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Philippine Theater
Before the Advent of Cinema
Long before the
coming of cinema in the Philippines, theater originated in the culture of
the country's early societies. Their theatron was on the ground within the
community. The ritual practitioners in their dance-dramas used imitative
dances to propitiate the supernatural powers that were believed to control
forces to regulate the seasons and elements; to ensure the earth's
fertility; and to grant the tribe success in hunting and warfare.
At the turn of the
19th century, the zarzuela, a traditional Spanish one-act comic opera with
satirical theme; and the vaudeville, a stage show consisting of various
acts, such as singing,dancing and comedy, became famous and prominent among
the Filipinos. These were shown and performed at town fiestas where Filipino
viewers go eagerly from different parts of the province so as not to miss
the stage plays.
The Spanish Operetta
or musical comedy introduced by a political deportee from Spain, Don Narciso
de Escosura, at Teatro de Binondo or Castellano in 1848, was given impetus
by Don Alejandro Cubero, the father of Spanish zarzuela in the Philippines,
at Teatro Filipino on Calle Echague.
The Tagalog zarzuela
found a home at Teatro Zorilla, the only surviving 19th century theater
located at the corner of Calle San Pedro ( now Evangelista ) and abbreviated
the Iris which formed part of Calle Azcarraga (now Recto). It provided ready
material for the nascent Filipino silent motion picture.
The
Advent of Cinema in the Philippines
During the last decade
of the 19th century, in 1896, a Spaniard by the name of Pertierra, prepared
to launch his first movie show in Manila at Christmas Time. The venue was to
be at Salon de Pertierra, which he established nine months earlier as the
Phonograph Parlor on the ground floor of the Casino Espanol at Calle Perez,
off the Escolta. But for some reasons still unknown to this writing,
Pertierra failed to make his presentation despite several published
announcements to this effect. The show kept being postponed until the New
Year.
Finally, on January 1,
1897, the first four movies namely, Un Homme Au Chapeau (Man with a
Hat), Une scene de danse Japonaise (Scene from a Japanese Dance),
Les Boxers (The Boxers), and La Place de L' Opera (The
Place L' Opera), were shown via 60mm Gaumont Chrono-photograph projector at
the Salon de Pertierra at no. 12 Escolta.
Other countries, such
as France, England, and Germany have their claims to the introduction of
publicly projected motion picture but the corresponding credit should have
been given to Mr. Pertierra and the centennial anniversary of the first
movie shown in the Philippines should have been commemorated on January 1,
1997
The
Arrival of Lumiere Cinematograph
Antonio Ramos, a
Spanish soldier from Alhama de Aragon, who had arrived earlier in the year
with the "Batallon de Cazadores" (Hunter's Batallion), which had been sent
to quell the Philippine revolution, was able to import a Lumiere
Cinematograph from Paris. With it he bought 30 film titles. He did the
acquisition with his savings, and evidently, with the financial backing of
Liebman and Peritz.
By August, 1897,
Liebman and Peritz presented the first movies on the Lumiere Cinematograph
in Manila. The new cine was set up at Escolta, corner San Jacinto, the hall
formerly occupied by the Ullman Jewelry shop. A test preview was presented
to a limited number of guests on August 28. The inaugural show was presented
to the general public the next day, August 29, 1897.
During the first three
weeks, Ramos had a selection of ten different films to show, but by the
fourth week, he was forced to shuffle the 30 films in various combinations
to produce new programs. These were four viewing sessions, every hour on
the hour, from 6:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M. After three months, attendance began
to slacken for failure to show any new feature. They transferred the viewing
hall to a warehouse in Plaza Goiti and reduced the admission fees. By the
end of November, the movie hall closed down.
The
First Movie Shot in the Philippines
Impelled desperately
to attract patronage and as a matter of survival, Ramos, using the Lumiere
as a camera, locally filmed Panorama de Manila (Manila landscape),
Fiesta de Quiapo (Quiapo Fiesta), Puwente de Espaņa
(Bridge of Spain), and Esceņas Callejeras (Street scenes), in 1898.
Notwithstanding the possibility that some cameramen aboard an ocean liner or
naval expedition might have earlier filmed the enchanting panorama of
Manila, Antonio Ramos thus became the first motion picture producer in the
Philippines.
Among the pioneers who
left documentary evidences of their visits to the Philippines were: Burton
Holmes, father of the "Travelogue" who made the first of several visits in
1899; and made the Battle of Baliwag; Kimwood Peters who shot the
Banawe Rice Terraces and Raymond Ackerman of American Biography and
Mutoscope who filmed Filipino Cockfight and the Battle of Mt.
Arayat.
In 1905, Herbert
Wyndham, shot scenes at the Manila Fire Department; Albert Yearsly
shot the Rizal Day Celebration in Luneta 1909; in 1910, the
Manila Carnival; in 1911, the Eruption of Mayon Volcano; the
first Airplane Flight Over Manila by Bud Mars and the Fires of
Tondo, Pandacan and Paco; and, in 1912, the Departure of
the Igorots to Barcelona and the Typhoon in Cebu.
Filmmakers, indeed,
covered wide ranges of the Philippines: Zamboanga children diving for coins
thrown from the ship's deck; Muslim ladies ogling at the camera; fiestas,
carabao races, fluvial parades, religious processions, panoramic shots of
Philippine cities and towns; gold mining in Paracale; concerts at the Luneta,
or the construction of the Manila Hotel on land reclaimed from the Manila
Bay.
The
Establishment of Movie Houses
Film showing was not
resumed until 1900. The man who opened the first hall exclusively for movie
viewing that year was a British named Walgrah who naturally called his
establishment Cine Walgrah, located at No. 60 Calle Santa Rosa in Intramuros.
The second movie house was opened in 1902 by a Spanish entrepreneur, Samuel
Rebarber, who called his building, Gran Cinematografo Parisien, located at
No. 80, Calle Crespo, Quiapo. In 1903, Jose Jimenez, a stage backdrop
painter, set up the first Filipino-owned movie theater, the Cinematograpo
Rizal. This was located on Azcarraga street, in front of Tutuban Train
Station
The assurance of
abundant and continuous supply of films at cheap introductory prices brought
a landslide of movie theaters. The first of these was Cine Anda which
opened on August 8, 1909, operated by two American Manila Policemen, Frank
H. Goulette and Eddie Teague, others followed: It, Paz, Cabildo, Empire,
Majestic, Comedis, Apollo, Ideal, Luz
and Gaity appeared between 1909 and 1911. Zorilla, the
vanguard of zarzuela and opera presentations, switched to showing films in
late 1909, while Grand Opera House began to include movies
in-between vaudeville number in 1910. Likewise, moviehouses mushroomed in
the Provinces which had electricity . To date, among Asean countries, the
Philippines has myriad moviehouses established from the urban to the
remotest rural areas.
First
Feature Film Produced in the Philippines
The first story film
made in the Philippines- Rose of the Philippines may have been
produced on location in Manila in 1909 by the IMP Company-- Carl Laemmele's
Independent Moving Picture Company, out of which grew the Universal Pictures
Corporation. Some film historians dispute this contending it must have been
a slide show. But the IMP released this 760 foot film (eight minute's
screening time) in the U.S. theaters in January, 1910. When it was released
in Manila in 1911, Rose of the Philippines, was
advertised in the Manila Times as "among the
first films produced locally-a dramatic story from the days of the Empire."
The
First Movie with Sound
The first picture with sound reached
Manila in 1910, using the Chronophone. But, remember, the silent movies were
never shown in silence starting with the first show in 1897. There was
always a gramophone, a piano, or a quartet, or when Caviria was shown at the
Manila Grand Opera House-- a 200 man choir.
By 1930, the talking pictures was
already one year old in the country with the showing of Syncopation,
the first American sound film, in Radio theater, Plaza Santa Cruz. The event
naturally incited competition among local producers and filmmakers as to who
would create the country's first talkie. On December 8, 1932, an article
came out in Graphic magazine featuring the movie, Ang Aswang (The
Vampire). The feature enthused that the said film will be the country's
first talkie. Apparently, as attested by those who remember, the film did
not turn out to be a completely sound film. In all likelihood, the honor of
having made the very first talkie properly belongs to Jose Nepomuceno. His
Film Punyal na Guinto (Golden Dagger), which premiered on March 9,
1933, at the Lyric theater, was credited as the first completely sound movie
to all-talking picture.
The
Film Marketing in the Philippines
In 1912, New York and
Hollywood film companies started to establish their own agencies in Manila
to distribute films. By 1915, the best films of both Europe and U.S. were
being enjoyed by Filipino audiences in Manila and the Provinces.
When World War I
(1914-1918) choked off the production of European studios, Manila theater
managers turned to U.S. for new film products. With the variety they
offered, American Production-distribution-exhibition combinations quickly
dominated the Philippine film market. It has stayed that way since then--
until now!
The
Golden Episodes in Philippine Cinema
In 1937, the first
Filipino movie to achieve international plaudit was Zamboanga, a
picture starred in by Fernando Poe and Rosa del Rosario. Hollywood director
Frank Capra praised the film as the most exciting and beautiful picture of
native life he had ever seen. Manuel Conde's Genghis Khan, released
in 1950 was a rave at the Venice Film Festival in 1952; and dubbed in
French, it was shown in Paris in 1954. Inspired by Conde's picture,
Hollywood remade Genghis Khan, with John Wayne as its lead actor. The people
who had seen both pictures adjudged that the latter was incomparable to the
former in terms of authenticity.
Undoubtedly, the 5th
and the 6th decades were the Golden age of Philippine cinema with subsequent
films making a mark in the overseas scene: Kandelerong Pilak,
Ifugao, Anak Dalita, Badjao, Anak ng Dagat,
to name just a few, swept awards at the Cambodian, Asia and Berlin Film
Festivals. Even at the annual Asian Film Festival with a dozen countries
taking turns in hosting the major filmfest (now the Asia-Pacific Film
Festival with 18 countries), there was a tacit acceptance that the
Philippine cinema was, at the time, the undisputed leader in the continents
film scene.
The
First Color Film in the Philippines
A British film crew
also visited the Philippines, and filmed, among other scenes, the Pagsanjan
Falls (Oriental, 1911) in kinemakolor. Bert Yearley's Oriental Films, which
commissioned this production, generated some excitement by offering six
months free movie passes to the lucky movie patron who could guess to the
closes minute the arrival of the steamship "Empress Russia" which was
bringing the processed film from London. During the 5th decade of the 20th
century, Filipinos awesomely seen Hollywood's first full length picture in
living Technicolor. Filipino local producers presented too, during this
period, their own full length pictures in color and one of which was
Prinsipe Amante (Prince Amante). But inevitably, the color was
imperfect due to technical deficiency. However, Filipino technicians were
quick to cope up with the fast technical development, so that by the turn of
the 6th decade, they succeeded in presenting to the public some full length
pictures in living Eastmancolor, one of which was Ito ang Pilipino,
by J.E. Production. The lead actor was Mr. Joseph Estrada himself. By the
turn of the 7th decade, local producers and filmmakers ceased to produce
pictures in black and white.
Censorship and Taxes on Philippine Cinema
The Government
established the Board of Censors for cinematographic films in 1912, It was
in constant operation until it was superseded by the Board of Censorship for
Moving Pictures in 1929. This is now the Movie and Television Review and
Classification Board (MTRCB).
The government also
imposed the first taxes on film in 1915, the same year income taxes were
imposed. Direct taxes were slapped by the national government on "kinetoscope,
biographs, cinematographs, magic lanterns and similar picture-projecting
devices.
Decrying that the
imposition of government amusement tax (G.A.T.) was confiscatory, the film
producers and distributors pleaded: "Moving pictures have provided more
people in every country of the world with wholesome amusement and at a price
that the poorest can pay than any amusement invented since the world began,
and have become almost a necessity to a great many people of all classes,
and nowhere are they considered a luxury." Nevertheless, the Bureau of
Internal Revenue started collecting taxes on film in 1916.
The
First Film Producers Association
The first association
of motion picture producers and distributors was organized in 1911-- by
American, Spanish, Filipino producers and theater managers-- to fight the
impending imposition of censorship, and later to lobby against taxes. It was
censorship that caused them to unite; it was taxes that made their union
permanent.
During the 5th decade,
however, film productions became one of the major industries of the country.
It contributed to the national government hundreds of million pesos in terms
of revenues. The hope of the filmmakers and distributors to eliminate taxes
waned out as their enthusiasm in the struggle to fight censorship withered
away.
The
Creation of the Film Academy
Realizing the
importance and the contributory value of the movie industry to the
government; and to have a closer supervision and extend the much needed
assistance to the industry, a Presidential Decree was issued creating the
Film Academy of the Philippines. Under its umbrella are the different
organizations and guilds of the industry's working forces, to wit:
- MOWELFUND
- Movie Welfare Fund
- KAPP -
Katipunan ng mga Artista ng Pelikulang Pilipino
- KDPP -Kapisanan
ng mga Director ng Pelikulang Pilipino
- DGPI -
Directors Guild of the Philippines, Inc.
- SGP -
Screenwriters Guild of the Philippines
- FEGMP -
Film Editors Guild for Motion Pictures
- PDGP
-Production Designers Guild of the Philippines
- STAMP -
Sound Technicians Association for Motion Pictures
- ADPM -
Assistant Directors and Production Managers
- FSC -
Filipino Society of Cinematographers
- UFIMDAP-
United Film Music Directors Association of the Philippines
- OSFILM -
Organization of Specialized Filmmakers
- AFW -
Actor's Workshop Foundation
- PMPPA -
Philippine Motion Picture Producers Association
- MPDAP -
Movie Producers & Distributors Association of the Philippines
Film
as an Effective Medium
It was Jose Nepomuceno
who came on the scene and realized the challenge and promise of cinema from
a different perspective. He saw cinema, not only as a profitable
entertainment fare, but as a unique medium with which to document the
unfolding development of the Philippines.
It is interesting to
read an observation of a film reviewer in the "The Citizen" who, after
seeing Nepomuceno's Dalagang Bukid in 1919, was convinced
that excellent local movies could project the Philippine condition abroad as
no other medium could. To quote:
"It is a sad truth to
mention that our country is practically unknown in most part of the globe.
Now, more than ever, the world needs much enlightenment with regard to our
situation so that our foreign commerce may expand and tourists may visit our
shores. We hope to make the Philippines the veritable Garden of the Far East
in the eyes of the commercial world, and to enhance this idea, the motion
picture is an essential factor. Pictures depicting the various phases of
Philippine life and customs, if exhibited in China, Japan, India,America,
Australia and Europe, will do much toward giving the people of these
countries a fair and correct view of our home affairs. It appears therefore,
highly propitious to develop this all important industry which, if realized,
will assist materially in putting the Philippines on the map as an
enlightened, progressive and industrious nation."
Seventy five years
later, (and to the present) the coveted objective of the patriotic reviewer,
is still a goal of the Philippine film industry.
Government's Recognition of Cinema's Relevance
The Philippine
Commission recognized early the potential of cinema as a tool of
communication and information, so that in 1909, the Bureau of Science bought
a complete filmmaking unit and laboratory from Pathe, and sent its chief
photographer, the American, Charles Martin, to France to train for a year.
When Martin completed his training, he resolved to document, in motion
pictures, the varied aspects of the Philippines -- its folkways and dances,
for instance, or its natural resources. He had many lucky breaks; his film
crew was at Taal Batangas, when the Taal Volcano erupted in 1911. His film
of this visually exciting natural disaster was shown around the world.
Government filmmaking
ranged from recording life among the cultural communities for the
Department of Interior to making "how-to" movies for the Bureau of Health
and Education. By 1914, the U.S. colonial government was already using films
as a vehicle for information, education, propaganda and entertainment. The
Bureau of Science tackled subjects designed to present an accurate picture
of the Philippines before the American public, particularly the U.S.
Congress.
For example, the
acclaimed films exhibited at the Panama Exposition in 1915 depicted "several
industries of the city and provinces, among them hat-making, salt
manufacture, nipa cultivation and manufacture in its many phases, rice
cultivation, the many kinds of weaving by Christians and non-Christians,
native blacksmithing, the Chinese macaroni and chocolate making, and scores
of others."
The Manila
publication, "The Citizen" credits cinema advertisements flashed in movie
theaters for he success of the national campaign to raise funds to buy one
submarine for the American war effort during World War I.
The national
government made plans to produce its own films as the most effective means
of reaching the masses. At the same time, it resolved to establish a
national repository for films, as a treasure trove for future generations.
The
Effect of Global Economic Trends on Cinema
The nascent shifting
of industrial society to information society has resulted to a single
economy in the world; and because of this unprecedented period of
accelerated change, the players and participants of the global economy has
become individuals and small entrepreneurs. The shift is an economic
reality, and not an intellectual abstraction. The innovations in
communications and computer technology accelerated the pace of change by
collapsing the information float. New information technologies give birth to
new activities, processes, and products. Huge business companies are forced
to downsize in order to survive in this global economic trends.
Big movie studios in
Hollywood, such as 20th Century Fox, MGM, Paramount, Columbia, Universal;
and in the Philippines- the famous Big-Four- Premiere Production, Sampaguita
Pictures, LVN Studio, Lebran Production, are all virtually closed down due
to the proliferation of individual and collective modes of film production.
Nevertheless, the film industry remains steadfast. Like an old soldier, it
may fade for a while, but it shall never die! |