Legitimate Theater Companies in The Philippines Objectives:: Speech and Theater Arts
Legitimate Theater Companies in The Philippines Objectives:: Speech and Theater Arts
Legitimate Theater Companies in The Philippines Objectives:: Speech and Theater Arts
City of Pasig
College of Education
Major in English PCED-02-201P MODULES
SPEECH AND THEATER ARTS
INTRODUCTION
The whole experience of theatre makes people more aware and sensitive
towards various issues. It empowers the meek and makes people do away with their
reservations. To make all of these possible, the ehelp of the theater companies are
needed, so here are the legitimate theater companies in the Philippines.
At present REP has one regular season of three plays. Classics, comedies,
dramas and sometimes a small scale musical are a regular part of each season. The
rest of the year is taken up by a musical for young audiences, and time permitting, a big
Broadway musical production. Recently REP has taken to adapting at least one play
and putting it in a Philippine setting although all the plays are performed in English. The
children are not forgotten. The REP THEATER FOR YOUNG AUDIENCES, now on its
27th year, stages professional productions of classic children’s musicals on weekends
and during the week for schools. Children from as far as Tarlac are bussed in to watch
our shows. Which are performed at staggeringly low ticket prices to make it affordable
for the students. Ms. Joy Virata is its Founder and Artistic Director.
RIZAL TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY
City of Pasig
College of Education
Major in English PCED-02-201P MODULES
SPEECH AND THEATER ARTS
REP sustains a summer Performing Arts Workshop attended by more than 200
children and adults each, many of whom are scholars. But Repertory Philippines is not
just a production outfit. It has also been the best-known training ground for actors
having produced the likes of Lea Salonga who first appeared with REP when she was
six years old and then played the lead in ANNIE when she was eight. She went on to
play the lead in Cameron Mackintosh’s MISS SAIGON, winning awards in both London
and New York for her performance and since then has been an international performer.
Monique Wilson, another “Rep tot”, also starred in the same production and is at
present based in Manila and travels the world over where she continues to pursue her
career. The late Junix Inocian, Jonjon Briones, Red Concepcion, Cocoy Laurel, Maya
Barredo, and Gia Macuja are just a few of others numbering about 40 who have
appeared and are still appearing in international productions. REP continues to be the
To carry out its vision, REP maintains a full-time support staff of 10. Its present
address is at Ecoville Executive Townhomes in Makati City. It began using a 200-seat
theater on the 12th floor of the Insular Life Building on Ayala Avenue, moved to a 500-
seat theater at the Shangri-la Plaza Mall which it named the William J. Shaw Theater,
and then, when that theater was demolished, moved to the Carlos P. Romulo 400-seat
theater in the RCBC Plaza. At present it rents the ONSTAGE THEATER in Greenbelt I
in the Ayala Center.
REP’s current President is Mindy Barredo Perez-Rubio. Ms. Zeneida Amador, in
an article she wrote profiling her company said: “Because REP is a non-stock, not-for
profit foundation, it has never stinted in giving each production the best it has been able
RIZAL TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY
City of Pasig
College of Education
Major in English PCED-02-201P MODULES
SPEECH AND THEATER ARTS
to. The money it makes from box-office sales and sponsorship grants have been
ploughed back to benefit actors and support struggling performers, as well as into
production budgets to give each presentation the taste, the look and the sophistication
that cosmopolites have become used to. Its sense of pride about one of the country’s
products renders it at all times unable to settle for mediocrity and to daily reach for
excellence.”
Further, by the regularity of its productions, REP is continuing its furtherance of
the aims of art. That is to make people more sensitive, more aware, more ethical in their
dealing with others, more compassionate and more giving.
Cultural Center of the Philippines - is the premiere showcase of the arts in the
Philippines. Founded in 1969, the CCP
has been producing and presenting
music, dance, theater, visual arts,
literary, cinematic and design events
from the Philippines and all over the
world for more than forty years. Its nine
resident companies, namely, Ballet
Philippines, Philippine Ballet Theater,
Tanghalang Pilipino, Ramon Obusan
Folkloric Group, the Bayanihan
Philippine National Folk Dance
Company, Philippine Philharmonic
Orchestra, UST Symphony Orchestra, Philippine Madrigal Singers and the National
Music Competition for Young Artists Foundation (NAMCYA) present a regular season of
productions, workshops and outreach performances .
The Arts Education Department encourages the growth of aspiring artists, arts
managers and new audiences through master classes, workshops, and online
educational resources. The Outreach and Exchange Department supports the
development of satellite venues in select cities all over the country. The Production and
Exhibition Department advances the practice in technical theater and design and takes
the lead in the professionalization of stagecraft and venue management in the country.
The Cultural Content Department digitizes the cultural content of the Center and
designs interactive portals to make this available to students, teachers, and enthusiasts
in the World Wide Web. With the Assets Development Program the CCP is poised to
redevelop it sixty hectare property as a major cultural and eco-tourism destination in the
Asia Pacific region.
ASEAN Committee on Culture and Information (ASEAN COCI), the ASEAN Korea
Traditional Music Orchestra (AKTMO) among many others. Through these international
network and exchange programs Filipino artists have been able to engage with their
international counterparts and local audiences have been able to experience the arts
and culture from the Asia Pacific and all over the world.
major productions are Bongga ka ‘day the musical (2020), Ang Huling El Bimbo the
musical (2018-2019), All out of love (2018), in addition, the theater also plays host
to The Voice of the Philippines, Pinoy Big Brother, Tawag ng Tanghalan and Idol
Philippines. The theater also hosted the 24th Asian Television Awards in January 2020.
In her book "Cultural Center of the Philippines: Crystal Years," Visitacion de la
Torre described it as a sheltered plaza with a roof that "appears to float, creating the
impression that the building is a dream on one's tender hands." The Tanghalan was
commissioned by then First Lady Imelda Marcos in 1974 for the Miss Universe
1974 Pageant, which was to be held in Manila for the first time. It was built in record
time of seventy-seven days in time for the pageant and was designed by Leandro V.
Locsin. It was originally built to seat an audience of 10,000. It was not air conditioned
and was designed to allow natural breeze to flow through.
The Tanghalang Pambansa (English: National
Theater) - formerly Theater of Performing Arts,
is a theater located in the Cultural Center of the
Philippines Complex in Manila, Philippines. It is
the flagship venue and principal offices of
the Cultural Center of the Philippines. Designed
by National Artist for Architecture Leandro
Locsin, its design was based and expanded
upon the unconstructed Philippine-American
Friendship Center. The Tanghalan is a primary
example of the architect's signature style known
as the floating volume, a trait can be seen in structures indigenous to the Philippines
such as the nipa hut. It houses three performing arts venues, one theater for film
screenings, galleries, a museum and the center's library and archives. Being a work of a
National Artist, the brutalist structure is qualified to be an important cultural landmark as
stipulated in Republic Act No. 10066. Construction began in 1966, with Alfredo
Juinio serving as structural engineer and Filipino firm DM Consunji as the builder.
Originally called the Theater of Performing Arts, it was completed and inaugurated in
1969. Its first major renovation occurred in 2005 for the opening and closing ceremonies
of the 112th General Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union held in Manila. Included
in the renovation were cleaning and replacement of the marble trim, installation of a new
air-conditioning system and new carpeting.
spectators enter the little theater or ascend to the main lobby through a massive
carpeted spiral staircase. Most of the interior is lit artificially, as there are few windows,
most of which are located along the sides of the main lobby. Large areas on the upper
floors are open to the ground floor lobby, emphasizing the large chandeliers and fluid
interior spaces on northeast side of the building. Galleries and other rooms surround
these open areas, occupying the space created by the huge cantilevered block.
Whenever possible, the walls surrounding these rooms are used as additional venues
for displaying art works.
Taubman praised the theater's acoustical flexibility in his review of the center's opening
night, writing that the architect and his team seem to have built a venue "that will be
equally congenial for drama, instrumental and vocal music and dance."
The Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino or the Little Theater, inaugurated a few years
after the opening of the main theater, is a conventional proscenium stage, designed for
drama, chamber music, solo recitals, lectures, and film screenings. It seats 413 people
in one orchestra section. From the main curtain line to the back wall, the stage
measures 13.6 meters (45 ft) with a proscenium width of 13.9192 meters (45 ft 8 in) and
features the same Mahogany flooring as the larger Main Theater. A covered orchestra
pit extends into the apron gives
additional performance space, similar
to a thrust stage. The stage curtain is
a tapestry woven in Kyoto, Japan,
based on a painting of Roberto
Chabet, visual artist and former
director of the CCP Museum. When
unfolded, the curtain acts as a natural
sound reverberation medium.
and aesthetics; and the other showcasing the CCP's collection of traditional Asian
musical instruments. The museum also presents special changing exhibitions, provides
curatorial assistance, and organizes workshops on indigenous art forms.
References
Retrieved from
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine_Educational_Theater_Association