Showing posts with label theater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label theater. Show all posts

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Ghost The Musical Manila, What Can I Say?


THANK YOU TO GOD FOR GIVING ME ANOTHER BLESSING OF JUST PAYING P1800 on a discounted ticket. I was at the center orchestra, eye-level. Perfect seat. 
GHOST THE MUSICAL MANILA IS THE BEST LOCAL PRODUCTION OF A MUSICAL PLAY I HAVE SEEN BY FAR (If you don’t agree, let us just agree to disagree… Hehe). IF at all, it was ultimately Cris Villonco who is the reason. Her performance was phenomenal, she hit the high notes so well though songs were hard and GAVE SUPERB ACTING PERFORMANCE. She made me cry. I never cried watching a play ever! Her rendition of "With You" was so heartfelt, it made me teary-eyed and her version is even better than Cassie Levy's (the original Molly in West End and Broadway). She carried the cast despite having some low energy in some scenes by the ensemble. 

This is also CHRISTIAN BAUTISTA’S BEST PERFORMANCE IN THEATER TO DATE. I do not agree with critics that his role was draining and his portrayal was not believable for he exuded so much empathy to the character and his portrayal was with consistent intensity! I am so glad I watched it!

Met my classmate Maize and we were both mesmerized. The stage was simple but the lighting was fantastic. The play sends the message that the love of a person even after death remains with us, and lives in us.

Johann Gabriele Dela Fuente congratulations! I like what you did with Cris’ smokey eyes bro! Continue the good work!

LAST SHOWING TODAY. STANDING OVATION BTW. Weeeeh! LET US CONTINUE TO SUPPORT PHILIPPINE #THEATER#GhostManila. Congratulations Atlantis Prod! ANOTHER JOB WELL DONE!

Thursday, August 29, 2013

LEAN the MUSICAL





The UP Repertory Company presents
LEAN: Based on Lean the Musical by Gary Granada

"Huwag ninyong hayaan ang inyong pag-aaral ay maging sagabal sa inyong edukasyon." In between the harsh dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos and the triumph of the People Power Revolution, there stood an iconic student activist named Leandro Alejandro. His life of activism takes centerstage in Gary Granada's LEAN THE MUSICAL (1997), beginning with his experiences as a student in UP Diliman and ending with his untimely death at age 27.  Fighting for national democracy in the university and in the nation, Lean would prove his importance in history with his works as an activist, a politician, a friend, a husband, a son and a father. His life has defined an era of student activism and his work still inspires the youth today.

Directed by UP Rep alumna Kathryn Manga and featuring new musical arrangement by Karl Ramirez, LEAN features powerful catchy songs that breathe new life to the many different characters and personas of the 1980s. Through song and dance, the musical not only tells the story of the influential student activist but also creatively re-imagines the loud cries of the masses and the lives of our so-called “iskolar ng bayan” during this era.

As part of its 41st anniversary celebration, The UP Repertory Company proudly presents LEAN, a musical that will surely get your toes tapping with an endless surge of LSS-worthy tunes and creative dances of joy and sorrow while provoking thoughts on our current society, leaving an important question to the audience – kung hindi ngayon, kailan pa?

LEAN runs on September 9, 14, 16, 21 (3pm and 7pm) and September 13 and 20 (7pm only) at the Dalisay Aldaba Recital Hall, University of the Philippines Diliman, Quezon City.

Tickets: Php 250.00.
Contact Jenica: +63 916 321 0485

ABOUT THE UP REPERTORY COMPANY:
The University of the Philippines Repertory Company (UP REP) is a non-stock, non-profit student theater organization that has delivered performances to a variety of audience, in and outside of the University. The company aims to enlighten its audience on different social issues and to bring Philippine Theater closer to the masses. The organization is nearing its 41st anniversary.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Haring Lear by PETA

"A PROUD MOMENT IN PHILIPPINE THEATER: PETA produces the first Filipino adaptation of William Shakespeare's King Lear!

Exciting, suspenseful and virtually violent, PETA's 'Haring Lear' retains Shakespeare's beautiful and devastating themes of the disintegration of family solidarity, running the gamut of love, madness, death and sacrifice.

Schedule: Friday (7:00PM) Sat-Sun (10:00AM-3:00PM) Jan 27-Mar 4
Tickets: Php350 | Php500 (VIP)
Contact: (02) 7256244, (02) 410021, 0917-5765400, www.petatheater.com" - from PETA
 

Peta stages ‘King Lear’ in Filipino

By:
 

“HARING Lear”

The Philippine Educational Theater Association (Peta) wraps up its 2011-2012 season with a Filipino translation of William Shakespeare’s “King Lear” that opens on Jan. 27, employing an all-male cast.

Felix “Nonon” Padilla directs, using National Artist for Literature Bienvenido Lumbera’s translation of the tale of King Lear, how he bequeaths his kingdom amongst his three daughters and is betrayed by two of them.


When Padilla was asked by Peta artistic director Maribel Legarda to stage a Shakespeare production, he immediately offered “King Lear.”


“It was suggested to me by Salvador Bernal because he’d always wanted to design it,” said Padilla, a longtime collaborator of National Artist for Theater Design Bernal, who passed away October 2011.


Post-apocalyptic setting


Production design duties are being handled by Gino Gonzales, one of Bernal’s protégés, who will build on Padilla’s post-apocalyptic setting.


“Originally, it’s set in prehistoric Britain,” says Padilla. “Shakespeare had very good reasons to set it in that time [instead of his own time] because he was trying to camouflage all of the touchy political issues about the [current] king.”


“I thought it would be interesting to go the opposite. To set it in the future, a future that is as bleak as it was in barbaric or primitive times.”


“It is one of the mature plays of Shakespeare. It’s emotional and riveting,” he says.

“The play is all about legacy. It’s about leaving something behind. It’s about somebody in the grips of mortality and facing mortality. What do you leave behind? You can leave your material wealth, or you can leave your soul, your compassion.”


“In ‘Lear,’ that’s what he learns. He learns to become human. It’s a running theme in Shakespeare, about how a man gets crushed by his own guilt, and ‘Lear’ is a prime example of that.”


Nod to Shakespeare’s text


The decision to use an all-male cast is Padilla’s nod to Shakespeare’s text and the way roles were cast and played during the Bard’s time. (In 2001, director Anton Juan cast Repertory Philippines founder Zenaida Amador as King Lear in his staging of the play.)


“In Elizabethan times, the young boys would always play the female roles,” says Padilla.
He also notes there are two characters in the play that were traditionally played by only one actor. “As written, in the scenes of Cordelia, the Fool is never there. When the Fool is onstage, Cordelia is gone. I think that’s crucial, and since Shakespeare designed it that way, I thought it was important to play around with that, to give it some focus or emphasis.”


Teroy Guzman plays the role of the aging monarch, Haring Lear. Lear’s daughters will be played by Gary Lim (Regan), Nor Domingo (Goneril) and Abner Delina (Cordelia).


“Haring Lear” runs Friday to Sunday, Jan. 27-Mar. 4, at Peta Theater Center. Contact 7256244, 4100821 to 22, 0917-5765400, or petatheater@gmail.com.


Source: http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/31263/peta-stages-%E2%80%98king-lear%E2%80%99-in-filipino

Monday, November 7, 2011

"Theater as a Creative Industry" by Joy Virata

This article was published in the business journal of the American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines, Inc. 
Thank you to Jeremy Domingo of Word of Mouth Theater who shared this article.
Theater as a Creative Industry
By Joy Virata


The author, Joy Virata, recently took on the role of the Narrator in Peter Pan by Stages and Repertory Philippines. Photo Courtesy of Joriben Zaballa at http://www.joriben.com/2011/10/peter-pan-manila-final-flight.html
Some years ago, at different times a couple of years apart, I attended two meetings called by government officials who were involved in the development of the Creative Industry. These meetings were attended by representatives from the different arts including theater, fashion, dance, the visual arts, design, etc. They were meant to discover how the government could facilitate the growth of the industry. At each meeting there were concrete suggestions put forth by the different artistic groups and organizations and after each meeting nothing ever happened.

Some forty or so years ago, Zeneida Amador visualized the creation of a theater industry by establishing Repertory Philippines Foundation, Inc. At that time, besides a few amateur and school theater groups, there were only two professional companies—REP and the Philippine Educational Theater Association or PETA. Today there are many professional theater companies of varying sizes, producing plays and musicals by both local and international playwrights in Tagalog or English. This year will have seen the production of at least sixteen shows all produced, directed, designed, staffed and acted in by Filipinos. These include Next to Normal. Seussical, The Sound of Music, Sweet Charity, In The Heights, Peter Pan, The Little Mermaid, Noli Mi Tangere, Aida, Care Divas, William, Haring Lear, Joy Luck Club, Shakespeare in Hollywood, and 39 Steps.

There is a roster of professional Filipino actors, directors, stage managers and crews, set and costume designers, orchestras, musicians, and other theater workers, from which theater companies regularly draw. It is not unusual for actors to be rehearsing for one production and acting in another. Actors also “moonlight” for corporate functions, or provide voice-overs or the talent for commercials. Some theater actors are hired for bit parts in foreign or local moves. Sometimes they are hired for work in Hong Kong, Macao or Singapore or for a production on a cruise-liner. Once upon a time they also became “Kims” or “Engineers” in Ms. Saigon productions.

Every year new actors are added to the roster. There is never any lack of interest in making theater a full-time profession. There is never any lack of raw talent waiting in the wings – willing to sacrifice their time and often having to use their own money for transportation and food just for the opportunity of being trained—even if actors rarely earn enough to support themselves (much less a family) on what they earn.

Most community theater companies (not Broadway nor the West End) in the United States and England (Fringe) depend on public and private subsidy. In the Philippines, for the most part, we have neither. Theater companies must depend on their own resources to meet escalating costs of production—mostly through the sale of tickets and advertising sponsorships. However these sponsorships have become few and far between—specially since the start of the importation of foreign productions. Every company must be creative at ticket selling and thus each company has their own methods of selling.

All theater companies struggle to survive—some better at it then others—and face similar problems. Advertising is expensive and cannot be covered by the ticket prices that can be charged for local productions. Therefore Manila’s active theater scene is the best-kept secret in town. Lucky ones get advertising help from newspapers but the newspapers can only give so much—usually one or two ads once or twice a month.

There is the usual competition from movies, television, DVD’s, etc., and the natural aversion to fighting traffic on a Friday or Saturday night . One has to experience the difference between plastic imagery and human warmth before he is willing to make the extra effort to see a live performance but how does he get that experience without first being lured into the theater? Building an audience is probably the most difficult job in Manila.

Another problem to face is ticket pricing. Although tickets to local productions cost fraction of what they cost in other countries there is valid reason for students and low wage earners to choose cheaper means of entertainment and theater companies must take this into consideration. A P300 ticket is easy to sell but won’t cover costs. Sponsorships help a ltittle but they are few and far between. Thus regular (not for special fundraising) tickets average between P1000 to P2000 and this requires Individual, man-to-man, ticket selling. It must also be noted that many people seem to begrudge having to pay for a theater ticket and will look for “freebies” and discounted tickets whenever possible.

Then there is there is what I will call “unusual competition” from foreign productions that somehow or other seem to get huge advertising sponsorships unavailable to local productions. These sponsorships allow for advertising on television, radio, newspapers and billboards. Corporations also buy tickets (which are usually four and five times the cost of tickets for local productions) and distribute them free to clients. These companies cannot entirely be blamed for this. Numbers count and imported productions attract more attention then local ones do and therefore provide more advertising coverage. It is very difficult to counter cultural mores that give more value to imported products no matter that local productions may be as good and sometimes better than these imports. Globalization is a good thing but we’ve got just as good a product and we produce it at a much cheaper price so shouldn’t we have some kind of protection so that we get a chance to grow?

During the two meetings that were held on the Creative Industries, two suggestions were put forth on how the government can help the theater industry. The industry needs affordable venues – both for performance and for training and it needs help in publicity. Venues may be hard to come by. Even the CCP must hire out its hall to the highest bidders (foreign companies) in order to survive. Local groups relay on the RCBC Theater, Onstage Theater and the Meralco Theater which are usually fully booked—specially in the second half of the year. But a little help with publicity should be possible. A daily listing of productions in newspapers sponsored by the Department of Tourism or a private company would help a lot. Also, tax exemptions for the importation of materials and equipment needed for cultural activities should be implemented. Exemption from the payment of withholding tax on payments for intellectual property rights and rentals for materials should also be implemented.

One of the most precious resources of the Philippines is the artistic talent, creativity and resourcefulness of its people. Yet it is this resource which receives the least recognition from both the private and public sectors, is seldom looked on as having any material value, is last on any list of priorities and first to be removed when budgets are tight. Still theater workers will continue to give their all and hope that someday this will change.

Broadway World.com (BWW) has revealed its nominees for Philippine Awards

Image Source: http://nav.broadwayworld.com/regional/Philippines_Regional_Icons.jpg
BroadwayWorld.com (BWW) Philippines Awards has recently revealed its nominees in different categories for Philippine Theater.

I have one critique though.  A category for BEST ORIGINAL PLAY and BEST ORIGINAL MUSICAL SCORE must also be included (and must be separated from foreign/non-original plays) because playwrights and composers such as the likes of Vincent De Jesus must be given due credit for composing original songs and writing plays which are fruits of their own intellect & "blood, sweat and tears" so to speak (and not copied) .  They are a feat in itself.

As one screenwriter Oscar honorary awardee once said, "A movie always starts, and ends with a screenplay."   The same goes with theater. Without the writer or lyricist/composer, the actor and director can do nothing (even if they have all the costume, lighting & set designers and musical directors).  Thanks to foreign plays which we can borrow rights from and showcase, but for theater companies who did not do such and produced their original plays for Philippine Theater, their very own original Filipino plays and music must be recognized and honored as well.  Just my two-cents-worth.

YOU CAN VOTE by a simple click at this link: 
and help YOUR CHOICE TO WIN 
by also sharing this voting link above.
DEADLINE IS DECEMBER 31, 2011

Nomination was from October 6 to 31.  The list of nominees were trimmed down from 500 to the following:

2011 BWW Philippines Awards Nominees

Best Musical
In the Heights (Atlantis Productions Inc.)
Sweet Charity (9 Works Theatrical)
Sound of Music (Resorts World Manila)
Peter Pan (Repertory Philippines/Stages Production Specialists Inc.)
Noli Me Tangere (Tanghalang Pilipino)
Care Divas (Philippine Educational Theater Association)
Cory ng Edsa (Philippine Stagers Foundation)

Best Play
American Hwangap (Tanghalang Pilipino)
Ang Post Office (Philippine Educational Theater Association)

Best Direction of a Musical
Bobby Garcia (Next to Normal)
Jaime del Mundo and Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo (Peter Pan)
Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo (Little Women)
Robbie Guevara (Sweet Charity)
Chari Arespacochaga (Aida)
Christopher De Venecia (Little Shop of Horrors)
Dexter Santos (Orosman at Zafira)
Vince Tanada (Cory ng Edsa)

Best Direction of a Play
Gary Labad (Ang Post Office)

Best Leading Actor (Musical)
Jett Pangan (Next to Normal)
Felix Rivera (Next to Normal)
Sam Concepcion (Peter Pan)
Gian Magdangal (The Wedding Singer)
Kris Lawrence (Sweet Charity)
Mark Bautista (Noli Me Tangere)
Melvin Lee (Care Divas)
Ricci Chan (Care Divas)
Jerald Napoles (Care Divas)
Vince Tanada (Cory ng Edsa)

Best Leading Actor (Play)
Martin delos Santos (Ang Post Office)

Best Leading Actress (Musical)
Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo (Next to Normal)
Ciara Sotto (Rent)
Mian Dimacali (Rent)
Caisa Borromeo (Little Women)
Nikki Gil (Sweet Charity)
Tippy dos Santos (Peter Pan)
Cris Villonco (Noli Me Tangere)

Best Leading Actress (Play)
Jay Glorioso (Love, Loss, and What I Wore)
Liza Infante (The 39 Steps)
Shamaine Centenera Buencamino (Fake)

Best Musical Direction
Gerard Salonga (Little Women)
Joseph Tolentino (Sweet Charity)
Pipo Cifra (Cory ng Edsa)

Best Choreography
Cecille Martinez (In the Heights)
Deana Aquino (Sweet Charity)
Dexter Santos (Orosman at Zafira)
John San Antonio (Cory ng Edsa)

Best Costume Design
Raven Ong (Peter Pan)
Mio Infante (Rent)
Emy Tanada (Cory ng Edsa)

Best Lighting Design
Shoko Matsumoto (Next to Normal)

Best Set Design
Joey Mendoza (Little Women)
Gino Gonzales (Peter Pan)
Jeffrey Ambrosio (Cory ng Edsa)

Best Sound Design
Chuck Ledesma (Rent)
 Bobbit Jacinto (In the Heights)
Rards Corpus (Sound of Music)
Art Grabentina (Cory ng Edsa)

Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role/Ensemble Role (Musical)
Markki Stroem (Next to Normal)
OJ Mariano (Rent)
Michael Williams (Peter Pan)
Jeff Arcilla (Little Women)
Johann dela Fuente (The Wedding Singer)
Jon Jon Martin (The Wedding Singer)
Miguel Faustmann (Sweet Charity)
Myke Salomon (Care Divas)

Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role/Ensemble Role (Play)
Jeremy Domingo (American Hwangap)
Nicco Manalo (American Hwangap)
Jonathan Tadioan (Bombita)
George de Jesus (Amphitryon)
Joshua Deocareza (Titus Andronicus)
Nic Campos (Shakespeare in Hollywood)

Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role/Ensemble Role (Musical)
Bea Garcia (Next to Normal)
Tex Ordonez (In the Heights)
Ciara Sotto (Sweet Charity)
Sheila Valderrama (Sweet Charity)

Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role/Ensemble Role (Play)
Cris Villonco (The Joy Luck Club)
Frances Makil Ignacio (The Joy Luck Club)
Liesl Batucan (American Hwangap)
Skyzx Labastilla (Titus Andronicus)

Best Theater Company
Atlantis Productions Inc.
9 Works Theatrical

Best Theatrical Venue
Carlos P. Romulo Auditorium
CCP Little Theater
PETA Center Theater
Newport Performing Arts Theater (Resorts World Manila)


I already have my own choices for some:
Jett Pangan (Best Actor - Musical)
Menchu L. (Best Actress - Musical)
Next to Normal (Best Musical)
Markki Stroem (Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role - Musical)
Bea Garcia (Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role - Musical)
Bobby Garcia (Next to Normal)

As to the others, I'm still thinking about it.  I have until Dec. 31 to vote.


Best of luck to our nominees! ;)

Audition for Atlantis Theater's 2012 Season

If you have what it takes, audition for ATLANTIS 2012 SEASON on November 23, 2011 for  
Rock Ages, 
Nine, 
& Shrek the Musical.  
Details are below:


Photo Courtesy of Atlantis Productions

Good Luck and Break a Leg! ;)

Sunday, October 30, 2011

"Picasso at the Lapin Agile" by Word of Mouth Theater


Word of Mouth Theater (WOM) headed by Jeremy-Benjamin Domingo will have a re-run on November 8, 2011 (N.B. Just got a message from Jeremy Domingo: we may be postponing our Picasso Encore Run to Nov.22. Please wait for further notice) of a staged reading of Steve Martin's Outer Critics Circle Award-winning comedy "PICASSO AT THE LAPIN AGILE."

In a legendary bar in 1904 Paris, a chance encounter between the young Einstein and Picasso sets sparks and stars flying. What does the world look like to a genius on the verge of transforming it? Their views on sex, fame and the future collide amidst an eccentric constellation of characters. Steve Martin - yes, THAT Steve Martin - brilliantly tackles these questions and more in his award-winning comedy, where philosophy and humor are seamlessly woven together in this surreal encounter of two great minds. Winner of the Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Off Broadway Play (Source: http://www.newvillagearts.org/mainstage.php)

Winner of 1996 New York Outer Critics' Circle Awards for "Best Play" and "Best Playwright," PICASSO AT THE LAPIN AGILE is set in 1904 in a bohemian Paris bistro, the Lapin Agile. Steve Martin's play revolves around an imaginary meeting between a passionate Pablo Picasso  and a fiery Albert Einstein . The two young men on the threshold of fame vie for the attentions of a young lady and for each others respect in an hilarious battle of ideas about painting, probability, lust, and the future of the world. One year later, Albert Einstein published the Special Theory of Relativity. Three years later, Pablo Picasso painted Les Demoiselles D'Avignon. (Source: http://blueflag.phys.yorku.ca/menary/misc/plays/picasso.html)

Word of Mouth Theater, Philippines invites with the phrase "PLAY WITH YOUR FOOD"  for it will be an evening of "music, dinner and show" all for P450 per person.

Featuring (in alphabetical order):
Apollo Abraham • David Bianco • Jennifer Blair-Bianco • Jeremy Domingo
Kenneth Keng • Lesley Leveriza • Leo Rialp • Rob Rownd • Jamie Wilson
with William Elvin & Jean Judith Javier


Directed by Jeremy Domingo
Visual Design by Rob Rownd

WHEN: November 8, 2011, 8pm (N.B. Just got a message from Jeremy Domingo: we may be postponing our Picasso Encore Run to Nov.22. Please wait for further notice)
WHERE: at QUANTUM CAFÉ, G/F Feron Bldg. 9590 Kamagong cor. Bagtikan, Makati City
(entrance on Bagtikan St.)


HOW MUCH: ***TICKETS at P450 each*** (inclusive of show, dinner and beverage)

For Reservations contact Cricket at (0905) 357-7420

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

To Be An Actor



“Anyone can be a star —- for as short as three months—- or as long as his talent can hold. But not everyone —- not just anyone—- can be an actor.” - Jose Javier Reyes

I stumbled upon this note “KEYNOTE ADDRESS by Jose Javier Reyes, on the occasion of the First General Assembly of the Philippine Theater Actors’ Guild” posted by a fellow theater enthusiast.

After watching “Next to Normal” last friday night (October 7), my passion for singing and performing in theater was rekindled. However I told myself, “How can I go back to theater now, when I am tied up with my lawstudies which is taking most of my time?”

But musical theater is and will always be my first love.

To be honest, yes I was inspired by their riveting performance, but I also envied them at the same time. I would’ve have traded anything to play a part in that play, if it were possible.

When I was in college I took theater 100, a free elective under Tony Mabesa and I vividly recall on one of his lectures that, “No actor on stage will immediately be very good. An artist improves through time,” he says. ” Though there are those who are gifted, “na magaling na agad”, generally actors don’t start well, but they get better and better as time goes,” he says.

And so, after watching “Next to Normal”, I made a vow that after I finish my law degree,— I will give time to focus on my passion, an avocation (for I would be a lawyer then) - that is “singing and performing on stage”, but this time, with maturity and discipline (which I think have been ingrained in every law student in U.P.). I need to study the craft, hone it and learn the tricks of the trade so to speak - amidst the politics, and crab-mentality that co-exist with the theater industry.

My relationship with theater is bittersweet. I was always chosen to do lead roles in school productions, theater workshops and unknown small theater groups but I always end up a reject (most of the time) if not a cameo role or part of an ensemble in professional theater of the famous theater groups- either because I am unknown, they always pick the popular ones, those with connections, or simply, they weren’t impressed at all, to be objective & I didn’t give that enough impact, unless I am Karylle or KC Concepcion.

I also had a traumatic experience with a theater director (whose name I won’t mention here) that I decided to withdraw from theater for awhile. I was 17 years old, very young, lacking experience and naive. I was the second to the youngest girl in the cast (I was a day older than the youngest). It was my first professional theater experience. Two fellow actors even approached me after that incident; one talked to me asking if I was okay, while the other told me “If you have anything to share to me, you can open up.” The director treated me like dirt or even dumb (partly a reason why I am pursuing law now — that is not to say that I am taking law solely because I want to prove myself to that director. I honestly love the law and what I am studying except for taxation). He didn’t even care to remember my name, and called me “Lorelai” that he invented every time he refers to me.The trauma lingered however that I decided to withdraw from theater for awhile.

Thank God, when I was in 2nd year college, I was given the opportunity to perform again on stage. That was DAF (Diary of Anne Frank) - one of my most memorable experiences in theater because of the people I worked with. I didn’t feel annoyed or intimidated by any of them. Despite the “lousy invisible director” we had and “poor marketing skills” the now defunct theater company also had - I had no regrets being a part of that cast, for more importantly I was able to meet friends (some were meek, some were torpe (haha!), some are just plain jologs and funny). I had so much fun in that play on and off stage and I am glad, with facebook, I can still communicate with them once in awhile .

Theater like any other industry — there are good people but at the same time, there are, to put it bluntly, insensitive assholes if not airheads.

BUT regardless, as I said I made a vow, marked in stone, that I will perform again - renewed, in a better shape and form, after I pass the bar in 2013, God-willing. Now, that is something I need to prepare for.

The training in lawschool is not only about laws and jurisprudence. There is also “character-building” involved - which is the first or even the most important lesson or training that any lawstudent would learn. This can be applied in any aspect in life, such as theater in particular. Now that is start, together with this piece of Jose Javier Reyes, about what it takes to be an actor. ~ Naomi

KEYNOTE ADDRESS

by Jose Javier Reyes

On the occasion of the First General Assembly of the

Philippine Theater Actors’ Guild

10 October 2011

PETA Theater Center

This gathering is important.

It is not only an expression of camaraderie, a renewal of friendship or a sharing of common interests.

Tonight is a vital first step.

This gathering is a statement. We want change…and we all realize that there is a task at hand. This is a necessity not merely for the sake of survival but to certify the significance of what we have chosen to become.

We come from a culture that seems to celebrate disparity as much as it makes a big deal out of our sense of unity. And yet our history has proven that change and advancement can only come when we all decide to forget our differences and assert our common goals.

If one still asks if it indeed a necessity for theater performers to get together, I think the answer is quite apparent.

This has got nothing and everything to do with the consumption of SkyFlakes crackers for lunch and dinner. This meeting is important because it is a necessary step from a decision we all made some time agao: We decided that we wanted to be artists.

We decided that this human life lent to us can and will only have meaning if we pursue, persist and fight for what can give us fulfillment. And that is to be theater artists. That is to be performers.

Mind you, I am not talking about success. I am speaking about the more important fulfillment.

Believe me when I say that there are so many people I know who are so successful but are completely unfulfilled.

Well, yes… rarely can a theater artist be featured in Yes Magazine! to showcase his or her house: well, not unless you are Eugene Domingo.

Rarely can the theater artist be recognized in a tiangge in Greenhills… or spend his weekend shopping at the third floor of TriNoMa or the exclusive shops at Greenbelt.

You see that is the difference between being a celebrity and an artist.

A celebrity gets immeasurable recognition, gets paid exorbitant amounts and gets all the fringe benefits for being public property. A celebrity will earn literally multi-millions for endorsing everything from laundry detergents to feminine washes. And a celebrity does not even require talent. Just a lot of marketing and helluva lot more luck.

Ah, but if you choose to be a theater performer, chances are… you come from a very rich family or basically a masochist.

Theater has never developed to become a lucrative business in this country.

You join the theater because you love to perform… even if you know you cannot make a decent living out of it. Through all these years, the Filipino theater artist has subsisted for the love of the art and the craft—- whether he came from the walkways of the Rajah Sulaiman Theater in Intramuros or the backstage corridors of the Insular Life Theater in Ayala Avenue or the Tanghalang Batute or the Little Theater at the CCP.

The theater artist seeks more than success; he is in constant search for elusive fulfillment. Ironically, fulfillment is so hard to define is the reason why… we persist, insist and subsist.

That is why you are all gathered here tonight. I am joining you in your celebration of untied masochism.

More than that, you are here because you care for theater. No, you don’t only care for theater… you love being part of theater.

Because you share a comoon passion, you want our countrymen to understand what you are doing… and what you want not only for ourselves but for our country.

You want Filipinos to finally acknowledge and appreciate the passions that so few truly understand.

You are here not for selfish reasons —- because if you were here only after the trappings of success, then perhaps you would have given up this calling and ended up in a call center instead.

You are here to make a point… and to make others see that you matter. Yes, you do matter. You may not be treated as well you wish it to be… but you matter.

Whether recognized or not… even if the theater artist is not beholden to the kingdom of the giant networks or do not have direct lines to the gods and goddesses of the movie studios… you matter!

You, like all creative agents —- mavericks, rebels and iconoclasts —- are instrumental in the shaping of our national culture.

So what makes this event important? Let me give my tatlong puntos.

Firstly, as soldiers of theater, it is about time that this country learns and recognizes the importance of this form of art as part of their lives.

There are still those who believe that theater is an elitist form of entertainment. There are those who do not recognize that the history of our country has always been anchored on theater forms in order to bring a sense of community and express the sentiments or mindset at whatever point of our soci-political evolution. But let’s not even go there.

To make my point straightforward and simple —- theater is still considered either a luxury or something required by classess in Literature and Theater Arts in high school and colleges.

The tradition of an authentic theater-going public has yet to b developed because it was never given a chance to be even a habit.

And why? Because of very apparent reasons. Not only do we lack the accessible venues for our countrymen to see the showcase of our works. Theater has been relegated to a dispensable form of entertainment made accessible only to a few.

Because of that, theater artists have never been given the importance they most definitely deserve. Because people do not know you. People do not appreciate what you do and what you represent.

Yes, we have the Cultural Center of the Philippines and places such as this… but there has been no concerted effort to bring theater closer to the people rather than compelling the audience to come to the theater.

As long as theater remains as an option from watching a concert of Bruno Mars or the Black Eyed Peas… as long as theater is considered a necessary evil, a requirement to complete courses because of reaction papers and submitted reviews to teachers… then theater can never truly be a part of the life of our countrymen.

And after all these years… after all the sacrifices made by the likes of Tinio, Mabesa, Espejo, Anton Juan, Amador, Guidote-Alvarez and a whole generation who precedes those gathered here tonight, it is about time. Yes, it is about time that you make theater matter.

The country takes pride in saying we have talents in world-class caliber. Pointless to mention the names too familiar that they have become part of a mantra: Lea Salonga, Joanna Ampil, Leo Valdez, Junix Innocian, Monique Wilson et cetera et cetera. Pointless to relentlessly celebrate their names and yet admit the fact that you —- theater artists—- are still being treated like second class citizens in the entertainment business.

This leads me to my second point: It is about time that the theater artists are given the respect that he and she deserve.

Let me assess the situation we all know:

Even a respected veteran movie and television performer whose acting and popularity were honed by media experience said that times have indeed changed.

Nowadays, it is so easy to be called an artista even if you know nothing about acting.

Because of a highly competitive dog-eat-puppy world of mass media, actors are no longer treated as people. You guys have become commodities.

Whereas before, to be called an actor means to prove how good you are in what you do, nowadays anybody who has been thrown in front of a camera can make claims that he is already an actor.

We all know, for instance, that reality shows are the biggest on-camera auditions ever conceived by mainstream commercial television to find the next generation of stars to fill up the studio’s stable. We all know that there are endless talent searches to keep the stockroom filled with second and third-liners. Fresh from the catch, these young wannabes are thrown straight into the barbeque pit and made to mimic what is supposed to be acting in front of the cameras. Performers borne out of popularity and salability of the moment are made leads, considered as star while do their on-the-job training.

The veteran actress asked, “Ganun na lang ba yon? Kahit sino na ba artista na ngayon?” And the sad answer is both a yes and no.

Anyone can be a star —- for as short as three months—- or as long as his talent can hold. But not everyone —- not just anyone—- can be an actor.

Stars fade—- actors mature. Stars are dependent on the box office receipts of their latest movies —- or how their most recent adventure in television fairs in the ratings game.

Actors are as good as their most recent performance —- measured by their competence in the role that they are made to play and challenged by other roles that remain to be discovered.

That is why actors are diamonds that shine with greatest brilliance in time. Celebrities merely fade … or enter politics.

When television and film productions —- both commercial and independent – are in need of competent, reliable and guaranteed professional performers —- they tap the theater actors. I know that for a fact.

As a line producer for commercial films or as a TV director, there is a roster of theater performers who form a core group of supporting actors that can enhance any show or film.

You —- the theater actor—- provide credibility to the performance level of films. Sometimes the theater actor, as the supporting performers, surround the neophyte wannabe star so that the audience can be made to believe that the newcomer can impersonate acting. In other words, you guys give credit to the dancing bear. It is not how good the bear dances… but the fact that you can make the bear dance at all.

But the saddest part is that you still get the SkyFlakes reference as a joke. I am quite sure that young man did not mean it that way… but is perceived that way not only by the larger public. Worse, that is how media productions think and perceive you.

Life for the dedicated professional actor was never fair. Even in the US, the likes of Jane Alexander, Patti LuPone, Mandy Patinkin and others never reached that much coveted star status not unless you are Meryll Streep. In our contry, the same thing can be said. Theater actors play the competent and inevitable supporting roles and never manage to have their names above the title—- well, not unless you are Eugene Domingo.

But what sounds like a dismal situation is good news. You should give premium to what you are worth not only for your theater work but for popular media as well.

An actors in an actor is an actor… regardless of where he appears: onstage, onscreen or in the tube. You should realize that even if you are given supporting roles that this is not a reson to be treated like second class citizens on the movie or television set.

As I said—-an actor is an actor is an actor. The only way you can dignify the wealth of your experience and training is when people realize that tour work in theater is far superior than the three day workshops given to wannabes who will be force-fed to the television or movie audiences.

This leads me to the final point: no one can help you except yourselves.

If I can be so blatantly honest with you, I have learned one thing about this country. You cannot depend on anyone to protect your turf and interests except yourself.

Government support to help boost the cultural development in this country? Government support to aid the development and propagation of theater?

Fat chance, people. Right at this very moment, there are more pressing problems in Hagonoy and Calumpit. Not that the cultural development should not be a priority… but it never was and by the looks of it, shall never be.

Besides, anything that has got to do with government tends to be tainted by politics, politicking and partisanship. I guess you wouldn’t want to go into that either.

So the most important lessons, Ladies and Gentlemen, is that no one can help you except youselves. And that is why tonight is very important. Tonight, by being here, you make a stand… no longer as an individual who has dedicated his life to theater… but as part of community seeking for a definite identity and a potent voice.

Tonight is important because if there is any need, any change that will take place… the crucial first step has already been taken. The journey has already started because you have empowered yourselves… because you realize that if there is anybody who should protect your interests… then it has to be your own moves, your own intentions, and your own volition.

It is perhaps too simplistic to enumerate three points and claim that these summarize the problems you must confront. There are definitely more. This adventure is bound to be a bumpy but interesting ride. But what is important is that you have made the crucial first step. And this, my friends, is the significance of this night… which hopefully is the birth of a new theater in the country.

###

Take from: http://www.facebook.com/notes/jha-briones/to-my-fellow-theater-enthusiasts-this-is-a-must-read/10150419699124257