that three-fourths amazing. She is a dancing-singing-acting dynamo, her joy at performing onstage incandescent with every twirl, kick, shake and shimmy.
She tends, however, to oversell her lines and mug through the proceedings, scrunching her lovely face for comic effect. She needn’t work so hard; Simon’s book, while dated, can still summon chuckles, and the show itself barrels through on the steam heat of its rousing dancing and musical sequences.
Poignant sensitivity
It’s telling that when Gil launches into song and begins hoofing her way, her cutesy exertions vanish, replaced by a poignant sensitivity that appears to make her character grow in stature (in “Where Am I Going?,” for instance).
She’s not helped by being set so visually apart from the rest of her bawdily garbed sisters-in-trade (the excellent Shiela Valderrama-Martinez as Charity’s best friend Nickie pacing them all). When Gil sings, “There’s gotta be some life cleaner than this!,” the disconnect between what she says and how she looks can’t be any clearer.
This aberration aside, the rest of the production is an engaging blast. Guevara orchestrates a glossy, admirably hardworking show, beginning with a peppy brass orchestra (conducted by Joseph Tolentino) that sets the evening on a toe-tapping mood right from the overture.
And the ensemble dancing Fosse? Well, they try. None of them, Gil included, has the Fosse silhouette or style--those angled, undulating limbs; the sly, sibilant, insinuating evocation of the burlesque--but in the all-dancing set pieces such as “Rich Man’s Frug” and “I’m a Brass Brand,” the company tears through its routine with uninhibited energy and conviction.
Lawrence, in his first musical-theater foray (this is Gil’s second, after “Legally Blonde” with Atlantis Productions last year), acquits himself with a charming turn as Charity’s nebbish love interest Oscar Lindquist. And OJ Mariano’s vocal dexterity lights up two disparate numbers, the pseudo-operatic “Too Many Tomorrows” and the soul-inflected “The Rhythm of Life.”
But, mostly, it’s Gil’s show, and she steps--nay, leaps--up to it. At one point, Charity sings, “I’m the bravest individual I have ever met!” Ditto, it seems, for the actress playing her--and the young theater company that’s here putting on the darndest good show it can. Do spend a little time with this “Sweet Charity.”
(“Sweet Charity” runs until Aug. 27 at the Carlos P. Romulo Auditorium, RCBC Plaza, Makati City. Call 5575860, 5867105 or 0917-5545560 or e-mail info@9workstheatrical.com)
[Photos 1-2: Kamole Orense/3-4: Sundee Guevara]
Luster and lucidity in the first, gloss and energy in the second
THE LAST TIME Tanghalang Pilipino staged the Cayabyab-Lumbera musical-theater adaptation of Rizal’s novel “Noli Me Tangere,” the result was vastly underwhelming.
Paul Morales’ 2005 production featured one forlorn piano as live accompaniment, uniformly unmiked voices, a gargantuan set that cramped everything else on stage, and listless direction which rendered Rizal’s convoluted tale more ponderous than ever.
“As a musical,” we wrote, “[this] ‘Noli’ is, finally, an aural failure, unable to wrap the theater in the aching sweetness of Cayabyab’s music or the sonorousness of Lumbera’s language.”
Only six years later, Audie’s Gemora’s restaging of the musical, ongoing until Aug. 28 at CCP’s Little Theater, goes a long way toward restoring much-needed luster and lucidity to this essential work. “The simpler, the better” seems to be Gemora’s mantra. As in his production of “Equus” for Repertory Philippines last year, this “Noli” stands as a model of narrative and emotional clarity--devoid of high-concept flourishes, but able to find its musical and psychological acuity in the crisp, crystalline retelling of the sad fate of Crisostomo Ibarra.
No longer does “Noli” feel like an episodic cavalcade of the book’s highlights. New additional text by Rody Vera helps to weave the material into a tighter, more logic-driven whole.
The juxtapositions are mostly canny. Padre Salvi’s discovery of Damaso’s incriminating letters, for instance (a newly written scene), is placed in counterpoint to the river-picnic episode at which Ibarra and Elias vanquish a crocodile. As the ensemble upstage shrieks, “May buwaya!,” Salvi (Al Gatmaitan, forceful), thunderstruck on a downstage corner at Damaso’s revealed lechery, mutters, “Anak ka ng buwaya!”
Similarly, late in the play, by simply repeating the ensemble movement earlier associated with the town leper on the now-outcast Ibarra, a sense of elegant foreshadowing and symmetry is realized between the two figures. And when Don Tiburcio and Doña Victorina (Garry Lim and Ring Antonio), after their scenery-chewing song-and-dance, strike a pose before a vintage camera, the throwaway image becomes a witty dig at celebrity culture, circa 1800s.
Damaso’s secret letters now travel through the narrative as an astute unifying device, carrying with them the story’s undercurrents of intrigue, betrayal, seduction, thwarted love and skullduggery. Mio Infante’s multi-stepped platform of a set entombed in what looks like a giant warehouse or a dungeon amplifies the sense of entrapment and oppression (the costumes are by National Artist Salvador Bernal).
In this stark landscape, and with Gemora’s apparently meticulous work on his actors’ characterizations, Rizal’s enduring characters (excepting the reliably caricatured De de Espadaña couple, the Thenardiers of their time) feel simultaneously archetypal and specific, familiar yet fresh.
Striking opposites
The two Ibarras make for striking opposites. Gian Magdangal is tall, mestizo, cosmopolitan, with a sweet, high tenor that rides Cayabyab’s torrential, occasionally dawdling music with beguiling ease. His alternate, the pop singer Mark Bautista in his musical-theater debut, has a darker, thicker voice that takes on a strained, scuffed quality in the high notes, though its mid-register sounds burnished.
Magdangal’s is the nuanced turn, but Bautista seems uncannily right for the part--compact, dusky, intense, in a manner that hints more easily at his character’s eventual transformation into the vengeful Simoun in “El Filibusterismo.”
They both find a comely object of affection in Cris Villonco’s splendidly sung Maria Clara. The immaculate tones of Villonco’s ingenue days have given way to a more tensile sound, transforming her character from the frail, simpering damsel of popular imagination into a young woman of intelligence and bright promise.
Her capitulation, thus, to Padre Salvi’s trickery attains a heightened sense of true tragedy--a moment topped only by her and Ibarra’s parting near the end, when this “Noli’s” purity of narrative has so roped you in that the “Pamamaalam” scene rises to a particularly ravishing peak of emotion and musicality.
That effect, we surmise, would have been even more pronounced had “Noli” opted for live orchestration. The recorded music sounds flat in places, though the ensemble’s clarion singing, as well as those by individual players such as Angeli Bayani (Sisa) and Red Nuestro (Kapitan Tiago), help mask that deficiency.
Tanghalang Pilipino is clearly working within constrained means. Props to it then, and to Gemora, for a production that, overall, feels anything but.
(“Noli Me Tangere” runs until Aug. 28 at CCP’s Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino [Little Theater]. Call 8323661, 8321125 local 1620/1621, or 8323704.)
‘Sweet Charity’
Bautista isn’t the only pop star attempting to earn musical-theater cred at the moment. Over at RCBC Plaza’s Carlos P. Romulo Theater in Makati, singers and TV hosts Nikki Gil and Kris Lawrence are headlining 9 Works Theatrical’s effervescent production of the musical “Sweet Charity,” directed by Robbie Guevara.
This version takes after the 2005 Broadway staging with Christina Applegate as the childlike dance-hall hostess Charity Hope Valentine--itself an updating of the original 1966 production directed and choreographed by the legendary Bob Fosse, with book by Neil Simon, music by Cy Coleman, lyrics by Dorothy Field, and starring Fosse’s incomparable muse, Gwen Verdon.
It’s important to remember that provenance, if only to understand how “Sweet Charity” has arrived to us in its more or less gentrified state. The source material, Federico Fellini’s 1957 film “Nights of Cabiria,” had Giulietta Massina playing a plucky, eternally optimistic streetwalker in Rome.
That gritty character became a less threatening dancer-for-hire in 1960s New York in Fosse’s “Sweet Charity”--though, by keeping Verdon sheathed in a slinky black dress, Fosse retained the sexual edge of the material. (“I want her in a plain black dress, and she’ll wear it the entire time,” was Fosse’s instruction to costume designer Irene Sharaff.)
When the musical was made into a film in 1969, also directed by Fosse, Edith Head kept the iconic black dress for star Shirley MacLaine. The template was being sported as late as 1986, in a Broadway revival with Debbie Allen, where the actress graced posters and billboards in the same dress and pose--arched back, flexed foot--Verdon had made famous two decades ago.
In the 2005 restaging, however, the black dress was banished. Applegate came out in a fire-engine red slip. And for the local iteration, the look has become downright tame--magenta and red, but in dainty empire-cut frocks (costumes and psychedelic-pop scenography also by “Noli’s” Infante) which make Gil’s character more girl-next-door sweetheart than the eight-year veteran of the Fandango Ballroom she’s supposed to be.
And yet, irrespective of the pallid dress, Gil is amazing. Make that three-fourths amazing. She is a dancing-singing-acting dynamo, her joy at performing onstage incandescent with every twirl, kick, shake and shimmy.
She tends, however, to oversell her lines and mug through the proceedings, scrunching her lovely face for comic effect. She needn’t work so hard; Simon’s book, while dated, can still summon chuckles, and the show itself barrels through on the steam heat of its rousing dancing and musical sequences.
Poignant sensitivity
It’s telling that when Gil launches into song and begins hoofing her way, her cutesy exertions vanish, replaced by a poignant sensitivity that appears to make her character grow in stature (in “Where Am I Going?,” for instance).
She’s not helped by being set so visually apart from the rest of her bawdily garbed sisters-in-trade (the excellent Shiela Valderrama-Martinez as Charity’s best friend Nickie pacing them all). When Gil sings, “There’s gotta be some life cleaner than this!,” the disconnect between what she says and how she looks can’t be any clearer.
This aberration aside, the rest of the production is an engaging blast. Guevara orchestrates a glossy, admirably hardworking show, beginning with a peppy brass orchestra (conducted by Joseph Tolentino) that sets the evening on a toe-tapping mood right from the overture.
And the ensemble dancing Fosse? Well, they try. None of them, Gil included, has the Fosse silhouette or style--those angled, undulating limbs; the sly, sibilant, insinuating evocation of the burlesque--but in the all-dancing set pieces such as “Rich Man’s Frug” and “I’m a Brass Brand,” the company tears through its routine with uninhibited energy and conviction.
Lawrence, in his first musical-theater foray (this is Gil’s second, after “Legally Blonde” with Atlantis Productions last year), acquits himself with a charming turn as Charity’s nebbish love interest Oscar Lindquist. And OJ Mariano’s vocal dexterity lights up two disparate numbers, the pseudo-operatic “Too Many Tomorrows” and the soul-inflected “The Rhythm of Life.”
But, mostly, it’s Gil’s show, and she steps--nay, leaps--up to it. At one point, Charity sings, “I’m the bravest individual I have ever met!” Ditto, it seems, for the actress playing her--and the young theater company that’s here putting on the darndest good show it can. Do spend a little time with this “Sweet Charity.”
(“Sweet Charity” runs until Aug. 27 at the Carlos P. Romulo Auditorium, RCBC Plaza, Makati City. Call 5575860, 5867105 or 0917-5545560 or e-mail info@9workstheatrical.com)
[Photos 1-2: Kamole Orense/3-4: Sundee Guevara]
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Friday, August 19, 2011
PETA's William contemporizes Shakespeare for young audiences
After the success of “Care Divas,” PETA ventures into another ambitious feat--its new Shakespeare rap musical, “William,” which runs August 19-September 25 at the PETA Theater Center.
The company, known for its distinctly Filipino theater, focuses on William Shakespeare whose literary works, no matter how great they may be, has horrified many a Filipino student to tears.
Written by Ron Capinding and directed by PETA Artistic Director Maribel Legarda, “William” familiarizes young people with the beauty of Shakespeare’s works and re-invents the Bard using rap rhythm and hip-hop beats.
Shakespeare’s works, just like today's rap hits, are based on beats, rhythm and rhyme. He also addressed themes of desire, greed, betrayal, power, violence and love, ages before Eminem did. Besides, Shakespeare wrote for ordinary people, and his signature iambic pentameter was the best street rhyming of his time.
“I brought in rap and hip-hop as the contemporary voice and language of young people today,” says Legarda. I hope Shakespeare’s poetry and today’s rap (ang bagong balagtasan) find a point of conversation and evolve into engaging dialogue and drama.”
The cast of “William” trained rap under a true Tondo rapper, Shielbert Manuel, a.k.a “O.G. Sacred” who has appeared in the indie film “Tribu” (Best Film, Cinemalaya 2007, Pari De L' Avenir, Festival de Paris 2008) by Jim Libiran.
“William” features 10 original rap songs composed by Jeff Hernandez. Songs such as “Pucha Bro”, “Nosebleed”, “O Shakespeare”, “What’s In A Name” are fusions of various music genres like rock, soul, funk, RnB and hip-hop. “William” also utilizes an emerging form of rap, FlipTop, which is becoming popular among today’s youth. These rap numbers, choreographed by John Tan (from Urban Dance Crew), are performed along with various hip-hop forms, such as crumping, breakdance, ballroom and jazz hip-hop.
Reminiscent of today’s popular TV musicals such as “Glee” and “High School Musical,” “William” is set in a high school in Metro Manila,where five young students are forced to study Shakespeare by their terror class adviser, Ms. Lutgarda Martinez.
In the process of studying, they not only realize the beauty of Shakespeare’s works but also discover themselves through Shakespeare’s characters. The class muse, Sophia, finds out what true beauty is through “Romeo and Juliet;” the bully, TJ, encounters humility and grace through “Hamlet;” the brainy OFW's daughter, Estela, learns forgiveness, while the student council leader, Richard, learns self-acceptance through “Merchant of Venice;” and a timid lad, Erwin, finds his voice through “Julius Caesar.”
This high school barkada soon realizes that Shakespeare is not just a literary icon meant to torment their lives, but is also a “brotha” and peer.
“William” play dates are August 19-21, 26-28, September 2-4, 9-11, 16-18, 23-25, 2011 with shows at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. The PETA Theater Center is located at No. 5 Eymard Drive, New Manila, Quezon City.
Tickets are P350 (regular) and P500 (vip). For inquiries and ticket reservations, contact PETA Marketing & PR Office at 7256244 or 4100821, 0917-5765400, e-mail petatheater@gmail.com.
The company, known for its distinctly Filipino theater, focuses on William Shakespeare whose literary works, no matter how great they may be, has horrified many a Filipino student to tears.
Written by Ron Capinding and directed by PETA Artistic Director Maribel Legarda, “William” familiarizes young people with the beauty of Shakespeare’s works and re-invents the Bard using rap rhythm and hip-hop beats.
Shakespeare’s works, just like today's rap hits, are based on beats, rhythm and rhyme. He also addressed themes of desire, greed, betrayal, power, violence and love, ages before Eminem did. Besides, Shakespeare wrote for ordinary people, and his signature iambic pentameter was the best street rhyming of his time.
“I brought in rap and hip-hop as the contemporary voice and language of young people today,” says Legarda. I hope Shakespeare’s poetry and today’s rap (ang bagong balagtasan) find a point of conversation and evolve into engaging dialogue and drama.”
The cast of “William” trained rap under a true Tondo rapper, Shielbert Manuel, a.k.a “O.G. Sacred” who has appeared in the indie film “Tribu” (Best Film, Cinemalaya 2007, Pari De L' Avenir, Festival de Paris 2008) by Jim Libiran.
“William” features 10 original rap songs composed by Jeff Hernandez. Songs such as “Pucha Bro”, “Nosebleed”, “O Shakespeare”, “What’s In A Name” are fusions of various music genres like rock, soul, funk, RnB and hip-hop. “William” also utilizes an emerging form of rap, FlipTop, which is becoming popular among today’s youth. These rap numbers, choreographed by John Tan (from Urban Dance Crew), are performed along with various hip-hop forms, such as crumping, breakdance, ballroom and jazz hip-hop.
Reminiscent of today’s popular TV musicals such as “Glee” and “High School Musical,” “William” is set in a high school in Metro Manila,where five young students are forced to study Shakespeare by their terror class adviser, Ms. Lutgarda Martinez.
In the process of studying, they not only realize the beauty of Shakespeare’s works but also discover themselves through Shakespeare’s characters. The class muse, Sophia, finds out what true beauty is through “Romeo and Juliet;” the bully, TJ, encounters humility and grace through “Hamlet;” the brainy OFW's daughter, Estela, learns forgiveness, while the student council leader, Richard, learns self-acceptance through “Merchant of Venice;” and a timid lad, Erwin, finds his voice through “Julius Caesar.”
This high school barkada soon realizes that Shakespeare is not just a literary icon meant to torment their lives, but is also a “brotha” and peer.
“William” play dates are August 19-21, 26-28, September 2-4, 9-11, 16-18, 23-25, 2011 with shows at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. The PETA Theater Center is located at No. 5 Eymard Drive, New Manila, Quezon City.
Tickets are P350 (regular) and P500 (vip). For inquiries and ticket reservations, contact PETA Marketing & PR Office at 7256244 or 4100821, 0917-5765400, e-mail petatheater@gmail.com.
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Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Loco over Rocco and his Dalawang Kaliwang Paa
“Isn't Rocco Nacino such a sweetheart?” asks McVie. Sus, OA. He's, ah, um... a work of art. (Yaman din lamang pinag-uusapan ang art-art ngayon!)
Or, rather, his Cinemalaya movie, Ang Sayaw ng Dalawang Kaliwang Paa, directed by Alvin Yapan and Alem Ang, is. Yes, you heard me, it is--even if Sayaw's story might again induce Bishop Bacani to exclaim, “Kadiri!” and cause his moral minions to hyperventilate, though am not sure whether from indignation or secret kilig.
Rocco is inviting everyone to the special screening of Sayaw on August 23, 2011 at Cinema 9 of SM Megamall, in a twinbill with Jade Castro's pulverizingly hilarious Zombadings I: Patayin sa Shokot si Remington, starring another heartthrob giving a breakthrough performance, Martin Escudero.
For only P500 (P300 for one movie), you get a double treat--moving poetry, dance, emotion, The Gaze (basta, panoorin mo na lang), plus Rocco and Paulo Avelino in frame after frame (though Jean Garcia is also excellent) in Sayaw; and sweet, explosive comedy, graced by the inimitable talents of Roderick Paulate and Eugene Domingo, among others, in Zombadings.
E-mail me gibbs_c@yahoo.com for tickets--but do it fast, they're nearly gone. The twinbill screening is a fund-raising effort of The Love Yourself Project. Rocco, bless him, even took time out last Sunday to join the photoshoot organized by TLYP, hence the swoon-worthy pics above.
PLUS: At the event, the people behind Sayaw will also be selling copies of a limited-edition CD featuring the poems and music used in the film. [Alvin and Alem were also director and producer, respectively, of the 2009 Cinemalaya entry and Cairo International Film Festival-winning film, Ang Panggagahasa Kay Fe, which starred Irma Adlawan.] I'll let Alem do the explaining:
The CD contains some of the instrumentals, all the songs and poems with poetry reading from the movie. So, aside from the songs that was heard in the movie, isinama rin namin ang mga pagbasa nina Jean Garcia, Paulo Avelino and Rocco Nacino para mabuo ang mga tula. 'Yung ibang songs kasi, kapirasong bahagi lang ng tula. Kaya naisipan namin ipasok ang ibang mga pagbasa sa mismong pelikula para buuin ang mga tula.
The poems are by the country's top feminist poets: Rebecca Añonuevo, Joi Barrios, Merlinda Bobis, Ophelia Dimalanta, Ruth Elynia Mabanglo and Benilda Santos. Kasama sa jacket cover ang lahat ng mga tula with pictures from the movie and recording. The songs were composed and arranged by Jema Pamintuan and Christine Muyco, both from the academe. Si Jema ay teacher ng Filipino, colleague ni Alvin [Yapan] sa Ateneo. Si Christine naman ay chair ng dept of musical theory and composition ng UP College of Music. She is actually from Iloilo kung saan nanggaling 'yung epikong Humadapnon na ginamit sa pelikula. Kaya 'yung tunog pati 'yung chanter na si Rolinda Gibaliga ay mismong galing sa tribe na pinanggalingan ng epiko.
Ang mga songs ay inawit nina Victor Robinson III, Nicole Judalena at Roselle Pineda. Si Victor ay graduate ng Ateneo at lumabas na siya sa mga play ng PETA. Si Nicole naman ay dating performer ng SOP. Pareho silang estudyante ni Alvin sa Ateneo. Si Roselle naman ay guro rin sa UP na kung saan nagdidirek siya ng mga play at opera.
Dahil walang royalty na siningil ng mga makata for their poem, we will be giving them royalties from the sale of the CD. Ang CD cover design pati na rin 'yung mismong poster ng 'Sayaw' ay gawa ni Kerwin Kaizer Yu na schoolmate ko naman sa Xavier.
Tapos, bilang bonus track, ipinasok na rin namin ang likha ni Jema for 'Gayuma:Pilgrim Lovers' [another--still unreleased--indie film also directed and produced by the Alvin-Alem tandem]. There are 2 versions from Gayuma ng kantang Pagsamba, isang Bikol at isang Filipino. Ipinasok na rin namin ang 2. Hindi kasi madaling gumawa ng soundtrack kaya since andito na ang opportunity, ipinasok na rin namin 'yung theme from Gayuma. Hindi naman kasi typical for an indie film na maglabas ng soundtrack. So, naipasok na rin namin kasi sayang naman. At magaganda talaga ang songs.
Labels:
books,
movies,
music,
readings,
tv/showbiz
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Tuesday, August 16, 2011
From iPads to GPS to smart TVs--a future predicted 18 years ago
AT&T's prophetic ads in 1993. Who knew, indeed?
Labels:
here and there,
the lush life
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UP Playwrights Theater's Fake gala night on August 20
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. Gala night is Saturday, August 20.
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.”
Amadís Ma. Guerrero of the Inquirer also called the performances of the cast a “knockout.”
“Fake” cleverly blends real and imaginary characters, factual as well as fictional encounters in one thought-provoking piece of theater. With the play, Quintos asks “Do we really need to believe in something?” And if we do, then “When is a lie better than the truth?”
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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Gantimpala Theater's new El Filibusterismo
Gantimpala Theater continues to celebrate the 150th birthday celebration of Dr. Jose Rizal as it stages its second play for its 34th theater season, “El Filibusterismo,” with new directors Jose Jeffrey Camañag and Andre Tiangco.
“'El Filibusterismo,' whose alternate title is The Reign of Greed,” says Camañag. “The theme's progression is wheeled by an unseen dark force, a force that is so powerful that it controls even the characters' trivial actions and choices, often leading to nothing but tragic endings. This unseen and destructive force is greed.”
“It is the intention of this production to reconstruct the face of greed as painted by the great Jose Rizal in this novel and to resonate Rizal’s definition of greed as the key evil that chains and enslaves the mind, heart and soul of a society away from the real path towards genuine freedom,” he adds.
“Through creative staging, powerful visuals, clear storytelling and moving music, we hope to usher and challenge the audience, especially the students who will be watching this show as an aid to their curriculum, to look beyond the entertaining value of our production and try to listen to the remarkable messages embedded in Don Simoun’s confessions to Padre Florentino.”
Giving life to “El Fili's” characters are Roeder Camañag (Don Simoun/Mr. Leeds); Joe Gruta (Padre Florentino); Paolo O'Hara (Kabesang Tales); Ku Aquino (Padre Camorra); Mondrian Sampang (Padre Salvi); Dante Balois (Tata Selo/ Don Custodio); Alfred Urieta and Francis Cruz III (alternately portraying Basilio); Hazel Orencio (Juli/Pepay); Kristian Chua (Isagani); Flerida Capiral (Donya Victorina); Anna Deroca (Paulita Gomez); Jun-Jun Quintana (Juanito Pelaez); and Noel Escondo and Raymond Talavera (alternately playing Placido Penitente/Imuthis).
Providing artistic and technical assistance to directors Camañag and Tiangco are Jomar Fleras (playwright), Andy Villareal (light designer), Charyl Chan-de Guzman (production manager), Mae Bueta-Chavez (stage manager) and Tony S. Espejo (artistic director).
Gantimpala Theater’s “El Filibusterismo” is supported by the National Parks Development Committee (NPDC), Jimm’s 7-in-1 Coffee, and Everbilena.
Performances are on August 21, (Sunday), 7 p.m., Concert at the Park Open Air Auditorium in Luneta, Manila; August 26 (Friday) and August 27 (Saturday), September 2 (Friday) and September 3 (Saturday), 10 a.m./2 p.m., at the AFP Theater, Quezon City, and September 9 (Friday) and September 10 (Saturday) at the Cinema 3, SM Southmall, Las Piñas City.
For tickets, please call the Gantimpala Marketing Office, 8995911 and 9985622. Visit www.gantimpalatheater.multiply.com and www.facebook.com/gantimpala.
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Monday, August 15, 2011
Awwwww.
My co-nominees: Loi Reyes Landicho aka The Professional Heckler, Lori Baltazar of Dessert Comes First, Von Ryan Cuerpo aka FickleCattle and Juned Sunido of Baratillo.net. Voting ongoing here: http://tattoo.globe.com.ph/tattawards/vote
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blogging,
here and there,
the lush life
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Sunday, August 14, 2011
In Chicago, Anton Juan stages Rizal's Sweet Stranger, The Musical (Untold Stories of Josephine Bracken)
[As you requested, Val and Lou.:)]
As the highlight of the year-long celebration of Dr. Jose Rizal's 150th birthday, the Chicago-based SamaSama Project and Circa-Pintig present the world premiere of "Rizal’s Sweet Stranger, The Musical (Untold Stories of Josephine Bracken)," a work that attempts to show a glimpse of the personal life of the National Hero's foreign-born (Irish-Hong Kong) wife, Josephine Bracken.
With concept and direction by Anton Juan, "Rizal Sweet Stranger" is a contemporary musical that uses a collaborative montage of the 2009 Palanca awardee for full-length play, "Miss Dulce Extranjera," by Sir Anril P. Tiatco, as well as Isagani Cruz’s "Josephine," plus extrapolations with other historical texts and visual documents.
Musical direction is by SamaSama Project’s very own Baron Lloyd Cabalona, with music by Cleofe Guangko Casambre and William Elvin Manzano of Happy Days Band in Manila. SamaSama Project is a Filipino folk-fusion band, while Circa-Pintig is a not-for-profit community theater group. Both are based in Chicago, USA.
Ariel Dayanghirang and Chip Payos (Jose Rizal) and Toni Gomez and Elizabeth Tuazon (Josephine Bracken) lead the cast, which also includes Bert Matias, Levi Aliposa, Nicole Dizon, Lovien (Joey) Flores, Evelyn Masbaum, Georges Augustin, Jovie Calma, Daniel Estorco, Charles Gareza, Hope Kim, Dylan Lainez, Anthony Martinez, Je Nepomuceno, Angel Pabalan, Tatum Pearlman, Emilia Ramos, Logan Ramos, Mae Vidal, Patrick Viray and Michael Baylon.
The show also features Lani Misalucha as Inang Bayan.
SamaSama Project’s Lee Maningas, Josh Torres, Ran Sevilla, Louella Cabalona and Baron Llyod Cabalona will set the play to music, along with Emilio Nicolasin on kulintang and Vice Velarde as choir director. Dramaturgy and video design by Pat Valera, assistant direction by Ginger Leopoldo and Levi Aliposa, lighting design and technical direction by Meliton Roxas, production design by Giau Truong, costume design by Lhenvil Paneda, photography by Jay Escalante, additional graphics by Charles Gareza and stage management by Angelica Atian. Elizabeth Tuazon is the repetiteur.
"Rizal’s Sweet Stranger, The Musical" will run Sept. 23 (Friday), 7:30 p.m., and Sept. 24, 2 p.m. and 7 p.m., at the St. Scholastica Academy Theater, 7416 N Ridge Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois 60645.
Tickets are at $25, $45, $75 and $100, and VIP tickets are at $120, which includes a gala night reception on Sept 24 at 6 p.m.
For tickets or more information, contact the following: Lakhi 224-538-1471, Lou 708-528-6321, Baron 312-593-5154, Jovie 847-987-5227, Mario Adap 224-766-8804, Via Times 773-866-0811, Tita Ging 773-615-0330, Biboy 773-744-8804.
Or email samasamaproject@gmail.com / info@circapintig.org. Or purchase tickets at CircaPintig.org and SamaSamaProject.com.
As the highlight of the year-long celebration of Dr. Jose Rizal's 150th birthday, the Chicago-based SamaSama Project and Circa-Pintig present the world premiere of "Rizal’s Sweet Stranger, The Musical (Untold Stories of Josephine Bracken)," a work that attempts to show a glimpse of the personal life of the National Hero's foreign-born (Irish-Hong Kong) wife, Josephine Bracken.
With concept and direction by Anton Juan, "Rizal Sweet Stranger" is a contemporary musical that uses a collaborative montage of the 2009 Palanca awardee for full-length play, "Miss Dulce Extranjera," by Sir Anril P. Tiatco, as well as Isagani Cruz’s "Josephine," plus extrapolations with other historical texts and visual documents.
Musical direction is by SamaSama Project’s very own Baron Lloyd Cabalona, with music by Cleofe Guangko Casambre and William Elvin Manzano of Happy Days Band in Manila. SamaSama Project is a Filipino folk-fusion band, while Circa-Pintig is a not-for-profit community theater group. Both are based in Chicago, USA.
Ariel Dayanghirang and Chip Payos (Jose Rizal) and Toni Gomez and Elizabeth Tuazon (Josephine Bracken) lead the cast, which also includes Bert Matias, Levi Aliposa, Nicole Dizon, Lovien (Joey) Flores, Evelyn Masbaum, Georges Augustin, Jovie Calma, Daniel Estorco, Charles Gareza, Hope Kim, Dylan Lainez, Anthony Martinez, Je Nepomuceno, Angel Pabalan, Tatum Pearlman, Emilia Ramos, Logan Ramos, Mae Vidal, Patrick Viray and Michael Baylon.
The show also features Lani Misalucha as Inang Bayan.
SamaSama Project’s Lee Maningas, Josh Torres, Ran Sevilla, Louella Cabalona and Baron Llyod Cabalona will set the play to music, along with Emilio Nicolasin on kulintang and Vice Velarde as choir director. Dramaturgy and video design by Pat Valera, assistant direction by Ginger Leopoldo and Levi Aliposa, lighting design and technical direction by Meliton Roxas, production design by Giau Truong, costume design by Lhenvil Paneda, photography by Jay Escalante, additional graphics by Charles Gareza and stage management by Angelica Atian. Elizabeth Tuazon is the repetiteur.
"Rizal’s Sweet Stranger, The Musical" will run Sept. 23 (Friday), 7:30 p.m., and Sept. 24, 2 p.m. and 7 p.m., at the St. Scholastica Academy Theater, 7416 N Ridge Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois 60645.
Tickets are at $25, $45, $75 and $100, and VIP tickets are at $120, which includes a gala night reception on Sept 24 at 6 p.m.
For tickets or more information, contact the following: Lakhi 224-538-1471, Lou 708-528-6321, Baron 312-593-5154, Jovie 847-987-5227, Mario Adap 224-766-8804, Via Times 773-866-0811, Tita Ging 773-615-0330, Biboy 773-744-8804.
Or email samasamaproject@gmail.com / info@circapintig.org. Or purchase tickets at CircaPintig.org and SamaSamaProject.com.
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Friday, August 12, 2011
Martin Escudero invites you to Ang Sayaw ng Daliwang Kaliwang Paa and Zombadings I: Patayin sa Shokot si Remington--back to back!
Tickets to the Love Yourself benefit screening of Ang Sayaw ng Daliwang Kaliwang Paa and Zombadings I: Patayin sa Shokot si Remington are now available!
To reserve your tickets, register at http://theloveyourselfproject.blogspot.com/p/ticket-reservations.html -- or e-mail me at gibbs_c@yahoo.com
The Love Yourself Project's special back-to-back benefit screening of these two new must-see movies will be on Tuesday, August 23, 2011, SM Megamall Cinema 9. Time of screening is 7 p.m. for Sayaw and 9 p.m. for Zombadings. Martin Escudero is the lead star of Zombadings--and he is a revelation!
Tickets at P300 (1 movie) and P500 (both movies).
Proceeds from this special event will support the provision of free counseling and assistance services to the youth and key populations affected by HIV/AIDS in the Philippines.
Tickets are also available for pick-up at TheRoom, landline 5770332, mobile 0917-8634899, http://daroom.multiply.com/
[Photo: Ian Felix Alquiros]
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blogging,
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movies,
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Thursday, August 11, 2011
Catholic kitsch
If those moral busybodies would have their way, this is the only art that would pass muster--Moses, not as some local artist might have imagined him, but Charlton Heston in the pose and the look made iconic by Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments!(left) Altar artwork at the chapel of Kamay ni Hesus in Lucban, Quezon, sort of like a religious theme park built by the “healing priest” Fr. Joey Faller. (Heston would go on to become the gun-toting champion of the US National Rifle Association.) Is there a better illustration of the Pinoy identity as a product of “300 years in a convent, 50 years of Hollywood”?
Labels:
images,
movies,
politics,
tv/showbiz
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Wednesday, August 10, 2011
A timely reminder--'No one has the right to spend their life without being offended'
In short, creative freedom over delicate sensibilities:
“No one has the right to live without being shocked. No one has the right to spend their life without being offended. Nobody has to read this book. Nobody has to pick it up. Nobody has to open it. And if they open it and read it, they don't have to like it. And if you read it and you dislike it, you don't have to remain silent about it. You can write to me. You can complain about it. You can write to the publisher. You can write to the papers. You can write your own book. You can do all those things. But there your rights stop. Nobody has the right to stop me writing this book. Nobody has the right to stop it being published, or sold, or bought, or read.” [And, may I add, threatened with arson or outrightly defaced.]
-- the author Philip Pullman, on what he thought of the offense his latest novel might cause Christians. The novel's title is The Good Man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ.
The words are even more compelling on video:
As if on cue, The Onion seconds with this brilliant bit:
WASHINGTON—In a decisive and vulgar 7-2 ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court once again upheld the constitution's First Amendment this week, calling the freedom of expression among the most “inalienable and important rights that a motherfucker can have.”
“It is the opinion of this court that the right to speak without censorship or fear of intimidation is fundamental to a healthy democracy,” Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote for the majority. “Furthermore, the court finds that the right to say whatever the hell you want, whenever the hell you want, is not only a founding tenet, but remains essential to the continued success of this nation.”
Added Ginsburg, “In short, freedom of speech means the freedom of fucking speech, you ignorant cocksuckers.”
[Hat tip: The Playgoer]
“No one has the right to live without being shocked. No one has the right to spend their life without being offended. Nobody has to read this book. Nobody has to pick it up. Nobody has to open it. And if they open it and read it, they don't have to like it. And if you read it and you dislike it, you don't have to remain silent about it. You can write to me. You can complain about it. You can write to the publisher. You can write to the papers. You can write your own book. You can do all those things. But there your rights stop. Nobody has the right to stop me writing this book. Nobody has the right to stop it being published, or sold, or bought, or read.” [And, may I add, threatened with arson or outrightly defaced.]
-- the author Philip Pullman, on what he thought of the offense his latest novel might cause Christians. The novel's title is The Good Man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ.
The words are even more compelling on video:
As if on cue, The Onion seconds with this brilliant bit:
WASHINGTON—In a decisive and vulgar 7-2 ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court once again upheld the constitution's First Amendment this week, calling the freedom of expression among the most “inalienable and important rights that a motherfucker can have.”
“It is the opinion of this court that the right to speak without censorship or fear of intimidation is fundamental to a healthy democracy,” Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote for the majority. “Furthermore, the court finds that the right to say whatever the hell you want, whenever the hell you want, is not only a founding tenet, but remains essential to the continued success of this nation.”
Added Ginsburg, “In short, freedom of speech means the freedom of fucking speech, you ignorant cocksuckers.”
[Hat tip: The Playgoer]
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Ang tunay na kabastusan
Reposting--Perhuwisyo ni Rizal hanggang ngayon, by Rody Vera:
Ang alam ko ay ganito ang nangyari: Isang araw may pumasok na prayle sa loob ng art gallery, isang gallery na halos hindi binibisita ng sambayanang pilipino. Nabastusan ang prayle at nagcacacaramba at itinuro sa madla na ito ay bastos. ang mga bulag bulagan debotong sang-ayon sa sinasabi ng prayle-- agad nakita ang kabastusan, kahit hindi ito ang layong ipahiwatig ng may-likha. Sinigundahan ng kongresman, tinerserahan ng asawa ng dating diktador ng Pilipinas-- na kung pagsasama-samahin ang kabastusang dinulot sa bayan ay walang panama ang nasabing kabastusan sa gallery. NGAYON, kahit ipagpalagay na sila'y tama-- at hindi ako naniniwalang sila ay tama-- hindi ko masisikmurang maki-alyado sa isang prayle, isang kongresman, at isang asawa ng diktador. Kapag sila ang sumigaw ng "Bastos! Walang pakundangan!" Agad kong iisiping isa itong mas masahol na kabastusan.
Sa isang bayan ng Laguna, may isang ritwal kung saan ang mga matatandang babae ay nagsusuot ng mga titi, malalaking mga titi, habang inihahatid ang isang babae sa kanyang kasal. Isinasayaw nila ang mga malalaking titi na ito sa harap ng babaeng ikakasal at pumaparada sa buong baryo hanggang umabot sila sa simbahan. Ang prayle ng simbahan ay nabastusan sa kaugaliang iyan. ipinagbawal niya ito sa bantang makademonyo ang kaugaliang iyan. Madaling tanggalin sa tunay na konteksto ang isang bagay at sabihing ito'y nakaiinsulto sa sensibilidad ng nakararaming nananampalataya. Mas natatakot ako sa KUNG SINO ANG NAGSABING BASTOS ang isang bagay kaysa kung tutoo ngang bastos iyon o hindi.
My own take, in 140-character bursts:
• mark my words, those zealots will not stop with the ccp exhibit.
• 'The Artist can never be a terrorist unless he/she murders the audience.' -- Charlson Ong. good read. http://t.co/BXmorx6
• if it's true d cbcp sought imelda's intervention re ccp exhibit, then that only shows how truly low n craven those catholic bishops can be.
• now it's jinggoy calling for d ccp board's head. HILARIOUS--jinggoy, bagatsing, sotto, imelda--now d champions of piety n morality?!? HAHA!
• now that they've extracted blood, do u think these curates n their flock will stop w/ just this work? what will they be 'offended' at next?
• once upon a time, d church also demanded a ban on d noli n fili, on studying rizal in school, on ballet as an 'immoral' activity for girls!
• if u find it offensive, by all means protest, file a case in court. but to demand its removal? r ur sensibilities a license to censorship?
• 'It will set an example to all.'--Christian groups filing case against CCP. see? they're all about striking fear. welcome d new torquemadas.
• Lawyer Jo Imbong re ccp exhibit: 'D Christian nation has been offended.'-- er, wt abt non-Xtians? last i heard, this is a pluralist society.
• Wt art can do--expose hypocrisy. e.g., imelda, sotto, bagatsing now posturing as arbiters of good taste n avatars of piety. THAT'S blasphemy.
• Imelda appalled by 'blasphemous' CCP exhibit goo.gl/fb/bWRii --zuure. you n those religious groups are perfect bedfellows. go procreate.
• wag na nga art critic, @radikalchick, but imelda of d horrific martial-law years, now arbiter of what's pious n religiously acceptable?!?
• @shattershards @mcvie @radikalchick remember, it was also imelda who spearheaded the soft-porn manila international film festival years ago!
• Imelda Marcos backs protests against CCP art exhibit, eyes raps vs officials bit.ly/pJBM61 -- wow, diba, ang linis, dalisay, busilak.
• imelda--IMELDA!--acting all offended by 'blasphemous' art is d real blasphemy. that's catholic religiosity for u--all surface, hollow core.
• karen davila says it's understandable for imelda to take offense at 'blasphemous' art because she built ccp. dear, what arrant nonsense.
• wt's blasphemous is for so-called religious groups to cry sacrilege bt then not be offended at imelda styling herself as d paragon of piety.
[Photo: Getty Images]
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Two must-see movies, back to back
1. Alvin Yapan and Alem Ang's beautifully crafted Cinemalaya entry Ang Sayaw ng Dalawang Kaliwang Paa, starring the dreamy tandem of Rocco Nacino and Paulo Avelino plus the excellent Jean Garcia, at 7 p.m. (my tweet--'ang sayaw ng 2 kaliwang paa' is pure feeling profoundly, ravishingly expressed. The film has ambition , style, delicacy--soul. BRAVO.);
2. Then, at 9 p.m., Jade Castro's fabulously funny Zombadings I: Patayin sa Shokot si Remington (my tweet--mart escudero's sensational turn in 'zombadings' is d breakthrough performance of cinemalaya 2011, perhaps of d year. brave, fab and funny!).
Back to back at SM Megamall Cinema 9 on Tuesday, August 23, 2011. For just P500 (P300 for one movie), and for a good cause--the Love Yourself Project. (Proceeds from this special screening will support the provision of free counseling and assistance services for the youth and key populations affected by HIV/AIDS in the Philippines.)
Not bad, eh? Please do come. It'll be a fun evening with friends and kindred spirits. Interested? E-mail me at gibbs_c@yahoo.com for tickets and details.
2. Then, at 9 p.m., Jade Castro's fabulously funny Zombadings I: Patayin sa Shokot si Remington (my tweet--mart escudero's sensational turn in 'zombadings' is d breakthrough performance of cinemalaya 2011, perhaps of d year. brave, fab and funny!).
Back to back at SM Megamall Cinema 9 on Tuesday, August 23, 2011. For just P500 (P300 for one movie), and for a good cause--the Love Yourself Project. (Proceeds from this special screening will support the provision of free counseling and assistance services for the youth and key populations affected by HIV/AIDS in the Philippines.)
Not bad, eh? Please do come. It'll be a fun evening with friends and kindred spirits. Interested? E-mail me at gibbs_c@yahoo.com for tickets and details.
Labels:
blogging,
movies,
politics,
the lush life,
tv/showbiz
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Tuesday, August 09, 2011
Rep's Seussical--Theater for Young Audiences opens August 13
The musical “Seussical--Theater for Young Audiences” opens at Onstage Greenbelt 1 on August 13 as the Repertory Children’s Theater production for 2011. It will run on weekends until December 18, 2011.
With music, book and lyrics by Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Ahrens of “Once On This Island” fame, “Seussical--Theater for Young Audiences” takes off from “The Cat in the Hat,” the fun-loving hero created by Dr. Seuss and beloved of children all over the world.
The musical brings to life some favorite Dr. Seuss characters such as Horton the kind-hearted elephant, Mayzie La Bird, Gertrude with the one-feather tail, the Sour Kangaroo, and others.
Singer/stage actress Bituin Escalante joins Children’s Theater mainstays and Rep stalwarts Cara Barredo, Rem Zamora, Liesl Batucan, Pinky Marquez, Ayam Barredo, Arnel Carrion, Naths Everett, Oliver Usison, James Stacey, Raul Montesa, Nacho Tambunting and others to make up the energetic singing and dancing cast of “Seussical.”
Returning to the Rep stage after many years abroad is Charity Grace, now grown up, who was last seen in Rep’s productions of “The Wizard of Oz” and “Annie.” She is joined by newcomers Nic Campos (Rep’s “Shakespeare in Hollywood”) and Kawie Atwood, a former Rep actress also returning from many years abroad. Four talented children--Noah Ramos, Nacio Samonte, Nicolle Cojuangco and Alessa Zialcita--take turns playing the part of Jojo, a child whose imagination, egged on by the Cat, creates a heart-warming story of love, loyalty and caring, as well as the main message of the boundless possibilities of “thinking”.
Oliver Roxas, a former Rep actor who now resides in the United Kingdom, has created the artistic set and colorful character costumes that will introduce children to the works of Vincent Van Gogh. Edna Vida lends her tremendous talent to the production through the choreography that interprets the music and lyrics of this mostly sung-through musical. John Batalla will work magic once again with his lights.
To get children even more involved in the show, they are being asked to submit drawings (at least by the first of each month) that depict the most beautiful, peaceful spot they have ever seen or imagined. Twenty drawings will be picked every month to be shown during the song “Solla Solew” that a forlorn Horton sings as he imagines such a spot. Children whose drawings are chosen will be given a Dr. Seuss book courtesy of National Book Store.
For ticket reservations, call Rep 5716926 or 5714941.
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Monday, August 08, 2011
Shakespeare revisited, Rizal reinvented
Philippine Daily Inquirer, 08.08.2011
3 campus productions try to revitalize the well-worn and venerable
THAT “ROMEO AND JULIET” is a “Christian” play, specifically a Catholic one, in the surface sense that its characters and original medieval Verona milieu are all embedded in a Roman Christian culture, is something already universally taken for granted.
The play cues this inference, of course, with the presence of the Franciscan friars Laurence and John, as well as invocations of saints and shrines, pilgrims and purgatory in the text. In modern versions, the protagonists remain of staunch Catholic stock--Puerto Rican and Italian-American in “West Side Story,” for instance; or natives of a Verona Beach in Miami drenched in Catholic iconography, in Baz Luhrmann’s MTV-flavored 1995 movie adaptation.
Would the Bard’s story of star-cross’d lovers work as well in a Muslim environment? The answer, based on Tanghalang Ateneo’s recent production “Sintang Dalisay,” is an emphatic yes.
Transposing the play to the world of the indigenous Sama-Badjao people of Mindanao by employing the tribe’s traditional dance, the igal, as its movement motif, “Sintang Dalisay” succeeded in reimagining “Romeo and Juliet” as an integral universe of ancient rido (family feuds), religious rigor and unbending custom, vivified by splendid finery (costumes by National Artist Salvador Bernal), atmospheric kulintang harmonies and undulating ululations, even the kris ably nudging its Western counterpart aside in those indispensable Shakespearean sword fights.
The transposition had help from two other sources--the 1901 awit (Filipino narrative poetry) “Ang Sintang Dalisay ni Julieta at Romeo” by one G.D. Roke--the earliest Tagalog version, according to UP professor Judy Ick in the program notes, the lovers’ tale contextualized within turn-of-the-century Tagalog culture--and the more classically faithful translation by National Artist for Theater and Literature Rolando Tinio.
However, director Ricky Abad and co-performance text creator Guelan Valera-Luarca appeared to have settled on a broadly pruned iteration (no soliloquies, for one), with rather deflated poetry but one that also gave this “Sintang Dalisay” swift narrative flow and sharp compactness.
Its life force came not from the verses but from the rich, sensuous allure of the igal. On a stage bereft of scenery, with only the live neo-ethnic band led by Edru Abraham as backdrop and aural anchor, the play unfolded as one seamless movement piece, each line-italicizing pose and gesture charging the play with a textured ardency.
Adding to the fine-grained theatricality were the ingenious use of native mats to mark off spaces and scene changes.
To its credit, the cast of mostly student or TA alumni actors, which had trained with four master igal teachers from Tawi-Tawi brought in by Ateneo during the summer, performed their paces with exactness and brio.
The leads--Kalil Almonte and Tasha Tañada in the show we caught--were well-cast, though Almonte (now Rashiddin to Tañada’s Jamila in the Islamic city of Semporna), while looking the part and evincing sensitive playing, could use a bit more assured flourish in his movements.
That unity of expressive dance and articulate verse-acting was achieved most impressively by one cast member--Brian Sy as the imam, this version’s Friar Laurence.
“Sintang Dalisay’s” honorable, thoughtfully stylized retelling of those “poor sacrifices of our enmity”--a Romeo and Juliet of a culture and consciousness now so near our own--felt just about right. It represented the ideal kind of reimagining: old tale made convincingly new.
‘Titus Andronicus’
In contrast to “Sintang Dalisay,” George de Jesus III’s production of “Titus Andronicus,” which ran for a mere three days at the De la Salle-College of Saint Benilde School of Design and Arts Theater, was a straightforward translation of Shakespeare’s early play into Filipino.
No imposed concept here; other than the Filipino text, the retained Roman-era setting precluded any touches of local color or modern inflection.
One could be forgiven, however, for thinking otherwise at the outset, since the play was foregrounded by the sound of loud, nihilistic rock. A punk “Titus,” perhaps?
The curtain rose, however, on meticulously designed plumed helmets, authentic-looking body armor, yards of crimson tunic and white toga, Roman columns and arches.
And no wonder. This was the showcase production of students of the school’s production design and technical theater programs, and as showcases went, the scrupulous scenery they came up with could give professional theater companies in town a run for their money.
The use of video projections, particularly, was judicious and deft, instantly shifting locales from imperial court to Roman plaza to thick forest--a beautifully conjured sylvan sight of treacherous shade and fallen giant statuary, where Titus’ daughter Lavinia (Mara Marasigan) would be ravaged.
The only badly designed element was the cumbersome ramps that required time to be reconfigured from scene to scene, thus stalling the play and cluttering the stage with actors-cum-stagehands.
De Jesus, one of the country’s most proficient adaptors of foreign material (Tanghalang Pilipino’s “Orfeo sa Impierno” from Tennessee Williams’ “Orpheus Descending”; “Godot, Wer Is U?” from Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot”), deployed a mix of earthy and elevated Filipino for this “Titus.”
The Moor Aaron (Joshua Deocareza), for instance, on his illicit dalliance with the Goth queen Tamora: “Pagsisilbihan ba ang sabi ko? Pagliliyabin ang kandungan ng reyna!” Still later, goading Tamora’s sons Demetrius and Chiron (Paul Jake Paule and Gab Santos) to jointly assault Lavinia: “Kung ganoon, pwedeng pagsaluhan ang p--ing ninanasa!”
Marasigan, Paule, Santos, Deocareza, Russell Legaspi (as Lucius) and Paolo O’Hara (Titus’ brother Marcus) were adequate, if unmemorable, in their roles. Joel Saracho, meanwhile, played Titus with a weary rational solidity that served him well in the early scenes, but seemed to shortchange his character as it slipped into the guise of madness--a gradual slackening that closely tracked the production’s own momentum.
Its second act, though goosed now and then by lively spurts of blood, the snarling Tamora of Kalila Aguilos and Nar Cabico’s brief but marked turn as the bad news-bearing nurse, had leaden spots one too many--a state of affairs redeemed only by the final scene of mass carnage, which was staged as a mean, eye-popping wallop of pure viscera, squeamishness be damned.
If anything, that unfettered ending marked this production out as a gleeful equal to the promise of its brash, slasher-rock beginnings.
‘Rizal X’
If Shakespeare rendered fresh is a perennial challenge for artists, so is José Rizal. On his 150th birth anniversary, what, indeed, has been left unsaid of the national hero and his legacy?
Dexter Santos’ “Rizal X,” ongoing at UP Diliman’s Guerrero Theater, attempts another stab at the enterprise, and it’s an effort distinguished by equal parts surprising novelty and admirable panache.
Santos’ first and most astute imposition on himself and his co-creators (headwriters and dramaturgs Katte Sabate and Chic San Agustin) is to ditch the civic preachiness altogether. There is no rote summoning of Rizal’s virtues here, no appeal to stock imagery of his heroism and example.
Instead, there is rage and angst, yearning, confusion, love and combustible conviction--in short, those roiling emotions the young Rizal must have felt himself during his storied life, and now mined by this production, often to thrilling effect, for its intended youthful audience.
That impressionistic palette finds expression not in a traditional narrative but in vignettes and sketches by various collaborators, which swim off, mostly in contemporary directions, from details and snatches of Rizal’s life and work.
Some have the whiff of the well-worn in them--Sisa, for instance, becoming a sequence about three mothers falling prey to servitude in foreign lands; or Crispin and Basilio now ending up as street kids.
One early vignette, “Kimera at Espinghe,” by Vlad Gonzales, about Rizal grappling with his nascent writerly urges, seems more obscure than illuminating--though it’s fair to point out that Alchris Galura, the indie movie actor who’s only on his third stage outing here, fails to make the sequence fly, let alone appear coherent.
Elsewhere, the stage burns with potent inspiration. “Alisbayan Box,” with text by Layeta Bucoy, is a raucously moving look at the national diaspora, mirroring Rizal’s own solitude for country while on European soil.
In “Women of Rizal,” an affecting tapestry of words exchanged between the Filipino swain and nine women across the globe, Rizal emerges as a flesh-and-blood, if often opaque, lover.
Leonor Rivera, Rizal’s greatest heartbreak, is given a special place in “El Dolor de Amante,” radiantly played by Maita Ponce. And Jean Judith Javier and Red Concepcion bring a gracious moment of stillness to the spirited proceedings with “La Deportacion,” a musical snippet Rizal himself had written during his Dapitan exile. (That dancing could go, though.)
Helping stitch these moments into a fiery portrait of youth on the cusp of change is the brilliant music-making by William Elvin Manzano.
After his similarly laudable work in last year’s “Cyrano de Bergerac,” Manzano’s soulful, propulsively melodic songs are helping usher in a fresh, energetic sound to local musical theater. “Rizal X’s” best moment, “Sinubukan,” a summons to arms after Rizal’s “Where are you, youth?” lament, brings that heartfelt fire and swagger to its zenith.
Excepting the earnest but still callow Galura and an oddly overwrought Reuben Uy, the musical and emotional sweep of “Rizal X” locates forceful interpreters in Ponce, Javier, Concepcion, Bea Garcia, Natasha Cabrera, the winningly versatile Jules dela Paz; and especially Yanah Laurel, strong-voiced and gorgeous, and Reb Atadero, the ensemble’s most adroit performer (he alone makes the rap stretches intelligible).
This new generation of artists, along with Santos, Manzano, the inventive scenic designer Leeroy New, et al., represents the future of Pinoy theater. If “Rizal X” is any indication, it’s a bright one.
“Rizal X” runs until Aug. 14, at the Wilfrido Ma. Guerrero Theater, 2/F Palma Hall, UP Diliman, QC. Call 0917-7500107, 9261349, 9818500 local 2449 or 4337840.
3 campus productions try to revitalize the well-worn and venerable
THAT “ROMEO AND JULIET” is a “Christian” play, specifically a Catholic one, in the surface sense that its characters and original medieval Verona milieu are all embedded in a Roman Christian culture, is something already universally taken for granted.
The play cues this inference, of course, with the presence of the Franciscan friars Laurence and John, as well as invocations of saints and shrines, pilgrims and purgatory in the text. In modern versions, the protagonists remain of staunch Catholic stock--Puerto Rican and Italian-American in “West Side Story,” for instance; or natives of a Verona Beach in Miami drenched in Catholic iconography, in Baz Luhrmann’s MTV-flavored 1995 movie adaptation.
Would the Bard’s story of star-cross’d lovers work as well in a Muslim environment? The answer, based on Tanghalang Ateneo’s recent production “Sintang Dalisay,” is an emphatic yes.
Transposing the play to the world of the indigenous Sama-Badjao people of Mindanao by employing the tribe’s traditional dance, the igal, as its movement motif, “Sintang Dalisay” succeeded in reimagining “Romeo and Juliet” as an integral universe of ancient rido (family feuds), religious rigor and unbending custom, vivified by splendid finery (costumes by National Artist Salvador Bernal), atmospheric kulintang harmonies and undulating ululations, even the kris ably nudging its Western counterpart aside in those indispensable Shakespearean sword fights.
The transposition had help from two other sources--the 1901 awit (Filipino narrative poetry) “Ang Sintang Dalisay ni Julieta at Romeo” by one G.D. Roke--the earliest Tagalog version, according to UP professor Judy Ick in the program notes, the lovers’ tale contextualized within turn-of-the-century Tagalog culture--and the more classically faithful translation by National Artist for Theater and Literature Rolando Tinio.
However, director Ricky Abad and co-performance text creator Guelan Valera-Luarca appeared to have settled on a broadly pruned iteration (no soliloquies, for one), with rather deflated poetry but one that also gave this “Sintang Dalisay” swift narrative flow and sharp compactness.
Its life force came not from the verses but from the rich, sensuous allure of the igal. On a stage bereft of scenery, with only the live neo-ethnic band led by Edru Abraham as backdrop and aural anchor, the play unfolded as one seamless movement piece, each line-italicizing pose and gesture charging the play with a textured ardency.
Adding to the fine-grained theatricality were the ingenious use of native mats to mark off spaces and scene changes.
To its credit, the cast of mostly student or TA alumni actors, which had trained with four master igal teachers from Tawi-Tawi brought in by Ateneo during the summer, performed their paces with exactness and brio.
The leads--Kalil Almonte and Tasha Tañada in the show we caught--were well-cast, though Almonte (now Rashiddin to Tañada’s Jamila in the Islamic city of Semporna), while looking the part and evincing sensitive playing, could use a bit more assured flourish in his movements.
That unity of expressive dance and articulate verse-acting was achieved most impressively by one cast member--Brian Sy as the imam, this version’s Friar Laurence.
“Sintang Dalisay’s” honorable, thoughtfully stylized retelling of those “poor sacrifices of our enmity”--a Romeo and Juliet of a culture and consciousness now so near our own--felt just about right. It represented the ideal kind of reimagining: old tale made convincingly new.
‘Titus Andronicus’
In contrast to “Sintang Dalisay,” George de Jesus III’s production of “Titus Andronicus,” which ran for a mere three days at the De la Salle-College of Saint Benilde School of Design and Arts Theater, was a straightforward translation of Shakespeare’s early play into Filipino.
No imposed concept here; other than the Filipino text, the retained Roman-era setting precluded any touches of local color or modern inflection.
One could be forgiven, however, for thinking otherwise at the outset, since the play was foregrounded by the sound of loud, nihilistic rock. A punk “Titus,” perhaps?
The curtain rose, however, on meticulously designed plumed helmets, authentic-looking body armor, yards of crimson tunic and white toga, Roman columns and arches.
And no wonder. This was the showcase production of students of the school’s production design and technical theater programs, and as showcases went, the scrupulous scenery they came up with could give professional theater companies in town a run for their money.
The use of video projections, particularly, was judicious and deft, instantly shifting locales from imperial court to Roman plaza to thick forest--a beautifully conjured sylvan sight of treacherous shade and fallen giant statuary, where Titus’ daughter Lavinia (Mara Marasigan) would be ravaged.
The only badly designed element was the cumbersome ramps that required time to be reconfigured from scene to scene, thus stalling the play and cluttering the stage with actors-cum-stagehands.
De Jesus, one of the country’s most proficient adaptors of foreign material (Tanghalang Pilipino’s “Orfeo sa Impierno” from Tennessee Williams’ “Orpheus Descending”; “Godot, Wer Is U?” from Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot”), deployed a mix of earthy and elevated Filipino for this “Titus.”
The Moor Aaron (Joshua Deocareza), for instance, on his illicit dalliance with the Goth queen Tamora: “Pagsisilbihan ba ang sabi ko? Pagliliyabin ang kandungan ng reyna!” Still later, goading Tamora’s sons Demetrius and Chiron (Paul Jake Paule and Gab Santos) to jointly assault Lavinia: “Kung ganoon, pwedeng pagsaluhan ang p--ing ninanasa!”
Marasigan, Paule, Santos, Deocareza, Russell Legaspi (as Lucius) and Paolo O’Hara (Titus’ brother Marcus) were adequate, if unmemorable, in their roles. Joel Saracho, meanwhile, played Titus with a weary rational solidity that served him well in the early scenes, but seemed to shortchange his character as it slipped into the guise of madness--a gradual slackening that closely tracked the production’s own momentum.
Its second act, though goosed now and then by lively spurts of blood, the snarling Tamora of Kalila Aguilos and Nar Cabico’s brief but marked turn as the bad news-bearing nurse, had leaden spots one too many--a state of affairs redeemed only by the final scene of mass carnage, which was staged as a mean, eye-popping wallop of pure viscera, squeamishness be damned.
If anything, that unfettered ending marked this production out as a gleeful equal to the promise of its brash, slasher-rock beginnings.
‘Rizal X’
If Shakespeare rendered fresh is a perennial challenge for artists, so is José Rizal. On his 150th birth anniversary, what, indeed, has been left unsaid of the national hero and his legacy?
Dexter Santos’ “Rizal X,” ongoing at UP Diliman’s Guerrero Theater, attempts another stab at the enterprise, and it’s an effort distinguished by equal parts surprising novelty and admirable panache.
Santos’ first and most astute imposition on himself and his co-creators (headwriters and dramaturgs Katte Sabate and Chic San Agustin) is to ditch the civic preachiness altogether. There is no rote summoning of Rizal’s virtues here, no appeal to stock imagery of his heroism and example.
Instead, there is rage and angst, yearning, confusion, love and combustible conviction--in short, those roiling emotions the young Rizal must have felt himself during his storied life, and now mined by this production, often to thrilling effect, for its intended youthful audience.
That impressionistic palette finds expression not in a traditional narrative but in vignettes and sketches by various collaborators, which swim off, mostly in contemporary directions, from details and snatches of Rizal’s life and work.
Some have the whiff of the well-worn in them--Sisa, for instance, becoming a sequence about three mothers falling prey to servitude in foreign lands; or Crispin and Basilio now ending up as street kids.
One early vignette, “Kimera at Espinghe,” by Vlad Gonzales, about Rizal grappling with his nascent writerly urges, seems more obscure than illuminating--though it’s fair to point out that Alchris Galura, the indie movie actor who’s only on his third stage outing here, fails to make the sequence fly, let alone appear coherent.
Elsewhere, the stage burns with potent inspiration. “Alisbayan Box,” with text by Layeta Bucoy, is a raucously moving look at the national diaspora, mirroring Rizal’s own solitude for country while on European soil.
In “Women of Rizal,” an affecting tapestry of words exchanged between the Filipino swain and nine women across the globe, Rizal emerges as a flesh-and-blood, if often opaque, lover.
Leonor Rivera, Rizal’s greatest heartbreak, is given a special place in “El Dolor de Amante,” radiantly played by Maita Ponce. And Jean Judith Javier and Red Concepcion bring a gracious moment of stillness to the spirited proceedings with “La Deportacion,” a musical snippet Rizal himself had written during his Dapitan exile. (That dancing could go, though.)
Helping stitch these moments into a fiery portrait of youth on the cusp of change is the brilliant music-making by William Elvin Manzano.
After his similarly laudable work in last year’s “Cyrano de Bergerac,” Manzano’s soulful, propulsively melodic songs are helping usher in a fresh, energetic sound to local musical theater. “Rizal X’s” best moment, “Sinubukan,” a summons to arms after Rizal’s “Where are you, youth?” lament, brings that heartfelt fire and swagger to its zenith.
Excepting the earnest but still callow Galura and an oddly overwrought Reuben Uy, the musical and emotional sweep of “Rizal X” locates forceful interpreters in Ponce, Javier, Concepcion, Bea Garcia, Natasha Cabrera, the winningly versatile Jules dela Paz; and especially Yanah Laurel, strong-voiced and gorgeous, and Reb Atadero, the ensemble’s most adroit performer (he alone makes the rap stretches intelligible).
This new generation of artists, along with Santos, Manzano, the inventive scenic designer Leeroy New, et al., represents the future of Pinoy theater. If “Rizal X” is any indication, it’s a bright one.
“Rizal X” runs until Aug. 14, at the Wilfrido Ma. Guerrero Theater, 2/F Palma Hall, UP Diliman, QC. Call 0917-7500107, 9261349, 9818500 local 2449 or 4337840.
Labels:
heritage,
music,
theater,
tv/showbiz
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Friday, August 05, 2011
Opening tonight--9 Works Theatrical's Sweet Charity
9 Works Theatrical's production of the dance comedy musical Sweet Charity opens tonight and will run on all weekends of August at the Carlos P. Romulo Auditorium, RCBC Plaza, Makati. (Call 5575860, 5867105 or 0917-5545560 or e-mail info@9workstheatrical.com.) The show, directed by Robbie Guevara, stars Nikki Gil as Charity Hope Valentine and Kris Lawrence as Oscar Lindquist, Charity's love interest.
More: With book by Neil Simon, music by Cy Coleman and lyrics by Dorothy Fields, “Sweet Charity” was originally directed and choreographed by Bob Fosse when it premiered on Broadway in 1966. With over 600 performances, the production won the Tony Award for Best Choreography in the same year before opening in London a year later. A 1969 film version starred Shirley MacLaine. A Broadway revival in 2005 featured Christina Applegate.
Shiela Valderrama-Martinez as Nickie and Ciara Sotto-Oconer as Helene will play Sweet Charity’s closest confidantes, while Sheree Vidal-Bautista will play Carmen, one of Charity’s co-dancers.
Other cast members include Miguel Faustmann, OJ Mariano, Tasy Garrucha, Caisa Borromeo, Chinie Nepomuceno, Vinia Pamplona and Carmelle Ros, Topper Fabregas, Job Bautista. Francis Matheu, Anthony Tarrosa Ong, Peter Alcedo and Chai Relucio.
The artistic team is composed of director Robbie Guevara, assistant director Lorenz Martinez, band musical director Joseph Tolentino, scenographer Mio Infante, lighting designer Martin Esteva, and costume designers Mio Infante and Hanna de los Reyes.
The show is presented by special arrangement with Music Theatre International, 421 West 54th Street, New York, New York 10019 Tel: (212) 5414684. Visit www.mtishows.com
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Tuesday, August 02, 2011
First look: Gian Magdangal as Ibarra and Cris Villonco as Maria Clara in Tanghalang Pilipino's Noli Me Tangere: The Musical
After Mark Bautista, it was Gian Magdangal's turn to sing as the alternate Ibarra, along with Cris Villonco as Maria Clara, at the presscon held for Tanghalang Pilipino's Noli Me Tangere: The Musical, which opens this weekend at the CCP Little Theater under Audie Gemora's direction. The music is by Ryan Cayabyab, libretto by National Artist for Literature Bienvenido Lumbera and costume design by National Artist for Theater Salvador Bernal.
PLUS: From the Tanghalang Pilipino Facebook page--
"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.
PLUS: From the Tanghalang Pilipino Facebook page--
"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.
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Monday, August 01, 2011
The real Callas master class
Terrence McNally’s 1995 play, “Master Class,” was inspired by the now legendary master classes that Maria Callas gave during the 1971-72 academic year at the Juilliard School. There were 23 two-hour sessions in all, and Callas worked with 25 students whom she had selected after listening to some 300 young singers in auditions.
To judge from the critic John Ardoin’s excellent 1987 book, “Callas at Juilliard: The Master Classes” (Amadeus Press), and especially the classic three-disc EMI recording “Maria Callas at Juilliard,” which includes long extracts from her coaching of 10 student singers, Callas was not much like the imperious, self-absorbed prima donna of Mr. McNally’s play. At Juilliard she was frank and demanding but unfailingly patient and encouraging. Above all, she was impressively precise in her technical and interpretive critiques.
One student (the soprano Pamela Hebert) is captured singing Bellini’s aria “Casta diva” from “Norma.” If Callas had a signature role, it was that of Bellini’s druid priestess... On the recording she gives Ms. Hebert detailed comments, including astute explanations of ornamentation in the Bellini style. In the long-spun opening phrase on the words “Casta diva,” invoking a “chaste goddess,” Callas insists that the ornamental turn be sung evenly, on “one tone,” with all the notes clearly articulated.
Though on the recording Ms. Hebert’s sound is luscious, her initial singing lacks smoothness in the embellishments: some notes stick out more than others. Her second time through is more elegant. But in the next phrase, to Callas’s demanding ears, Ms. Hebert again cheats a bit on some notes.
“I will not let that go by,” Callas says, not sternly but insisting on musical and vocal integrity. She then helps Ms. Hebert to sing without “shifting gears” vocally...
A play that hewed closely to Callas’s detailed teaching during the Juilliard classes might not be great theater. But there is great drama in listening to Callas at Juilliard, so vulnerable and giving as she works with a new generation of singers, pushing aside for a while any thoughts about her own future. She died just five years later.
-- “Broadway’s Callas vs. Callas Herself,” by Anthony Tommasini in the New York Times
As it happens, I have a copy of this CD recording--one I bought from the Virgin record store along the Champs Elysees in Paris two years ago. (Natch, I wish I could say that more often--yeah, you knooow, bought this at the Shanz in Paree.) The double-CD set was a bargain, marked down to 5 Euros from the original price of E16.80. Hello, P350 onli? Grab na! Apparently, to go by Mr. Tommasini's report, this was already an abridged version; the original release had 3 discs. But there I was, ruing a bit that I had come across the recording only about a year after Cherie Gil had debuted as a splendid Callas in the Philippine Opera Company's production of Master Class. (I could have used the CD as an additional study aid.)
Listening to the CD made me realize independently what Mr. Tommasini is saying above--that the actual master classes had far less fireworks and theatrical drama in them. Terrence McNally had employed expansive dramatic license in conjuring his portrait of Callas as a tempestuous, larger-than-life diva assoluta whipping up a storm during her Juilliard master classes. The Maria Callas that emerges from the recordings is, well, human-scaled--solicitous but firm in her ministrations to students, sharp and authoritative in her insights about the music (that, Mr. McNally got right) but also seemingly careful not to bludgeon her wards with them.
With its unexpected add-ons, the double CD I got proved to be a find in more ways than one. The Casta diva moment with soprano Pamela Hebert that Mr. Tommasini makes mention, for instance, is accompanied by the definitive 1954 recording of Callas herself singing the aria--perhaps the one track that has come to define Callas' legend as La Divina. Rossini's Una voce poco fa (from The Barber of Seville), fleshed out with Syble Young, is also followed by Callas' 1957 take on it. And so forth. This juxtaposition lends the recordings a poignant, haunting quality. Callas in her 1971-1972 master classes in America was but a shadow of her former glory, but she still sang every time, even in wobbly voice, to illustrate or underline a point (she doesn't at all in the McNally play). Hearing that ruined voice side by side with its younger self, when the Callas sound was at the blinding, breathtaking apogee of its beauty and splendor, is an extraordinary experience.
Here--sharing with you La Divina's Casta diva master class with Pamela Hebert (track 1), and her own peerless recording of it (track 2):
To judge from the critic John Ardoin’s excellent 1987 book, “Callas at Juilliard: The Master Classes” (Amadeus Press), and especially the classic three-disc EMI recording “Maria Callas at Juilliard,” which includes long extracts from her coaching of 10 student singers, Callas was not much like the imperious, self-absorbed prima donna of Mr. McNally’s play. At Juilliard she was frank and demanding but unfailingly patient and encouraging. Above all, she was impressively precise in her technical and interpretive critiques.
One student (the soprano Pamela Hebert) is captured singing Bellini’s aria “Casta diva” from “Norma.” If Callas had a signature role, it was that of Bellini’s druid priestess... On the recording she gives Ms. Hebert detailed comments, including astute explanations of ornamentation in the Bellini style. In the long-spun opening phrase on the words “Casta diva,” invoking a “chaste goddess,” Callas insists that the ornamental turn be sung evenly, on “one tone,” with all the notes clearly articulated.
Though on the recording Ms. Hebert’s sound is luscious, her initial singing lacks smoothness in the embellishments: some notes stick out more than others. Her second time through is more elegant. But in the next phrase, to Callas’s demanding ears, Ms. Hebert again cheats a bit on some notes.
“I will not let that go by,” Callas says, not sternly but insisting on musical and vocal integrity. She then helps Ms. Hebert to sing without “shifting gears” vocally...
A play that hewed closely to Callas’s detailed teaching during the Juilliard classes might not be great theater. But there is great drama in listening to Callas at Juilliard, so vulnerable and giving as she works with a new generation of singers, pushing aside for a while any thoughts about her own future. She died just five years later.
-- “Broadway’s Callas vs. Callas Herself,” by Anthony Tommasini in the New York Times
As it happens, I have a copy of this CD recording--one I bought from the Virgin record store along the Champs Elysees in Paris two years ago. (Natch, I wish I could say that more often--yeah, you knooow, bought this at the Shanz in Paree.) The double-CD set was a bargain, marked down to 5 Euros from the original price of E16.80. Hello, P350 onli? Grab na! Apparently, to go by Mr. Tommasini's report, this was already an abridged version; the original release had 3 discs. But there I was, ruing a bit that I had come across the recording only about a year after Cherie Gil had debuted as a splendid Callas in the Philippine Opera Company's production of Master Class. (I could have used the CD as an additional study aid.)
Listening to the CD made me realize independently what Mr. Tommasini is saying above--that the actual master classes had far less fireworks and theatrical drama in them. Terrence McNally had employed expansive dramatic license in conjuring his portrait of Callas as a tempestuous, larger-than-life diva assoluta whipping up a storm during her Juilliard master classes. The Maria Callas that emerges from the recordings is, well, human-scaled--solicitous but firm in her ministrations to students, sharp and authoritative in her insights about the music (that, Mr. McNally got right) but also seemingly careful not to bludgeon her wards with them.
With its unexpected add-ons, the double CD I got proved to be a find in more ways than one. The Casta diva moment with soprano Pamela Hebert that Mr. Tommasini makes mention, for instance, is accompanied by the definitive 1954 recording of Callas herself singing the aria--perhaps the one track that has come to define Callas' legend as La Divina. Rossini's Una voce poco fa (from The Barber of Seville), fleshed out with Syble Young, is also followed by Callas' 1957 take on it. And so forth. This juxtaposition lends the recordings a poignant, haunting quality. Callas in her 1971-1972 master classes in America was but a shadow of her former glory, but she still sang every time, even in wobbly voice, to illustrate or underline a point (she doesn't at all in the McNally play). Hearing that ruined voice side by side with its younger self, when the Callas sound was at the blinding, breathtaking apogee of its beauty and splendor, is an extraordinary experience.
Here--sharing with you La Divina's Casta diva master class with Pamela Hebert (track 1), and her own peerless recording of it (track 2):
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Philippine Opera Company presents Ang Bagong Harana
The Philippine Opera Company presents “Ang Bagong Harana,” a musical journey that offers fresh takes on immortal and classic Filipino songs, performed by the country’s foremost classically-trained singers and artists.
“'Ang Bagong Harana” will integrate past, present, north, south, colonial, post-colonial experiences and put them into a revue where our whole souls will be the source of inspiration,” says show director Floy Quintos. “The different suites will mix old songs and new while talking about who we are as Filipinos and where we have been.”
The show will also showcase the best of all the Filipino composers from different music eras and genres--Nicanor Abelardo, Ryan Cayabyab, Willy Cruz, Francisco Santiago, Antonio Molina, Resti Umali, George Canseco, Ernani Cuenco, Levi Celerio, Jose Estrella, Constancio De Guzman and Felipe de Leon, to name some.
The first incarnation of “Harana” was conceived by Philippine Opera Company’s Artistic Director, Karla Gutierrez, in 2008 as a vehicle to showcase the evolution of Philippine music through song and movement. The show was critically well-received, and also toured Amsterdam (2009) and the cities of Cebu, Roxas, Antique, Bohol, Palawan (2010), Bacolod, Ormoc, Tacloban and Samar (2011).
The word “Harana” is the Filipino name of a traditional form of courtship in which a man woos a woman’s affection by singing underneath her window. The creation of each “Harana” suite is a product of thorough research with the commitment to preserve indigenous Philippine music and its appropriate dance and folklore.
“This romantic tradition was widely practiced in the old Philippines,” says Gutierrez. In the 1920s, the harana or kundiman became a much more mainstream musical style, with many popular performers, including Diomedes Maturan and Ruben Tagalog popularizing the art form. Now, however, the practice of harana has died, that’s why POC is reviving this beautiful Filipino tradition.”
“Ang Bagong Harana” will feature some of Philippine theater’s celebrated singers--Karla Gutierrez, Aizel Prietos, Charley Magalit, Janine Santos, Marian Santiago, Lawrence Jatayna, Jack Salud, Nazer Salcedo, Marvin Gayramon, Al Gatmaitan and Floyd Tena.
The show will have a limited run on September 29-October 1, 8 p.m., with matinee at 3:30 p.m. on October 1, at the Carlos P. Auditorium, RCBC Plaza, Makati.
For tickets, call Philippine Opera Company 8817168 or 0917-5272880 or TicketWorld at 8919999. Visit www.philippineoperacompany.com; or like “Harana” on Facebook.
“'Ang Bagong Harana” will integrate past, present, north, south, colonial, post-colonial experiences and put them into a revue where our whole souls will be the source of inspiration,” says show director Floy Quintos. “The different suites will mix old songs and new while talking about who we are as Filipinos and where we have been.”
The show will also showcase the best of all the Filipino composers from different music eras and genres--Nicanor Abelardo, Ryan Cayabyab, Willy Cruz, Francisco Santiago, Antonio Molina, Resti Umali, George Canseco, Ernani Cuenco, Levi Celerio, Jose Estrella, Constancio De Guzman and Felipe de Leon, to name some.
The first incarnation of “Harana” was conceived by Philippine Opera Company’s Artistic Director, Karla Gutierrez, in 2008 as a vehicle to showcase the evolution of Philippine music through song and movement. The show was critically well-received, and also toured Amsterdam (2009) and the cities of Cebu, Roxas, Antique, Bohol, Palawan (2010), Bacolod, Ormoc, Tacloban and Samar (2011).
The word “Harana” is the Filipino name of a traditional form of courtship in which a man woos a woman’s affection by singing underneath her window. The creation of each “Harana” suite is a product of thorough research with the commitment to preserve indigenous Philippine music and its appropriate dance and folklore.
“This romantic tradition was widely practiced in the old Philippines,” says Gutierrez. In the 1920s, the harana or kundiman became a much more mainstream musical style, with many popular performers, including Diomedes Maturan and Ruben Tagalog popularizing the art form. Now, however, the practice of harana has died, that’s why POC is reviving this beautiful Filipino tradition.”
“Ang Bagong Harana” will feature some of Philippine theater’s celebrated singers--Karla Gutierrez, Aizel Prietos, Charley Magalit, Janine Santos, Marian Santiago, Lawrence Jatayna, Jack Salud, Nazer Salcedo, Marvin Gayramon, Al Gatmaitan and Floyd Tena.
The show will have a limited run on September 29-October 1, 8 p.m., with matinee at 3:30 p.m. on October 1, at the Carlos P. Auditorium, RCBC Plaza, Makati.
For tickets, call Philippine Opera Company 8817168 or 0917-5272880 or TicketWorld at 8919999. Visit www.philippineoperacompany.com; or like “Harana” on Facebook.
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