BITTERSWEET INTEGRATIONS: KABILANG IBAYO by The DLSU Harlequin Theatre Guild (2016)
By Gio Potes
Southeast
Asia has a rich and colorful heritage, preserved even in the face of a dark
colonial past. The dramatic history of Asia has always been the interest of the
local theatre scene. A good example this year is DLSU Harlequin Theatre Guild’s
KABILANG IBAYO. KABILANG IBAYO celebrates Southeast Asia, flaunting its
ridiculous pop culture stereotypes and hinting at its dark histories. It is a
rather interesting piece that tackles the recent ASEAN Integration. The Harlequin
Theatre Guild’s latest offering admittedly aims to present relevant
sociocultural conditions of this integration, but whether the group
successfully confronts the matter in-depth or not is besides the point. The politics
can take a backseat in KABILANG IBAYO’s three saccharine youth-targeted one-act
plays.
KABILANG
IBAYO features three lighthearted episodes about neighboring ASEAN countries.
The first is “Mysteryland”, a musical comedy-drama about an audition for the
titular Broadway-esque show. Waiting in line are Laotian, Vietnamese and
Chinese nationals who question the show’s Americanizing nature. They form a
short-lived friendship despite their cultural differences and pressing
challenges. The second play is “Robot”, about two Korean scientists who
programmed a robot Filipino to serve them. Despite the robot’s troublesome
history, she does her function of serving her masters and assisting them to
their marriage. The third play “Ahjhumma” is about a Korean bride assisted by
her two best friends in a nerve-wracking wedding preparation. The entrance of
the groom provokes a dramatic confession regarding comfort women in World War
II.
Although
none of these plays are set in the Philippines, the production’s use of Tagalog
aims to draw Filipino audiences to the transnational condition of Asian
countries. Despite its noticeable seams, the Harlequin Theatre Guild is totally
unsubtle in delivering its support for the Philippines’ ASEAN integration. Their
production aims to bridge certain commonalities between ASEAN nations and the
Philippines, but of course the sails are not always smooth – in each of these
plays, there’s always a looming element that tends to break the narrative, to
abruptly inject a social issue or two. And these instances lay down the most
interesting moments of the production: the Assistant Director in “Mysteryland”
is typical hot-headed auditions executioner, whose sudden shift to song in a musical
fable is the best musical moment of the show. The visual projections are also a
highlight in the whole production. For instance in “Robot”, the projections
worked best in building up the mood of the play, overshadowing its rather
static performers. Its sinister shifts and glitches are perhaps the show’s best
visual offerings.
Meanwhile,
the melodramatic turns in “Robot” and “Ahjhumma” are rather questionable in
delivery. For instance, the comedic Filipina robot’s malfunctioning transforms
into a human who experienced trauma, revealing she’s a victim of Typhoon Haiyan.
But that serious beat is tossed away and the whole backstory of the Filipina is
neglected to return to the romantic angle of the play. While “Ahjhumma” is the
best in the lot – spirited and riotous in its witty punch lines, and very
energetic in its physical comedy – it can’t seem to balance with the subsequent
melodrama smoothly. While it does manage to expose the rarely talked about
plight of war comfort women in both Philippines and Korea, the heaviness of the
scene and the issue itself will make the viewers root for a solution in “Ahjhumma”.
But instead the play returns to the laughs just as abruptly as it descended
into melodrama, without further giving a proper redemption to what was a
traumatic experience, bordering on trivialization. Certain additions can give
these social issues more impact, but the production tries its best to avoid
digging deeper into such seriousness in all three plays that these themes only
seem to pop up for a little more weight to the otherwise floating action. Just
like its white puzzle background, these pieces of narratives don’t seem to fit.
Despite
its flaws, what KABILANG IBAYO delivers in its theatrical presentation is the
importance of cultural narratives in a globalized set-up: that these stories,
cultures and nuances that define a nation’s identity must be preserved, or else
these identities will just be forgotten in the long run. The students of the
Harlequin Theatre Guild are sincere in delivering this message very
enthusiastically, although a lot can still be done to execute it better. Perhaps
the project’s potential can also be realized, and it can give well-earned
justice to the unavoidable issues connected to any two or more countries’
“integration”.
KABILANG IBAYO is written by Nicolas Pichay
and directed by Raffy Tejada.
Catch DLSU Harlequin
Theatre Guild’s latest production at the Augusto Rosario-Gonzales Theater, De
La Salle - College of Saint Benilde on the following dates:
August 4 (4:30PM, 7PM)
August 5 (10:30AM, 3PM, 7PM)
August 6 (3PM, 7PM)
August 5 (10:30AM, 3PM, 7PM)
August 6 (3PM, 7PM)
For more information,
contact Geordina Uy @ 09175463401.
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