Localizing Shakespeare as Folk Performance: Romeo and Juliet, Sintang Dalisay, and the Igal of the Sama Bajau in Southern Philippines

Based on Romeo and Juliet and a 1901 awit adaptation of Shakespeare’s play, the theater production Sintang Dalisay deploys, as its movement motif, the igal, a dance tradition of the Sama Bajau of the southern Philippines. The use of the motif influences other elements in the production, specifically...

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Main Authors: Abad, Ricardo G, Santamaria, M. C. M.
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2021
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/sa-faculty-pubs/101
https://ajolbeta.ateneo.edu/paha/articles/223/2522
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.sa-faculty-pubs-10992022-03-18T05:16:12Z Localizing Shakespeare as Folk Performance: Romeo and Juliet, Sintang Dalisay, and the Igal of the Sama Bajau in Southern Philippines Abad, Ricardo G Santamaria, M. C. M. Based on Romeo and Juliet and a 1901 awit adaptation of Shakespeare’s play, the theater production Sintang Dalisay deploys, as its movement motif, the igal, a dance tradition of the Sama Bajau of the southern Philippines. The use of the motif influences other elements in the production, specifically, the music, the decision to set the play in a Muslim community, the set and costume designs, and the change of the characters’ names into more local appellations. The localized production adopts a collaborative intercultural approach to theater-making, with Muslim and Christian artists working together to teach the dance to performers, help reconfigure the dance for the contemporary stage, and align that reconfiguration with community practice. This paper reviews the production, assesses its reception on etic and emic levels, and contextualizes the project in terms of Muslim–Christian relations in the Philippines. It finds that the task of localizing Shakespeare as folk performance must contend, onstage, with issues of cultural and political representation and, most importantly, offstage, with ethical issues that underlie collaborative intercultural theater. The offstage component makes the production a vehicle to advance a vision of mutual solidarity between Muslims and Christians. 2021-04-15T07:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/sa-faculty-pubs/101 https://ajolbeta.ateneo.edu/paha/articles/223/2522 Sociology & Anthropology Department Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Intercultural theater collaborative intercultural theater intercultural Shakespeare Asian Shakespeare Philippine Shakespeare igal Sama Bajau Muslim–Christian relations Anthropology Religion Sociology South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies Theatre and Performance Studies
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Intercultural theater
collaborative intercultural theater
intercultural Shakespeare
Asian Shakespeare
Philippine Shakespeare
igal
Sama Bajau
Muslim–Christian relations
Anthropology
Religion
Sociology
South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
Theatre and Performance Studies
spellingShingle Intercultural theater
collaborative intercultural theater
intercultural Shakespeare
Asian Shakespeare
Philippine Shakespeare
igal
Sama Bajau
Muslim–Christian relations
Anthropology
Religion
Sociology
South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
Theatre and Performance Studies
Abad, Ricardo G
Santamaria, M. C. M.
Localizing Shakespeare as Folk Performance: Romeo and Juliet, Sintang Dalisay, and the Igal of the Sama Bajau in Southern Philippines
description Based on Romeo and Juliet and a 1901 awit adaptation of Shakespeare’s play, the theater production Sintang Dalisay deploys, as its movement motif, the igal, a dance tradition of the Sama Bajau of the southern Philippines. The use of the motif influences other elements in the production, specifically, the music, the decision to set the play in a Muslim community, the set and costume designs, and the change of the characters’ names into more local appellations. The localized production adopts a collaborative intercultural approach to theater-making, with Muslim and Christian artists working together to teach the dance to performers, help reconfigure the dance for the contemporary stage, and align that reconfiguration with community practice. This paper reviews the production, assesses its reception on etic and emic levels, and contextualizes the project in terms of Muslim–Christian relations in the Philippines. It finds that the task of localizing Shakespeare as folk performance must contend, onstage, with issues of cultural and political representation and, most importantly, offstage, with ethical issues that underlie collaborative intercultural theater. The offstage component makes the production a vehicle to advance a vision of mutual solidarity between Muslims and Christians.
format text
author Abad, Ricardo G
Santamaria, M. C. M.
author_facet Abad, Ricardo G
Santamaria, M. C. M.
author_sort Abad, Ricardo G
title Localizing Shakespeare as Folk Performance: Romeo and Juliet, Sintang Dalisay, and the Igal of the Sama Bajau in Southern Philippines
title_short Localizing Shakespeare as Folk Performance: Romeo and Juliet, Sintang Dalisay, and the Igal of the Sama Bajau in Southern Philippines
title_full Localizing Shakespeare as Folk Performance: Romeo and Juliet, Sintang Dalisay, and the Igal of the Sama Bajau in Southern Philippines
title_fullStr Localizing Shakespeare as Folk Performance: Romeo and Juliet, Sintang Dalisay, and the Igal of the Sama Bajau in Southern Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Localizing Shakespeare as Folk Performance: Romeo and Juliet, Sintang Dalisay, and the Igal of the Sama Bajau in Southern Philippines
title_sort localizing shakespeare as folk performance: romeo and juliet, sintang dalisay, and the igal of the sama bajau in southern philippines
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2021
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/sa-faculty-pubs/101
https://ajolbeta.ateneo.edu/paha/articles/223/2522
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