Rosa Rosal

Rosa Rosal
Born Florence Lansang Danon
(1931-10-16) October 16, 1931
Manila, Philippine Islands
Occupation Actress
Years active 1945present
Spouse(s) Walter Gayda
Children Toni Rose Gayda
Awards FAMAS Best Actress
1955 Sonny Boy

Florence Danon Gayda (born October 16, 1931), better known as Rosa Rosal, is a FAMAS award-winning Filipino film actress dubbed as the "original femme fatale of Philippine cinema".[1][2] She is also known for her work with the Philippine National Red Cross. For her humanitarian activities, she received the 1999 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service,[3] an award widely considered as Asia's Nobel Prize.[4][5][6] She is the mother of TV host Toni Rose Gayda.

Early life

Rosal was born Florence Danon in Manila. Her mother hailed from Santa Rita, Pampanga, while her father was of French and Egyptian descent.[2] Her half-brother, Don Danon, once acted as a stand-in for the Hollywood actor Rudolph Valentino.[7]

During the Japanese occupation of the Philippines, Rosal worked as a newsreader in a Japanese-run radio station.[2] Shortly after the end of the war, Rosal worked part-time at the San Lazaro Hospital. One night, she was passing by a film shooting as she was walking home, and she was spotted by the film's producer, Luis Nolasco.[2] She was offered a film contract by Nolasco, who headed his own outfit, the Nolasco Brothers Studio.[1]

Film career

The Nolasco Brothers Studio cast Rosal in Fort Santiago (1946). Her screen name was taken from the Tagalog words for "rose" and "gardenia".[2] In 1947, Rosal was cast opposite Leopoldo Salcedo in Kamagong (1947). Her performance drew the attention of the other major film studios,[2] and she was signed to a contract with LVN Pictures by the studio head, Doña Sisang de Leon. She was cast by LVN Pictures in her first starring role in the 1949 film Biglang Yaman.[1]

Throughout the 1950s, Rosal starred in costume dramas such as Prinsipe Amante sa Rubitanya (1951), and in such neo-realist dramas as Lamberto Avellana's Anak Dalita (1956), Tony Santos's Badjao (1956), and Manuel Silos's Biyaya ng Lupa (1959), which she cites as the best film she has ever made.[2] For her role in Anak Dalita, Rosal would receive a citation from President Ramon Magsaysay.[1] She was named FAMAS Best Actress in 1955 for Sonny Boy, and would be nominated for three other times, for Dagohoy (1953), Biyaya ng Lupa, and Ang Lahat ng Ito Pati na ang Langit (1989).[7]

Notwithstanding her serious roles, Rosal would become best known in the 1950s for her daring appearances in film. She had no qualms appearing onscreen in bathing suits, engaging in kissing scenes or in playing villainous roles.[1][2] Offscreen, Rosal led a quiet and private life. She enrolled in night classes at the Cosmopolitan Colleges[2][8] and obtained a degree in Business Administration in 1954. She was married briefly in 1957 to an American pilot, Walter Gayda, with whom she had a child, Toni Rose, who later became a television host.[2]

In the 1960s, Rosal became one of the first leading Filipino actors to appear regularly on television.[2] She was a fixture on Cecille Guidote Alvarez's dramatic series Balintataw on ABC-5 (now TV5). In the 1970s, Rosal starred in Iyan ang Misis Ko, a family-oriented sitcom with Ronald Remy.[2] In 1976, Rosal would also appear in Behn Cervantes's Sakada, a film which was banned by the martial law government of President Ferdinand Marcos.[9]

TV appearances

two public service shows where people in need of assistance came to ask Rosa's help

EPISODES:

with her real life daughter Toni Rose Gayda, playing as her daughter, with Laura Hermosa and Augusto Victa

introducing Fanny Serano, with Caloy Pimentel, Rolly Papasin, Joey Galvez & Rafael Lucas

with Josephine Estrada, Mervyn Samson, Hero Bautista & Princess Punzalan

with Hero Bautista & Mervyn Samson

with Gina Alajar & Earl Palma

with Fanny Serrano, Romnick Sarmenta & introducing Dennis Roldan

with Fanny Serrano, Rolly Papasin, Romy Mallari & Charmie Benavidez

with Fred Montilla, Diana Dean, Angelito, Herbert Bautista, Maila Gumila, and Charmie Benavidez

with Michael Sandico, Lito Anzures, Estrella Kuenzler, Joey Galvez, Jose Villafranca and introducing Janice de Belen

with Lito Anzures

with Anita Linda & Charmie Benavidez

with Gina Alajar

with Pen Medina, Janice de Belen, Bella Flores, Angelito, Soxy Topacio

with Eddie Infante, Dexter Doria, Charmie Benavidez, Jun Soller

with Geraldine, Connie Angeles, Caloy Pimentel, Chona Castillo

with Jose Villafranca, Romeo Enriquez and Chona Castillo

Humanitarian activities

Rosal joined the Philippine National Red Cross as a volunteer-member of its Blood Program in 1950, and was elected to its Board of Governors in 1965.[2] Rosal has become widely known for her efforts to promote blood donation in the Philippines. She helped initiate Red Cross programs that set up bloodletting sessions inside campuses and military camps, including the American military base at Clark. She lobbied political leaders and foreign embassies for donations to upgrade Red Cross facilities.[2]

Rosal also established a Women's Crisis Center within the Philippine National Red Cross. The Center was aimed at assisting unwed and needy pregnant mothers, as well as finding homes for unwanted children.[2] With donations obtained from the pork barrel funds of members of Congress, Rosal has also run in her personal capacity a college scholarship fund for poor but deserving students.[2]

Rosal has also hosted two public-service television programs, Damayan and Kapwa Ko Mahal Ko, which solicit financial and medical aid for indigent medical patients.

Despite her widespread association with blood donation, Rosal has never donated blood herself, on account of her blood pressure, which is way below the level required for donors.[2]

Honors

In 1999, Rosal was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service. She was cited for "her lifetime of unstinting voluntary service, inspiring Filipinos to put the needs of others before their own."[3]

In 2006, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo bestowed on Rosal the Order of the Golden Heart with the rank of Grand Cross for a lifetime in public service and for her work with the Red Cross.[10]

In the 1950s, while in her mid-twenties, Rosal declined President Ramon Magsaysay's offer to appoint her as head of the Social Welfare Administration, the predecessor-agency of the cabinet-level Department of Social Welfare and Development.[2]

In November 2008, Rosal was awarded the Ading Fernando Lifetime Achievement Award at the 22nd PMPC Star Awards For TV.[11]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Lena Pareja (1994). "Philippine Film". In Nicanor Tiongson. CCP Encyclopedia of Philippine Art. VIII (1st ed.). Manila: Cultural Center of the Philippines. p. 310. ISBN 971-8546-31-6.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 "The 1999 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service: Biography of Rosa Rosal". Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation. Retrieved 2008-02-19.
  3. 1 2 "The 1999 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service: Rosa Rosal". Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation. Retrieved 2008-02-19.
  4. Clare Arthurs (2000-07-25). "Activists share 'Asian Nobel Prize'". BBC News. Retrieved 2008-02-20.
  5. "Arvind Kejriwal selected for Magsaysay Award". The Times of India. 2006-07-31. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
  6. Ann Bernadette Corvera (2003-10-08). "'03 RAMON MAGSAYSAY AWARDEES: A LEAGUE OF EXTRAORDINARY MEN & WOMEN". Philippine Star. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
  7. 1 2 CCP Encyclopedia, p.309
  8. Francisco, Butch (2005-04-27). "ROSA ROSAL: DOCTOR OF HUMANITIES". Philippine Headline News Online. Philippine Star. Retrieved 2008-02-19.
  9. Jen M. Pangilinan (2005-06-24). "BEHN CERVANTES' SAKADA PREMIERES ON TV AFTER 30 YEARS". Philippine Headline News Online. Philippine Star. Retrieved 2008-02-19.
  10. "PGMA fetes Seguis with Gold Cross Award". The Office of the President: News Page. Retrieved 2008-02-20.
  11. Philippine Entertainment Portal (2008-12-01). "GMA bags PMPC's 'Best Station' award". GMANews.TV. Retrieved 2008-12-15.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.