(This article was first published in
print in issue 20 of the Philippine Collegian on 12 December 2012.)
by Anton Chua
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Source: http://www.philippinecollegian.org/bongga-ka-day-the-legend-of-nora-aunor/
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A
young woman, clad in white, prays to the heavens to receive a vision of the
Virgin Mary. Silently, her beautiful almond eyes are placed in focus, then the
camera pulls back to show her kneeling and steady, until at last she is
completely visible, motionlessly in awe of her vision. It is here, in this
unspeaking moment, that she is at her most expressive.While this unfortunate
woman, Elsa, would go on to be fatally shot later in the film, the performance
behind the character would live on forever. In Ishmael Bernal’s masterpiece
Himala, Nora Aunor gives her most recognizable performance as faith healer
Elsa, in a role that parallels her own mythical nature.
Nora
Aunor ranks among the greatest of Filipino artists, endowed with such
superlative titles as “Superstar,” and conferred with a long list of awards,
the breadth of which could only be dreamed by other thespians.
More
than this, however, she is a figure of mythical proportions, larger than any of
her roles or even her own persona. Practically worshipped by fans, and
seemingly made to represent ideals larger than herself, Nora Aunor is an
unparalleled legend in the Filipino entertainment industry.
Ang
Totoong Buhay ni Pacita M.
Nora
Aunor, or “Ate Guy,” grew up as a member of the masses, a short, dark-skinned
girl who at the time could hardly be confused for a star. Her career began at a
radio singing competition in Naga, called Darigold Jamboree. Nora joined in
order to help her parents pay for her sister’s tuition. Winning this and many
other amateur competitions, she soon made it big as a professional singer, her
magnificent contralto delivering record-breaking sales.
She
also starred in her own TV series, a variety show, at first called the
Nora-Eddie Show when it was launched in 1967, and then renamed The Nora Aunor
Show in 1968, and was ultimately known as Superstar. Movie appearances
followed, with her nabbing her first FAMAS nomination in 1972 for the film And
God Smiled at Me. It was here, when she started to enter film, that the myth
began to take shape.
“There
is no Nora Aunor film that does not script her ‘own’ life,” writes Barnard
College professor Neferti Tadiar. These performances typically characterize her
as a lower-class martyr who values helping others and suffering for them in
service, mirroring her own humble beginnings. In becoming this myth, both her
own persona and her characters are elevated to heights that exceed how they
would otherwise been regarded.
This
semi-autobiographical nature of her films build a sense of aspiration from the
audience that is underscored and enhanced by Nora’s status as a very
down-to-earth celebrity, who looks or acts nothing like the tall mestiza beauty
queens who usually grace the silver screen. She is an everywoman, not a
goddess, but she was able to achieve all of these things through effort and
perseverance – and this makes all the difference to her fans.
T-Bird
at Ako
Certainly
there are many great actresses and singers out there with plenty of fans, but
Nora Aunor’s fanbase is of particular note. Noranians, as fans of the famed
actress are oft-called, are among the most enthusiastic and energetic fanbases
of any celebrity. They’d go as far as to threaten to stage a rally if their
star doesn’t win an award.
Reverence
of her image takes place at almost religious levels. Tadiar writes of a story
of a wealthy neighborhood in which daily life was disrupted, because all the
household maids had gone off to watch a nearby shooting at which Nora Aunor was
present. Art history professor Patrick Flores recounts statements from members
of the Grand Alliance for Nora Aunor Philippines, in which they “would affirm
that Nora Aunor is the sole reason they ‘spend countless hours, experiencing sleepless
nights, working day and night.’”
“The
social profile of Nora Aunor fans is usually characterized as lower class,
consisting of housemaids, slum dwellers, and market vendors; any wealthy Nora
fans are considered an exception to the rule,” writes Dr. Bliss Cua Lim of the
University of California, Irvine, in describing the Noranians.
Director
Cesar Buendia notes what immediately made Nora so special and celebrated: “She
became a hit when it was in vogue to be fair and mestiza. The fans were waiting
for someone they could identify with. She was like Manny [Pacquiao] in her
time. That, combined with phenomenal singing and acting talent made her a
superstar.” Behn Cervantes calls her “the Dark Pinay who toppled the White
Tisay,” saying that her ascendancy “coincided with the rise of rabid
nationalism during the late 1960s and early 1970s.”
Dr.
Lim writes that Nora is the only “short, dark, low-born actress in the
Philippines” to achieve as much success as she did, given the competition of
stars who were definitely tall, white, and of higher class. In being such, “she
seems to encapsulate the most progressive anti-colonial aspects of Filipino
masscult.”
Himala
Relative
to this myth, Nora the human is not quite so perfect; she supported Marcos in
the 1986 snap elections, pleaded guilty to drug charges, and endured money
problems and unemployment in the United States.However, her triumphant return
to the country in August 2011 reified the ontological aspect of the mythical
Nora Aunor figure.
“Bakya
temporality,” according to Tadiar, is when the social elite believe the poor
masses to be backwards in their culture and are unwilling to change, unready to
move forward. Nora, like her alter-ego Elsa, is a “heretical saint,” whose
trajectory is unlike anything the gatekeepers of high culture has ever
witnessed. In light of this, the heretic figure of Nora Aunor represents a
subversion of the elite’s almost-colonialist assertion that the poor are “not
ready” to advance or contribute.
The
value of the Nora Aunor mythical figure lies in how she maintains the hope of
those who suffer, who find themselves at the bottom rungs of the social ladder.
Interpassivity, in which people project themselves and their aspirations onto
people or objects, is described by philosopher Slavoj Zizek as the delegation
of sensation to the object. With the mythical figure of Nora Aunor as an
interpassive subject, one can see that her representation of the masses runs
far deeper than just being a source of inspiration. If Nora falters but gets back
on her feet, then it shows that someone like her can have faults but still
recover.
That
said, Nora and her characterizations never seem to extricate themselves from
their suffering. This is in sharp contrast to the characters of her
contemporary and rival, Vilma Santos, whose roles in films such as Sister
Stella L and Dekada ’70 depicted women who were empowered despite their
context, not simply remaining passive to their tribulation. The final heresy
lies in shattering the mythical figure of herself, in breaking the shackles of
the Nora persona and hurl the character of the martyred woman into the annals
of history once and for all. To borrow the title of one of her unfinished
projects – the sole copy of which is reportedly in her possession –that will be
Nora Aunor’s Greatest Performance. ●
Hi great reading your postt
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