The Philippine Star

Forgotten indie recovered 41 years later in NY

-

This is a story that actually began in the late ’60s after we had left the Manila Times publicatio­ns to join ABC Channel 5, its broadcast arm. Those were exciting times when television was still in its infancy and Channel 5 was a David battling huge stations and succeeding to the amazement of everyone.

Station manager at that time was the innovative devil-may-care Ramy Diez, who only stayed long enough at his post to leave footprints one would never forget. It was during his stint at Channel 5 that the station had rocketed to become the leading news and public affairs channel with Antonio Tecson as head of the newsroom. Jose Mari Velez anchored The Big News which won awards yearly. Doroy Valencia’s Over A Cup of Coffee, Max Soliven’s Impact and Ninoy Aquino’s Insight were the top commentary talk shows. Lupita Concio was harvesting the success of Balintataw. It was possibly the best times of our life, when one was young and adventurou­s, and there was nothing too dif

Ramy taught us everything we learned in broadcast and gave us the best breaks together with photograph­er Romy Vitug who, like us, was a newbie in television, having come from the print medium.

worked on The Rites of Summer celebratin­g the many colorful Holy Week practices around the country. It was a huge still photograph­y, and us hungering for more.

On two separate Sundays in 1968, carrying a borrowed 16mm Bolex camera, short ends and contribute­d black time was Romy’s favorite hunting grounds for the black and white poetic images he would record on still camera. of people whose lives and deaths, joys and sorrows, were inexorably chained to the sea.

We were joined on these trips by Emmanuel “Eric” Torres, poet, art critic and professor of English and Comparativ­e Literature at the Ateneo de Manila, and curator of the Ateneo Art Museum, who wrote the script for the film.

Post- production was something else we hadn’t adequately prepared for, with equipment more difficult to borrow, but we were determined. Romy had a friend who donated the positive stock to print our short ends. With a magnifying glass held up against the light, we recall laying on the floor editing this material and patching it up with tape. A generous photograph­er/ editor put the final touches on his Moviola machine. We now needed to record narration and music.

We called Michael Dadap to put in the music. Michael then was already a popular guitarist, composer, and conductor, and an influentia­l advocate of Filipino folk music. He would later migrate to the US, where he would establish a world- class rondalla ensemble and the Iskwelahan­g Rondalla in Boston, Massachuse­tts. Ray Pedroche, among the pioneers of early radio and later chief executive at RPN- 9, recorded the narration Eric wrote. We couldn’t believe we were done without having to pay anyone.

Someone had told us there was a film archive in

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Bearing with the humdrum rhythm of a life of touch and go
Bearing with the humdrum rhythm of a life of touch and go
 ??  ?? Momentous meeting of this writer and M.M. Serra in New York
Momentous meeting of this writer and M.M. Serra in New York
 ??  ?? Death will not answer ‘Who are we? Where are we going?’
Death will not answer ‘Who are we? Where are we going?’
 ??  ?? Life must move                                                                    of evening
Life must move of evening
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines