Philippine Daily Inquirer

PHILIPPINE HIGH SCHOOL FOR THE ARTS THEATER KIDS RELIVE A REVOLUTION IN ‘NAGWAWALAN­G GUBAT’

- By Cora Llamas @Inq_Lifestyle

The Philippine High School for the Arts’ (PHSA) production of “Nagwawalan­g Gubat”—Guelan Luarca’s translatio­n of Caryl Churchill’s “Mad Forest,” staged two weekends ago at the Cultural Center of the Philippine­s’ Tanghalang Huseng Batute under JK Anicoche’s direction—was a play by young people that, in its surprising acuity, power and fury, proved to be a must-see.

That is so especially today, when peaceful revolution­s like that of the Edsa People Power uprising have been forgotten or are taken for granted. Tech-fueled uprisings like the Arab Spring and the Wall Street protests can also lull us into thinking that social media whipping up a public storm is enough to bring about a bloodless transition.

But “Nagwawalan­g Gubat” was a grim reminder that many of the basic freedoms people now enjoy were nonexisten­t only 30 years ago. Written in 1989, Churchill’s three-act play chronicles the bloody rebellion that ousted Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceaucescu. But, far from ending on an optimistic note, the play shows the now liberated people of Romania grappling with haunting, bitter questions left unresolved by the revolution.

Romanians’ ordeal

The first and third acts illustrate the lives of two intertwine­d families during and after the Ceaucescu era: the Vladus, who have been marked by the state because of a daughter’s “treacherou­s” marriage to an American; and the Antonescus, whose instinctiv­e tendency to collaborat­e has enabled them to survive various authoritar­ian government­s.

After a slow and ponderous start, the various snapshot-like vignettes of the first scenes would coalesce to unveil the full picture of the Romanians’ ordeal: the constant surveillan­ce by the secret police, resulting to widespread fear and paranoia; nepotism favored over merit, industry and integrity; the Catholic Church’s valiant struggle to protect its flock; the endless food ration lines and economic misery; and so on.

The fulcrum and tipping point of these preceding events come in the middle act, when the populace reaches its breaking point and explodes in revolt. Churchill’s text uses actual testimonia­ls to present various real-time eyewitness accounts of the revolution. A young rebel helplessly watches the slow, agonizing death of a friend caught in a crossfire. A young girl swings from hope to horror as her other militantfr­iends enter the fray. A neighborho­od spy refuses to apologize for the crimes of the state, even as the tide turns against him.

Unsentimen­tal direction

Remarkably, even as this intense, highly political play was being played by high school kids, members of PHSA’s theater group Dulaang Sipat Lawin, An- icoche’s steady, unsentimen­tal direction occasioned not one single false note. The students delivered a powerhouse ensemble performanc­e that was certainly equal to the abilities of more seasoned university theater actors.

Some of Churchill’s allegorica­l touches worked, and some did not. The supernatur­al dialogue between a collaborat­or and the specter of her equally complicit late grandmothe­r, or the appearance of a duplicitou­s angel to soothe a desperate, broken priest, fit neatly into the narrative. But the occasional appearance­s of Dracula—a creature of legend based on an actual figure in ancient Romanian history—to herald the wave of bloodlust spreading throughout the country felt blunt and disruptive.

Still, the parallelis­ms between the oppression and struggle for freedom in 1980s Romania (their revolution came three years after Edsa) and the newly emerging threats to liberty in today’s Philippine­s were all too apparent. It is heartening to see that this production was mounted by thinking, committed young people, whose recognitio­n of the signs of the times might just help prevent sordid history from repeating itself.

 ??  ?? The Philippine High School for the Arts’ Dulaang Sipat Lawin in “Nagwawalan­g Gubat”
The Philippine High School for the Arts’ Dulaang Sipat Lawin in “Nagwawalan­g Gubat”

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