LIFE STAGES. The venerable Teatro Sabina of Bacolor, is the venue for the play, "Reina Malaya", produced and performed by students of Pampanga Trade School. Note the figure of Uncle Sam on the left, which would suggest that this play had a patriotic theme like many plays of the period. Ca. 1927.
In early 20th
c. Pampanga, Bacolor’s first and premiere theatre – Teatro Sabina – was where
Kapampangan actors and singers, playwrights and composers, congregated to give vent to their new,
artistic pursuits before an adoring town audience.
One such
novel art form was the ‘zarzuela’, a play that was both sung and acted by
performers,with dialogues and song lyrics in Kapampangan. The Kapampangan
‘zarzuela’ was a product of a brainstorm by the 3 leading poets and dramatists
of their time: Proceso Pabalan (Byron) , Juan Crisostomo Soto (Crissot) and
Felix Galura (Flauxgialer), who thought of combining declamations and songs in
one stage play, sometime in 1900.
Previous to
this, staged drama consisted of moro-moros and kumidyas, which only had
straight and long dialogues that caused many an audience to sleep in the middle
of a play. The group enrolled the services of composer Amado Gutierrez David to
create song melodies, and soon, the first zarzuelas emerged from their prolific
pens. Pabalan wrote his zarzuelas (Ing Managpe and Magparigaldigal) and Soto
his ‘Paninap ng San Roque’.
The
rehearsals for the ‘zarzuelas’ were held in the spacious residence of Mateo Gutierrez-David, father of composer
Amado and another zarzuelista—Jose Gutierrez-David, the future justice of the
Supreme Court. The Gutierrez-David house is thus considered as the birthplace
of Pampanga zarzuelas.
But a
permanent venue was needed to accommodate the large repertory of actors,
musicians and backstage hands – not to mention the audience. Luckily, Indang
Sabina Joven, the unmarried sister of Pampanga’s governor, Don Ceferino Joven,
had an idle plot of land in downtown Bacolor. With the help of her family, a
theater was constructed that was to bear her name—Teatro Sabina. To further
honor her, the performing troop called itself Compania Sabina, which toured all
over Pampanga, Tarlac and even Manila .
Many
zarzuelas—now considered classic—had their gala performances at Teatro Sabina,
which was praised for its excellent acoustics, courtesy of water wells dug in
strategic parts of the theater grounds. Pabalan had the privilege of having his
zarzuela, “Ing Managpe” (The Patcher) staged first at the renowned theater on
13 September 1900, followed by Crissot’s ‘’Ing Paninap ng San Roque” (1901) and
“Alang Dios” (1902).
Hundreds of
zarzuelas were written and produced afterward, with many becoming word-of-mouth
hits like “Ing Sultana”, “Mascota”, “Sigalut”, and “La Independencia”. Teatro
Sabina became a popular venue for staging plays produced not only by professional
theatre groups but also by drama guilds of nearby schools.
In 1909,
the Teatro Sabina was reconstructed and remodelled. When inaugurated anew, a
commemorative board was placed above the frontage of the stage, on the
proscenium arch. It contained the names of Pampango dramatists and composers
who played major roles in promoting the Kapampangan zarzuela: Proceso Pabalan,
Juan Crisostomo Soto, Felix Galura, Pascual Gozun, Pablo Palma, Jose Prado,
Amado Gutierrez-David and Jose Gutierrez-David.
The
zarzuela era flourished for about 3 decades, thanks to
Teatro Sabina. The support from the
Joven family continued until financial difficulties set in. The legendary
theater ceased operations in the late ‘20s, ending the golden era of Kapampangan
theater.
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