Two ideas regarding performance have been mentioned so far: one involving a show of skills, while the other also entailing exhibition but less of certain skills than of an accepted and culturally coded pattern of behavior. The third concept of performance concerns "the general success of the activity in light of some standard of achievement." Judging the success of the performance in such instances is not the job of the performer but of the observer, who makes a mental comparison between the execution of an action that she had just observed and an ideal (or accepted) model of that action.
Is Angel Locsins performance of Darna better than Vilma Santos? How about compared to Nanette Medved? Does Anjanette Abayari count?
If Diether Ocampo acts all swishy in public, is that condemnable behavior? What if he does it really well? Would that supercede social norms and enter the realm of superb aesthetics?
If you, like Melody in the indie film Big Time, love to look and emote in front of the mirror (real or imagined the film camera is an excellent substitute here ) and have dreams of becoming a starlet, and in the audition process switch between the real and the reel world in a single take, does that make you vain and shallow, or just a bit nuts like Barbara Streisand in that film of the same title?
A performance is always for someone, even when that audience is yourself.
Among the five that I saw Pepot Artista, Sarong Banggi, Lasponggols, Big Time and Ang Pagdadalaga ni Maximo Oliveros its definitely the last one that has made the most impact (or dent, depends on which side youre on). So much already has been written about "Maxi" during its theatrical run that I think its wiser for me to gush over it some more when the DVD comes out (just that once, dont buy the pirated version). Or when Aureaus Solito comes back from the festival circuit i.e. Germany, Holland and Japan. Only an "I" country seems to be missing from that triumvirate. Could it be the same "I" that young Maximo lives in, full of squalor and full of love: his "I" land, his I-dent-ET?
In Big Time, con men Danny and Jonas (played by Nor Domingo and the excellent Winston Elizalde) are also looking for something their next heist.
Past performances include robbing a sari-sari store and getting only about P400 and a chock full of Choc Nut; dressing up as a clown, performing magic and then stealing a dog from a fat Chinese woman; and selling fake Jolina Magdangal tickets.
In a society obsessed with quasi-heroic ideals, bogus deals and hip antics, its not surprising that these two small-time crooks were donning Superman and Batman masks when they charged into the main door of their kidnap victim, "starlet struck" wannabe Melody. This is a film that relishes in spectacular performance, although too knowing and heavy-handed most of the time to prompt any effective engagement amid the one-liner writing, camera work and editing. It almost looked like an extended music video.
The premiere night in Megamall made for an equally fascinating performance: big invites, promo girls, confetti, the works. Very Big Time indeed. And yes, a long time too. Its one thing to thank the people who have supported the artist and her work, its another to ramble on and on and bombard the public with verbose and self-congratulatory remarks.