“Thrilla in Manila”: Troubling Theatricality and Uneasy Spectator Affects Surrounding the Ringside Bar Midget Boxing and Wrestling

This paper illustrates how performance and affect inform disability politics in the case of Filipino Little People wrestlers and boxers at the Ringside Bar along a red-light district in Makati City, Philippines. The archive of the study focuses on the reception of its primarily foreign visitors as m...

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Main Author: Tan, Neslie Carol
Format: text
Published: Animo Repository 2021
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/akda/vol1/iss2/2
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/akda/article/1011/viewcontent/1_Tan_Thrilla_20in_20Manila_Akda_201_282_29.pdf
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:akda-10112023-06-07T13:05:56Z “Thrilla in Manila”: Troubling Theatricality and Uneasy Spectator Affects Surrounding the Ringside Bar Midget Boxing and Wrestling Tan, Neslie Carol This paper illustrates how performance and affect inform disability politics in the case of Filipino Little People wrestlers and boxers at the Ringside Bar along a red-light district in Makati City, Philippines. The archive of the study focuses on the reception of its primarily foreign visitors as manifested online, including the bar’s unofficial Facebook account, review-based websites, and select travel and expatriate blogs/vlogs where reviews of these attractions most actively circulate. First, I map out the troubling theatricality of midget wrestling and boxing, identifying their cast, choreographies, and designs, to reveal traces of freak show traditions. Second, I unpack the uneasy affects of the (activated) spectators generated by the performances. I argue that, amidst the façade of “intense crazy action” promoting these attractions, there are palpable cracks of apprehension that expose guilty tensions of complicity with disablist attitudes and, at the same time, reveal embarrassed resistance against a perceived tourist scam. The implications of these precarious performances and confused affects on disability politics, specifically on the already tenuous relationship between exploitation and agency among the Little People in the Philippines, are discussed. 2021-10-31T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/akda/vol1/iss2/2 info:doi/10.59588/2782-8875.1011 https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/akda/article/1011/viewcontent/1_Tan_Thrilla_20in_20Manila_Akda_201_282_29.pdf Akda: The Asian Journal of Literature, Culture, Performance Animo Repository midget wrestling and boxing Little People freak show confused affects activated spectators Pacific Islands Languages and Societies South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies Theatre and Performance Studies
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic midget wrestling and boxing
Little People
freak show
confused affects
activated spectators
Pacific Islands Languages and Societies
South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
Theatre and Performance Studies
spellingShingle midget wrestling and boxing
Little People
freak show
confused affects
activated spectators
Pacific Islands Languages and Societies
South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
Theatre and Performance Studies
Tan, Neslie Carol
“Thrilla in Manila”: Troubling Theatricality and Uneasy Spectator Affects Surrounding the Ringside Bar Midget Boxing and Wrestling
description This paper illustrates how performance and affect inform disability politics in the case of Filipino Little People wrestlers and boxers at the Ringside Bar along a red-light district in Makati City, Philippines. The archive of the study focuses on the reception of its primarily foreign visitors as manifested online, including the bar’s unofficial Facebook account, review-based websites, and select travel and expatriate blogs/vlogs where reviews of these attractions most actively circulate. First, I map out the troubling theatricality of midget wrestling and boxing, identifying their cast, choreographies, and designs, to reveal traces of freak show traditions. Second, I unpack the uneasy affects of the (activated) spectators generated by the performances. I argue that, amidst the façade of “intense crazy action” promoting these attractions, there are palpable cracks of apprehension that expose guilty tensions of complicity with disablist attitudes and, at the same time, reveal embarrassed resistance against a perceived tourist scam. The implications of these precarious performances and confused affects on disability politics, specifically on the already tenuous relationship between exploitation and agency among the Little People in the Philippines, are discussed.
format text
author Tan, Neslie Carol
author_facet Tan, Neslie Carol
author_sort Tan, Neslie Carol
title “Thrilla in Manila”: Troubling Theatricality and Uneasy Spectator Affects Surrounding the Ringside Bar Midget Boxing and Wrestling
title_short “Thrilla in Manila”: Troubling Theatricality and Uneasy Spectator Affects Surrounding the Ringside Bar Midget Boxing and Wrestling
title_full “Thrilla in Manila”: Troubling Theatricality and Uneasy Spectator Affects Surrounding the Ringside Bar Midget Boxing and Wrestling
title_fullStr “Thrilla in Manila”: Troubling Theatricality and Uneasy Spectator Affects Surrounding the Ringside Bar Midget Boxing and Wrestling
title_full_unstemmed “Thrilla in Manila”: Troubling Theatricality and Uneasy Spectator Affects Surrounding the Ringside Bar Midget Boxing and Wrestling
title_sort “thrilla in manila”: troubling theatricality and uneasy spectator affects surrounding the ringside bar midget boxing and wrestling
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2021
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/akda/vol1/iss2/2
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/akda/article/1011/viewcontent/1_Tan_Thrilla_20in_20Manila_Akda_201_282_29.pdf
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