June
26-July 7, 2013
Tanghalang
Huseng Batute (CCP Studio Theater)
Bulwagang
Amado Hernandez (Conference Room)
CCP
Complex
Last
year’s Virgin Labfest, the eighth edition of the festival showcasing untried,
untested, unpublished and unstaged plays was notable for having sold out a week
before the whole thing even started. Having a sold out run last year has set
the bar really high for the upcoming edition happening this June 26 to July 7,
2013 at the Cultural Center of the Philippines’ Tanghalang Huseng Batute (CCP
Studio Theater) and Bulwagang Amado Hernandez (Conference Room). The Virgin
Labfest is a joint venture of the CCP, Tanghalang Pilipino and the Writers’
Bloc, Inc. in cooperation with the National Commission for Culture and the Arts.
This
year’s edition, the ninth, poses the question May mas sasarap pa ba? or Is
there anything tastier? when translated. Ten new, one act plays (nine short
and one full length) along with three plays from last year, five staged
readings, a writing fellowship program, site specific performances and a book
launch make up the events for this year’s Virgin Labfest.
This
year’s plays include works from Labfest veterans such as George de Jesus, Liza
Magtoto and Em Mendez with Kapit, Isang Daan and Ambong Abo. Virgins to the
Labfest playwrights are represented by Benjamin Pimentel, Herlyn Gail Alegre,
Eljay Castro Deldoc’s, Bernadette Neri, Jimmy Flores’ and Carlo Vergara. Dominique
La Victoria ’s Chipline, will be the Labfest’s first
ever play which will be totally in Cebuano. Restaged plays from the 8th
Virgin Labfest include Em Mendez’s Unang
Regla ni John, Aizel Cabili’s Pagsubli
and Guelan Luarca’s Kuneho. Chris Millado, Marlon Rivera, Chris Matinez, Melvin
Lee, Charles Yee, Roobak Valle, JK Anicoche, Law Fajardo, Emman dela Cruz,
George de Jesus, Ed Lacson and Ariel Yonzon will be directing the plays.
The
plays that are part of the Virgin Labfest 9 are the following:
Set
A:
Kudeta! Kudeta!
by Jimmy
Flores
A coma patient and a disgruntled fallen angel join forces in a plot to remove Lucifer from power. It’s good versus evil and all the grays in between.
Kapit
by George
de Jesus
In a bedroom, an older woman berates a younger man much like a mother reminding her son of his future. In the course of the conversation, their relationship becomes more than what it seems revealing how the ties that bind them together is being unfettered. Kapit is a story of the attachments people make, what makes them hold on to the things that they ought to let go.
Imbisibol
by
Herlyn Gail Alegre
The play is set in 1992 on an ordinary Sunday in
Set
B
Isang Daan
by Liza
Magtoto
Ting has a Katipunero hero for an ancestor. In fact, a street is named after him. He wants his Fil-am daughter to feel that Pinoy pride by showing her that. The bad news is that the street will soon give way to a highway which is being built through a mayor's initiative. Ting's Fil-Am daughter Bituin couldn't care less, but Ting wants to preserve the legacy of his great-grandfather. An informal settler and an NGO worker also seem to have reasons to stop the mayor from building this highway. What's in this street anyway that they have to fight for it? Perhaps a quest for immortality, survival or something else?
Chipline
by Dominique
La Victoria
The simple, quiet lives of three children in Bukidnon are shaken when they hear that a Zipline park is going to be constructed in their beloved playground. They go to the site hoping to play peacefully like they always do--instead they find a sign: NO TRESPASSING. In their own little way they weigh the pros and cons: development for their little barangay or loss of a childhood?
Owel
by
Eljay Castro Deldoc
Owel's medical examination unlocks a story of loss, romantic petition, and gender discussions. Sexual innuendos, mentions of heartbreak, and personal strife are juxtaposed against the clinical atmosphere of an infirmary in
Set
C
Pamamanhikan
by
Bernadette Neri
Pamamanhikan narrates the friendship of Ibyang and Ester as the latter is faced with the cross of motherhood. Her youngest daughter, Ces, is coming home along with her partner and Ester is confronted with the predicament of how to deal with her daughter’s lover. The story takes place while Ester and Ibyang are preparing all the ingredients of her daughters favorite dish. With the help of Ibyang who is an expert in concocting not just complicated dishes but also that of the most complex emotions, will Ester eventually find the exact recipe that complements her own feelings?
Kung Paano Ako Naging Leading Lady
by
Carlo Vergara
Being a maid is tough enough, but when Mely finds employment under a group of unconventional employers, she steps up to the unique challenge for the sake of her family. When Mely's sister Viva enters the picture, Mely is reminded of a disturbing past, made complicated by an unsettling romantic revelation made by one of her employers. All this in a tragicomedy about domestic help, sibling rivalry, and shattered dreams.
Ambong Abo
by
Em Mendez
Ambo is found by the police in
Set
D
Pramoedya
by
Benjamin Pimentel
'Pramoedya' tells the story of Indonesian novelist Pramoedya Ananta Toer who spent years as a political prisoner on a desolate Indonesian island during the Suharto regime. Banned from writing or reading, he defied his captors by composing an epic novel by secretly narrating the story to fellow prisoners. Pramoedya's novel features a 19th century Indonesian patriot who draws inspiration in his struggle against Dutch colonial rule from the revolution waged by Filipinos against
Set
E - Virgin Labfest 8 Revisited
Unang Regla ni John
by
Em Mendez
Ang Unang Regla ni John is a coming-out story of a young boy brought up in a hyper-machismo family. John dreads growing hair as he reaches the age of puberty but adores the hairless bodies of women displayed in posters in their barbershop. Upon waking up from a dream, he discovers the first spurts of hair in his privates. He sneaks away his father's labaha and attempts to shave the thing he hates most.
Pagsubli
by Aizel
Cabilan
Pagsubli tells about how an old native man and a soon-to-be-wed lady from
Kuneho
by
Guelan Luarca
In exchange for four million pesos each, five clueless men are hired by a mysterious employer to accomplish an inanely simple task: to transfer a loaded body bag from one room to another. But suddenly, they find themselves locked inside a metal room, and forced to fight for survival when an absurdly murderous written instruction from their employer surfaces.Will they succumb to the idiocy of compassion and humanity, or rise to the challenge of instinct and cunning?
Staged
Readings happening at the Bulwagang
Amado Hernandez (Conference Room):
Ang
mga Nakakapanggigil-hiningang Bline Items ng Kodakerong Chinito ng Binondo
by George
Kabristante
Ang
Kaligayahan ni Nelson at ng Ibang Tao
by Guelan
Luarca
Ang
Maharlika
by
Rogelio Braga
Minsan
May Pumara, Minsan Ma’y Pumara
by Marc
Gaba
The Showcase: Virgin Labfest 9 Writing
Fellowship Programe happens on July 7, 6:00
PM at the Bulwagang Amado Hernandez. The launch of the Virgin Labfest Ikalawang Antolohiya will
be on June 26, 2013 , 6:00 PM at the Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino
Lobby.
Ticket
prices:
P300
P1200
Festival Pass
For
inquiries:
CCP
Dramatic Arts Division 832-1125 local 1606-1607
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