It's been two years to the day
Mario O'Hara RIP
Here is an old interview (reproduced from my book Critic After Dark) I did, the very first time I met him:
Three Men Drunk In A Dimsum Shop
WE MET OUTSIDE of Shakey's, which was
Mario O'Hara's suggestion. "Then I thought 'Wait a minute,'"
he told me, "'Shakey's, on a Friday night--a basketball night.
We won't get a table.'" Indeed we didn't: there was a line of
customers waiting to be seated. We ended up in a dim sum shop outside
of Glorietta's Streetlife, ordering pitchers of beer from a nearby
bar.
I was with my friend--call him Mang
Philip--and we had collared the elusive Mario O'Hara backstage of the
last performance of his latest play, Wilfredo Ma. Guerrero's Ulilang
Tahanan (Orphan Home). Mang Philip took one arm, I took the
other, and we twisted until O'Hara agreed to meet us: which is, it
turns out, the only way you can convince him to give an interview.
Backtrack one year: when I had first
met Mang Philip, we had spent the whole night talking about, well,
everything you can imagine; one of the things we talked about was
films. "Everyone is a thief and a fake," he informed me.
"Celso (Ad. Castillo), Mike (de Leon), Ishmael (Bernal), Lino
(Brocka), Gerry (de Leon)--all thieves and fakes."
"I don't know," I told him,
"They're not that bad."
Mang Philip shook his head. "The
only one who's any good is Mario O'Hara. I can't remember the title
of the movie I saw of his--what's the matter?"
The matter was, I had just seen Tatlong Taong Walang Diyos, (Three Years Without God) and
I was more or less thinking the same thing--not that O'Hara's the
only one who's any good, but that he's the best filmmaker we have.
The realization came gradually. As early as '86 I had seen Bagong Hari (The New King) and I was blown away: the film's action sequences were far more thrilling, far more exciting than anything I had ever seen in a Filipino film, almost--well, almost Japanese in intensity. I'd decided that if Brocka is our best film director, at least visually, O'Hara is his superior.
When I saw Lino Brocka's Tinimbang Ka Ngunit Kulang (You Were Judged and Found Wanting, 1974), I
was dumbstruck. Not in his agitprop films Bayan Ko (My
Country) and Orapronobis (Fight for Us), not in his
acknowledged masterpiece Maynila Sa Mga Kuko Ng Liwanag
(Manila in the Claws of Neon) did Brocka realize the epic sweep, the
intimate detail that he did in this pitiless, passionate portrait of
a small provincial town. He even had a pair of lovers--Lolita
Rodriguez as a crazed woman, Mario O'Hara as a leper--in a dramatic
duet so powerful they took over the film. It was after seeing the
film (I was late for the opening credits) that I had my mind blown
away yet again: the film had been written by O'Hara.
Name me the best Filipino directors, at
least of the 70's, and the list is short: Lino Brocka, Ishmael
Bernal, Mike De Leon, Celso Ad. Castillo. O'Hara's name is rarely
mentioned, yet he is always there, lurking in the credits like
Frankenstein's monster. Of Brocka's three greatest films (Maynila, Tinimbang, Insiang), O'Hara wrote two: Tinimbang and Insiang, and he gave the best
single performance in Tinimbang. The man can act, can
write, can direct--a triple threat. What else was he capable of?
Then I saw Tatlong Taong Walang
Diyos, and I was blown away for the third time.
When the pitcher of beer arrived, I
filled our mugs, then asked him about the film, and how it was
received back in 1976.
"Not very well," he admitted.
"Mainly because everyone was asking: who's he? I'm from Adamson
University, and all the filmmakers and Manunuri critics were from UP.
"The best-praised film that year
was Lupita's (Kashiwahara) Minsa'y Isang Gamu-Gamo (Once
There Was a Moth). Socially relevant films were very in then, and Tatlong Taong wasn't very socially conscious."
No it wasn't, I told him. I added that
the film was also unique for another reason: it portrayed Japanese
soldiers as human beings. As far as I can tell, we're the only
country in the world that has suffered under the Japanese Occupation
and made a film like this.
"Christopher De Leon's Japanese
officer," I concluded, "is like no other character I've
ever encountered in Filipino films. How did you create him?"
O'Hara smiled, "I knew him."
"You knew him?"
"Or someone like him. I knew a
Filipino who had raped a woman, then felt guilty, cared for the
woman, and became a good father to their baby. Every character I
write is from someone I know."
"How about Insiang?"
O'Hara started to laugh. "Insiang
happened at the back of our house in Pasay."
Mang Philip interrupted: "Mario, I
loved Insiang, except for one thing: I cannot believe it
can happen in Tondo."
"It didn't," O'Hara said. "It
was set in Pasay. Brocka changed it to Tondo."
"You should have insisted on
Pasay," he said, refilling our empty mugs.
I was lost, and I admitted as much to
them. O'Hara explained it to me. "A woman as good-looking as
Hilda Koronel's Insiang wouldn't remain poor in Tondo. She would
stand out; she would be noticed, wooed, showered with gifts. In
Pasay, there are so many prostitutes another one, no matter how
beautiful, wouldn't make a difference. She would stay poor."
"Oh." I asked him: "and
Nora Aunor's character in Tatlong Taong? The one De Leon
raped? Did you know her?"
O'Hara laughed. "There are a lot
of women like her in Pasay."
Mang Philip refilled our mugs. I
ordered another pitcher.
"I liked you in your very first
role," Mang Philip was telling O'Hara, "opposite Eddie
Garcia in Tubog sa Ginto (Dipped in Gold). Eddie was with
you at the swimming pool. You stripped and dove in. A beautiful
scene."
"There's a story about that
scene!" O'Hara said. "I was concerned about taking my
clothes off. I told Lino: I wanted just Eddie, him, and the
cameraman. No one else. When I arrived, the owner of the pool was
there; so was his wife, his children, his maids, his neighbors. I
talked to Lino again, and he said 'Don't worry, I'll take care of
everything.' I was too nervous--it was my first role. So I obeyed
him. I took my bathrobe off. One of the young dalagitas--I'm sure she
was a virgin--pointed and screamed: 'Diyos ko, ano 'yan?!' (Dear God,
what's that?!)"
"A beautiful scene," Mang
Philip murmured, caressing the mug with his thumb.
I was trying to establish his writing,
directing and acting filmography. "What was your next role?"
"Stardoom, 1972."
I frowned. "And Tubog was--1970,
right? Why the gap?"
O'Hara laughed. "Because I was
angry! After that swimming pool scene, I said to myself: 'P_k_ mo
Lino, just try and put me in one of your films again! Just try!"
Mang Philip roared "P_k_ niya
talaga!"
I looked at Mang Philip. "Is that
how people from Pasay express themselves?"
"P_k_ nilang lahat!"
"Lino liked to shock people,"
O'Hara said.
"Lino was an idiot!"
"I thought Halimaw
(Monster, 1986) was an interesting film," I said, looking hard
at Mang Philip. He was pouring himself another mug of beer. "At
least, your half of the film."
"That was during the Metro Manila
Filmfest, when Tingting Cojuangco announced that all the films were
copies of foreign movies." Mario said. "I said to myself,
'P_t_, I better not win, because if I do, I'm going to say
something!' So I walked out."
"But you won anyway, for" I
looked at my notes, "best actor, best director, best picture."
Actually third best picture; the judges refused to give first best.
First or third, I told him, Halimaw
had at least two brilliant sequences. The first had Liza Lorena
talking to O'Hara, and ends with Lorena slapping O'Hara's face, again
and again. The scene was finely written, flawlessly acted; you had to
remind yourself that it was a horror story. The second sequence was
even better: a long monologue where Lorena explains to Lotlot De Leon
her feelings of jealousy and hate, all the while walking towards
Lotlot with chilling deliberation.
"The film was based on Ifugao
burial practices. They put their dead in jars, and store them in
caves." O'Hara told me. "Tingting must have thought the
film was copied from an Amazing Stories episode, where
monsters came out of a box."
"Tingting is a--" Mang Philip
went into a long, involved speech about exactly what Tingting was.
"And the other half?" I
managed to ask. "The Christopher De Leon segment?"
"That was inspired by Ah-ha!s'
video, the one where the hero turns into a cartoon character."
"Ah-ha."
Mang Philip was for ordering another
pitcher.
"You won the previous year for Bulaklak Sa City Jail (Flowers of the City Jail, 1984),"
I noted, filling mugs.
"I thought I might win a third
time. But "Bagong Hari was given an X-rating, which
disqualified the film."
"You directed Bagong Hari?"
Mang Philip asked. "My God!" He pointed at O'Hara "You
sir, understand violence. You do! I know everything about the
balisong, and I didn't see a single fake moment in the film. Did you
pick Dan Alvaro for the role?"
"No, he was picked by the studio.
I had to use him."
"He was perfect," Mang Philip
declared. "So quiet! Real killers are like that. The loud man
walking down the street, I don't notice. I'm afraid of the quiet
man." He talked about quiet men and balisongs, balisongs and
quiet men, for some time after that.
"It took me three days,"
Mario finally continued, "to shoot the fight scene at the
National Mental Hospital sunken theater in Mandaluyong. The producer
asked why it had taken three days. I showed him the fight scene and
he didn't like it."
I couldn't believe that, and I told him
so. After, of course, Mang Philip had me order another pitcher of
beer.
"Actually, the most difficult
action scene was the one in the ice plant. I'd forgotten that Dan had
his shirt off and was soaking wet. His bare feet kept sticking to the
metal floor."
"I have to urinate," Mang
Philip said, and walked out.
"Johnny Tinoso and The Proud
Beauty," I said quickly (I knew I didn't have a lot of
time), "is half of a wonderful film. Half was poor special
effects, the other half was, for me, even more magical than Disney's Beauty and the Beast."
"I didn't want to go too far from
the concept of Beauty and the Beast at first," Mario
said. "That's why Jestoni Alarcon's makeup was the traditional
Beast makeup. When Gretchen Baretto was transformed, I wanted to show
her inner nature coming out."
"It was beautiful," I said,
"and horrifying. The hand clutching her forehead. The tiny face
on her chin, screaming. That I remember: that and the ending. It's
the first time I ever saw a dramatic climax where the two stars had
their backs to the camera. Why did you do it?"
"She was supposed to transform
back to her beautiful self, and I was tired of seeing the magic done
in front of you, onscreen. So I had her turn her back instead. You
heard the change through her voice, through the words she used. You
never saw the magic, but you knew it's happening."
"Which was magical." I said.
Mang Philip came through the door, looking suspicious. "Did I
miss anything?" We shook our heads.
"Another pitcher of beer,"
Mang Philip said. O'Hara gently told him he'd had enough. But Mang
Philip was stubborn.
"The beer won't be wasted. If you
can't finish the pitcher, I will!"
We compromised: one more, but it's the
last. Mang Philip agreed. O'Hara went to the bathroom. I told Mang
Philip: "We came here to interview O'Hara, but it's turning into
an interview of you."
He shook his head. "You saw how
shy he is. I'm trying to help you draw him out."
"The shop closes at two. I have
just a few hours left to 'draw him out.'"
"You can do it, you'll see."
O'Hara came back smiling. "I went
to the men's room in Hard Rock Cafe, and I saw all these people
seated. They looked so bored! They were so bored they all stared when
I walked by them."
Mang Philip probably felt O'Hara needed
a little more "drawing out;" he talked about his travels to
France, about meeting Orson Welles, about some university professor
named Anton who flashed him in Dunkin' Donuts, thinking he was a boy
prostitute (they instantly recognized each other, and were deeply
embarrassed).
Eventually, I did see: I saw O'Hara
listening to Mang Philip. I saw the line of his body, the tilt of his
head, the turn of his knees. I saw the subtly branching fingers on
his hands, like tree roots probing deep for water. His whole being
was focused on this old man pouring his memories out over a mugful of
beer.
"My son," Mang Philip said,
"is a son of a b_tch. He's in Japan, he speaks Japanese, he
works there."
"You must be proud of him,"
O'Hara said.
"I hate him," Mang Philip
said. "He never sends any money."
O'Hara laughed. "You don't miss
his money, you miss his letters! You miss him, don't you? Don't you?"
he teased, gently nudging Mang Philip.
"I have to urinate again,"
Mang Philip walks out.
O'Hara laughs. "While he was
talking, I could see his character forming in my head!"
"You mean, you might use him in a
script? A film?" O'Hara laughed again. For some reason, I felt
more than a little envious. I remember a question I had asked him
earlier:
"Was the leper and the crazy woman
in Tinimbang inspired by Sisa and her husband in (the
Jose Rizal novel) Noli Me Tangere (Touch Me Not)?"
"But Sisa's husband wasn't a
leper!" Mario said, "Not in the book. I created the two
lovers, I didn't copy them."
"Did you write the part of the
leper for yourself?"
"No. Lino couldn't get anyone, so
he asked me."
"Really?"
O'Hara suddenly looked serious. He
leaned forward, looked at me, and said: "One thing I am, one
thing that's me is, I'm devoted. I'll give a person what he needs. If
he needs a friend, if he needs a companion, if he needs to talk, if
he needs to cry, I'm there."
The shop was closing. For the umpteenth
time, I told Mang Philip that the last pitcher was the last pitcher.
"You shouldn't be so literal," he moaned.
O'Hara started to move away. Suddenly,
Mang Philip had his arms around his neck.
"Don't go!" he said.
"I won't," O'Hara soothed.
O'Hara being a prodigious beer drinker,
knew all the moves when handling a drunk--but so did Mang Philip. He
clung to O'Hara's neck. O'Hara relented. The two of us walked Mang
Philip unsteadily out of the building.
"I love this man," Mang
Philip said. "This man is a genius!"
I asked O'Hara if he'd be all right
going home. "I think so," he said. Suddenly, we realize
that Mang Philip wasn't with us; he was leaning against a wall,
urinating.
"Now's your chance," I told
O'Hara, nudging him. He looked puzzled; then he understood. "Thanks,"
he said, stretching a hand out to me. And he was gone.
7 comments:
Lovely piece Noel.
First and last time I met Direk Mario was after the SOFIA screening of Bagong Hari. Managed to tell him how much i loved the film without coming off like a douche (I hope) and then someone took him aside and that was it. Wish i'd talked to the man longer. You always think there'll be some other time.
RIP, Direk Mario.
Thanks. You always think you have time. I recently got a hold of his cell number and wanted to ask him about Sa Ngalan ng Ina; now it's a moot point.
nice pics
Rest in peace, direk Mario. I remember reading this off the stands in a nicely printed magazine, if i remember right. I also reread it last year in my old copy of your book. Exchanged a few words with him in our Good Harvest days-- not much as we're both pretty reserved. And in those days, he wouldn't have known me from Adam anyway. This business is brutal enough to begin with, but it can be especially cruel to mavericks and rogues like direk Mario. It's guys like you that remember to remember when the rest of the world has forgotten. Thanks for that. Here I am back in Regal proudly trying to wave the freak flag that outlaws like direk proudly use to carry. We going down swinging, y'all! Chambers empty! Cheers with a cold San Miguel. :)
It was Manila Chronicle, Rico. But thank for the kind words.
I think it was reprinted on a CCP magazine? If I remember right, I read it in the National bookstore Greenbelt branch. I remember thinking like, wow, this dude is such a bad-ass he didn't even bother checking out Star Wars. Maybe I've got my articles mixed up, he he. Parang Jarmusch saying that he hadn't seen Wizard of Oz yet (which is like almost blasphemous for an American!) Or Lav Diaz saying f_ck the canon, he he. I guess that's outlaw cinema for you. :)
Could have been reprinted. Yes, he doesn't really give a shit what's canon or not canon. But when he saw Citizen Kane, tellingly, he had this to say: "That's so radio!"
Think about that.
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