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PDI Feature: Why theater remains relevant in our lifetime

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In today's paper, to coincide with the Lifestyle section's anniversary, a manifesto of sorts. A debt of gratitude will always be owed foremost to him whom I consider my trailblazing mentor, Gibbs Cadiz, and Lifestyle editor Thelma Sioson San Juan. 

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Why theater remains relevant in our lifetime

Early in August 2016, just a little over a month since he'd been sworn into office, President Duterte gave his go signal for the burial of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos in the Libingan ng Mga Bayani. Needless to say, the uproar that ensued was deafening, the wounds inflicted by this national insult yet another sign that change, to pluck the words out of Duterte's mouth, had indeed come.

In October of that year, the Manila theater community unveiled its swift response in the best way it knew how. Organized in just two months, "Never Again: Voices of Martial Law" assembled nine one-act plays that became a collective reminder of the terrors of the Marcos dictatorship, and, as former Inquirer theater editor Gibbs Cadiz observed, a "stand against the tide of historical revisionism," endorsed so openly by the new government.

That festival, among many other reasons, is why the theater remains relevant in our lifetime--and why its documentation in these pages is more than a simple matter of weekly journalism.

History book in the making

Our stages are no longer just places to project the woes of the human condition and the possibilities of human invention. The theater is now a literal camera, a Filipino history book in the making, our cowitness to the gradual unraveling of society in the hands of morally bankrupt leaders.

A year into Duterte's deadly "war on drugs," Adrian Ho's "Sincerity Bikers' Club" at the Virgin Labfest was already examining how this futile crusade has torn apart even the smallest of communities. Dustin Celestino would take the introspection, the unfounded "othering" even among families, notches further with "Mga Eksena sa Buhay ng Kontrabida."

Halfway through the Duterte regime, we have seen two Lualhati Bautista novels come to life onstage--Guelan Luarca's adaptation of "Desaparesidos" and Pat Valera's musical rendering of "Dekada '70," both the most forceful reminders to "never forget" how our country arrived at its present predicament.

And the fearless Juana Change has toured the world--and will hopefully continue doing so--with her one-woman show "Tao Po"--a series of monologues from the imagined perspectives of both victims and perpetrators of the "drug war," and perhaps the fiercest indictment yet of this current administration's rising tally of crimes against humanity.

Witness

The Inquirer Lifestyle Theater section has borne witness to all these plays--and hundreds more. Since its inception seven years ago, it has remained the only one of its kind: a weekly venue for Filipino theater writing that sees both print and online distribution through a national broadsheet.

Our coverage has always known no bounds--be it a university venue or a fancy casino house, a late-night cabaret or a hole-in-the-wall reading--so long as it is physically possible for us to reach the theater.

We were there when it was just insiders who were noticing the boom of local theater through an increasing annual number of productions. We have seen this community thrive through the decade and eventually take up its cudgels in the continuing fight for social justice. And we intend to be there, writing with the level of fair-minded insight and passion our theater so deserves, for decades to come--for all the cycle of change yet to unfold.

PDI Opinion: Normalized inhumanity

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My fourth piece for Inquirer-Opinion is dedicated to my alma mater--the website link here.

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Normalized inhumanity

There aren't enough beds to go around in our public hospitals. And if you think the country is in a hurry to fix this problem, think again.

At the Philippine General Hospital (PGH), where I was once a postgraduate medical intern, it is normal to see some admitted patients in the emergency room (ER) being accommodated on Monoblocs. In the charity wards at night, the bantays--the patients' assigned companions, sleep either on chairs or on cardboard sheets spread beside or under the patients' beds.

And that's only scratching the surface of the Philippine public health situation.

The old PGH labor and delivery room, before it was torn down to give way to what has become a protracted reconstruction, could get so crowded it resembled a parking lot: women on steel stretchers placed side by side, with just slivers of space in between for careful movement. Oh yes, charity patients used--and still use--uncushioned stretchers, usually outfitted with just a thin sheet of cloth to separate the woman's body from the cold surface.

At least the patients just stay in bed. I'd been in numerous in-house emergencies where the bantays had to push the drastically deteriorating, bedbound patient alongside the physician on duty all the way from the ward to Radiology. Where was I? Running--in a place where life is oftentimes a literal race to get things done--to have the needed scan approved and scheduled instantly by the radiologist on duty. Where was the hospital aide whose job it supposedly was to push the bed? Pushing another patient's bed.

And yet, there aren't enough voices demanding the provision of more items from the government to employ more health care personnel. There isn't enough outrage at the fact that what is supposed to be our best government hospital still persists in primitive conditions.

It's reasonable to believe the people with the money and power to actually change things don't even grasp the ground-level reality of our public hospitals. Look at how our leaders justify their splurge on a multimillion-peso scam of an ornamental cauldron for the Southeast Asian Games, after having slashed next year's national budget for health by an infuriating percentage. In times of sickness, they inhabit a world of their own: plush suites that can give luxury hotels a run for their money, the bantays with their own beds, and massive TVs and high-speed internet access to pass the time. Even the apathetic middle class have a myriad of private hospitals to choose from; should they opt to go to PGH, there are still air-conditioned private quarters to check into.

The state of hospitals such as PGH is nothing new. In fact, it has been like this for so long, we hear the depressing anecdotes and instinctively think, "That's just the way it is."

As I write this, a hallway continues to substitute for the ER lobby of PGH, threatening to burst during peak hours with all the sweaty, tired bodies jostling for the attention of an overwhelmed team of medical professionals. A single converted ward--the main stand-in for what used to be a multi-part complex--is stretched ridiculously thin to accommodate almost all the patients admitted for emergency care. And these patients on their stretchers have spilled over into neighboring hallways and even a portion of the hospital's central elevator lobby.

We've heard again and again how our doctors are overworked and underpaid; how our nurses are overworked and even more underpaid. When a doctor tweets, "Ubos na ubos na ako (I'm totally spent)," it's now somehow taken as a fact of life and fodder for after-work conversation.

But at least resident doctors who go on 24-hour duties every three days get to go home to a bath, a warm meal and a soft bed at the end of it all. Ditto with nurses who drown in paperwork alone every shift. The luckiest even have well-appointed call rooms to retreat to during down times.

Our patients, on the other hand, have no choice but to endure the deplorable conditions of our government health care facilities, for lack of more humane and accessible choices. Suck it all up, to put it bluntly.

For our patients, it's already a battle just to be seen at the ER. In the wards, bantays continue to sleep on the floor, waiting for that day when the patient finally gets discharged or dies. Behold, this normalized inhumanity.

PDI Review: 'Lam-ang' by Tanghalang Pilipino

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My last production for the year--the website version here.

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'Lam-ang': Filipino musical theater's needed return to legend

Curtain call at "Lam-ang."

A marvelous sense of scale, local texture and atmosphere pervades "Lam-ang," Tanghalang Pilipino's new musical adaptation of the Ilocano epic poem "Biag ni Lam-ang."

In its best moments, the production has a hypnotic, phantasmagorical feel to it, summoning through the power of words and music a lost world that is unmistakably Filipino.

Unfortunately, it is burdened by Eljay Castro Deldoc's dissonant narrative rendering. Splitting the musical into two acts, Deldoc somehow has also written two entirely different shows: The first half, mesmerizing but also wearying to a degree, is clearly more in tune with the spirit of an epic; the second half is mind-boggling rom-com with shades of Disney's "Aladdin."

Where character and plot development matter most--and where tragedy presents itself as an opportunity to be mind, especially in the first act--Deldoc tends to pull back. As such, the main points of conflict comes across as cop-outs.

What "Lam-ang" ends up painting is a portrait of the hero as soft boy, reflected in the fact that JC Santos' portrayal of the titular character is more satisfying as miniature matinee idol than as boy prince-turned-arrogant anointed leader.

Direction by Fitz Bitana and Marco Viaña feels subservient to the structurally faulty writing, but it still manages to construct some visually arresting tableaus and even sequences of genuine tension.

It is admirable how this production wisely plays to its strengths. The direction, alongside JM Cabling's movement design and Meliton Roxas Jr.'s lighting design, works best in static moments, successfully evoking, oftentimes through simple sleights of hand, images of a close-knit community under siege from unseen forces. The ensemble here is visibly small, but an illusion of volume is achieved where it is needed, the sprawling set by Viaña put to effective use.

It is in moments of chaos when the cohesive illusion collapses, all three aforementioned elements still in need of military pruning. To put it plainly, you suddenly realize you don't know where to look, or even who is speaking or singing.

Except when Tex Ordoñez-de Leon is onstage, in which case all eyes and ears are on her. As the narrator Baglan, she hews closest to the ethereal, otherworldly quality of lore, while being the most forceful and transfixing presence in this show.

Anna Luna as Lam-ang's love interest Kannoyan also achieves that delicate balance of grace and commanding tangibility, while Paw Castillo as the warrior Sumarang elevates an atrociously underwritten role to a fiery embodiment of wrath and betrayal.

The overall picture is, in the end, a welcome and necessary return of Filipino musical theater to the realm of local legend.

More than the score, which at times feels dispensable, it is TJ Ramos' sound design that helps make that return possible, the soundscape he has crafted both advancing and expanding the visual narrative.

In fact, taken together, the final two scenes of "Lam-ang" are already pitch-perfect in their evocation of loss, yearning and infinite possibility. It's a pity it takes the musical a long and laborious while to get there.

The Best of Manila Theater 2019

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[UNDER CONSTRUCTION]

Has it really been a decade since I saw my first show in Manila? This used to be Gibbs' signature annual piece, but now that he's gone (not for good, I hope), someone has to do it. The website version of this piece here--and also, i must insist you get the print copy.

SEE ALSO:

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Best of theater 2019

"The Phantom of the Opera," February 2019.

No less than 14 previously staged, full-length Filipino productions returned this year.

9 Works Theatrical brought back its APO Hiking Society musical "Eto Na! Musikal nAPO!". The crowd-favorite Eraserheads show "Ang Huling El Bimbo" played three sold-out runs at Resorts World Manila. Floy Quintos'"The Kundiman Party" moved from the University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman to the Peta Theater Center, and "Himala, Isang Musical," coproduced by 9 Works and The Sandbox Collective, reappeared even better than its already perfect form in 2018.

Two perennials also turned up--a record-setting seventh run of "Rak of Aegis," and the fourth (and inarguably best) version of Tanghalang Pilipino's (TP) "Mabining Mandirigma"--alongside smaller but no less absorbing fare such as Sandbox's redesigned "Dani Girl."

Even the splashy foreign visitors were repeats: an nth dose of the interactive Harry Potter parody "Potted Potter"; and, at The Theatre at Solaire, updated productions of Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Cats" and "The Phantom of the Opera," both having debuted locally at the Cultural Center of the Philippines earlier this decade.

Which is not to say 2019 was lacking in terms of new and/or original work--quite the opposite, actually.

The near-synchronous arrival of three pieces by American legend Stephen Sondheim was nirvana for the geekiest of musical theater geeks.

But Sondheim wasn't the only one all over town. The Spanish playwrights somehow invaded the campuses. Dulaang UP (DUP) staged English and Filipino versions of Federico García Lorca's "The House of Bernarda Alba" and Lope de Vega's "Fuente Ovejuna"; MINT College did Lorca's "Yerma"; and the Theater Arts program of De La Salle-College of St. Benilde had "Ang Dakilang Teatro ng Daigdig (in part, Calderoón de la Barca's "The Great Theater of the World") and "El Mar de Sangre" (Lorca's "Blood Wedding," which Artist Playground deconstructed into "Buwan" for its actors' recital).

88 productions

Our schools, in fact, proved to be fertile ground, as evidenced below by our picks for the year's crème de la crème.

Of the 88 fully staged productions we saw in Manila--including 28 musicals, 44 straight plays, and 20 new one-act plays--39 were staged by students or student-run companies.

University production or not, however, success was never a guarantee--not just in quality, but also in economic terms.

For every surprise hit, such as "Ang Pagsalubong sa Apatnapu" by the Marikina-based community outfit Teatro ni Juan, there were the likes of "Aurelio Sedisyoso" and "Guadalupe: The Musical," neither planned rerun of which materialized.

FrontRow Entertainment's "M. Butterfly" folded abruptly midway through its national tour.

And, most conspicuously, the London-based Rose Theatre canceled its repertory productions of Shakespeare's "Macbeth" and "A Midsummer Night's Dream" less than a week before the intended opening.

What follows is by no means an exhaustive appraisal o the 2019 Manila theater scene. Take it, instead, as our personal roll call of those we'd most welcome to see again onstage.

BEST PLAY (ONE-ACT)

"Fangirl," June 2019.

"Fangirl" (Herlyn Alegre; Charles Yee, dir.)

The most accomplished entry of Virgin Labfest 15 turned the seemingly ridiculous phenomenon of pop-culture fandom into compelling comedy, buoyed by richly detailed writing, airtight direction, and a tireless trio of actresses playing longtime friends fighting tooth and nail over a concert ticket.

Good news to those who missed it: "Fangirl" will be back next year in the Labfest's "Revisited" section.

Honorable Mentions: "Anak Ka Ng" (U Z Eliserio; Maynard Manansala, dir.); "Wanted: Male Boarders" (Rick Patriarca; George de Jesus III, dir.); "The Bride and the Bachelor" (Dingdong Novenario; Topper Fabregas, dir.)

BEST PLAY (FULL-LENGTH/NON-FILIPINO MATERIAL)

"Stop Kiss," July 2019.

"Angels in America: Millennium Approaches" (Tony Kushner; Bobby Garcia, dir.)

The best production in Atlantis Theatrical Entertainment Group's season heralded Garcia's return to nonmusicals after "God of Carnage" seven years ago, and, more significantly, his second stab at part one of Kushner's magnum opus, 24 years after premiering in the Philippines all two parts and seven hours of it.

In his script, Kushner writes that an "epic play" such as "Angels""should be a little fatiguing." Garcia's production was perceptively paced and rendered, with astonishing emotional precision, the unraveling lives of its eight main characters in the 1980s AIDS crisis. It made you laugh, broke your heart, and left you with a renewed sense of hope and possibility.

Honorable Mentions: "Stop Kiss" (Diana Son; Ed Lacson, Jr., dir.); "If He Doesn't See Your Face" (Suzue Toshiro, English translation by Christy Scriba; Ricardo Abad, dir.); "Every Brilliant Thing" (Duncan Macmillan and Jonny Donahoe; Jenny Jamora, dir.); "Dancing Lessons" (Mark St. Germain; Francis Matheu, dir.)

BEST PLAY (FULL-LENGTH/ ORIGINAL FILIPINO MATERIAL OR ADAPTATION)

"Alpha Kappa Omega," April 2019.

"Alpha Kappa Omega" (Mike de Leon's film "Batch '81," adapted and directed by Guelan Luarca).

In an interview last year, Luarca, then newly appointed artistic director of Tanghalang Ateneo (TA), said: "Theater [should be] agitating and ever-questioning, ardent in its pursuit to challenge the status quo."

That, he achieved irrefutably with this unflinching, contemporized take on De Leon's classic tale of a bunch of fraternity neophytes during the Marcos years.

Performed almost entirely by a student cast, "Alpha Kappa Omega"--yet further proof of the prolific Luarca as one of our most astute artist-critics--was at once a fiery indictment of strongman culture and a subtle middle finger to the sycophancy and depravity now symbolic of Duterte-era politics.

Honorable Mentions: "Antigone vs. the People of the Philippines" (Sophocles'"Antigone," adapted by Sabrina Basilio; Tara Jamora Oppen, dir.); "Makinal" (Sophie Treadwell's "Machinal," adapted by Eljay Castro Deldoc; Nour Hooshmand, dir.); "Katsuri" (John Steinbeck's novella "Of Mice and Men," adapted by Bibeth Orteza; Carlitos Siguion-Reyna, dir.)

BEST ACTOR (PLAY)

"Katsuri," October 2019.

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BEST ACTRESS (PLAY)

"Anak Ka Ng," June 2019.

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BEST FEATURED ACTOR (PLAY)

"Fuente Ovejuna," November 2019.

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BEST FEATURED ACTRESS (PLAY)

"Tartuffe (o Ang Manloloko)," April 2019.

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BEST MUSICAL (NON-FILIPINO MATERIAL)

"Spring Awakening," March 2019.

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BEST MUSICAL (ORIGINAL FILIPINO MATERIAL OR ADAPTATION)

"Hanggang Isang Araw," March 2019.

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BEST ACTOR (MUSICAL)

"Company," September 2019.

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BEST ACTRESS (MUSICAL)

"Passion," September 2019.

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BEST FEATURED ACTOR (MUSICAL)

 "Himala, Isang Musikal," September 2019.

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BEST FEATURED ACTRESS-MUSICAL

"Walang Aray," October 2019.

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BEST DIRECTOR

"Dancing Lessons," August 2019.

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ARTISTIC AND TECHNICAL STANDOUTS

"Nana Rosa," March 2019.

LIGHTING

SET

COSTUMES

SOUND

"Charot!," February 2019.

MD

CHOREO

PROJECTION

TRANSLATION

BOOK

COMPOSITION

BRIEF








PDI Review: 'Break It to Me Gently: Essays on Filipino Film' by Richard Bolisay

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In which I review the debut book of someone I idolize and have long fanboyed over--the website version here

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Richard Bolisay's 'Break It to Me Gently': Essential reading for anyone who loves Filipino films

If you happen to be a Filipino cinephile who came of age on social media from the late 2000s onwards, you would no doubt be familiar with "Lilok Pelikula," the self-maintained and, sadly, now-defunct blog ran by film critic Richard Bolisay.

You would know that, like any respectable and self-respecting critic, Bolisay doesn't mince his words: His praises are lucid, his pans crafted with surgical precision. But more importantly, you would know that what sets Bolisay apart from his contemporaries--what makes him our most readable film critic--is that rare sort of deep-seated passion for the movies that informs his writing.

To read Bolisay's reviews is to see film in the eyes of someone with a genuine love for and understanding of the medium; someone who embraces emotion and doesn't flinch at the thought of putting it on paper in its rawest forms.

All that is evident in his debut book, "Break It to Me Gently," which is remarkable for being both a collection of incisive criticism and a sweeping survey of the 21st-century Filipino film landscape. The main goal was obviously to gather over a hundred reviews from Bolisay's blog into a single document; the result is a singular documentation, brimming with unfiltered compassion, of our film industry.

Despite covering mostly films of the new millennium, "Break It to Me Gently" never feels time-bound. Bolisay's reviews do not limit themselves to just the movie at hand; they work like tapestries, woven with a keen sense of history and context, and an awareness that, always, it takes a village to make a film. In one way or another, everything and everyone is covered, from Lav Diaz and Ishmael Bernal to Cathy Garcia-Molina and Erik Matti; from "Working Girls" in the 1980s to "On the Job" only six years ago to the numerous film festivals that have dotted the scene of late.

The introduction alone may well be reason enough to get the book: Already, the piece feels like essential reading for anyone who loves Filipino films and anyone who aspires to get into the nasty business of filmmaking and the even nastier business of film criticism. In this manifesto of sorts, Bolisay not only becomes a historian of the movies, but his very own historian as well, writing of the unspoken struggles and frustrations of being an arts critic this side of the world, in the process grounding his reader on the reality that writing about film--and writing in general--is never an easy task.

Everyone's a film critic these days, to go by Twitter and Rotten Tomatoes. To read Bolisay's book, then, is to realize that not everyone is cut out for the job. "Break It to Me Gently" shows us a master at work.

The Best of Manila Theater 2019, Part 2

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Part 2 of the annual theater roundup: the designers, writers, musicians--because print space limitations *sad face emoji*. The online version here.

SEE ALSO:
8. Compilation of links to my theater reviews

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Best of Theater 2019

"Nana Rose," March 2019.

One major limitation of print publications is the availability of space in any given issue. It is for this reason that the final section of our annual theater roundup, published last Dec. 14, included only our top choices for every design and technical category.

But the designers, writers and musicians are just as essential to any theater production as the directors and actors we recognized last week. What follows, then, is part two of our Best of Theater 2019. Of the 88 fully staged productions we saw in Manila this year, here are the names and works that left a most indelible impressions:

In lighting design, Aaron Porter produced the year's finest work with his psychedelic evocation of the '60s for "Beautiful: The Carole King Musical" and his black-and-white show of masterly exactitude for "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street."

Also--Shakira Villa Symes' dreamlike play with shadows for "Passion"; D Cortezano's lights-as-physical beats for "Alpha Kappa Omega"; Miyo Sta. Maria ("Spring Awakening"); Jonjon Villareal ("Angels in America: Millennium Approaches"); Dennis Marasigan ("Coriolano"); John Batalla ("Every Brilliant Thing"); Barbie Tan-Tiongco ("The Dresser"); Andre Gonzales ("Makikitawag Lang Ako"); and Jethro Nibaten ("Stop Kiss").

Director-designer Ed Lacson Jr. easily exceeded himself with his jaw-dropping theater-within-the-theater set design for "The Dresser," along with the Instagram-inspired look of "Stop Kiss" that wonderfully simplified the storytelling.

The crowded field also includes Ohm David's otherworldly wood paneling for "Spring Awakening"; Faust Peneyra's '60s throwback in "Beautiful: The Carole King Musical" and claustrophobic clutter for "Angels in America: Millennium Approaches"; Tata Tuviera ("Antigone vs. the People of the Philippines" and "If He Doesn't See Your Face"); Jason Tecson ("Passion"); Marco Viaña ("Lam-ang"); David Gallo ("Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street"); Kayla Teodoro ("Dancing Lessons"); Joey Mendoza ("The Quest for the Adarna"); Gino Gonzales ("The House of/Ang Tahanan ni Bernarda Alba"); Monica Sebial ("Alpha Kappa Omega"); and Charles Yee ("Nana Rosa").

For costumes, Bonsai Cielo's work for "Lam-ang" impeccably summoned the look and texture of native myth. Likewise, Gayle Mendiola and Leika Golez ("Spring Awakening"); Tata Tuviera ("Antigone vs. the People of the Philippines"); Raven Ong ("Beautiful: The Carole King Musical"); Hershee Tantiado ("Hanggang Isang Araw" and "Alpha Kappa Omega"); and Zenaida Gutierrez ("Passion").

For sound design, Arvy Dimaculangan's mastery of music and silence was most sublime in "Every Brilliant Thing," in addition to his topnotch soundscapes for "Laro,""Dolorosa" and "Freedom Wall"--bravo!

More: Teresa Barrozo ("Stop Kiss"); Jethro Joaquin ("The Dresser"); TJ Ramos ("Lam-ang" and "Coriolano"); Justin Stasiw ("Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street"); Glendfford Malimban ("Angels in America: Millennium Approaches"); Xander Soriano ("Alpha Kappa Omega"); and Jon Lazam and Marie Angelica Dayao's clever use of radio for "Nana Rosa."

"Charot!," February 2019.

For musical direction, Ejay Yatco was behind the lustrous, full-bodied music-making in "Spring Awakening" and the retooled "Mabining Mandirigma." Gerard Salonga ("Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street"); Daniel Bartolome ("Passion"); Farley Asuncion ("Beautiful: The Carole King Musical"); and Rony Fortich ("Company") also did first-rate work.

The year's standout choreography/movement deisgn was by Mica Fajardo for "Spring Awakening," trailed by Nicolo Ricardo Magno's for "Alpha Kappa Omega."

Steven Tansiongco's projection design for "Makinal" should have earned him a 1.0 for this thesis. The other notable in this field was GA Fallarme for "Angels in America: Millennium Approaches."

For translation/adaptation, the inimitable Guelan Luarca, besides his script for "Alpha Kappa Omega," also triumphantly tames Shakespeare with an easy-on-the-ears "Coriolano," while Sabrina Basilio emerged as the year's breakout writer with "Antigone vs. the People of the Philippines." Two more: Eljay Castro Deldoc ("Makinal"); and Nicolas Pichay ("Fuente Ovejuna").

The sharpest--and funniest--original book of a musical was Rody Vera's for "Walang Aray." Plus--Eljay Castro Deldoc ("Hanggang Isang Araw"); and Luna Griño-Inocian ("The Quest for the Adarna").

For original composition, Vince Lim was responsible for the riotous "Walang Aray" (with Vera's lyrics) and "Charot!" (lyrics co-written with Jeff Hernandez and Michelle Ngu). Also--Fitz Bitana and Krina Cayabyab ("Hanggang Isang Araw"); and new instrumental work by Teresa Barrozo in "Stop Kiss" and Arvy Dimaculangan in "Dolorosa."

Breakouts, brief appearances and readings. Finally, it is only right to recognize the three names that, for the first time, grabbed our attention and now have us looking forward to their next appearances: Nikki Bengzon ("Bring It On: The Musical"); Davy Narciso ("The Theory of Relativity"); and Paw Castillo ("Mabining Mandirigma" and "Lam-ang"). Luis Marcelo and Justine Narciso were a pair of perfectly cast surprises in "The Quest for the Adarna." In "Beautiful: The Carole King Musical," Gab Pangilinan and Teetin Villanueva each ran away with her time in the spotlight; ditto Sabrina Basilio in both "Spring Awakening" and "Dolorosa."

And the Company of Actors in Streamlined Theatre produced two staged readings that may as well have been the real thing. The first was James Goldman's "The Lion in Winter," directed by Mako Alonso and Jill Peña, with a delectably icy Roselyn Perez as Eleanor of Aquitaine, and Jaime del Mundo giving the year's first great performance as King Henry II.

The second was Arthur Miller's classic text "All My Sons," given a "painfully provocative Philippine" treatment, as Lifestyle's Theater reviewer Cora Llamas noted, by directors Nelsito Gomez and Wanggo Gallaga, the sensational ensemble led by Audie Gemora, Tami Monsod, Mako Alonso and George Schulze. For both shows--full staging, please!

The Best Theater of the Decade

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What a decade it's been. The idea was to do a 20-before-20, but obviously we couldn't even agree on a top 20. The dotnet version of this piece here.

SEE ALSO:

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Best theater of the decade
co-written with Arturo Hilado

So many plays, so little time.

There's the gist of the last 10 years in Philippine theater--or, at least, the ever-expanding scene in Manila that we have covered week after week to arrive at this best-of-the-decade rundown of homegrown shows.

Our theater industry remains a small and predictably unpredictable sphere.

Most productions are constrained to limit themselves to playing only on weekends, for runs that hardly go beyond a month.

It's an encouraging sign of the times, therefore, that running after anywhere between three and five productions in a single weekend has become a frequent occurrence, especially in the second half of the decade.

And we're not complaining.

So, a toast to the crème de la crème of the 2010s!

"Tribes," August 2016.

1) "Next to Normal" (Atlantis Productions, 2011; music by Tom Kitt, libretto by Brian Yorkey; Bobby Garcia, director). 

This electrifying, heart-shredding production was our first glimpse this decade of the mastery of the Broadway musical idiom that would become an Atlantis--and Garcia--signature.

Here, as well, we witnessed the first, and perhaps finest, of many fine turns--"fine" being a severe understatement--that the peerless Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo (as the bipolar protagonist Diana Goodman) would churn out in a 10-year span.

2) "Stageshow" (Tanghalang Pilipino, 2012; script by Mario O'Hara; Chris Millado, director).

Former Theater editor Gibbs Cadiz said it best: "An instant classic... [mapping] out a crucial lost era in the history of Filipino culture, and [filling] a gap in our understanding [of] what makes us the Scheherazades of the world, singing and dancing for our lives in the face of death and destruction.

Shamaine Centenera-Buencamino was sensational in a Herculean tour-de-force as bodabil star Ester. Her real-life husband Nonie Buencamino played her onstage husband--a whirlwind of dizzying virtuosity, attaining peak form with an explosive dance rendition of "I'm Gonna Live Till I Die."

3) "Der Kaufmann: Ang Negosyante ng Venecia" (Tanghalang Pilipino, 2013; William Shakespeare's "The Merchant of Venice," Filipino translation by Rolando Tinio, adaptation by Rody Vera; Tuxqs Rutaquio and Rody Vera, directors). 

We saw a number of outstanding Shakespeare adaptations this decade, but none as mind-bending as this.

It was the sheer ironic cruelty of it all, the themes of discrimination and domination played to devastating hilt, that stuck with you--Vera setting the story in a concentration camp where Jewish inmates are forced to "play" the play, given how the original's traditional villain happens to be the Jewish Shylock.

One of TP's most unforgettable productions: a comedy brilliantly transformed into unthinkable tragedy.

4) "Red" (The Necessary Theatre by Actor's Actors Inc., 2013; John Logan; Bart Guingona, director).

This two-hander happened to be that year's most cerebral play--talk of Matisse and Pollock, art and mythology, the endless vexations of the creative mind, populates the dialogue--but on the magnificent shoulders of Guingona (as the painter Mark Rothko) and the ever-reliable Joaquin Valdes (in one of his rare stage outings, as Rothko's fictional assistant), was also the most mesmerizing. 

5) "Sa Wakas" (Culture Shock Productions, 2013; book by Andrei Pamintuan and Ina Abuan, score by Ebe Dancel; Andrei Pamintuan, director).

Parallel to the surge of jukebox musicals on Broadway was a similar development hereabouts, our "honorees" so far including The Eraserheads, APO Hiking Society, Yeng Constantino, Aegis, and Francis Magalona.

But the best of the lot--and by best, we mean the tightest, most elegant and full realized fusion of story and music-making--was the 2013 premiere of this Sugarfree musical, telling a middle-class, millennial love triangle in the inverted-time structure of Stephen Sondheim's "Merrily We Roll Along." With musical direction by the prolific Ejay Yatco.

6) "Middle Finger" (Tanghalang Ateneo, 2014; Han Ong, Filipino translation by Ron Capinding; Ed Lacson Jr., director).

The claustrophobia and blinding confusion of coming-of-age in a society that wants its youth silenced and stifled, rendered with breathtaking fearlessness in what is undoubtedly the university company's most accomplished work this decade.

This was the year our hearts wept for Guelan Luarca (the playwright is also an actor!) and Joe-Nel Garcia as a pair of lost, tormented teenagers, and also the year Lacson emerged as formidable figure in theater directing.

7) "33 Variations" (Red Turnip Theater, 2015; Moisés Kaufman; Jenny Jamora, director). 

Unquestionably a highlight for the company that has made a name for pushing boundaries with heady, creatively challenging plays.

First-time director Jenny Jamora's management of the interpenetrating timelines was nothing short of astounding, as were the set (by Ed Lacson Jr.) and lighting design (by John Batalla) that combined economy and imagination.

With Shamaine Centenera-Buencamino, in yet another memorable role, as the dying musicologist Katherine Brandt, Teroy Guzman as fictionalized Ludwig van Beethoven, and Ejay Yatco as Guzman's piano-playing double, dazzlingly executing the titular "33 Variations" throughout the dramatic action. 

8) "Desaparesidos" (Ateneo Entablado, 2016/Ateneo Areté, Almonte, Bustamante and Jamora, 2018; Lualhati Bautista's novel, adapted and directed by Guelan Luarca).

In an era that cries out for politically engaged art, "Desaparesidos" captured both the courage and passion of the resistance struggle, and the heartaches bedeviling its (supposed) triumph.

Indicative of Luarca's protean abilities were its two incarnations: the visceral, epic-sweep, student-run original, and two years later, a marvelously tighter and deeper recalibration.

Seeing the two versions was almost "Rashomon"-like: the same canvas, merging the political and the personal, witnessed through somewhat different lenses--and a richer combined experience of this theatrical work for that.

9) "Fun Home" (Atlantis Theatrical Entertainment Group, 2016; music by Jeanine Tesori, libretto by Lisa Kron; Bobby Garcia, director).

With its themes of homosexuality, suicide and dead-end marriages, it certainly didn't fit the conventional happy-hummable Broadway mold. But what an indelible piece of theater--alternately funny and heartbreaking, and gripping in its emotional power and depiction of the complex human spirit.

As the subdued matriarch Helen Bechdel, Lea Salonga was no central character--the splendid leads were Cris Villonco (as Alison Bechdel) and Eric Kunze (as Bruce)--but it defied belief that anyone could have come away unshaken by her rendition of "Days and Days."

10) "Tribes" (Red Turnip Theater, 2016; Nina Raine; Topper Fabregas, director).

Inarguably the second peak in a remarkable three-year run of critical successes for the company, from "Cock" to "Rabbit Hole" to "Time Stands Still" to "33 Variations" (the first peak!) to "This Is Our Youth" to "Constellations."

"Tribes" felt like new plane for Red Turnip: The dominant aesthetics were silence and restraint, which the production pulled off impressively to become, as Cora Llamas wrote in her review, "compelling, consequential theater."

11) "Angry Christ" (UP Playwrights' Theatre, 2017; Floy Quintos; Dexter Santos, director).

Probably the best original Filipino play of the decade--a masterpiece on many levels, from Santos' nuanced evocation of an entire regional milieu to the explication of a bewildering, complicated artwork; from the intertwined depictions of class realities by Nelsito Gomez (as the painter Alfonso Ossorio) and Kalil Almonte (as Ossorio's fictional lowly assistant), to Monino Duque's lighting--bringing to literal light in the final scene the titular mural, before obliterating it to emotionally wrecking effect.

Above all, there was Quintos' magisterial writing, harnessing the multifarious strands in the life of an artist and a society.

12) "Ang Pag-uusig" (Tanghalang Pilipino, 2017; Arthur Miller's "The Crucible," Filipino translation by Jerry Respeto; Dennis Marasigan, director).

No other show that year came closer to approximating the culture of duplicity enabled by the Duterte administration than this force-of-nature play, mirroring our country in the Salem witch trials, where truth was sacrificed in favor of power and repute.

This was the TP Actors' Company at its most blistering since "Der Kaufmann": Jonathan Tadioan as Deputy Governor Danforth, JV Ibesate as John Proctor, Marco Viaña as Reverend Parris (and Proctor in the next year's rerun), Lhorvie Nuevo as the vacillating Mary Warren, and an ultra-fierce Antonette Go as the diabolical Abigail Williams.

13) "Himala, Isang Musikal" (9 Works Theatrical & The Sandbox Collective, 2018/2019; book by Ricky Lee, music by Vincent de Jesus, lyrics by Ricky Lee and Vincent de Jesus; Ed Lacson Jr., director).

This decade saw the original Filipino musical truly come into its own, and this "Himala" must be accorded pride of place--a tremendously moving parable of our country in this age of unthinking faith in messiahs.

Its core quartet of women was extraordinary: the luminous Aicelle Santos (Elsa), Kakki Teodoro (Nymia), Neomi Gonzales (Chayong) and Bituin Escalante (Saling, also played by Sheila Francisco in the 2019 run).

Beyond them, however, the best character was Barrio Cupang itself, the grit and desolation summoned to tenable life by topnotch direction and design.

"The Pillowman," October 2014.

My other picks

1) "Ang Nawalang Kapatid" (Dulaang UP, 2014; music by Ceejay Javier, Filipino adaptation of "Mahabharata" by Floy Quintos; Dexter Santos, director).

The most exhilarating dancing of the decade, the bone-breaking choreography (also--unsurprisingly--spearheaded by Santos) exceptionally executed by a troupe of mostly student-actors, including four of our most dependable names now: Ross Pesigan (Karna), Jon Abella (Yudisthira), Vincent Kevin Pajara (Duryodhana) and Teetin Villanueva (Draupadi).

2) "The Pillowman" (The Sandbox Collective, 2014; Martin McDonagh; Ed Lacson Jr., director). 

A one-off reading that was easily the towering highlight of "The Imaginarium" festival at the Peta Theater Center. McDonagh's police interrogation of an author accused of gruesome murders was an entrancing back-to-basics in narrating the horror story, finding consummate vessels in Audie Gemora (Katurian), Robie Zialcita (Michal), Niccolo Manahan (Ariel) and the late Richard Cunanan (as Tupolski, the comedy performance of the year). 

3) "The Bridges of Madison County" (2015; book by Marsha Norman, score by Jason Robert Brown) and"Waitress" (2018; book by Jessie Nelson, score by Sara Bareilles) (Atlantis Theatrical Entertainment Group; Bobby Garcia, director).

Two very American tales united by three elements: Garcia's emphatic focus on the text--his honest-to-goodness "tell the story" sensibility; first-rate design (Faust Peneyra's frame-laden walls and Jonjon Villareal's lights in "Bridges"; David Gallo's pink-and-blue rotating diner in "Waitress"); and Joanna Ampil as each production's emotionally crystalline and note-perfect leading lady.

4) "Mga Buhay na Apoy" (Tanghalang Pilipino, 2015; written and directed by Kanakan Balintagos).

What could have been just another family-under-fire drama turned out to be a flawlessly acted, beguilingly written, unmistakably Filipino work that understood the power of nostalgia--how the past is merely a Pandora's box of answers to all future times.

5) "Almost, Maine" (Repertory Philippines, 2016; John Cariani; Bart Guingona, director).

Repertory Philippines' best production this decade was this captivating little gem of whimsey and muted heartache, featuring the superlative acting quartet of Natalie Everett, Caisa Borromeo, Jamie Wilson and Reb Atadero; and John Batalla's Gawad Buhay-winning conjuring of the northern lights.

6) "Kalantiaw" (Tanghalang Ateneo, 2016; Rene Villanueva; Charles Yee, director).

A celebration of everything theater should represent: ingenuity, imagination, panache where it matters, and that rare ability to overcome so many odds given so little.

This was one of Yee's two enthrallingly stylized works that year (the other was "Ang Sugilanon ng Kabiguan ni Epefania")--marking him as primed for the big leagues.

The play, about one of Philippine history's biggest hoaxes, couldn't have been timelier, arriving at a time of rising historical revisionism.

7) "Spring Awakening" (Ateneo Blue Repertory, 2019; music by Duncan Sheik, libretto by Steven Sater; Missy Maramara, director).

The Tony-winning rock musical given a revelatory, lucidly mounted, across-the-board ravishing treatment, steeped in a profound understanding of youth, its juvenile nature and reckless desires, to evoke a world both archaic and frighteningly current. Also my choice for best musical of 2019.

"Mabining Mandirigma," August 2019.

Arturo's other picks

1) "Care Divas" (Peta, 2011; book by Liza Magtoto, score by Vincent de Jesus; Maribel Legarda, director). 

Magtoto's tale of five gay overseas Filipino workers in Israel--caregivers by day, drag performers by night--was wildly entertaining, campy glitter interwoven with personal heartbreak and the queens' oppressive sociopolitical realities.

The 2011 premiere was trailblazing in the way it gave ample space for both flamboyance and pathos, with a bittersweet spectacle of a finale that was a fitting salute to the musical's affirmation of Filipino OFW and LGBTQ resilience.

2) "William" (Peta, 2011; Ron Capinding; Maribel Legarda, director).

A delightful conjunction of smarts, laughter and heart, set to engaging rap music by Jeff Hernandez, "William" allowed its story's band of teenagers the possibility to grasp in Shakespeare's prose and verse an idiom for coping with reality. "The Bard for young people"--but done with great respect for both the youth and the Bard. Would that adults could "learn" their Shakespeare so authentically, indeed!

3) "Mabining Mandirigma" (Tanghalang Pilipino, 2015/2019; music by Joed Balsamo, libretto by Nicanor Tiongson; Chris Millado, director).

Groundbreaking in many ways: the "steampunk" aesthetic in the score and Toym Imao's visually arresting design; the casting of the central role of Apolinario Mabini with a woman (first Delphine Buencamino, then Liesl Batucan, Hazel Maranan and, most recently, Monique Wilson, in the musical's most polished version yet); and Tiongson's deeply affecting portrayal of the protagonist as fully human, love of country transcending infirmities and impulses to create a true modern hero.

4) "Changing Partners" (MunkeyMusic, 2016/2018; book and score by Vincent de Jesus; Rem Zamora, director).

A showcase of Filipino talent in the purest sense: haunting yet accessible music, remarkably intricate scripting, imaginative direction, and shape-shifting, gender-bending turns from Agot Isidro, Jojit Lorenzo, Sandino Martin and Anna Luna.

The 2016 premiere at the Peta Theater Center was already scintillating; the 2018 rerun gave the musical a richer, even more spacious texture. 

5) "The Kundiman Party" (UP Playwrights' Theatre, 2018; Floy Quintos; Dexter Santos, director).

Political theater seldom explores the social layers of uncertain ground.

Quintos' most recent play probed, through an absorbing narrative, how the comfortable but politically aware upper-middle class gropes for an effective response to the threats to society and country.

The cast was a roll call of generous portrayals of flawed, but very real, modern Filipino types, with Shamaine Centenera-Buencamino at the head as Maestra Adela, as nuanced a protagonist--hilarious, sad, passionate--as any in recent memory.

6) "Dekada '70" (Black Box Productions, 2018; Lualhati Bautista's novel, adapted and directed by Pat Valera, music by Matthew Chang, lyrics by Pat Valera and Matthew Chang).

Already an audaciously realized musical as a student thesis, but polished into it latest form in a matter of months.

It was an all-around triumph--adaptation, direction, music and orchestration--but the show no doubt belonged to Stella Cañete-Mendoza as Amanda Bartolome: Her moment in the finale, clenched fist raised as she stood at the head of the ensemble, was iconic.

7) "Passion" (Philippine Opera Company, 2019; book by James Lapine, score by Stephen Sondheim; Robbie Guevara, director). 

Sondheim is a master of the modern, intelligent musical, and "Passion" may just be his most demanding piece.

This production was simply gorgeous--visually, vocally, dramatically, turning a grotesque tale of obsession into an empathetic exploration of the nature of desire.

Starring a ferocious Shiela Valderrama-Martinez as Fosca, embodying physical and mental sickness, and affirming the transcending power of beauty and love.

"Fangirl," June 2019.

Plus: our favorite one-acts:

1) "Kawala" (Virgin Labfest, 2011; Rae Red; Paolo O'Hara, director).

Ingeniously utilizing only half the stage--the story, after all, is set in an elevator--it was a progressive laugh trip that arrived at something unexpectedly poignant. Starring the underrated Cris Pasturan as the elevator boy forcibly dragged into the private entanglements of his building's tenants.

2) "Kublihan" (Virgin Labfest, 2015; Jerome Ignacio; Guelan Luarca, director).

Exquisitely simple--some 45 minutes of dialogue between two high school friends on the brink of parting ways--but amazing how, despite minimal resort to the explicit, it contained a world of adolescent emotion and inner experience.

3) "Si Maria Isabella at ang Guryon ng Mga Tala" (Virgin Labfest, 2015; Dean Francis Alfar's short story "The Kite of Stars," adapted by Eljay Castro Deldoc; Ed Lacson Jr., director).

This was sheer poetry, Lacson's staging investing the production with a wondrous sense of yearning and magical realism. Starring Krystle Valentino in her breakout role as the title character.

4) "Indigo Child" (Never Again: Voices of Martial Law, 2016; Rody Vera; Jose Estrella, director).

Powerful how it rose above polemics to put a wrenchingly human face to the legacy of a brutal dictatorship. Movingly acted by Skyzx Labastilla and Rafael Tibayan as a mother-and-son tandem coming to terms with the past and each other.

5) "Mula sa Kulimliman" (Virgin Labfest, 2016; Carlo Vergara; Hazel Gutierrez, director).

Crisp, unpredictable writing, and worth seeing again and again, if only for Mayen Estañero giving the performance of a lifetime as an ordinary housewife who discovers her husband is not of her world.

6) "Fangirl" (Virgin Labfest, 2019; Herlyn Alegre; Charles Yee, director).

The seemingly ridiculous phenomenon of pop-culture fandom as engrossing comedy--one high-octane, LOL sequence after another landed perfectly by the tireless trio of Mayen Estañero, Marj Lorico and Meann Espinosa.

Finally, more decade-best works: Reb Atadero in "Dani Girl"; Nicco Manalo in "This Is Our Youth"; Myke Salomon as (jukebox) musical director of the decade with "Rak of Aegis,""3 Stars and a Sun,""Ako si Josephine" and "Ang Huling El Bimbo"; Mikkie Bradshaw-Volante in "Carrie"; Carla Guevara-Laforteza in "Rent" and "Nine"; the kulintang music and igal choreography of "Sintang Dalisay"; Audie Gemora in "The Producers" and "La Cage aux Folles"; Skyzx Labastilla in "Ang Dalagita'y 'sang Bagay na Di-buo"; Gwyn Guanzon's soil-drenched set for "Rite of Passage"; Cathy Azanza-Dy in "Silent Sky"; Kakki Teodoro in "Every Brilliant Thing"; PJ Rebullida's choreography for "Newsies"; the quartet of Frances Makil-Ignacio, Ces Quesada, Missy Maramara and Harriette Damole in "The Dressing Room: That Which Flows Away Ultimately Becomes Nostalgia"; Sheenly Vee Gener in "Ang Mga Bisita ni Jean"; Ed Lacson Jr.'s set and direction for "Stop Kiss"; Tami Monsod in Upstart Production's staged reading of "Wit"; Jennifer Blair-Bianco in "Venus in Fur"; Gab Pangilinan in "Ang Huling El Bimbo"; Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo's "The Ladies Who Lunch" in "Company"; Pinky Amador in "Piaf"; Lea Salonga in "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street"; and Mio Infante's instantly unforgettable set for "Rak of Aegis."

PDI Feature: Extra Virgin Labfest 1

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So I wrote about this recent trip to CDO here.

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Extra Virgin Labfest: 'Mindanao theater is Philippine theater

Gala night of EVLF at the Rodelsa Hall lobby, Liceo de Cagayan University.

Every year, for the last 15 years, the Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP) has devoted two to three weeks of its calendar to the Virgin Labfest (VLF), a festival of "untried, untested, unstaged" plays that CCP vice president Chris Millado said began as an effort "to address the fact that fewer and fewer writers are doing one-act plays."

The effort has come a long way. Since 2005, VLF has premiered over 150 titles. Some have become full-length films, like Juan Miguel Severo's "Hintayan ng Langit." Others have earned recognition in such a prestigious body as the Palanca Awards, like Guelan Luarca's "Mga Kuneho" and "Bait," and Ma. Cecilia dela Rosa's "Ang Mga Bisita ni Jean." 

VLF can now count an additional 12 new one-acts to its name: the nine fully staged plays and three dramatic readings that comprised Extra Virgin Labfest (EVLF), which ran Dec. 4-7 at Liceo de Cagayan University, Cagayan de Oro City, marking the festival's first venture beyond Manila.

A dream

On gala night, the university's 700-seat Rodelsa Hall was packed. Cameramen and videographers roamed the lobby, where red carpets had been rolled out to welcome arriving audiences, a number of whom were literally dressed to the nines--all of it quite nothing like the low-key, casual affair that has been the norm at the CCP.

All of it, as well, was just a dream five years ago, when EVLF festival director Hobart Savior first raised the idea of bringing the festival to Mindanao, in a conversation with playwright Rody Vera, longtime head of VLF coproducer The Writer's Bloc.

The realization of that dream is only affirmation that "Mindanao theater is Philippine theater," as Savior declared to the gala night audience--affirmation that is, in fact, crucial to a country where the theater scene (and its coverage by leading print and online publications) remains concentrated in the capital city.

Breaching barriers

The differences brought forth by the breaching of geographical and cultural barriers were immediately apparent. For instance, Dominique La Victoria's "Ang Bata sa Drum," performed as a one-off gala night special, was surprisingly both more intimate and powerful in its new, purely Bisaya form (the translation from its original Tagalog-Cebuano mix care of Savior himself).

Regional sensibilities, too, surfaced with regional playwrights--writers "who know their land and people," as Savior put it, dramatizing issues that resonate loudest in the Southern part of the country.

Lendz Barinque's "Ang Mga Babae sa Kusina" focused on the role of women--or their continuing silencing--in Muslim society.

Darren Bendanillo's "Banga" and Norman Isla's "Daang Papunta, Daang Pabalik" both dealt with the specter of the siege of Marawi.

Gil Nambatac's "Si Balaw ug ang Lablab sa Palawpao" infused traditional dance into its dramatization of the persisting purge of indigenous communities out of their ancestral lands.

Or consider, for example, the staged reading of Abigail James'"Birhen," how it merged the issue of folk medicine (its protagonist is an albularya, a traditional healer) into the narrative of messy romantic entanglements (a love triangle figures int the plot!) in a way that, to this author's mind, would lose its potency, should its Cebuano script be subjected to translation.

Mindanaoan languages

Of the 12 plays, in fact, only one was written in pure English, and a couple purely or partly in Tagalog. The rest were in languages spoken across Mindanao, most prominently Cebuano and Hiligaynon.

The nine fully staged plays were divided into three sets of three plays each, each set playing a matinee and an evening performance, the festival's four-night run a collaboration among nine Mindanaoan playwrights, 10 directors, 50 actors and 45 production staff.

The rawness of the plays and the productions can, of course, be easily attributed to necessary birthing pains. As VLF production manager Nikki Garde-Torres later wrote on Facebook: "Of course, there is much to improve. There always is. But the strength of having the courage to stage 'untried, untested and unstaged' works lies also in the courage to face constant change--in systems [and] in styles of expression."

If anything, EVLF only highlighted the need to nurture not just playwrights, but also directors, actors and designers--and perhaps, even theater arts programs themselves, be they in the university or community settings.

There is much to improve, indeed. But as demonstrated by the first, and hopefully not the last EVLF, there is always a path to achieving results.  

The Year in Film and TV (2019)

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I'm doing something different this year: I'm combining movies and TV in a single list. Feels just about right, given how three of the best things I saw onscreen were TV series/miniseries. The same personal rule once again applies: My list is, first, a rundown of favorites (because I am not my colleague Emil Hofileña ["Emil Reviews Things"], who somehow has the time and stamina to watch everything); and, second, a combination of the current year's new releases and the previous year's leftovers. If you're reading this on desktop or desktop mode, there's a sidebar to the right that lists every movie and TV show I saw this year. Now on to the list!

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1. Parasite (dir. Bong Joon-ho)
The perfect moviegoing experience. 

2. Chernobyl (HBO; dir. Johan Renck)
A five-hour-plus nervous breakdown.

3. Fleabag, Season 2 (BBC; dir. Harry Bradbeer)
Short, sweet, rapturous and flawless. That first episode should be taught in film schools everywhere.

4. An Elephant Sitting Still (dir. Hu Bo)
A sweeping triumph of portraiture, both macro (the fucked-up 21st-century Chinese society at large) and micro (the lost and lonely inhabitants of this modern-day epic). 

5. Edward (dir. Thop Nazareno)
Maybe it's just my biases as a doctor at play. Maybe it's really the best Filipino film of 2019. Take your pick. 

6. Oda sa Wala (dir. Dwein Baltazar)
If you're not yet a Dwein Baltazar stan, then you're not doing drag. 

7. Succession, Season 2 (HBO; dirs. various)
For starters: "Boar on the floor!"

8. Cleaners (dir. Glenn Barit)
A remarkably precise and tender love letter to a distinctly Filipino high school experience (by way of Damián Szifron's "Wild Tales"). This is exactly what it meant and felt like to come of age in the late 2000s.

9. Knives Out (dir. Rian Johnson)
Dictionaries should edit themselves to use this film in sentence examples of "fun."

10. The Favourite (dir. Yorgos Lanthimos); Shoplifters (dir. Hirokazu Kore-eda); By the Grace of God (dir. François Ozon)
A three-way Sophie's choice: The Greek and his blacker-than-black black comedy; the Japanese and his quiet, and quietly heartbreaking, exploration of family and poverty; and the Frenchman taking on the Catholic Church with machine-gun rhythm.

And now for my next 10--because despite the likes of "Joker,""Uncut Gems,""A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood," etc., 2019, like the previous year, still offered an embarrassment of riches. 

11. Portrait of a Lady on Fire (dir. Céline Sciamma)
Every frame is a painting. Every scene gleams with care and patience.

12. The Crown, Season 3 (Netflix/ dirs. various)
The strongest season so far. "Aberfan"? Josh O'Connor's "Hollow Crown" monologue? Charles Dance in that Montbatten episode? And look how the series has embraced its teleserye roots.

13. Marriage Story (dir. Noah Baumbach)
It's rightfully leading the Best Picture tally at present--and this isn't even Baumbach's best yet (that would be "Frances Ha").

14. Can You Ever Forgive Me? (dir. Marielle Heller)
Why didn't this win more awards last season?

15. Barry, Season 2 (HBO/ dirs. various)
If the Filipino word "baliw" were turned into TV, this is how it would look like.

16. The End of the F***cking World, Season 2 (Channel 4/All 4/Netflix; dirs. Lucy Forbes & Destiny Ekaragha)
Every episode kept below 25 minutes. (Short-form) storytellers, pay attention!

17. Sila-Sila (dir. Giancarlo Abrahan)
Theater people really are God's gift to the world. (P.S. Gio Gahol deserved that Best Actor festival prize.)

18. Catastrophe, Season 4 (Channel 4; dir. Jim O'Hanlon)
The discipline that this has. Every episode at/below 25 minutes, part II.

19. Hustlers (dir. Lorene Scafaria)
This is how I love my dose of mainstream.

20. Midsommar (dir. Ari Aster); Us (dir. Jordan Peele)
A tie between these two this *low* in my list, if only because as follow-up efforts, they feel *less* than "Hereditary" and "Get Out," respectively. Still brilliant, tho.

BUT WAIT--there's more. In alphabetical order, 10 more titles I'd recommend in a heartbeat to anyone who asks: Ad Astra (dir. James Gray); American Factory (dirs. Steven Bognar & Julia Reichert); Bacurau (dirs. Kleber Mendonça Filho & Juliano Dornelles); Elise (dir. Joel Ferrer); Isa Pa with Feelings (dir. Prime Cruz); Lola Igna (dir. Eduardo Roy Jr.); The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Season 2 (Amazon Prime Video; dirs. various); Metamorphosis (dir. J.E. Tiglao); One Child Nation (dirs. Nanfu Wang & Jialing Zhang); Russian Doll, Season 1 (Netflix; dirs. various).

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My favorite performance of the year--heck, what should be the performance of the year--is MICHELLE WILLIAMS in "Fosse/Verdon." I suspect we'll be talking about her monumental, infinitely giving turn as Gwen Verdon for decades to come. Here are *20* more performances, from an ocean of great performances, that I can watch again and again and again:
  • Louise Abuel (Edward)
  • Carlo Aquino (Isa Pa with Feelings)
  • Timothée Chalamet (Beautiful Boy) 
  • Toni Collette (Knives Out)
  • Olivia Colman (The Favourite; Fleabag, Season 2)
  • Charles Dance (The Crown, Season 3)
  • Alessandra de Rossi (Lucid)
  • Adam Driver (Marriage Story)
  • Gio Gahol (Sila-Sila)
  • Bob Jbeili (Lucid)
  • Jennifer Lopez (Hustlers)
  • Natasha Lyonne (Russian Doll, Season 1)
  • Lupita Nyong'o (Us)
  • Josh O'Connor (The Crown, Season 3)
  • Peng Yuchang (An Elephant Sitting Still)
  • Joe Pesci (The Irishman)
  • Brad Pitt (Ad Astra; Once Upon a Time in Hollywood)
  • Florence Pugh (Midsommar)
  • Jose Javier Reyes (Ang Babae sa Septic Tank 3: The Real Untold Story of Josephine Bracken)
and the ensemble of "Succession," Season 2.

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The Decade in Film (2010-2019)

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As of today, I have seen 844 films released in the last 10 years. Yes, I do in fact keep a list, thank you for asking. Is that a good enough number? I came to the local festival circuit pretty late (2015, to be exact--the year of "Sleepless" in QCinema). I spent two years during the latter half of the decade based in Iloilo City, which meant time away from the Manila-exclusive film festivals, where many of our local titles have lived and continue to live their ephemeral lives. Why did "The King's Speech," a movie that is just okay at best (albeit starring Colin Firth, Geoffrey Rush and Helena Bonham Carter in top form), win the Academy Award for Best Picture and Best Director over the masterpiece that is "The Social Network"? That is a question I still ponder every now and then. Below, I've made a 20-before-20, though in the process of making the collage, I realized I needed to choose a top 10, hence the picture. Lemme know what you think!

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MY TOP 10 FILMS OF THE DECADE (in alphabetical order):


1. Arrival (2016; dir. Dennis Villeneuve)
A masterclass in thrilling storytelling through and through. This New Yorker review by Anthony Lane sums up my sentiments precisely.

2. Frances Ha (2012; dir. Noah Baumbach)
By far, the best work of the director who has also given us "The Squid and the Whale,""Mistress America,""The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected)" and "Marriage Story." 

3. Happy as Lazzaro (2018; dir. Alice Rohrwacher)
Starts out as neorealism, then morphs into something between magic and myth. An utterly beguiling cinematic gift.  

4. Inside Llewyn Davis (2013; dirs. Joel & Ethan Coen)
The Coen Brothers' finest work this decade is a rumination on success and sadness by way of a folk musical. Who would have thought?

5. Lady Bird (2017; dir. Greta Gerwig)
Love takes limitless form--for parent, lover, friend, place, time--in this sublime reinvention of the American bildungsroman.

6. Norte, Hangganan ng Kasaysayan (2013; dir. Lav Diaz)
This "astonishing study of madness and its accompanying instruments" topped CNN Philippines' rundown of the best Filipino films of the decade. Nobody disagrees.

7. Parasite (2019; dir. Bong Joon-ho)
The perfect moviegoing experience. I caught an early-afternoon screening with maybe 10 senior citizens in the theater--and let me tell you, dear reader, the energy in that room was wild, wild, wild.

8. A Separation (2011; dir. Asghar Farhadi)
"A trenchant emotional thriller that you watch in dread, awe and amazing aggravation," wrote Wesley Morris for The Boston Globe. That 99% critics' score (based on 173 reviews) on Rotten Tomatoes sounds just about right.

9. The Social Network (2010; dir. David Fincher)
Hell (and heaven for us viewers) in the form of fragile male egos stabbing each other with words. If I had to pick only one film to represent the decade, this might be it.

10. Weekend (2011; dir. Andrew Haigh)
Even "the defining LGBTQ film of the decade" feels like an inadequate encapsulation of this airtight masterwork.

MY NEXT 10 FILMS OF THE DECADE (in alphabetical order):

11. Apocalypse Child (2015; dir. Mario Cornejo)
Drama with a capital D, that moves with a believably human brain, and knows which wounds to poke and sores to reopen on your puny mortal soul.

12. Certified Copy (2010; dir. Abbas Kiarostami)
The late Roger Ebert spent almost nine paragraphs of his review trying to figure out this mesmerizing, mind-tickling two-hander, before admitting that "perhaps it was wrong of me to even try"--and I am nodding in agreement.

13. Edward (2019; dir. Thop Nazareno)
Maybe it's just my biases as a doctor at play. Maybe it's really the best Filipino film of 2019. Take your pick. 

14. An Elephant Sitting Still (2018; dir. Hu Bo)
A sweeping triumph of portraiture, both macro (the fucked-up 21st-century Chinese society at large) and micro (the lost and lonely inhabitants of this modern-day epic). 

15. Gone Girl (2014; dir. David Fincher)
If you can survive watching "Gone Girl" get shut out of every category (save for Best Actress) on Oscars nominations day, then you can survive anything.

16. Looper (2012; dir. Rian Johnson)
Where does one even begin with this film? The Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress that year did not go to Emily Blunt (she wasn't even nominated), and we are mad as hell.

17. The Master (2012; dir. Paul Thomas Anderson)
The Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor that year did not go to Philip Seymour Hoffman, and we are also mad as hell. Also probably as good a time as any to share that, for one shining moment, I did consider joining Lancaster Dodd's cult (the power of PTA, yea!).

18. Oda sa Wala (2018; dir. Dwein Baltazar)
If you're not yet a Dwein Baltazar stan, then you're not doing drag. 

19. Spotlight (2015; dir. Tom McCarthy)
This is why journalism--the truth and its telling--matters.

20. 20th Century Women (2016; dir. Mike Mills)
Transcends the specificity of its non-Developing World narrative to capture the universal pains and pleasures, confusions and convolutions of coming of age.

PLUS--*30* more titles (in alphabetical order) to make 50:

Boyhood (2014; dir. Richard Linklater); Bridesmaids (2011; dir. Paul Feig); Call Me by Your Name (2017; dir. Luca Guadagnino); Child's Pose (2013; dir. Calin Peter Netzer); Cleaners (2019; dir. Glenn Barit); Cloud Atlas (2012; dirs. Tom Tykwer, & Andy & Lana Wachowski); The Favourite (2018; dir. Yorgos Lanthimos); Honor Thy Father (2015; dir. Erik Matti); Inception (2010; dir. Christopher Nolan); Kiko Boksingero (2017; dir. Thop Nazareno); La La Land (2016; dir. Damien Chazelle); Mad Max: Fury Road (2015; dir. George Miller); Maps to the Stars (2014; dir. David Cronenberg); Margaret (2011; dir. Kenneth Lonergan); Neighboring Sounds (2012; dir. Kleber Mendonça Filho); Nightcrawler (2014; dir. Dan Gilroy); Pamilya Ordinaryo (2016; dir. Eduardo Roy Jr.); Phantom Thread (2017; dir. Paul Thomas Anderson); Roma (2018; dir. Alfonso Cuarón); Shame (2011; dir. Steve McQueen); Shoplifters (2018; dir. Hirokazu Kore-eda); Take Shelter (2011; dir. Jeff Nichols); Tangerine (2015; dir. Sean Baker); Three Identical Strangers (2018; dir. Tim Wardle); A Touch of Sin (2013; dir. Jia Zhangke); Violator (2014; dir. Eduardo Dayao); Wild Tales (2014; dir. Damián Szifron); The Wolf of Wall Street (2013; dir. Martin Scorsese); Zero Dark Thirty (2012; dir. Kathryn Bigelow); and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Parts 1 & 2 (2010, 2011; dir. David Yates) because die-hard Potterhead here.

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PDI Feature: 2020 theater calendar--so far

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I made a friggin' listicle in today's paper!

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10 things to look forward to in 2020 theater season

"Dekada '70" at Ateneo de Manila University, September 2018.

We're not here to deal with what Lin-Manuel Miranda calls "crazy hypotheticals." For instance, from the grapevine: The stage adaptation of the 1992 Whitney Houston vehicle "The Bodyguard"? No formal announcement yet.

On the other hand, our 2020 theater calendar already has 24 items all firmed up. What are we looking forward to the most? Here's a list of 10 to start things off:

1. Menchu onstage--again

Why yes, we mean the one and only Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo. She's long been referred to as Philippine musical theater's first lady, and for good reason.

Who else in this lifetime can claim to have played both The Witch and The Baker's Wife in "Into the Woods," Johanna and Mrs. Lovett in "Sweeney Todd," Joanne--twice!--in "Company," Fantine in "Les Miserables" (and Cosette in a concert version), Cathy in "The Last Five Years," Eva Perón in "Evita," Luisa in "Nine" and Fosca in "Passion"?

In March, Lauchengco-Yulo reunites with Bobby Garcia and Atlantis Theatrical Entertainment Group for "The Band's Visit." The last time she was in an Atlantis production, she brought the house down as the fanatical Margaret White in "Carrie."

This time, she plays café owner Dina--which won Katrina Lenk the 2018 Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical.

2. BlueRep's 'Next to Normal'

"Ballsy" is the word that came to mind at the news of Ateneo Blue Repertory (BlueRep) closing its 28th season with Tom Kitt and Brian Yorkey's masterwork, not least because the upcoming production has mammoth shoes to fill.

The rock musical's Manila premiere nine years ago, directed by Garcia for Atlantis and starring Lauchengco-Yulo as the bipolar protagonist Diana, recently made our list of the Best Theater of the Decade.

For BlueRep, Missy Maramara directs (she also helmed last year's "Spring Awakening," which we named 2019's Best Musical--Non-Filipino Material). Six-time Gawad Buhay winner Cris Villonco plays Diana; two-time Gawad Buhay winner Jef Flores plays her husband Dan. Our tissues are on standby, while we swoon at how hip and sexy this millennial pairing looks on poster.

3. A pair of classics

We're getting the British musical about orphans that gave us the immortal line "Please, Sir, I want some more," and the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, the immortal "If I Loved You" and "You'll Never Walk Alone," within a month of each other.

"Oliver!" opens in June as Atlantis' second show for the season. "Carousel" opens in May, marking the Repertory Philippines (Rep) debuts of director Toff de Venecia, and Gian Magdangal (as Billy Bigelow) and Nikki Gil (as Julie Jordan). When was the last time Manila saw a piece of theater that predates the Tony Awards?

4. 'Rep Unplugged'

Slated for June, another surprise up Rep's sleeve: an "out-of-the-box,""unconventional,""alternative" theatrical piece, titled--quite simply--"Rep Unplugged," with Ed Lacson Jr. directing.

What's it about, exactly? Your guess is as good as ours, but we're all buckled up for Liesl Batucan's first year as Rep's artistic director.

5. New blood at Virgin Labfest

This annual festival of "untried, untested, unstaged" one-act plays at the Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP) is also getting a new director--JK Anicoche, whose past works include "Battalia Royale" (Inquirer Lifestyle's Best Play--Original Filipino Material for 2012) and Samuel Beckett's "Waiting for Godot" in five versions for Tanghalang Ateneo (TA). 

The Labfest's 16th edition also received a record 290 submissions--a 43-percent increase from last year's "measly" 207--and will be playing June 10-28. The lineup will be announced within the next three months.

6. A new CCP theater

At long last, Manila's premier arts center will be getting a new (black box) theater: the 300-seat Tanghalang Ignacio Gimenez, right across the Philippine International Convention Center. Hopefully, this is where we'll be watching the Labfest already.

7. Four CAST readings

The Company of Actors in Streamlined Theatre gave us some of our most memorable theatrical outings last year.

Lauren Gunderson's "The Revolutionists" was a "spectacular first offering... invigorating mentally and emotionally," wrote Arturo Hilado. Directors Nelsito Gomez and Wanggo Gallaga turned Arthur Miller's "All My Sons" into "painfully provocative Philippine drama," noted Cora Llamas. And James Goldman's "The Lion in Winter" featured 2019's first great performance in Jaime del Mundo's Henry II.

What do we know of this season? Only that the venue is still Pineapple Lab in Poblacion, Makati City, and that the theme is "When Music Plays." Per company custom, the title of each play is revealed only at the start of the reading itself (each play gets only a matinee and an evening show, so seats are extremely limited).

The first reading is Jan. 12.

8. More university productions

2019 was a terrific year for campus theater. Three of our picks for the year's best productions were either thesis plays or by university campuses. The University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman's lineup of student theses alone included August Strindberg's "Miss Julie," Peter Weiss'"Marat/Sade" and Beckett's "Happy Days."

Already announced for 2020: Liza Magtoto's take on Caryl Churchill's "Top Girls" for TA; the return of Far Eastern University Theater Guild's "Ang Pinakamakisig sa Mga Nalunod sa Buong Daigdig" (Risa Jopson's adaptation of Gabriel García Márquez's short story "The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World"); and UP Dulaang Laboratoryo's adaptation of Nick Joaquin's "The Summer Solstice."

9. Another jukebox musical

In June, Resorts World Manila will present "Bongga Ka 'Day," a jukebox musical that features the songs of Hotdog, the band that defined the "Manila Sound." The musical's creative team includes Magtoto, Maribel Legarda and Myke Salomon--the brains behind the megahit "Rak of Aegis."

10. 'Lagárì' season

In show-biz parlance, lagárì (the Filipino term for "saw") connotes being swamped in so many commitments, one's body might as well be sawn off to get to all the places it needs to be.

Slated between mid-February to early April are Tanghalang Pilipino's "Batang Mujahideen," Trumpets'"Joseph the Dreamer," the international tour of "Matilda, The Musical," Rep's "Stage Kiss" and "Anna in the Tropics," Black Box Productions'"Dekada '70," Dulaang UP's returning "Nana Rosa," etc.

Are we ready--yet again--for the first-quarter lagárì season? You bet.  

PDI Feature: Repertory Philippines''Stage Kiss' on their first kiss

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It's already Valentine's month! I thought I'd do something different with an advancer this time. The website version here. "Stage Kiss" runs from Feb. 7-Mar. 1 at Onstage Theater, Greenbelt 1, Makati City.

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'As if time had stopped'--the first kiss

In 2017, Manila saw two plays by the American playwright Sarah Ruhl--"Eurydice," mounted by Tanghalang Pilipino using a Filipino translation by Guelan Luarca, and "In the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play)" by Repertory Philippines (Rep).

Next week, Rep returns to Ruhl with its 83rd season opener: "Stage Kiss," a backstage farce in which two ex-lovers suddenly find themselves playing the romantic leads of the play within the play. Carlitos Siguion-Reyna directs, with Missy Maramara (Best Director of Inquirer Lifestyle's 2019 theater roundup) and Tarek El Tayech (Theatre Titas'"Macbeth,""BuyBust") as ex-lovers.

Ahead of the Feb. 7 opening night--and just in time to usher in Valentine's season--we asked the cast and crew of "Stage Kiss" to tell us all about their first kisses, either onstage or in real life.

Here are excerpts from our email exchanges:

My mom always said that when I was in preschool, I kissed this cute boy in my class. So I grew up thinking my first kiss was gone. The first kiss that mattered, though, was right after high school, with a boy from another school who was very good in math. He watched all my plays even if he wasn't into theater. I really liked him, even if I was also terribly infatuated with my scene partner in our school play. (Said partner was also super cute, and most everyone had a huge crush on him, too.)

Onstage, it was with Jenny Jamora in New Voice Company's "Stop Kiss" in 2003. That was when I learned how stage kissing is such a delicate component of theater--and nothing like real kissing. Onstage kissing should let the audience be the ones to "feel," and the actors have to be careful not to get lost in the act. It involves a different kind of discipline and trusting relationship. 
--Missy Maramara, "She"

I have a theory that my kisses make people famous. I had to kiss JC Santos and JM de Guzman in "Isang Panaginip na Fili," and today they're both movie stars. Who wants to be my next leading man?
--Mica Pineda, "Laurie"/"Millicent"

I was around 10. My older sister's classmate would always grab me every time she saw me, and kiss me on the lips. All I remember is liking it. My first onstage kiss: in a production of "Much Ado About Nothing" eons ago, where I played Claudio! Me as a romantic lead. Awkward.
--Robbie Guevara, "The Husband"

I've played romantic roles, the third party and even an abusive man, but I've had only three onstage kisses, all very chaste, and all in Shakespeare: with Shiela Valderrama-Martinez and Issa Litton in "A Midsummer Night's Dream," and Niccolo Manahan in the all-male "The Taming of the Shrew." I wonder when I will be cast in a role that will allow me to go to town. Any takers?
--PJ Rebullida, choreographer

It was an innocent peck; I was playing doctor with this girl. It was before puberty hit.
--Tarek El Tayech, "He"

I had a make-out scene in "Burles" (Dulaang Unibersidad ng Pilipinas, 1978, written by Rene Villanueva, directed by Jonas Sebastian) where I had to kiss the cheeks and neck of my scene partner. During the first weekend run, she asked me why I wasn't really kissing her and, instead, was just pretending to do so by brushing my lips against her skin. I had thought that the 15-year-old me was trying not to take advantage of her. After that, my kisses during the second weekend became more realistic.
--Dennis Marasigan, lighting designer

It was early in high school. She was an exchange student, with surfer blonde hair and a great smile. We kissed in the field at school after class, with the sun getting lower on the horizon. We were walking hand in hand, and I sensed that we could both feel the moment approaching. We stopped walking and faced each other, and then something changed in her eyes, as I am sure something in mine did. It did seem as if time had stopped, and the rest of the world--the noise of children playing, a football game in progress, even the rustling of the leaves--had faded away.

That magical first kiss had everything in it: awkwardness, excitement, expectations, fear and nervousness, and the feeling that even if we both knew she was leaving, maybe this could somehow be a reprieve. When we had parted, and opened our eyes, and finally caught our breaths, we smiled.

She was perfect in the afternoon sun. And then the smiles disappeared, and our eyes closed as we leaned in to kiss again, and in my eagerness, I bumped her teeth. We laughed, then stepped closer to try again,
--Jamie Wilson, "The Director"

My family and I moved to Ho Chi Minh City when I was in middle school, and that was peak teen--"truth or dare" and "spin the bottle" parties galore. Long story short, I was dared to kiss some dude, when I really wanted to kiss my crush, who was right next to him. My best friend ended up kissing my crush instead, so you can only imagine how a 14-year-old would react!
--Justine Narciso, "Angela"/"The Maid"

None--or shall I say, none yet? But either in real life or onstage, it will probably be full of sweetness and excitement, knowing how warm and soft, or how cold and hard, the other must be. Shall I keep my eyes closed? How do I even prepare for that? Perhaps I am scared of the intimacy that will certainly go beyond a mere peck on the cheek or a gentle touch on the forehead, but just the thought of a little kiss is thrilling.
--Nick Nañgit, pianist

I was crushing on this girl from a baseball movie that I watched growing up. I was so infatuated with her that one day, with no one around, I walked up to the TV, pressed the pause button, and gave her a big kiss on the screen. 
--Andres Borromeo, "Kevin"/"The Understudy"

If I had an Academy Award ballot, 2020...

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Oscars' eve, Philippine time. Here are my choices! Note that my "should have been nominated" picks are based on how well the films fared during precursor season. (I make an Excel file every year for fun, but also to put some science into this whole crazy business, and the science actually makes sense!)


BEST PICTURE

Winner: "PARASITE"
Alternate: "LITTLE WOMEN"

On a customized preferential ballot, this is how I would rank the Best Picture nominees:

1. "Parasite"
2. "Little Women"
3. "Marriage Story"

[gap]

4. "1917
5. "The Irishman"
6. "Jojo Rabbit"
7. "Ford v Ferrari"

[gap]

8. "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood"

[gap]
[gap]

[a million more gaps]

9. "Joker"

"Parasite" is far and away the deserving winner, but "Little Women" can win over it and I would be perfectly happy. Among the Best Picture contenders during precursor season, "Knives Out" would be my third placer, ahead of "Marriage Story.""1917" has extremely dumb situations as major plot points. The third act of "The Irishman" is the film I would have wanted to see more of. "Jojo Rabbit" is cute, but never really transcends its cuteness. "Ford" is fun during the racing scenes. "Once..." was an exasperatingly alienating viewing experience. And "Joker" got this year's trash nominee slot, akin to "Bohemian Rhapsody" last year.

BEST DIRECTOR

Winner: BONG JOON-HO, "PARASITE"
Should Have Been Nominated: Greta Gerwig, "Little Women"; Céline Sciamma, "Portrait of a Lady on Fire"

No alternates. The floor is now open for questions, but I will not be taking any. Greta should be in Todd Phillips' slot, and Céline, in Quentin Tarantino's (yes, fight me). That should have solved the "no women" complaint.

BEST ACTOR

Winner: ADAM DRIVER, "MARRIAGE STORY"
Alternate: Antonio Banderas, "Pain and Glory"; maybe Jonathan Pryce, "The Two Popes"
Should Have Been Nominated: Brad Pitt, "Ad Astra"

Joaquin Phoenix has been sweeping the precursors and is going to win for a bad movie. (He was great in "The Master," but there was obviously no beating Daniel Day-Lewis' Abraham Lincoln; he was also great in "Her," a movie I initially adored but now find kind of blech.) Driver clearly deserves to win this year. Banderas would be my alternative vote. Pryce is my far third; I'm not a fan of "The Two Popes" (ordering a cake and getting a muffin). Leonardo DiCaprio, whose Oscar should have been for "The Wolf of Wall Street"--no one was better that year--is nominated this year for a movie I do not care about at all. I would take out either Leo or Joaquin (coin toss; I couldn't care less about the result) and write in Brad Pitt in "Ad Astra." How am I faring so far as "brutally honest Oscars voter"?

BEST ACTRESS

Winner: SAOIRSE RONAN, "LITTLE WOMEN"
Alternate: Renée Zellweger, "Judy"
Should Have Been Nominated: Lupita Nyong'o, "Us"; Florence Pugh, "Midsommar"

This should be Lupita's second Oscar. But oh, she's not even nominated. So Renée has also been sweeping the precursors and is going to win for a movie that does not deserve her performance. I am fine with her winning. If we go by the actual lineup, Saoirse would get my vote in a heartbeat. Scarlett and Renée both stay. Charlize Theron and Cynthia Erivo both shouldn't even be here; their nominations should have gone to Lupita and Florence Pugh in "Midsommar." Pugh and Pitt should both be double acting nominees this year. Also, the irony that Lupita, who won an Oscar for playing a slave, isn't this year's token Black woman in the lineup; instead, it's Erivo, who's up for Best Actress for--guess what--also playing a slave. Let it be known: What Lupita does in "Us" is the stuff that legends are made of.

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

Winner: BRAD PITT, "ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD"
Alternate: Joe Pesci, "The Irishman"
Should Have Been Nominated: Song Kang-ho, "Parasite"; Choi Woo-shik, "Parasite"; Wesley Snipes, "Dolemite Is My Name"; Timothée Chalamet, "Little Women"

This will be a well-deserved acting win for Brad Pitt. If Joe Pesci pulls off an impossible upset, I will cheer for him. Al Pacino, Tom Hanks and Anthony Hopkins can all go. Pacino is doing classic loud Pacino here. I don't care for Hanks as a stilted Mr. Rogers; I think the film is loads of bull, and Hanks should have been nominated for "Captain Phillips" or even "Sully." Hopkins did what he could with the role. Two actors from "Parasite" are so much more deserving of nominations. Also, Wesley Snipes in "Dolemite"--when camp succeeds, you just know it. If not Snipes, then Chalamet in "Little Women"--nobody has been talking about this performance (maybe it's Chalamet fatigue), which is a shame, because it is terrific in its subtlety.

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Winner: LAURA DERN, "MARRIAGE STORY"
Alternate: Florence Pugh, "Little Women"
Should Have Been Nominated: Jennifer Lopez, "Hustlers"; Cho Yeo-jeong, "Parasite"

I am fine with Laura Dern winning; she is dynamite in this film. Florence Pugh can also win it for that scene alone in the drawing room with Timmy. Kathy Bates can stay in the lineup for her work in "Richard Jewell." ScarJo's "Jojo Rabbit" turn and Margot Robbie in "Bombshell" have to go; in a just world, this should really be Jennifer Lopez's Oscar. Cho Yeo-jeong would be my fifth nominee; her vacuous character is my favorite performance in "Parasite."

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

Winner: BONG JOON-HO & HAN JIN-WON, "PARASITE"
Alternate: Rian Johnson, "Knives Out"
Should Have Been Nominated: Lulu Wang, "The Farewell"; Céline Sciamma, "Portrait of a Lady on Fire"

Noah Baumbach's script for "Marriage Story" is my third placer. Quentin and "1917" out, Wang and Sciamma in--now there's a solid original screenplay lineup.

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

Winner: GRETA GERWIG, "LITTLE WOMEN"

No alternates. This is clearly Gerwig's Oscar. To take on a classic novel and somehow reinvent it as your own? "Jojo Rabbit" could never.

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

Winner: ROGER DEAKINS, "1917"
Alternate: Jarin Blaschke, "The Lighthouse"
Should Have Been Nominated: Claire Mathon, "Portrait of a Lady on Fire"

What is "Joker" doing here again? That should have been Claire Mathon's nomination--and win. But I'm perfectly fine with Roger winning his second; the cinematography, after all, is one of the strongest elements of "1917." I thought "The Lighthouse" was just okay as a whole.

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN

Winner: "PARASITE"
Alternate: "1917"

BEST EDITING

Winner: YANG JIN-MO, "PARASITE"
Alternate: Andrew Buckland & Michael McCusker, "Ford v Ferrari"
Should Have Been Nominated: Todd Douglas Miller, "Apollo 11"

I am by no means a fan of "Apollo 11"--I was awed by its technical accomplishment of having woven all those photographs, footages, and recordings into a narrative, but I found the whole just okay. There were certainly more engrossing documentaries this year (see below). But this is the one category that "Apollo 11" deserved a nomination; again, what is "Joker" doing here?

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE

Winner: ALEXANDRE DESPLAT, "LITTLE WOMEN"
Alternate: Hildur Guonadóttir, "Joker"

This is the only "Joker" win I would support (it's gonna happen).

BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

Winner: "FOR SAMA"

I am not a fan of "Honeyland." Thirty minutes into it, I was like, what the fuck am I watching? At the end of last year, I was totally fine with "American Factory" winning this. But an "American Factory" win would only be further proof of Hollywood elitism, of just how insular these awards are. People are dying in Syria, Brenda. Doctors are risking their lives to save lives! But oh, sure, let's vote for the movie about how other cultures are taking jobs away from Americans. I jest a little. "American Factory" is a terrific film. But my heart belongs to "For Sama"; I found "The Cave" too produced, its polish getting in the way of authenticity. "For Sama" would be a worthy winner; it would be a great winner.

P.S. I haven't seen "The Edge of Democracy."

BEST ANIMATED FILM

Winner: "KLAUS"

What a terribly weak field. "Toy Story" was good, but is the weakest of the "Toy Story" films. "I Lost My Body" is a glorified story about a creep. "How to Train Your Dragon 3" is the weakest of the trilogy. And I've yet to see "Missing Link."

BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE

Duh.

PDI Review: 'Under My Skin' by PETA

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My review of the first production I really liked this year--the website version here.

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A must-see: 'Under My Skin' is Peta's return to form

Curtain call during media night of "Under My Skin."

First things first: "Under My Skin" is indisputably a return to form for the Philippine Educational Theater Association (Peta). As a theatrical piece, it hits the mark; as an advocacy play, it is a triumph.

In the last decade, Peta has alternated between straightforward dramas and well-intended advocacies: Anton Chekov's "The Cherry Orchard" and Marsha Norman's "'night, Mother" vis à vis original work such as "William,""A Game of Trolls" and "Charot!" The results, especially for the originals, haven't always been unqualified successes.

"Under My Skin," written by Rody Vera, tackles the HIV-AIDS crisis in the Philippines, where the current daily average of people being diagnosed with the virus is now at a distressing 36. Comparisons to such landmark plays as Larry Kramer's "The Normal Heart," or even Tony Kushner's "Angels in America," are thus inevitable.

But "Under My Skin" does its forebears one better: It has a keen awareness of its dramatic potential, but practices remarkable restraint in fulfilling that potential.

How HIV works

This play knows exactly how HIV works--how it exists in the casual grind of everyday life, in the silences and pauses that fill our day-to-day activities; how, despite scientific advancement and giant leaps in humanitarian action, it still exists; how, no matter the tears shed or words imparted, it will continue to exist.

A line from a key character is most essential to the point this play so intelligently, thoughtfully drives home: It is pointless to dwell on the drama. In "Under My Skin," the impact of the virus takes not the form of grand, tear-filled moments or scenes where characters scream and shout their emotions to the heavens. There is crying and shouting, sure, but it is all done at a decibel level that is recognizably real--a reminder that the "h" in HIV stands for "human," after all.

In positioning his play on an all-too-human plane, Vera has written what may be his most accomplished original theatrical piece in years--one that deals with the science of the story with the same superlative skill employed in its critique of the 21st-century gay community, all while weaving in and out of multiple plot lines, the characters intersecting in scenes, facts flowing alongside and even bleeding into the fiction. 

Ilustrative

And the science here, take note, is handled with such expert skill, it's honestly breathtaking and a breath of fresh air. What Vera does in this play is the kind of pedestrian translation that most of the medical and scientific community is simply incapable of doing--the breaking down of mind-numbing facts and jargon into language at once understandable and illustrative. Witnessing Vera explain the intricate pathophysiology of HIV-AIDS--through more-than-justified breaking down of the fourth wall, no less--makes you realize what a better, and clearer, world we'd be living in right now if only our scientists were also potent communicators.

Vera is greatly aided by Steven Tansiongco's video projections--the most effective use of the medium we've seen since projections started to be in vogue in local theater--and Teresa Barrozo's sound design and instrumentals, in their best moments elevating the story to the level of thriller, or late-night stand-up, or heartfelt drama. At this point, it may seem a tad greedy to ask for more--tighter direction from Melvin Lee (for the moments that feel either too loose, or too heavy-handed with the drama) or a more uniform level of performance from the ensemble (though there are standouts in Roselyn Perez, Gio Gahol, Anthony Falcon, and even Dudz Teraña, providing a "nonintermission intermission" that could have been a solo drag performance in itself).

As it is, the premiere of "Under My Skin" is still, pardon the cliché, a must-see. It aspires to a vision of a healthier world, along the way tearing down barriers both social and intellectual, while never once losing sight of the reality we're grappling with now.

Listen only to the subtle oohs and aahs from the audience during the play's educational portions: That right there is the sound of impactful, meaningful theater. That right there is why we keep going to the theater.

PDI Review: 'Batang Mujahideen' by Tanghalang Pilipino

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Between this and PETA's "Under My Skin," it's shaping up to be a great year for the original Filipino play. The website version of this review here.

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'Batang Mujahideen': Magnificent drama told through facts

A puppet figures in Tanghalang Pilipino's (TP) premiere of Malou Jacob's "Batang Mujahideen." It is the character of Fatima, who witnesses her father's death at the hands of a Christian extremist, and is later transplanted to an Abu Sayyaf training camp. We see her learn to use a gun, take necessary steps to become the title character--child jihadist--in the definition that militants have reduced "jihad" to.

Fatima is only a piece of the puzzle. The larger world of the play is set in March 2000, when the Abu Sayyaf raided two schools in the island-province of Basilan and abducted over 50 individuals, including students, teachers and a Roman Catholic priest. Fatima learns to hate; the kidnapping victims learn the taste of fear.

How these two narrative strands intertwine is but one of the many strengths of this play, which, though written by Jacob, is also devised--developed and written further--by director Guelan Luarca and the TP Actors Company (AC) that comprise the cast, with dramaturgical input from Dominique La Victoria.

The end point is something we already know: Violence begets violence. An entire school coming under a terrorist attack may not be of the same contextual scale as a father being brutally murdered before his child's eyes, but the seed of fear, and more importantly, of hate, is planted all the same.

No cop-outs

The play acknowledges that as a fact of life; it serves us drama through facts, and not cop-outs. But more importantly, the play recognizes that the path to a violent end is preceded by a constant push and pull between fighting for peace and giving in to the temptation for revenge. This inward interrogation is ever present in the play, in the way it structures its plot points and in the words of its characters: The cycle of violence may often prevail, but its path to victory isn't easy. Everywhere there are people who still believe in goodness, and who will stand by goodness, despite the odds.

Luarca captures all that and more. His production flows with an assured rhythm, like a cogent debate, brimming with ironic calm and intellectual rigor. He lets his actors shift between playing narrators and characters in the story at a brisk pace that never sacrifices clarity. There are arresting scenes of violence, even some coups de theatre, but these are interspersed between lengthy moments of quiet, the play somehow insisting on storytelling and conversation--the power of words!--as salvation.

Flawless

The design of this production is fundamentally flawless. Marco Viaña and Paw Castillo, in addition to designing the costumes, have created a set that resembles a classroom jungle, with flexible blocks and staircases to conjure different worlds and timelines. D Cortezano (lights) and Arvy Dimaculangan (sound) are reliable as always, turning in topnotch work; their contributions are most essential in materializing violence onstage, complementing Jomelle Era's movement design.

Among the cast, Manok Nellas and Jonathan Tadioan are forceful presences in their multiple characters, but the standout is longtime AC member Lhorvie Nuevo. Hewing to the prologue's promise to disregard age and gender, Nuevo plays fallen Abu Sayyaf head Khadaffy Janjalani with an acute understanding of the combined power of kindness and silence. Marlon Brando in "Apocalypse Now" and Joe Pesci in "The Irishman" both knew this: Sometimes, the softest voice in the room is the most frightening of all. Amid the theatrical carnage, you can't help looking at, and for, Nuevo.

There are faults in this production, of course--graphics that come up short in a logistical sense, performances that are either far less commanding than a role demands or hammy to a degree, lines of dialogue that are distractingly on-the-nose polemical.

No matter, "Batang Mujahideen" is still magnificent, astutely crafted theater. It runs for less than 90 minutes, which is nothing if not intelligent use of such brief stage time. It has five remaining performances (no thanks to COVID-19!), but deserves to run for plenty more. 

PDI Review: 'Dekada '70' by Black Box Productions

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I like this show less now than when I first saw it two years ago, but it's still an important, must-see piece. The website version of this review here.

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'Dekada '70': The revolution is alive in this musical

Pat Valera addressing the audience post-show two years ago. The production has returned to the same venue this year.

Plays set in or centered on the Marcos dictatorship (these days, interchangeable in certain ways with the Duterte administration) all come to us with that singular, oft-intoned message: Never forget. Pat Valera's musical adaptation of the Lualhati Bautista novel "Dekada '70" tells its audience exactly that, but in all capital letters.

There is no denying the revolution, in its myriad forms, is alive in this musical, which has been enjoying a sold-out rerun at Ateneo de Manila University. That can only be for the best.

One can argue that the resistance taking the form of song and dance is, in effect, preaching to an echo chamber--the sort of people willing to shell out money for an obviously anti-Marcos (and by extension, anti-Duterte) piece of theater are in all likelihood long on the same page as the play itself--but lest we forget, today's high school kids weren't even born during the second Edsa Revolution, and their K-12 curriculum has made a joke out of Philippine History as a subject.

In that sense, "Dekada '70" should stick around this notoriously amnesiac nation for as long as it can, hopefully packing every performance not just with theatergoers who are there on their own dime, but more importantly with scores of students, their parents and teachers.

Far from perfect, but...

Never mind that both the play and its current iteration under Black Box Productions are far from perfect.

"Dekada '70" examines literally a decade of life under martial law through the eyes of the comfortably middle-class Bartolome family. The stage version actually feels like watching a decade unfold.

There are two--not just one, but two!--plays-within-the-play, on top of drawn-out song numbers that bleed into each other and scenes that either repeat previous points or gratingly spell the point out for the audience.

Throughout this production, the volume, both auditory and emotional, is set to maximum; the action is always an approximation of fear and confusion; the moments of silence become literal breaths of fresh air, you would think this show might one day outlaw the mere act of breathing. And, by the way, the exhausting pace that this production insists on actually shows, most visibly taking its toll on the performers toward the end of both acts.

It's still an excellent cast, though, and taken on its own, the score by Valera and Matthew Chang gives us some genuinely heart-stopping anthems.

Stella Cañete-Mendoza's performance alone is still worth the price of admission; the narrative journey she brings the audience along, her transformation from subdued matriarch to empowered woman, remains a most accomplished creation of the stage.

Note, as well, that her real-life husband Juliene is playing her onstage husband--and that we can probably make notebooks of notes out of studying their masterful pairing.

When Cañete-Mendoza's Amanda finally asserts her personhood--"My God, Julian, it's a woman's world, too!" she tells her husband--it's as perfect a moment as any for applause. Fast-forward to a few minutes later, and husband and wife reconcile, earning a tender moment between themselves. Then, the play launches into song--in itself, a terrific piece of music, but in the context of the production, like rubbing the script on the viewer's nose.

That's "Dekada '70" in a nutshell."

PDI Review: 'Next to Normal' by Ateneo Blue Repertory

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Manila theater is officially shut down. It has been heartbreaking, to say the least. This one, in particular, is a huge loss. The website version here.

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'Next to Normal': 2020's best local musical you'll miss due to Covid-19

The COVID-19 (new coronavirus) outbreak in Metro Manila this past week virtually crippled what had promised to be a bustling month for theater, with as many as 13 canceled productions for this weekend alone.

Among the casualties is "Next to Normal"--and it's especially hard not to feel dejected over this one: This new staging by Ateneo Blue Repertory (BlueRep) may well be the year's best local musical production.

It's easy to say that BlueRep had a straight path to victory. The material, after all, is a Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece, and masterpieces are harder to bungle. But it is precisely how this "Next to Normal" highlights what a masterpiece the musical is that makes the production an unmissable work.

Emotionally lacerating

Once again codirecting with Darrell Uy (after last year's ravishing "Spring Awakening"), Missy Maramara helms this production--and again, sidesteps the temptation to yield to the material's rock-musical roots. The result is "Next to Normal" with its insides fully exposed--an emotionally lacerating, meat-of-the-matter treatment that only brings to light the airtight, organic quality of Tom Kitt and Brian Yorkey's writing and music-making.

Another way to put it: Maramara's production visibly makes sense of the material--of the lyrics, and of the story itself. The plunge into the unraveling lives of the fictional Goodman family (consisting of Diana, who has bipolar disorder, her husband Dan and daughter Natalie) never once feels rote or dishonest. Every element in this production, both human and nonhuman, is intertwined.

This "Next to Normal" becomes an even more outsized accomplishment when one considers the physical space it is given: Ateneo de Manila University's Gonzaga Fine Arts Theater, a cramped box of a room that the affluent school has somehow passed off as an actual "theater." Why this place is home to this show is topic for lengthier talk, but one thing's clear: This place does not deserve this masterpiece and the tremendous talent it employs.

Overcoming limits of space

Yet somehow we should also thank this venue, if only for the chance to witness the topnotch skill involved in this production, how it has overcome the limits of space through intelligent direction and design.

Tata Tuviera's set reflects the fragile state of the Goodman family, especially Diana's state of mind, and effectively evokes the story's needed spaces, working hand in hand with Franco Ramos' efficient movement design, Miyo Sta. Maria's strategic lighting and Cholo Ledesma's crystal-clear sound design. And Tuviera's costumes, take note, are fine specimens of what one might label "no-costumes costumes."

Main draw

The main draw of any "Next to Normal" would be rightfully its Diana--a Herculean part requiring any actress to wander stoutheartedly what the lyrics call the "manic, magic days and [dark], depressing nights." But guided by Maramara, and on the strength of its actors, this production becomes at once the individual and converging stories of Diana, Dan and Natalie.

Cris Villonco is, simply put, heartbreaking as Diana, but equally so is Jef Flores as Dan; they are breathing, singing, open wounds, and we'd be heaven-blessed to come across a more magnificent pair of leading performances this year. As Natalie, Nikki Bengzon (alternating with Jam Binay) is a vision of clarity, in every sense of the word, and one of the most exciting newcomers to the scene we've seen of late.

In fact, so thoughtfully staged is this production that it even makes you care about the Goodmans' son Gabe (Tim Pavino, affecting and in wondrous voice, alternating with Adrian Lindayag), Natalie's boyfriend Henry (Carlos de Guzman, immensely likable, alternating with Davy Narciso), and Diana's doctors (Jobim Javier, alternating with Jason Tan Liwag, who is "authoritative as a man of science," notes former Theater editor Gibbs Cadiz).

In the program, Maramara writes: "The hope of art is to sublimate human experiences [into] a form that allows for manageable confrontation." On that account alone, this "Next to Normal" is a success. It is also a musical triumph (the musical direction by Ejay Yatco), and a powerfully moving time at the theater. It is the real deal.

PDI Review: 'The Band's Visit' by Atlantis Theatrical Entertainment Group

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This was the last production I saw before the Metro Manila quarantine was enacted. The website version here. The original Broadway cast recording has been a go-to mental-health break for days now.

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'The Band's Visit' was simply perfect

Years from now, we will talk of Atlantis Theatrical Entertainment Group's "The Band's Visit" and remember how it was forced to close even before it could open.

The irony will not be lost on us: how a musical about human connection had to dim its lights prematurely because of a pandemic that spread, among other means, through human contact.

Fatalists might even claim the musical's book set it up for that irony. "You probably didn't hear about it. It wasn't very important," goes the opening supertitles, referring to the story of a fictional Egyptian police orchestra that winds up not just in the wrong town, but also in the wrong country.

Overnight, the musicians are adopted by the Israeli townspeople--allowed into their homes, and for that brief span, into their "bleak" and "boring" lives.

Anything but boring

This Atlantis production was anything but bleak or boring. It was, in fact, one of the finest musical productions to have graced our stage in at least the last decade.

As directed by Bobby Garcia, we saw and understood exactly why this show--written by Itamar Moses and scored by David Yazbek--deserved its Tony Award for Best Musical.

"The Band's Visit" is a true-blue "book musical," the kind of song-and-dance theater that favors sound storytelling over spectacle; where the singing and dancing aid the narrative, instead of the narrative merely interspersed between musical numbers.

The New York Times called it "an honest-to-goodness musical for adults," and that assessment is just about right. Very little, in terms of incident, may seem to happen in this 90-minute show, but my, does it open up human worlds and histories as evocatively and eloquently as it illuminates the ordinary and seemingly inconsequential in the lives of its characters.

That, and more, we gleaned from Garcia's production, its compact yet measured pacing reflective of the wisdom and insight that went into its making. And it wasn't just Garcia's direction--everyone involved in this production did topnotch work.

Farley Asuncion's musical direction was remarkable for its clarity, as for its illusion of simplicity.

Faust Peneyra's set was of a piece with Adam Honoré's lights. The deceptively barren walls and sparingly outfitted performance space could have revealed its tricks only through the genius lighting design.

Seamless

Odelon Simpao's costumes and Justin Stasiw's sound design were essential to the seamless creation of the world of this musical, and GA Fallarme's projections heightened effectively the parts of the show where they were needed.

And that cast? Not a false note: Reb Atadero's girl-baffled Papi; the easy-to-miss groundedness of Bibo Reyes' Itzik and Steven Conde's Simon; Mark Bautista delivering a performance of composed suavity as Haled; even Maronne Cruz's brief but realized turns as Julia and a bus station clerk, to name a few.

The star pairing of Rody Vera (as orchestra conductor Tewfiq) and Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo (as café owner Dina) was of an entirely different level--two lead performances that glimmered with that rare sort of intelligence, when an actor knows exactly how much to give or withhold in every single scene, and in the process, expand the world of the musical way beyond its perceived limits.

If it isn't clear enough, yes, if there were such a thing as a perfect production, "The Band's Visit" was just about it. Very few saw it during its invitational technical dress rehearsals. It was beautiful. It was important. And it should visit us again the moment we get past this pandemic--hopefully soon. 

PDI Feature: Theater cancellations amid COVID-19

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Fucking pandemic. The website version here.

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Cancellation notices simply heartbreaking

How does one even begin to take stock of unprecedented loss--much less learn how, or what, exactly to feel?

It's a thought worth pondering these days of the Luzon quarantine, which shuttered nine theater productions and led to either the postponement or cancellation of 18 more, including eight slated to open the week the quarantine was announced.

Make no mistake, this was a necessary move. We still know very little about the enemy--and we're not even being dramatic in calling COVID-19 "the enemy"--though we know for certain it thrives in close quarters. Logic only followed that the theater, an art form that breathes through human proximity and intimacy, should close immediately.

A necessary move, no doubt. But it doesn't make it any less heartbreaking. Unlike Broadway or the London's West End, whose marquees dimmed all at once following organized edicts from above, the Manila theater industry instead endured day after day of pounding uncertainty.

"The show must go on" has always been a powerful adage, fueling productions even in times of man-made disasters or natural calamities, and fuel productions it did in the weeks leading to the quarantine announcement.

State of limbo

At first, it was just Tanghalang Pilipino's (TP) "Batang Mujahideen" preemptively canceling performances, its show buyers--mostly schools--withdrawing their participation, given the pandemic's looming threat.

Then with the initial suspension of classes in Metro Manila from March 10 to March 14, the university productions were sent into what could have only been a harrowing state of limbo. (Do they make up for canceled performances? Extend the run? Close altogether?)

Even on the night of the quarantine announcement itself, two productions--Atlantis Theatrical Entertainment Group's (ATEG) "The Band's Visit" and Repertory Philippines' (Rep) "Anna in the Tropics"--were more than ready to open, should they have been allowed to do so, while the international tour of "Matilda the Musical" carried on at The Theatre at Solaire.

Now, only drawn curtains and heartbreak magnified. When the theater has become so integral to your life, as it has been to the writers of this section--when your weekends are plotted according to the varying runs of productions, and chasing after shows across the region's scattered stages has become a way of life--the sight of these productions posting closing or cancellation notices one after another can be a most gut-wrenching experience.

Perched distantly as surveyors of the scene, we cannot even claim to imagine how much more difficult a time it has become for the artists themselves--the writers, directors, performers, designers, musicians, publicists, crew members, who actually keep our stages running and burning bright.

Economic impact

The economic impact of this pandemic will be brutal. Perhaps it may be too early for a thorough assessment of the damage that these closures and cancellations have brought upon Philippine theater, but already we are seeing just how fragile the fabric of an industry we have touted to be "booming" all these years remains.

What of our freelancers? What of our practitioners who are also breadwinners? What of those for whom theater and the performing arts are, clichés be damned, truly the world--financially, as much as artistically?

So it has been heartening, to say the least, seeing our theater artists themselves take up the cudgels, in the many ways they know how. Some have brought their craft online, through storytelling sessions and concerts on Facebook Live, or even streamed yoga and dance sessions.

Others have started advocacy and awareness campaigns against the pandemic through song.

Most important, #CreativeAidPH, led by JK Anicoche, Laura Cabochan, Jopie Sanchez, Komunidad, Sipat Lawin and the Concerned Artists of the Philippines, has launched an online platform to gather concrete data from individuals on the economic and financial damage the pandemic has so far caused--which is exactly the kind of moving-forward step the industry needs.

The next time you use the word "resilient," theater practitioners better be at the top of your mind.

So--for now--take your virtual bows:

"Anna in the Tropics" and "Carousel" (Rep); "The Band's Visit" and "Oliver!" (ATEG); "Bogus Pokus" (Harlequin Theatre Guild); "Dekada '70" (Black Box Productions); "Enrico IV" (TP); "Every Brilliant Thing" and "Lungs" (The Sandbox Collective); "In the Heights" (Broadway Theatre Troupe of Ateneo); "Juan Tamban" (Dulaang ROC); "Kublihan,""Kung Paano Maghiwalay" and "Swipe Right, Siz" (College of St. Benilde Theater Arts); "Macli-ing" (Ateneo Entablado); "Matilda the Musical" (GMG Productions); "Nana Rosa" (Dulaang UP); "Next to Normal" (Ateneo Blue Repertory); "Once a Panahon" (Juliene Mendoza/9th Studios Creative Hub); "Ang Pangahas na si Pepe Rodriguez" (Teatro Tomasino); "Rashomon" (ViARE); "The Revolutionists" (Cast); "Tabing Ilog the Musical" (Star Hunt/ABS-CBN); Tamdula 3 (FEU Theater Guild); "Top Girls" (Tanghalang Ateneo); "Under My Skin" (Peta); and "Walang Damit ang Hari ng La Mancha sa Mata ng Hangal" (Dulaang Sipat Lawin).

We'll see you in the theater when this pandemic is over. The day our curtains rise again is the day we look forward to the most.

PDI Opinion: Adding fuel to the COVID-19 inferno

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What a fucked-up time we are living in now. Every hour, something infuriating just seems to happen in this country. The website version of this rant here.

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Adding fuel to the COVID-19 inferno


It's hard not to envy the Singaporeans. Through a televised address on March 12, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong laid out in a mere 11-and-a-half minutes the state of his country amid the COVID-19 pandemic, and his government's plan of action. The speech was clear, concise, and, most importantly, reassuring, the gist of it being: We are wading on uncharted waters, but your leaders are on top of things.

How nice to have a government--or even just a head of state--that actually knows how to talk to its people, instead of sending them into alternating states of panic and paranoia.

The same day as Lee's address, President Duterte also faced his nation. He was two hours late to the scheduled broadcast, and when he finally appeared, it was to announce--in increments--the provisions of the Metro Manila quarantine. "Announce now, details to follow" was the gist of the whole affair, as if the document he was reading were the most banal and unimportant thing.

Days later, his lackey, presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo, also took to the podium. Mind you, this was before the actual announcement of the "enhanced quarantine"--now the whole island of Luzon was to be locked down. Among the many things Panelo said: The Cabinet was about to propose a Luzon-wide lockdown to the President (so why was he already blabbing about it to the media?); the country was taking South Korea's lead in locking down (Korea has done no such thing); eating bananas and gargling saltwater would prevent you from getting COVID-19 (they won't); and the operations of such services as supermarkets and food cargo deliveries would be impeded (the Department of Trade and Industry had to quickly go on record to refute that statement).

Neither instance was out of character; anyone who has lived through all three-and-a-half years of Mr. Duterte's presidency should by now be familiar with its penchant for chest-beating and noise-making set to maximum. "We can say what we want and get away with it" has always been the gist of this government.

It's only rational, then, to think that, for all the proactive actions it has indeed taken, this government remains blithely unaware of just how extraordinary and precarious a time we are living through--that now, more than ever, the unhinged minds occupying its highest echelons must take responsibility for every single word they utter.

In the two instances cited above, what transpired afterward was only expected. Perhaps for the nth time within the span of two weeks, many people in Metro Manila found themselves panic-buying, prodded by vague, doomsday-like proclamations from above to head to groceries, pharmacies, and other establishments. In other words, crowding in public places--and, quite possibly, transmitting the virus among themselves. The pictures of these crowds--the indirect result, it must be emphasized, of the government's reckless mouth--are just some of the stuff that health care workers' nightmares are made of these days.

And it isn't just its mouth this government can't control; it also doesn't care about the kind of messages it sends out to its already anxious and agitated people.

The country running short on testing kits for the virus? Let's have asymptomatic politicos get tested, anyway, violating the algorithm set by the Department of Health, and have them parade their results in public. Meanwhile, patients under investigation for COVID-19 are dying in our hospitals without even knowing if they were positive for the virus.

A pandemic laying siege to our fragile health care system? Let's have a law-and-order solution to this public health problem, with checkpoints manned by the military, ill-equipped and clueless about the necessary hygienic precautions (though hopefully not as clueless now).

Nobody expects any government to get through this pandemic perfectly. But the least it can do is provide a reassuring voice to its people, and show them it is exhausting every possible means to get them through this unprecedented time--something numerous local government units, through the leadership of their mayors and governors, seem to be achieving.

Our national government, on the other hand, is only adding fuel to the Philippine COVID-19 inferno. Not only are we facing a virus the world still knows very little about, we must also deal with leaders who don't know how--or don't care--to talk to us like they actually want us to survive this pandemic.
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