This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VI, No. 9, April 2-8, 2006
Theater artist Rick Gonzalo
was in love with the stage early on. He admits a wrong work attitude almost cost
him his career. But he rethought his lifestyle and now he is not only a real
star, he also trains newcomers in the workings of theater arts. BY
PINK-JEAN FANGON MELEGRITO Last weekend, my mind was
preoccupied imagining myself as taking part in a theater workshop. My theater
skills are getting a little rusty. And time is both friend and foe: a theater
workshop somewhere in Bengao was taking place while I wasn’t available. Great. Kung Bakit Babae ang
Naghuhugas ng Pinggan (Why Women are
the Ones Washing the Dishes) is a gender-conscious play concealed somewhere in
my subconscious. Someday I’d meet one of its characters. And Rick Gonzalo was
the answer. He was the instructor-facilitator of the Bengao workshop. So I met him for an
interview. It was a very cheerful conversation, with every sentence punctuated
by a snort or laughter. His tale of the hackneyed ups and downs of drama and
success caught my attention. Recollections of his
educational background kicked off our chat. His acting interests started with
his elective drama class during his high school days in the early 1970s at the
Union Christian College (UCC), La Union. From then on, he never let his acting
skills go dormant. In college he got into
vices and as a result had to move from one school to another; from St. Louis
College La Union to the then Baguio Colleges Foundation (now the University of
the Cordilleras) and finally back to his alma mater UCC.
Still, not all was for naught as he established
theater organizations in La Union while in college: the Union Christian Theater
Guild, Dulaang Panday (Blacksmith Theater) and the Tahanan (Home) Outreach
Program and Services for streetchildren.
After college he moved to Manila and found
himself joining the Tanghalang Sta. Ana (Sta. Ana Theater), which was founded by
actor Lou Veloso. The group gained him a
Philippine Educational Theater Association (PETA) scholarship. In 1998, he was
one of Tanghalang Sta. Ana’s senior trainors. He also became
director-facilitator of the Asian Social Institute’s drama modules. Rick’s movie and theater
stints unfortunately infected him with star complexity. “Di pa ‘ko sikat,
nalaos na ‘ko. Feeling ko kasi
noon, ako lang magaling at bida” (I
faded away even before becoming famous, because I thought I was the only star),
he remorsefully admitted. He later learned that “In theater, everyone is equal,
no one is indispensable.” A renewed Christian Rick
rethought his lifestyle. He went back to work from scratch. He eventually became
Amazing Philippines Theater’s first director. He also became part of Gantimpala
(Reward), and later found himself working with Dulaang Kayumanggi (Brown Man’s
Theater), his current Pasay-based theater. Kayumanggi’s director
Grundy Constantino introduced Rick to the Concerned Artists of the Philippines
(CAP), which he joined and with which he is still affiliated. CAP participated
in the 2004 International Workshop of Performing Artists together with Dap-ayan
ti Kultura iti Kordilyera (Council for Cordillera Culture). Currently, he gives
workshops and leadership trainings in Manila and in provinces using his own
module, a part of which was published in a book by his writer-friend Alfonso
Deza (of the famed PLDT commercial ‘Suportahan taka’), Drama and Beyond:
Another Unfinished Treatise (1998). “Theater is the highest
form of discipline,” Rick said. “It is unlike film or TV where you can stop
shooting if a mistake was made.” Northern Dispatch / Posted by Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
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Rick Gonzalo: From Star Complex
to Stardom
Northern Dispatch
Posted by Bulatlat