The Philippine Star

Dance, discipline, and Pinocchio with Lisa Macuja-Elizalde & Osias Barroso

- By DLS PINEDA

I was seated in front of Lisa Macuja-Elizalde at a café in Ortigas when I felt the urge to ask her, “Has anyone approached you for an autograph after your speech at Ateneo’s commenceme­nt exercises?”

She put her utensils down, sipped from her glass of water, and dabbed her lips with a napkin. “You know,” she said, “my Ateneo speech gave me a second career.” Our long table of press people, Osias Barroso and Tippy dos Santos, all broke into laughter. We were there for a less-than-formal press lunch — “a simple gathering,” they said in the invite — for the announceme­nt of Ballet Manila’s Pinocchio.

“The next day,” she continued, “my family and I were in Boracay. Easter vacation no’n, eh. And I found out na ‘yun na — trending and trending and trending! And then, biglang may

nagte- text na, ‘Can you be our commenceme­nt speaker?’ Sabi ko, ‘Teka muna, teka muna! Nasa Boracay ako!’’

“I just didn’t expect it all to happen be- cause of that Ateneo speech,” she said. “I didn’t expect anything to happen at all!”

She explained that it was the first time she got an invitation to speak as a commenceme­nt speaker. And for that, she wanted to make it great. “As soon as I got the invitation, inumpisaha­n ko na. And hindi rin

naman ako kasi tulad nung mga nauna na nilang in- invite na genuinely-genuinely-super-super busy, the kind of persons who’d say, ‘Okay, what am I doing today? Okay, give me my speech!’”

Lisa narrated that she met with a core group of soon-to-be graduates and asked them what they wanted to hear in the speech. “It’s when I met with them that I really got down to writing the speech. I really practiced on a podium with a microphone. Nag- rehearse talaga

ako. Sineryoso ko siya talaga. Kinareer ko.” As a dancer of her caliber, it is impossible to take away the discipline ballet has taught her. She said it made her uneasy, sitting beside people in togas, while she sat onstage wearing a Filipinian­a, “Hindi naman ako master’s degree holder or anything like that. My Lord — I’m a dancer!”

After that unforgetta­ble speech, anyone, including the young and uninitiate­d, would be hard put not to know who the country’s prima ballerina is. Lisa’s speech was also testament to the elegance, and at the same time, the relevance of ballet. Its beauty lied in showing how her craft had become her life and how we, her audience, could do the same in ours.

It is in the same spirit that Ballet Manila sets out to stage Pinocchio at the Aliw Theater later this month and on the first weekend of December. Ballet Manila makes it a point to show ballet for children, perhaps to introduce and entice a new generation of ballerinos and ballerinas. Alvin Santos, one of School of Bal- let Manila’s own scholars, will play Pinocchio. He is also the first male Filipino danseur to receive a Finalist certificat­e in the Asia Pacific Internatio­nal Ballet Competitio­n in 2003.

Pinocchio promises to be a full-blown production which will feature dancers, acrobats, vibrant stage design, and singing by Tippy dos Santos. I asked Lisa if she had any apprehensi­ons loading the show with non-ballet performanc­es. She quipped, “No, magaling

si Alvin.” Everyone in the table then shifted their gaze to Alvin. Caught in the middle of chewing his carbonara, he swallowed his food in one gulp and gave a wide, innocent smile — a natural Pinocchio.

Osias then recounts an incident when Alvin had been injured immediatel­y after the second run of Pinocchio a decade ago. While tending to his knee, Alvin joined the company which was on a performanc­e tour in Russia. Unable to move, he joined as the music master for their crew.

After one of their shows, Osias was waiting for Alvin to come out of the theater. When Osias felt that his student was taking too long, he went inside the deserted theater, and saw the boy, barely recovered from his injury, dancing alone onstage. The inconvenie­nced ballet director asked his student angrily, “Anong ginagawa mo?” The boy replied, “Sir. Di ko na masasayaw

‘yun dito, eh.” It brought everyone to tears, said Osias, a true Pinocchio moment for Alvin.

“The Pinocchio ballet is very popular,” Osias said. “My take on the ballet is really more for children, but the lessons can still be for adults. I made it mine because the play is basically me — I’m a jolly person. I’m a happy person; I always find time to laugh about life’s problems.”

In today’s fast-paced life, both Lisa and Osias commented that the young today are no longer as adept at mastering the discipline ballet instills. “I think the younger generation is more into tricks,” said Lisa. “They are more into the dancing as an athletic form of expression, rather than the artistic form that it’s supposed to be. On YouTube, Instagram, you see five pirouettes, six pirouettes, eight pirouettes, 10 pirouettes. Nawawala ‘yung whole ‘dancer/ artist.’ Ang nangyayari ay para kang ‘ athlete/ trickster/dancer,’ ‘yung ‘ artist’ nagiging lesser of a priority. They ask, ‘What should I do to be able to turn?’ or ‘What should I do to be able to jump high?’ It’s to impress. They no longer think of the overall picture. They’re just focused on results.”

Perhaps, this is the subtext behind Ballet Manila’s staging of Pinocchio. Confronted by the world’s harsh realities — Stromboli, the fox, the cat, the whale, etc. — and deceived by immediate rewards, the naïve Pinocchio is led astray. Geppetto, his father and true mentor, journeys far and wide to bring his son back.

Pinocchio shows on Nov. 27, 28, and Dec. 5 at 8 p.m.; Nov. 29 and Dec. 6 at 3 p.m. at Aliw Theater in Pasay City. Tickets are available at all Ticketworl­d outlets. Call 891-9999) or visit www.tickedworl­d.com.ph.

‘The “Pinocchio” ballet is very popular,’ Ballet Manila co-artistic director Osias Barroso says. ‘My take on the ballet is really more for children, but the lessons can still be for adults.’

 ??  ?? Alvin Santos, who reprises his role as Pinocchio from 2002, is one of Ballet Manila’s top performing scholars and is now one of its most senior company members.
Alvin Santos, who reprises his role as Pinocchio from 2002, is one of Ballet Manila’s top performing scholars and is now one of its most senior company members.
 ??  ?? Lisa Macuja-Elizalde, Ballet Manila artistic director and prima ballerina
Lisa Macuja-Elizalde, Ballet Manila artistic director and prima ballerina
 ??  ?? Pinocchio choreograp­her Osias Barroso
Pinocchio choreograp­her Osias Barroso
 ??  ?? The cast of Ballet Manila’s Pinocchio
The cast of Ballet Manila’s Pinocchio
 ??  ?? Pinocchio with Jiminy Cricket and the Blue Fairy
Pinocchio with Jiminy Cricket and the Blue Fairy

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