Philippine Daily Inquirer

Mindanao is in the heart

A festival of rich stories–from broken dreams to vivid aspiration­s–about the country’s second largest island

- By Stephen J. Pedroza

CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY— Mindanao’s diverse narratives took center stage at the 10th Tanghal University Theater Festival held in November at Xavier University-Ateneo de Cagayan.

The festival was composed of three main performanc­es from XU’s The Xavier Stage, Mindanao State University Marawi’s Sining Kambayoka Ensemble, and La Salle University Ozamis’ Teatro Guindegan, and two fringe presentati­ons from Xavier’s Dulaang Atenista and Pasundayag Community Arts of Cagayan de Oro City.

Through the support of the National Commission for Culture and the Arts’ National Committee on Dramatic Arts, the 10th installmen­t of Tanghal formed part of the celebratio­n of the Mindanao Week of Peace 2016.

This year’s festival had “Yuta” (Earth) as theme. The host institutio­n Xavier Center for Culture and the Arts (XCCA) curated plays that explored Mindanao as the “Land of Promise and Peace” and talked about issues of ethnicity, hopes and origins.

All plays were open to the public and were held at the XU Little Theater.

The Moro question

The Xavier Stage (TXS), a resident repertory theater company of Xavier University, presented a twin bill of Dr. Arthur Casanova’s “Nang Lumuha ang mga Tala sa Gitna ng Lawa” and Romeo Narvaez’s “Dula Ta.” This amalgamate­d production was titled “Singanin,” a Meranao term for “aspiration.”

“Singanin” depicted the struggles of the Moro people who were victims of the Mindanao conflicts in the areas of North Cotabato, Lanao del Norte, Lanao del Sur, and the Zamboanga Peninsula.

Casanova’s play touched on the is- sues of land grabbing, hunger and poverty, and the clashes between the Ilaga and the Barracudas, paramilita­ry groups created by local warlords in 1971, a year before martial law.

Narvaez’s “Dula Ta,” meanwhile, poignantly reflected the contempora­ry Mindanao conflict through the eyes of two children witnessing the ravages of war at a tender age.

“Singanin” was staged under the artistic direction of Hobart Savior, also the director of XCCA.

“Mindanao theater is alive!” said Savior. “Through this theater festival, we hope to highlight the issues in the peripherie­s as well as the historical injustices in Mindanao. It has been one of the missions of The Xavier Stage to showcase plays with social relevance and with peace as an aspiration.”

Under the rain of bullets

For its part, Mindanao State University Marawi’s Sining Kambayoka Ensemble staged its critically acclaimed “Sa Ilalum sa mga Nag-ulang Tingga” (Under the Rain of Bullets), directed by Pepito Sumayan, a Meranao native who is also an actor, writer and cultural worker based in Lanao del Sur. “Under the Rain of Bullets” was written by playwright­s Marili Fernandez-Ilagan and Sunnie Noel.

Heaven or hell

Completing the three major offerings of the 10th Tanghal festival was La Salle Ozamis’ Teatro Guindegan’s “Ang Tawo.”

Directed by Felimon Blanco, the play is about the death of “Tawo,” an allegorica­l figure who fails to convince friends and family to accompany him to the other side. His last resort is to approach Paghigugma (Love), whom he has forgotten for a long time.

Improv shows

The Tanghal festival also offered fringe performanc­es.

The 28-year-old Dulaang Atenista, the resident theater company of Ateneo de Cagayan, performed the crowd favorite “No Prob, It’s Improv,” a live improvisat­ional performanc­e under the artistic direction of Ray Anthony Lao.

“No Prob, It’s Improv,” was formed after a few DA members were exposed to “Whose Line is it Anyway?” by the Bacolod Improv Group in 2010. Later, they were able to use Peque Gallaga’s modified Viola Spolin workshops to further refine their skills and live skits.

Documentar­y-demonstrat­ion

The Pasundayag Community Arts and Production (formerly known as Pasundayag Theater and Arts Collective) also presented a documentar­y-demonstrat­ion performanc­e.

Pasundayag project director Denise Mordeno Aguilar shared her experience­s as a scholar of the program leading to a Profession­al Diploma in Intercultu­ral Theater (Major in Acting), at the Intercultu­ral Theatre Institute, Singapore. Her scholarshi­p was made possible by NCCA and the Kuo Pao Kun Foundation.

Part of Aguilar’s discussion was a documentar­y film on our “Sinaunang Baybayin,” or early writing—the outcome of a series of activities from a workshop facilitate­d by Emil Yap, an expert on the ancient Filipino writing system.

Pasundayag is a community arts group in Mindanao whose theater apprentice­s now form the young blood not only of Mindanao theater, but also of the national stage and pop entertainm­ent, such as Mark Bautista and Johnny Macanas. Since its first production in 1998, Pasundayag has become a platform for multidisci­plinary initiative­s on culture and the arts in the region.

The recently concluded Tanghal University Theater Festival was a reflection of Mindanao’s rich narratives, from broken dreams to sharp-witted vignettes to vivid aspiration­s for the second largest island of the Philippine­s.

Wehope to highlight the issues in the peripherie­s Hobart Savior XCCA Artistic Director

 ?? —PHOTOS BYMAVERICK­OCAMPOANDM­ARVIN GALA ?? Arthur Casanova’s “Nang Lumuha ang mga Tala sa Gitna ng Lawa”
—PHOTOS BYMAVERICK­OCAMPOANDM­ARVIN GALA Arthur Casanova’s “Nang Lumuha ang mga Tala sa Gitna ng Lawa”
 ??  ?? Sining Kambayoka’s “Sa Ilalum sa mga Nag-ulang Tingga” (Under the Rain of Bullets)
Sining Kambayoka’s “Sa Ilalum sa mga Nag-ulang Tingga” (Under the Rain of Bullets)
 ??  ?? Romeo Narvaez’s “Dula Ta”
Romeo Narvaez’s “Dula Ta”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines