philstar.com - Arts and Culture

Jan 312016
 

It’s said that the past is a different country. Not one for old men? It is, too. In fact sometimes it seems to be the only country we are left to relish.

Each time we lose someone from an era, we are sad but somehow regaled by memories of how sweetly that time and country had nourished us.

The losses are mounting. David Bowie reminded us of Major Tom and Ziggy Stardust of a space age long gone, but soon a ninth planet is discovered and we say it’s obviously him out there. 

I wish we could say the same of Carlos “Caloy” Loyzaga, the best basketball player we ever had, bar none. He passed away last week at the age of 85 — when five planets were in east-northeast configuration, a basketball team to the naked eye at dawn.

The fellow with jersey number 14 was “The Big Difference.” And he was the towering center of our recollection of boyhood days in the 1950s. His exploits as a cager have been sung of late— two-time Olympian (1952 Helsinki and 1956 Melbourne, where we placed 9th and 7th, respectively) among his citations, individually topped with inclusion in the mythical team in 1954 after our bronze finish in the World Championships in Brazil, next only to USA and the host country.

Numerous other data of half-a-century past fill up his stats sheet: seven consecutive championships with the fabled MICAA team Yco Painters; four Asian Games and two Asian Basketball Confederation titles through the ’50s and ’60s; retirement in 1964, before coaching the national team to regain the ABC crown in 1967 with his “Dirty Dozen”…

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Before all that, the images are still capital in my mind’s eye. As a grade schooler in San Beda, my earliest memories were of the banners hung above the main gate on Mendiola: once hailing a top one-two finish in the bar exams, then a series of signs welcoming back four Red Lions after that Brazil triumph: Caloy Loyzaga, Tony Genato, Pons Saldaña and Rafael Barretto.

And the following year, when Loyzaga regained his Bedan center slot after a hiatus caused by academic deficiency, he led the “sons of SBC” to that historic third NCCA post-war championship against Ateneo to claim the Zamora Trophy. The tale is oft-repeated among his many other exploits. San Beda won consecutively in 1951 and 1952, before losing out to the rival of the era in the next two years, the last sans “King Caloy.” Then in 1955, the showdown against the Blue Eagles. And the Zamora Trophy came home to Mendiola.

In those same years, my kiddie ears were just as honed as my eyes that early cast an upcoming fanatic’s adulation at the giant who strolled the playing field back of St. Benedict’s Hall, often in the tight short shorts of that era. I don’t recall ever having witnessed him practicing with the basketball team inside the gym. Maybe it was off-limits to us kiddos. It was at the corner of the football field where his figure loomed large, where a pitching mound and four base-bags were the attraction. He also loved softball, the game that broke his wrist before the mid-’60s and led to his retirement.

At home, the images of the national pastime being played at fever pitch were all imagined, as graphically as the sportscaster Willie Hernandez could paint the picture. My dad taught me how to score a game on paper while listening intently to what I still savor as a cathedral radio, all of two feet high, with gold cloth covering the parts sectioned by arching wood.

We listened to the MICAA games. For the NCCA my dad made sure to acquire season’s tickets to the Rizal Memorial stadium (where LaSallite Kurt Bachmann’s mother ran on-court with a wicked umbrella after an opposing player). Before Bachmann there were many other legendary names: Charlie Borck ahead of everyone, as my dad told and retold, then Lauro “The Fox” Mumar, Herminio Astorga and Luis Tabuena of Letran’s “Murder, Inc.” that preceded San Beda’s glory years.

A decade and a half later, it was similarly via radio broadcast that I thrilled to Danny Florencio’s undergoal twisters against South Korea when Coach Loyzaga fielded him in the last minutes of a tight game. Danny proved to be the “dirtiest” of the dozen, a national rookie who won the game and the ABC crown with crucial free throws.

How simple life seemed in those days, starting in the ’50s. We took communion weekly, sang “No mas amor que el tuyo” in the most beautiful chapel in the world, waited for the bar exam results each year, while our Red Lions had Loyzaga, Saldaña, Genato and Barretto, later Jota “The Spinning Jay,” “The Olympian” Bonnie Carbonell, and to start the next decade, Tata Carranceja, burly center Big Boy Reynoso, Pepe Oyson and Boy Ascue as part of a no-superstar team that won another NCCA championship.      

We walked up and down Mendiola, past Holy Ghost College towards Malacañang, or crossed the bridge over an estero to the pool halls at the corner of Legarda and what was then Azcarraga, farther up which was Morayta where we took a jeepney ride home, or sometimes went past FEU to cross Quezon Boulevard for Asia Chicharon and the moviehouses all the way to Avenida Rizal. 

Ah, the romance of colonial names for streets, before the nationalism binge also led to family glorification by way of pettily legislated surnames.

In any case, by the time Caloy’s oldest son Chito led SBC in regaining the NCCA crown in 1977, much of Manila’s romance had faded, as it continues, with the PNB building on Escolta next on demolition row. Murder, Inc. has become the bad boy of our choking metropolis.

Thanks to Chito then for initiating the book on his father, launched in 2013 in the Mendiola campus when The Big Difference had come back from Australia after sorry medical episodes. Thanks to sportswriter Lito Cinco who spearheaded the compilation of reports and features by Henry Liao, Ignacio Dee, Bong Pedralvez, Tessa Jazmines, A.O. Flores, Joaquin Henson, Brian Maniquis and Beth Celis.

Rereading the book now, we are reminded that it was Baby Dalupan who had lent a car for Caloy to drive up to Baguio with his bride Vicky for their honeymoon in 1956. Oh what a far yet charming country.

We’ve heard of how Loyzaga was offered an athletic scholarship at the University of Oregon after the Melbourne Olympics, but turned it down. But we are reminded again by Tessa Jazminez of a conversation he had with the pre-Celtics Bill Russell. As Caloy recalls:

“Bill Russell gave me good advice in Melbourne. He said, getting to the top is hard, but when you’re already there, it’s twice as hard to stay there. When you reach the top, there is no other way to go but to the other side of the hill. Quit while you’re ahead. And remember to treat well the people you meet on your way up, because you’ll meet them again on your way down.

“And that’s what I did. I played only for three teams in my life — San Beda, Pratra and YCO. I am not in the habit of collecting playing uniforms.”

In the same book, Iggy Dee gives us the game results in that World Basketball Championships in Rio de Janeiro where we won six and lost three games, once to USA by 56 to 43, and twice to the hosts, by 99 to 62 and 47 to 41. But we beat Paraguay 64-52, China 61-44, Israel 90-56, Canada 83-76, France 66-60, and Uruguay 67-63. Caloy scored 33 points in that last game, 20 against France, and 13 against Canada.

In a few months, can our Gilas national team do the same against France and Canada in the Olympics wild-card qualifiers we’ll be hosting here? So we may go back to Rio, to another Olympics? Without the likes of The Big Difference and against NBA players? Alas, that country of great good memories seems far far gone. Along with it, goodbye, Caloy! And thank you for the Bedan and Pinoy pride. 

* * *

Memory lane also takes us back to Baguio in the 1960s when our friendship with architect Bnn Bautista had us meeting all his siblings at their residence which often became our lodging quarters. We took meals with the whole family, with patriarch Fernando Bautista Sr., and “Nanay” at the head of the table that groaned from food and incessant laughter, what with their boys infected with a serious case of viral humor: Fer, Bnn, Rhey, Des, Herr, Gil…

Tatay and Nanay had established University of Baguio. A couple of their househelp came from Sagada, which led to our first visit there with buddy Eric Villegas (two years ahead of us in San Beda) way way back in 1962. 

Now I am pleased to hear that that far country restores our faith in genes. Ynna, Bnn’s and Malu’s eldest daughter, was recently installed as UB’s first lady president in investiture rites last December.

Prof. Dhanna Kerina Bautista Rodas is a Fine Arts-Visual Communication graduate of UP Diliman, where she also took a master’s degree in special education and is currently a PhD candidate.

As an educator-artist, Ynna initially worked on graphics designing and animation at the Makati-based Burbank Animation in the early 1980s. From 1988 to 1991, she served as an animation production director and graphic artist at Creative Expressions Studios, Inc. With Reintegration for Care and Wholeness, she was a board member from 2007 and corporate treasurer several years later. She was also a Special Olympics parent volunteer from 2003 to 2005. She has lectured and taught at UP, St. Scholastica’s College and FEU-FERN College in undergraduate subjects on child behavior and as college professor in the graduate program for human growth, learning and development and art in early childhood and special education.

Last year, she presented the paper “Social Studies Curriculum Guide and Textbook: How String is the Connection” during the International Journal of Arts and Sciences Conference in Harvard, as well as a speech on “Education Reform for Social Justice: The New Challenge 2015” in the College of Arts and Sciences in Thailand. She has also served as corporate secretary and first vice president of the Philippine Association of Colleges and Universities. 

Sworn in as University of Baguio President by Bishop Carlito Cenzon, Prof. Ynna Bautista Rodas stressed in her acceptance speech: “We must empower students to be independent while keeping their cultural identity, contributing to society constructively. This is the UB graduate’s identity, competent for industry and life at large.”

Congratulations to Ynna. Tatay and Nanay of that far yet loving country must be so proud.

Nov 182015
 
MOA Arena all set for economic leaders' welcome dinner

Kenneth Cobonpue used the Banawe Rice Terraces as inspiration for the setup of the APEC leaders’ welcome dinner on November 18. Instagram/Kenneth Cobonpue MANILA, Philippines – Kenneth Cobonpue shared photos of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Economic Leaders’ Welcome Dinner setup early this afternoon.  LIVE UPDATES: APEC 2015 meetings in Manila The acclaimed Cebuano designer is the official creative director for the dinner. His role includes handling the set design for the Mall of Asia Arena, where the dinner will be held, as well as designing the souvenir tokens for the 21 economic leaders. Cobonpue used the World Heritage Site Banaue Rice Terraces as inspiration for the dinner setup. The setup includes a grassy circular stage that will be set up in the middle of the venue, colorful anahaw leaf-inspired designs that will be hung from the ceiling and his iconic Yoda chair made of rattan strips. Check out the photos shared by Cobonpue below: Gary V leads the prayer before final rehearsals. #APEC2015 Lifestyle Feature ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: A photo posted by Kenneth Cobonpue (@kennethcobonpue) on Nov 17, 2015 at 9:11pm PST Lights off five hours before the doors open to the warmest reception in the world. #APEC2015 A photo posted by Kenneth Cobonpue (@kennethcobonpue) on Nov 17, 2015 at 8:51pm PST

Oct 182015
 
All systems go for Asia Pacific Writers and Translators 2015

It’s “all systems go” for this year’s edition of the annual Asia Pacific Writers and Translators (APWT) conference, which will be held in Manila later this week, from Thursday on to the weekend. As a member of the APWT Board and one of APWT 2015’s convenors, I’m particularly thrilled for the Philippines to be hosting this event, which is the literary equivalent of the APEC, the SEA Games, and let’s throw in The Amazing Race, which it could be a bit of for our foreign guests. It’s not a competition, of course, and we won’t be signing any treaties or squabbling over territory. In fact, the way we’ve set things up, it’ll be a politician-free zone, which isn’t to say that politics will be off the menu. With topics ranging from “Sex and Sensitivities” and “Criminal Intent” to “Love in the Time of Dissonance” and “Why Publishers Prefer Outsiders,” there’ll be fireworks aplenty in the panel discussions we’ve put together for the three-day conference, which will be held at the Institute of Physics in UP Diliman on Thursday and Friday, before moving to De La Salle University and the University of Sto. Tomas on Saturday. I’ll be one of four keynote speakers for the conference, and will speak on the conference theme, “Against the Grain,” at UP on Thursday morning, to introduce the Philippines and our culture and literature to the audience, especially our visitors. I’ll be followed the next day by Romesh Gunesekera, the UK-based, Sri Lanka-born Booker Prize Read More …

Sep 142015
 
7 books by famous celebrities at 2015 Manila International Book Fair

“Stupid is Forevermore” is a sequel to Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago’s best-selling collection of jokes, quotes and anecdotes “Stupid is Forever.” File photo MANILA, Philippines – The biggest book fair in the Philippines is here once more. Now on its 36th year, the Manila International Book Fair (MIBF) will be happening at the SMX Convention Center, SM Mall of Asia Complex in Pasay City from September 16 to 20.  Ranging from leisurely to academic readings, everything that all bookworms have been looking for will all be there in one roof. For this year, the MIBF will also be showcasing some books from well-known celebrities and personalities. Here are few titles you should watch out for: “Dear Alex, Break Na Kami. Paano? Love, Catherine,” by Alex Gonzaga  Alex Gonzaga’s  book aims to help single gals deal and understand their lives as NBSBs. Philstar.com/Jonathan Asuncion, file photo Lifestyle Feature ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch:  “Paano Ba Ito?” by Bianca Gonzalez-Intal Bianca Gonzalez-Intal’s book is dedicated to people in their 20s and 30s. File photo “Judy Ann’s Kitchen” by Judy Ann Santos  ‘Judy Ann’s Kitchen’ is Judy Ann’s first book to ever be published. File photo “Bakit Hindi Ka Crush ng Crush Mo” by Ramon Bautista  Ramon Bautista’s book was turned into a movie, which starred Kim Chiu and Xian Lim. File photo “Besties” by Solenn Heusaff and Georgina Wilson In Besties, Solenn and Georgina finally break the It-Girl spell. File photo “One More Chance” by Juan Miguel Sevilla (based on the screenplay by Vanessa Valdez Read More …

Sep 062015
 
Kudos to literary awardees

Jimmy Abad is conferred the Gawad Dangal ng Lahi by Carl Anthony Palanca and Sylvia Palanca-Quirino. It’s that time of year when our writer-friends reap awards, for individual works or lifetime achievement. Allow me to indulge in furthering literary bonding by congratulating some of them in this space, and turning over much of it to excerpts from a couple of speeches relating to literary milestones. First off, “kongratz y cudoz” as I usually say to all the winners of the 2015 Gawad Pambansang Alagad ni Balagtas handed out by UMPIL or Writers Union of the Philippines to cap its Writers’ Congress on Aug. 29 — most especially to certain friends. These are Susan S. Lara for Fiction in English, Danton Remoto for Poetry in English, Vim Nadera for Tula sa Filipino, Yen Makabenta for Essay in English, and Rody Vera for Dula sa Filipino, as well as Erlinda Kintanar-Alburo for the Gawad Paz Marquez Benitez. Here’s sharing lifelong friend Susan’s memorable remarks of gratitude:   “Thank you, UMPIL, for this honor. I deeply appreciate receiving this award, and I humbly accept it. We always say that writing is its own reward, and awards are welcome bonuses. They give affirmations, assurances — to us, but especially to our families — assurances that we chose wisely when we took this road, the one less traveled by. Palace poet Peachy Paderna plucked 1st prize for Poetry. Here shown with (from left) Carl Anthony Palanca, Criselda “Dang” Cecilio-Palanca, Budget Sec. Butch Abad, and the Poetry Read More …

Sep 062015
 
Going for the bestseller

August and September are usually busy months in the cultural calendar, and this year’s been no exception. UMPIL — the Writers Union of the Philippines — held its annual conference toward the end of August, with the economist and columnist Solita “Winnie” Monsod delivering the customary Adrian Cristobal Lecture. On Sept. 1 — perhaps the most important date on many a young Filipino writer’s calendar —the 65th Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature were given out, with poetry titan Gemino “Jimmy” Abad arguing eloquently for the power of literary language to create its own reality. In that same week, the National Book Development Board and National Book Store teamed up, among other sponsors, to put on the Philippine Literary Festival at the Raffles Hotel in Makati, headlined by visiting authors Matthew Quick and Meg Wolitzer. I went on a panel at that festival with my friends Krip Yuson and Jing Hidalgo, with Marivi Soliven as moderator, to talk about writing the novel. I was surprised to walk into a packed room at the Raffles, despite the fact that Meg Wolitzer was holding forth in another session at the same time. Now, I’ll admit that I’d never read Meg before, although I’d read about her recent novel Belzhar. She was advertised as a bestselling author, as was Matthew Quick, who wrote The Silver Linings Playbook. I overheard a mild complaint in the hallway to the effect that the NBDB should have invited the powerhouse cast of Pulitzer prizewinners that Manila festivalgoers Read More …

Aug 272015
 
Record 100k visitors get 'Taste of Manila' in Toronto

Occupying a 1.3 kilometer stretch of Bathurst Street, the two-day celebration of Filipino culture, cuisine and entertainment is now being touted as the biggest gathering of Filipinos in Canada. Facebook/Taste of Manila MANILA, Philippines — A record number of visitors attended the second annual “Taste of Manila” on August 22 and 23 at so-called “Little Manila” of Toronto, the Department of Foreign Affairs said. Occupying a 1.3 kilometer stretch of Bathurst Street, the two-day celebration of Filipino culture, cuisine and entertainment is now touted as the biggest gathering of Filipinos in Canada for a street festival. The Toronto City Government estimates that 100,000 people of different nationalities attended the event. Actor Jericho Rosales greets fans at “Taste of Manila 2015” in Toronto, Canada. Facebook/Taste of Manila Aside from Philippine officials, Canadian public figures also graced the event, including Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, Federal Senator Tobias Enverga, Canadian Finance Minister Joe Oliver, MP Mark Adler and MPPs John Carmichael and Laurie Scott. Political hopefuls for the upcoming federal election in October, including Michael Levitt and Marco Mendicino, likewise took advantage of mammoth crowds to touch base with the electorate. Lifestyle Feature ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: Toronto Mayor John Tory addressed the crowd with the heartening news that the process is under way at City Hall to rename the park in the Wilson-Bathurst section as “Manila City Park.” “Taste of Manila” was organized by the Philippine Cultural Community Centre with the support of the Philippine Consulate General in Toronto. Read More …

Aug 232015
 
The gentler path

For the first time in something like 20 years, I’m teaching two undergraduate classes this semester. I usually teach one graduate and one undergrad class, but thanks to what I’m taking as a glitch in the registration process, my graduate fiction writing class — which is usually oversubscribed — had zero enrollees this term, forcing its cancellation and my reassignment to a course usually reserved for young instructors, English 11 or “Literature and Society.” I should make it clear that I’ve always insisted on teaching at least one undergrad class every semester, and have done so unfailingly since I returned from my own graduate studies abroad in 1991. The benefits go both ways — young students get to learn from more experienced professors, and senior profs get to know how young people think. With four years of active teaching left before retirement (it’s hard to believe, but I’m getting there), these encounters with some of the country’s brightest young minds will only become more precious, and as with every class I take on, I can only hope that, many years from now, my former students will remember something useful that they picked up from me. I haven’t taught English 11 in ages, so it was with some trepidation that I entered the classroom on our first day a couple of weeks ago, under UP’s new academic calendar. Students don’t realize this, but professors can be just as full of anxiety at the start of the semester as they are. As Read More …

Aug 162015
 
‘Rak pa more! Aegis pa more!’

Aileen ko: Tolits (Jerald Napoles) and Aileen (Aicelle Santos) in their water wonderland in flooded Barangay Venezia Photos by Raffy Yllana I’ll go out on a limb and admit that I am no Aegis fan. Let’s just say I’ve heard their songs one too many times in the jeepneys I ride, in the KTV’s I frequent, and in singing contests which are pretty much part of our national consciousness. More often than not, when an ambitious bloke — I like to call them “contenders” in some imaginary contest — keys in the numbers for an Aegis song on the karaoke machine, I would immediately roll my eyes, sigh, and tell myself that the party’s over and it’s time to go home. And once the contender sings, I would feel validated as they turn Aegis’ trademark birit notes into weak falsettos, soulful pitch changes into screams, and vibratos into opportune moments to pull the mic away from their mouths and laugh. Laugh at what exactly? I do not know. Don’t get me wrong, I have no real issues with the seven-piece band hailing from Misamis Oriental. But when people start singing their songs in hopes to embarrass themselves, I sense mankind’s degrade invading my ears like yellowed, overused Q-tips. Watching Rak of Aegis, however, was an entirely different “karaoke” experience. In no way would it remind anyone of that all-too-common KTV tragedy. It was glorious, worthy of the word “Aegis’” origins in Greek mythology. You just knew that, dazzled by the Read More …

Aug 112015
 
Ballet Philippines holds performance tour in Middle East

Photo taken during the culminating activity of Ballet Manila’s Summer Workshop. File MANILA, Philippines –  Widely recognized as the country’s flagship company in ballet and contemporary dance, Ballet Philippines (BP) will showcase its artistry to the cities of Abu Dhabi, Amman, Doha, Dubai and Manama. BP’s repertoire entitled, Master Pieces: Celebrating a Tapestry of Filipino and Friendship, is an assortment of classical ballets, neo-classical works, and modern and contemporary dance pieces, offering its collection of acclaimed works created and performed throughout its 46-year history. Master Pieces offers to the people of Bahrain, Jordan, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates not only the hand of friendship from the Philippines, but also a memorable evening of cultural experience. These works reflect Filipino creativity, introspection, and celebration of life’s meaningful phases and milestones. Culture is an effective tool in advancing the national interests, our fundamental values and principled advocacy; in achieving the Philippine development agenda in the international arena; in showcasing Philippine talent, creativity, artistry; and in building bridges of friendship, understanding, and cooperation between Filipinos and other nations. With at least 10 million Filipinos making up our country’s diaspora and serving as cultural diplomats, the DFA values the impact of culture in modern diplomacy.   The BP will have performances from August 7 to 14.