Thursday, December 29, 2016

BISAYA ENGLISH: PROSE AND POEMS EVERY DAY

Fucking idiot Lily!
By JC Nigado

                                                                                            Mercedes Cabral
‘Fucking idiot Lily!’
If Cabral is reported right, she’s right.
If she’s quoted right, she’s righter.
And if she well meant it, she’s rightest.

Lily had it coming – any way;
Long after the fall of Miller’s Salesman.
The indie culture reared its Achebe head –
To utter blunt what many always knew.

So what’s the fuss, not really?
When fucking idiot Lily is fucking
Idiot Lily – Botoxed and rhinoplastic,
The post-dated-check Banshee.

And where’s the hypocrite ‘bearded meat’?                              
Image result for lily monteverdeWho licked Lily’s ass for ages.
She eloped to the new movie itch
Manay, with her toady self as spouse.

The MMFF’s Mercedes rolls in, standing tall
As fucking idiot Lily cringes –
And coils in her own motherly,
Well-deserved reputation won.
           

Innocents Daze, Wednesday, 28 December 2016
Tagurabong City, Philippines                                                 Lily Monteverde


Friday, December 23, 2016


BISAYA ENGLISH: PROSE AND POEMS EVERY DAY


An allergy called and none came                   
By JC Nigado         


An allergy called and none came
It informed such neighbors and friends,
Who whistled, and raised sly rumors
Wild as the sea, and blown over;
The loudest lie laughed the pain out.

And so it is when illness comes;
It strikes a solitary walk.
One must ready in solitude
The cure to heal within without,
Till allergy leaves one’s wellness.

When allergy comes calling again,
Such neighbors and friends shall eke out:
To see no one around the house,
And travel talk of stranger tales --
To feed the sea and make waves tall.



                       


3:30 a.m., Saturday 10 December 2016

Tagurabong City, Philippines
BISAYA ENGLISH: PROSE AND POEMS EVERY DAY

           
 Steal life           
 By JC Nigado
                                                                                   

A thief is always a thief
Ignoble in life and in death;                                              
And final sleep is hard to find.                             
He steals a grave strife,                                         
Alone clothed or in cahoots --                              
The mud thieving never ends                              
Congenital thief of decay.                                     
Indecency reigns supreme,                                  
When justice can be as ugly                                
As crime, if not uglier.                                                                                
Electra’s hallmark of shame                                 
Grasped by Gloria’s Nine;                                     
Brazen corruption and deceit --                            
Marcos’s legacy of revenge.                                             
No sense fretting about One’s
Absence of right or wrong --
That betrays the Populist scheme,
Tracing the Nationalsozialist.
Time to rise, to engage anew
And break sob sympathies,
Against the dread of violence.
To bury outrage in disgust,
Upon the skin of protest,
And in the heart of fury.
The New Society decomposes
Into Federal change coming --
New dress for same old trick,
The tyrant’s kin clothing.
Behold the martial law wake
Disorders the youngling swell --
And work a better soil to grow.



Saturday, 12 November 2016
Tagurabong City, Philippines
Alone the pain feels
By JC Nigado



Alone the pain feels
When one’s sick – abed
Or elsewhere, healing
All by oneself, as Tolstoy
Comforts in his peace of war.
Single at birth and in death –
One’s first breath and last;
And sole the discomfort grows.
A carer or a crowd,  
Around the sickroom,
Doesn’t change the reality
Of pain and solitude.







4:00 a.m., Sunday, 4 December 2016   
Tagurabong City, Philippines
Chin by the night of the first soiree
By JC Nigado


By the night of the first soiree
Chin was the very first
Who engaged me like turtle,
Walking merry on a wire
That burned with fire and water.

Stagers call him “Pusit.”
Is it because of the ink
He pouts and spurts dry?
Or is it because he stains
And stinks their bland desire?

Tell me whatever is so
And I’ll believe you never
Because I’ve felt and known
Chin’s chin in sin or holy
With gin, brandy or beer.

By the night of the first soiree
We measured each other friend
A scale that for days weighed
Weeks, months, ever years
Until the night of the last soiree.
BISAYA ENGLISH: PROSE AND POEMS EVERY DAY

Vean’s dance is street smart                  
By JC Nigado                                                         



Vean’s dance is street smart                                 
On stage borne not out of                                     
Ballet, folk or jazz training;                                    
But from gut and gumption                                               
Of the young and willing                                       
To the tune of life.                                                   
                                                                                   
Vean’s dance is instinct born                               
Like her beauty out of nature,                              
Now invaded by trained hand                              
In the art of appearances --                                   
That enhance or ruin the one                              
Bestowed by rain, sound, air.                               
                                                                                   
Vean’s dance is smarter still                                 
With ballet, pop and jazz                                       
Swaying pirouettes of trumpet:
A challenge to wit and character                         
That seem to break on some                                 
Cold watchers in the rye.                                       
                                                                                   
Dance, Vean, dance!                                             
To the music of life you know
Mind not their inconfidence.
The theater of envy and desire
Is at work all day, cycling --
Recycling the fear of self-doubt.




After dancing,
Wednesday 24 August 2016
Tagurabong City, Philippines






BISAYA ENGLISH: PROSE AND POEMS EVERY DAY


ARIAN GOLONDRINA: The actress sings to life                 
By JC Nigado                                                                                                                                                                                              

EVERY TIME I see or think about Arian I always recall how she covered Gloria Gaynor’s
“I will survive” on videoke, and claimed it for three minutes. Three minutes are all it takes to press a song and groove it to life once more. Covers can be precarious,
they can make or unmake copies, depending on their take of the material. The moment the song turns carbon, the singer is doomed to disappear--perhaps, into the oblivion of the original. But not Arian.
            First time I saw Arian onstage, in a workshop’s immersion piece,
“Sa Bubungan,” I knew an actress was at hand. She was honed to theater, by gut or game, maybe, and she played already well at the onset. She fit the role and roled the character, as it were, like a real addict drugging the scene.
            In the end, Arian was tagged a Stager hands down, no doubt about it. The “doubt” came much later, during the season, when she displayed her own world, a solitude in a crowd that others couldn’t inhabit. That’s when the talk began; and that’s when I noticed her even more.
            Now, Arian’s part of my days in or out of the PSF.
They say she’s not leading-lady material, but for me she leads
everyone in many ways. Onstage she morphs like a chameleon, or a caterpillar transforming into a butterfly – for that effect. And if some people don’t get it, it’s their problem.
            Arian performs not to please people, anyway. In fact, she does best when she keeps things to herself, sharing only her art and soul. 





                                                                After morning afters, Monday, 29 August 2016
                                                                 Tagurabong City, Philippines

BISAYA ENGLISH: PROSE AND POEMS EVERY DAY


CHEA CASTILLO: Bossa nova, literally     
By JC Nigado                                                          

CHEA’S cool singing voice sounds fresh and free, it’s supposedly not
made for musicals, some say, as if voices were “made.” But hers is a gift that
should be nurtured in casual concerts and records. I mean “casual,”
as in easy, simply because it’s where Chea shines best, and connects most.
            Hers is the new for old voice, like the fluid alto of Karen and KZ,
Carly and Cher--relaxed and pleasing to the ear, the singing almost effortless. And what stories it tells!
            Chea is a character addition to the roster of talents in the Philippines Stagers Foundation. She bears watching, despite the fact, or especially because some people think her performance in “Katips: Ang mga Bagong Katipunero” leaves much to be desired. I dare say, and better look again, folks, she’s not the only one whose acting is wanting, as Claire would holler. There are many others, too.
            But off Katips, Chea’s singing is a sight and sound to behold.
Her sing song is her history--calm, natural, and the music is organic,
the rhythm rising and falling to the beat. You watch her sing, looking
plain and simple, artless even, but underneath that voice and simplicity is a storied life whose characters are hewed out from classics, Grace Poe, the scripted Quasimodo  of showbiz and politics would cringe in shame.
            Perhaps, Victor Hugo would relate her to the Good Hunchback of Notre Dame and Cosette in Les Miserables, in the Visayan and Ilocano
setting, who cares? As long as Chea sings her joys and woes, her dreams and failures, in the style she does best, the world will be better for it.
            Songs are everyone’s soundtrack, and how you hear them defines
who and what you are. Indeed, those who sing them are bound to be and do more.
Cheer on, Chea!




After exercise, Thursday, 18 August 2016
                                                                            Tagurabong City, Philippines
BISAYA ENGLISH: PROSE AND POEMS EVERY DAY


ROTSEN ETOLLE: World class                             
By JC Nigado                                                                                  


ROTSEN’S impersonation act stands on its own, holding a candle
to anything of the same sort or other anywhere in the world. Is it unique?
Not exactly, but precisely is the point in picking it out in an 
array of similar club acts: It speaks fluently without words.
            Rotsen raises the bar of lipsynch and impersonation. His impressions
onstage employ not just imitation to details but also pantomime, deftly expressing in gestures the absence of speak. The effect is riotous and resounding,
attentive watchers want more. His repertoire is intelligent entertainment and never boring,
it’s almost a challenge every time. Rotsen roars and soars in angular, jazzy beats,
hinting at the Chaplinesque and the early days.
Best suited for intimate audiences because of its performance-art ambience,
Rotsen’s act, ironically, could also appeal to the masses, if shown on TV, maybe,
but not among large crowds, and live. The throng will drown his genius and
brilliant nuances, simply because his is a “silent act.” His loud moves
and other body language notwithstanding, Rotsen’s comic genius is specified in the
tradition of, well, almost, Marcel Marceau and Buster Keaton, minus the plus-song
vocals, any old time. Is there an “original” mimic bearing torch?
            Rotsen’s basically a comedy bar number sans the risqué features. It’s
seductive, yes, but not in the usual “seducing” way. In his best element, Rotsen
could change theater as we know it.
            Remember the name, Rotsen Etolle: Like many comics, he gives the impression that
he is made of serious, sterner stuff, few poets could capture him in words.




Wednesday, 17 August 2016
                                                                                       After meditation, 5:47 a.m.
                                                                                      Tagurabong City, Philippines