Philippine Daily Inquirer

Tony Mabesa–lion of the theater

The secret to his six-decade longevity? ‘A happy actor is a working actor, and ditto for a director’

- By Amadís Ma. Guerrero Contributo­r

THE JAPANESE military banned Hollywood movies during their traumatic occupation of the Philippine­s in the 1940s. As a result, Philippine theater flourished. The Avellanas formed the Philippine Artist League, Gerardo de Leon’s troupe performed at the Life Theater in Quiapo, Manila; and Narciso Pimentel staged plays at the Met.

Cinema houses were closed down, but later gave way to these stage production­s.

Little Tony Mabesa (born in Los Baños,

Laguna in 1935), accompanie­d by his mother and sometimes by his Lola Chayong, would watch these shows that featured “dancing women, singers, acrobats, animal acts, precocious children and comedians, and capped by a 30 to 45 minute dramatic theatrical piece performed by actors from film, radio and theater.”

Cupid’s arrow

At UP Rural High School, young Mabesa suddenly became a director “when Cupid shot an arrow into the heart” of his English teacher, Priscilla Alabado. During a class project, Miss Alabado turned over the directoria­l chores to the student “apparently (because) she wanted to spend more time with her beau whom she eventually married.”

Mabesa went on to become a director of note, and an actor of stage, film and TV. He is still at it after some six decades. At 78 years old, he has done over 150 plays, and counts appearance­s in about 100 movies and TV shows.

At the University of the Philippine­s, his first mentor in theater was the playwright Wilfrido Ma. Guerrero (later a National Artist). Mabesa kept on acting and directing, went abroad for graduate and doctoral studies, and establishe­d the Dulaang UP and UP Playwright’s Theater, among other myriad accomplish­ments.

Plays of substance

The choice of his favorite plays, says Mabesa, is dictated by “sentiment, aesthetic merit, and the impact the plays had on my career in theater.”

Count among these Guerrero’s “Wanted: A Chaperone,” all the full-length plays of Anton Chekhov, Henrik Ibsen’s “Peer Gynt,” “St. Louis Loves Dem Filipinos” by Floy Quintos, Schiller’s “Maria Stuart/Maria Stuarda,” the musical “Man of La Mancha” and Nick Joaquin’s “Portrait of the Artist as Filipino.” Plus Shakespear­e, of course.

The young Peer Gynt was played by—would you believe—Roderick Paulate, and the four- to five-hour play also starred Jonas Sebastian, Shamaine Centenera and Angie Ferro. It was one of his most am- bitious production­s.

As for “Man of La Mancha,” Mabesa has directed the play three times, with translatio­n by (National Artist) Bienvenido Lumbera. “The song ‘The Im- possible Dream’ never ceases to haunt me,” he says.

Delicate relationsh­ip

“The relationsh­ip between a teacher/director and student artist is a delicate one,” muses Mabesa. “Somehow, one’s role as a mentor of a student can be a most rewarding or a most frustratin­g one.”

Presumably most rewarding for him is the gaggle of top-tier actors he has mentored, led by Centenera, Irma Adlawan, Eugene Domingo, Frances MakilIgnac­io, Adriana Agcaoili, Banaue Miclat, Neil Ryan Sese, among many others.

Filmmakers Chito Roño and Aureus Solito were in his directing class, and he also served as adviser to the theses production­s of Chris Millado, Dennis Marasigan, Alexander Cortez and Tuxqs Rutaquio.

The honor roll of Mabesa students includes film scholars Nick Deocampo and Ada Bautista (film editing, Sorbonne Paris), designers Clint Ramos (Obie Award, New York) and Eric Pineda, and playwright­s Floy Quintos and Nick Pichay.

“I am blessed to have had an ongoing six-decades-plus career in the theater,” the veteran actor-director says.

For Dulaang UP this September, he is adapting and directing John Webster’s “The Duchess of Malfi” in both English and Filipino, with the Filipino translatio­n done by Allan Palileo.

You can also see him starting Sept. 16 in the new TV5 tawaserye “Madame Chairman,” starring Sharon Cuneta. Mabesa plays Father Andy. A long way from Shakespear­e and Chekhov but, as he says in his trademark basso profundo, “a happy actor is a working actor, and ditto for a director.”

 ??  ?? INQSnap this page (not just the logo) to view more photos! ABOVE: In front of UP Oblation with his Chow Chow dogs, against a tarpaulin from Dulaang UP honoring alums Eugene Domingo, People’s Choice Award for Best Actress, and Shamaine Centenera-Buencamino, Best Supporting Actress in the 6th Asian Film Awards in HK
INQSnap this page (not just the logo) to view more photos! ABOVE: In front of UP Oblation with his Chow Chow dogs, against a tarpaulin from Dulaang UP honoring alums Eugene Domingo, People’s Choice Award for Best Actress, and Shamaine Centenera-Buencamino, Best Supporting Actress in the 6th Asian Film Awards in HK
 ??  ?? YOUNG Mabesa“BAKASYUNIS­TA” “PAGKAHABA-HABAMan ng Prusisyon, Sa Simbahan Din ang Tuloy” aka “Much Ado About Nothing” FLOY Quintos’ “Fake” with Joel Lamangan and Ross Pesigan “MARY Stuart” with Shamaine CenteneraB­uencamino and Ana Abad Santos
YOUNG Mabesa“BAKASYUNIS­TA” “PAGKAHABA-HABAMan ng Prusisyon, Sa Simbahan Din ang Tuloy” aka “Much Ado About Nothing” FLOY Quintos’ “Fake” with Joel Lamangan and Ross Pesigan “MARY Stuart” with Shamaine CenteneraB­uencamino and Ana Abad Santos

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