Sunday, May 26, 2013

10 Things You Should Know About Dawn Zulueta


A new Dawn rises
Dawn Zulueta on the power of prayer: “I prayed for children, I got it. I prayed to be financially independent, I got it. I prayed for a good husband, I got it. Career, I have.”

Hailed as the most beautiful, most fashionable and best actress time and time again, this 44-year-old still attracts screaming fans in their tweens, and even outshine beauty queens. How does someone beautiful since birth make life decisions, find love, and defy aging? Here are 10 things you should know about Dawn Zulueta.

1. She is a perfectionist, both at work and as much as possible, in her home. “It’s my wanting to be in control.”

 “I don’t like that there is a stone that is left unturned,” she says about her habit of wanting to know every little detail when it comes to her shoots. “I want to know exactly the ins and outs. I’m also a producer, and I want to be able to help solve if there is any hitch anywhere.” She says it also extends to her home, where she is all about cleanliness, organizing and labeling things. “In the cupboard, I want to see everything. Taller and heavier things at the back and the smaller ones in front!”

2. She admits to having been a “mean girl” in her younger years in school.

She attended grade school in Carilagan, moved to Assumption Antipolo, and attended high school in Colegio Sta. Rosa. “I was always a class officer. President, treasurer, palit palit lang, including muse! That was funny,” she laughs. “I would hold these caucuses with my friends, whenever there was a new student we would assess her. I was the leader of the pack, ‘Okay, is she cool?’ I was the first to approach and introduce myself, we’d try her out, then I’m the one that would ask, ‘What do you think?’ It’s kind of bad! Everyone goes through that phase.” She has one brother, whom she was very protective of. “If I heard that he got into a fight or someone bullied him, I’m there! ‘Who is heeee? Bring him oooout!’” she says with a grumble. “I was like that! Parang hindi diba? Well, I’m not like that anymore.”

Dawn did not continue on to college. If she knew back then what she now knows, would she have balanced her work and college? “Yes,” she says forcefully. During that time, she wasn’t really sure of what she wanted to get into — maybe become a fashion designer (“But back then there were no schools for that”) or a biologist (“But I wasn’t into math, show me numbers naduduling na ako”). When she was accepted in UP, she had already signed a contract with Viva Films. “I was 18, I was already independent, my concern was how to survive, how to pay the rent. If you have concerns like that, immediately you have to prioritize.”

3. She has one big regret in her career: declining doing a movie with the late, great director Lino Brocka.

“He even called me on the phone, almost parang begging, saying ‘You know, I’ll take care of you, you just have to trust me. This is the role, you are going to be a mistress and it’s Eddie Garcia who is playing the part. I understand your reservations but I know you can do the role. This is the thing. There is this kissing scene.’ Ay! Wait! Talagang I was so torn. I just could not imagine myself. I was 18. I was so prudish. I can’t believe I turned him down. I actually turned him down,” she recalls. “You know a few months later, he died, he got into that fatal accident. That is one of my regrets, that I didn’t get to work with that masterpiece of a man.”

On being a reluctant celebrity: “I only started to appreciate it when I got commendations. It was only then I started to feel, ‘Maybe there is something more to this than just the money. They see something in me that I don’t even realize. I should think about this.’”

On whether she regrets any role she took on: “Every time I look back, I think sana I paid more attention to the kinds of roles I took on. I don’t regret that I took on certain roles, but sana I thought better about how to portray it. Sana I was more interested in what I was doing.”

4. Dawn Zulueta in numbers:

29: Number of years in the industry

8: Number of awards won, including 1992 Famas Best Actress for the classic film Hihintayin Kita Sa Langit. Dawn has done 38 films, plus numerous TV shows and musicals.

7,000: Number of pesos paid as her talent fee for the Close-Up commercial that launched her showbiz career when she was 17.

31: Her waistline in inches. “I have tried all the treatments in Marie France kaya I know they work. It all depends on what your body needs, just consult with their doctors.”

17,619: Number of fans on the Facebook fan page of the official CharDawns, the nickname for her love team with Richard Gomez.

5. On the undying magic of the Richard-Dawn love team: “I suppose it really has a lot to do with the fact that we’ve had a past, and it was a serious relationship what we had before.”

She shares that after they broke up, it was around two years of no communication before they were able to be friends again. “Aside from being able to pick up a little from that past, there is also all this time that he and I have been able to evolve separately. I feel excited to work, with him particularly. Sa dami na ng pinagdaanan namin together, all the experiences we’ve had in the last 15 years, we had separate lives na, got married, had children, we are able now to collaborate and use all these experiences to enrich our characters,” she explains.

On their die-hard fans: “We started to see this new breed of fans, kasi they’re young, they are already the kids of our fans, let’s put it that way! It was really clear when we did the Walang Hanggang Pasasalamat show in Araneta. Before pa coming out onstage, we could really hear the people. And when he and I came out, just the way the crowd reacted, I turned to him and said, ‘Can you believe this?’ ‘I can’t.’ ‘I can’t either. I don’t know how this happened.’” She compares it to the fans they encountered before and adds, with a laugh, “Hindi mo na ine-expect kung gurangers ka na diba?!”

“I approach my work differently now. Unlike before ang dami kong insecurities. What are people going to think if I do this? If I say that? I was so concerned. Now I just want to be myself, there’s nothing wrong with being myself. I’m secure in that thought, and that’s the thing that I wish I learned earlier.” She declares: “I’m open na now, I have no fear.”

6. Before they got married, she actually told her husband Congressman Anton Lagdameo: “I don’t want to be a politician’s wife.”

“I remember before we got married, it was one of my considerations. I told him, ‘You better promise me you won’t enter politics.’ His uncles were already in it, baka mamaya siya na ang patakbuhin. Ayoko. I really don’t like. So yeah, he promised me. But of course we all know now that that promise is broken,” Dawn laughs. “I could not naman be selfish. I couldn’t say, ‘No, because you promised me.’ I saw that he’s perfect for the job. He is a people person, community-oriented, he really wants to help. I’m proud of his achievements. And now it’s already his third term, landslide win pa din.”

It was actually when Dawn had decided to give up on dating that she realized Anton was “the one.” “I was tired already of partying, I was tired of the single life. You’re always on the lookout, who’s my next date, who’s the prospective boyfriend. I didn’t want that anymore. I felt, if nothing na talaga, I don’t mind growing old this way. I’ll just work and work, okay lang, magpapayaman na lang ako! If there is really somebody out there for me that God has planned, then you just plop him here in front of me. I don’t want to go searching anymore I’m tired na,” she recalls. They’d been friends for some time, until one day, Anton set up Dawn to spend “alone time” with him. “I liked what I saw, we kept dating. And that was it.”

7. On exposing her kids to showbiz and politics: “I want them to get to know my work and understand it better and have an appreciation for it, same with their dad’s work.”

Colleagues in the industry attest to how Jacobo, 7, and Ayisha 3, are often spotted on set with Dawn. “As much as possible I take them around with me, if the whole week is work, they just come to my set, or even to Congress,” she shares. “The time I am not working, I am just with them. I really just try to stay with them, even if it’s just to lie down and sleep, or even if we are not talking and we are all on the iPad. Basta we are together,” she laughs.

“I’m especially proud when they have achievements. When Ayisha uses big words when she’s talking, like the other day she used the expression, ‘What the?!’ Ha? Anong ‘What the?!’ And Jacobo, he’d come home with a (soccer) trophy kasi daw naka-three strikes siya!”

8. Dawn’s five most treasured fashion items:

1- Black mink fur coat: “I really love it talaga but I can only wear it when I’m traveling. I tell Anton, ‘Can we go to the opera? Broadway? I just wanna wear this.’ He got it for me last December. I am lucky my husband loves to shop.”

2 - YSL Tributes: “They are so comfy even if they are so high, you can be on them the whole day!”

3 – Let’s-go-anywhere bags: “Right now I am loving my Loewe. I try not to have too many bags that are only for a certain outfit or occasion. I like these dump-anything-inside-and-go kinds of bags.”

4 - Large sunglasses: “I have a collection of all these bubuyog sunglasses. Especially in our weather. My dream is to find the perfect big one that is also polarized.”

5 – Jewelry: “I am really a collector. As a matter of fact, I collect it more than real estate. I’ve always believed that it’s about the only kind of investment that really grows.”

9. The four bad habits Dawn broke in the name of beauty.

1 - Baking under the sun: “I was a child of the ‘70s. We didn’t have sunblock. Back in our time, nagpapasunog talaga kami! I would bathe in beer or Coca-Cola and lie down in the hopes of getting roasted. Bad talaga yun! People think nagpa-glutathione ako. No, I just really stay out of the sun. Now, just from the door to the car, nagtataklob pa ako.”

2 - Not paying attention to skin types: “For many years in my adolescent years, I suffered through acne. Not only my face, my chest, my back. I used to wonder why, until about 15 years ago when I met this derma friend of mine, she said, ‘i-skin test kita.’ I discovered after, I was allergic to perfume! And here I was with my pabango (she motions spraying all around) Yun lang pala. Just find out what you are allergic to, don’t be tempted to buy all these expensive things.”

3 - Lack of sleep: “Sleeping for me is important talaga. But sometimes with our work you cannot help it. I really need eight hours.”

4 - Sleeping on her side: “Never sleep like this! (she motions her hands on the side of her cheek) Your lines will become deeper! How do you do it? You have a pillow wedged here (she points to the front) and wedged here (points to the back) That way you will never slide too much burying your face in the pillow. I have a hundred pillows on my bed!”

10. Dawn admits to having gotten pretty much everything she wanted in life: “I’m very positive kasi when I think about my dreams. When I think about what I want, I can really see it in the future.”

“I prayed for children, I got it. I prayed to be financially independent, I got it. I prayed for a good husband, I got it. Career, I have. There are other things I am praying for, but I know I am going to get it later on. Even if it doesn’t look like it is doable, I believe in it,” she says. She does reveal one thing she really wanted but didn’t get: “When I was younger, there was this guy that I really had the biggest, biggest crush on. I prayed so hard sana he’s the one I’m going to marry. But I didn’t marry him. I would’ve still been happier now than if I had gotten my wish!”

Other things she wishes for? “I envision that my children go to Ivy League schools, or maybe in Europe, and that I will be traveling when I am older to visit them. And I have a home somewhere in Europe, it’s a dream talaga for me!”

* * *

“How does it feel? I’ll give you a hint of what it feels like,” she gets close when asked what 44 feels like, as opposed to when she first hit the peak of her career in her 20s. “Honestly, you know what, I still feel like I’m 24. Here (points to her mind) and here (points to her heart). When I was in my 20s I used to look at 40s as so old. But now I realize, this is what it feels like pala. There really is no difference! You’re just coughing a bit more, you have back pains, but that’s all. As long as I take care of my body I think I’ll enjoy myself ‘til I’m 70 or 80.”

Sunday, May 12, 2013

10 Things You Should Know About Anthony Taberna


On the air with the fearless Anthony Taberna
Anthony Taberna once pretended to be a seminarian to get a scoop — ‘the mother lf all tapes’ — the Garci tapes in 2005.

Known for breaking down the biggest national issues on morning TV and for his hilarious, hard-hitting commentary on AM radio, “Ka Tunying” has an undeniable, unconventional charm. Making the most serious issues easy (and fun) for all of us to understand, what makes him the new generation’s news idol? Here are 10 things you should know about Anthony Taberna.

1. His teacher had to pick him up from the rice fields just so he could enroll for his senior year in high school.

“Hindi na po ako mag-aaral kasi wala naman po akong pambayad,” he answered when his teacher Mrs. Castillo asked him why he hadn’t enrolled, with the school year having already started. “Nagbibilad ako ng palay sa tapat ng bahay nun! During that time kasi, na-stroke na yung tatay ko. Yung nanay ko wala namang hanapbuhay, at wala namang grumaduate sa aming magkakapatid (he is the fourth of seven siblings). At least ako nakatapos ng third year,” he says. The next day, his teacher came back and told him that the principal of General Jesus Academy, Noemi Villanueva, decided to pay for all of Anthony’s tuition and miscellaneous fees just to ensure he would finish school. “Naka-graduate ako with honors. Sa high school, nasa top 10 ako lagi. Yabang ko nun eh, nasa elementary public school ako, valedictorian,” he says with a laugh.

He went on to take up mass communications in New Era College, with his sister paying for his first semester, and a scholarship (“May nadiskubre ako, may Presidential decree pala si Marcos, for every 500 students, may iilan na dapat ma-libre sa isang private institution kung qualified, nag-qualify ako”) for the remaining semesters. He was accepted to take on a part-time job in both Jollibee and DZEC radio, and he decided to choose radio (“Related naman sa kurso ko”) in 1992.

2. He did not believe that the offer for him to be on TV was real.

“Hindi ako naniwala na matatanggap ako. Pinag-audition kami ni Gerry (Baja, his radio partner for 13 years and still going strong), pareho kaming nasisilaw-silaw sa mga ilaw, patingin-tingin lang sa camera. Eh siguro mas pogi ako kay Gerry kaya ako kinuha,” he laughs. It was 2005 when he took his first on-cam job for the morning show of ABS-CBN, and has consistently been the main anchor since 2006. “Nalungkot ako kasi gusto ko sana magkasama kami, dahil malaking parte ng success ko sa radyo ay dahil kay Gerry.”

“Alam mo ba hanggang ngayon nai-intimidate ako sa artista? Pag nakasalubong ko, nahihiya akong batiin. Nung bagong salta ako, nanibago ako kasi napapanood ko lang kayo sa TV eh! Natakot ako baka iba yung treatment sakin. Pero okay naman pala, mabait naman pala!”

3. Contrary to what some people think, Anthony is not a lawyer. At 38, however, it is still his dream to become one.

“Nag-cover kasi ako ng Supreme Court for radio. SC, DOJ, Ombudsman, Sandiganbayan, Manila courts, araw-araw walang paltos nagbabasa ako ng desisyon ng Supreme Court. Mahilig pa ako magbasa ng John Grisham books, lahat ng libro niya nabasa ko. Actually hindi ko napapansin, unconsciously, nagpo-programa ako sa radyo biglang may binabanggit ako na provision sa batas,” he explains about his “lawyer” persona. He wanted to take up law way back in 1998, but discovered he still had unfinished units in college. “Hahanapan ko ng oras ’to, gusto ko maging lawyer someday.”

4. The worst death threat he received was a bomb (that exploded in the wrong house). “Palagay ko sa dami ng galit sa akin, hindi ko mahuhulaan kung sino,” he says with a laugh.

Death threats to him usually come through letters, e-mail or text messages, but there haven’t been that many recently. “Nung April 2010, may nag-invite sa akin sa Tacloban so sinama ko si misis. Sabado yun. Pagbalik namin ng Linggo, meron daw akong kapitbahay na nilagyan ng improvised explosive device yung gate. Nasira yung gate, dalawang kotse, natamaan pati taxi sa labas. Kinahapunan bumalik yung pulis at sabi, ‘Sir, kayo ho target nung bomba. Pareho yung description ng bahay ninyo at nung target,’” he reveals for the first time. Anthony says that the bomb exploded around 4:30 on a Sunday morning and it is at that time, every Sunday, that his wife Rossel leave for church. “It’s either tanga lang talaga yung nautusan o isinalba talaga ako ng langit,” he says.

On coming face to face with personalities he has bashed on radio: “Ako kasi malinis naman lagi ang konsensya ko pag may tinira ako. Babatiin ko pa din sila. May isang incident na yung tinira ko, babatiin ko, tinabig pa yung kamay ko. Sabi, ‘Ikaw naman, napaka-unfair mo.’ Isang incident lang naman yun, pulitiko. Yung iba, civil naman.”

5. His most memorable radio moment was being the first to break the news of the “Garci tape.”

“Tandang-tanda ko. June 6, 2005. One ng hapon nung inere namin; nilabas ni (then President Gloria Arroyo’s Press Secretary Ignacio) Bunye yung dalawang tape,” he says of the audio evidence of alleged cheating in the 2004 presidential election. “Alam kong may iba pang may hawak ng kopya nun, pero walang nangahas mag-ere nun kundi ako. Pinagpaalam ko yun sa station manager namin, si Angelo Palmones.” When he asked why he trusted the source of the tape, he says, “Mahabang proseso eh, matagal ko nang source yun. Marami na siyang binigay na storya sa akin na hindi pumalpak.” He shares that it was actually a government official who triggered his urge to air the controversial tape. “Earlier that day, nung 7:30 a.m. na Dos Por Dos, in-interview namin si National Security Adviser Bert Gonzales. Alam ko nang may tape nun, at alam ko na ang laman ng tape. Sabi niya, ‘kung meron kayong tape eh di ilabas ninyo.’ Inisip ko parang ang yabang naman ng taong ito kung makapag-dare. Nilabas ko nga.”

The story takes a comedic turn: Anthony shares how he traced the story to “the mother of all tapes” that everyone was following on the news. “Nung nag-presscon si Samuel Ong ng hapon, alam ko dinala siya sa San Carlos Seminary. Lahat ng media bawal pumasok. Ako lang ang nasa loob nun. Dumaan ako sa guwardiya, naka-polo na blue, may salamin, may hawak akong maliit na clutch bag. Naglalakad ako, binati ako, ‘Brother!’ ‘O, brother,” binati ko din at dere-derecho ako sa loob. Tapos yung mga nakakasalubong ko na seminarista, binabati din ako ng ‘brother!’ he says with his trademark naughty laugh.

Another memorable story was the 2005 Morales vs. Pacquiao fight. “Di pa uso pay-per-view nun. Hindi ako pinayagan ng opisina maging official reporter, hindi daw masasagot eroplano ko, so dumiskarte ako. Ringside ako, at ang usapan namin ni boss Angelo, per round magre-report lang ako ng summary. Pero ang ending, tinapos ko all 12 rounds daldal lang ako ng daldal! May mga nagsabi naiyak sila sa coverage ko, talo si Pacquiao nun, dumugo ang mukha niya. Nung pinakinggan ko yung recording, naiyak nga ako! Grabe pala yung passion ko sa coverage ko, parang pinsang buo ko si Quinito Henson sa pinagsasasabi ko,” he says laughing.

6. As a journalist, he is extremely opinionated about political personalities, but during election time, he is part of a bloc vote as an Iglesia ni Cristo faithful.

How does he reconcile being passionate about whom he likes and dislikes, while at the same time being told who to vote for? “In fairness sa Iglesia, sa leadership, hindi nila ako inaawat sa komentaryo ko, pabor man o kontra sa sinumang sinusuportahan nila. Klaro kasi sa isip ko at sa kanila din, na yung pagboto ng Iglesia as one, doctrinal yun para sa amin. Bago pa ka pumasok at ma-baptize, tinuturo na yung 25 lessons ng Iglesia. Ang pinaka-papel ko lang sa pagboto ko tuwing araw ng eleksyon, ang paniniwala ko, sundin kung ano ang desisyon ng church leadership,” he explains. “Ang totoo, maraming sinusuportahan ang Iglesia na personally hindi ko gusto. Hindi ko talaga gusto pero binoboto ko. Halibawa si Gloria, nung nagpasya ang Iglesia na iboto si Gloria nung 2004, napakahirap sundin para sa akin. Sa loob loob ko, bakit ko iboboto tong tao na to eh alam ko naman maraming atraso sa bayan to, at personally, tingin ko, mali yung paraan ng pagkakaupo niya sa pwesto. Si P-Noy, binoto ko, kahit na naniniwala ako na hindi siya handa nung umpisa, may mga senador din akong binoboto na hindi ko din gusto. Pero lagi at lagi nananaig sa akin, bakit pa ako nag-relihiyon kung hindi ko din rerespetuhin yung pasya ng namamahala ng Iglesia, niloloko ko lang sarili ko kung kunyari sumusunod ako pero hindi naman.” Both he and his wife have been Iglesia ni Cristo since birth.

7. As tough as Anthony may seem, there are three people who never fail to make his heart soften: his daughters Zoey and Helga, and wife Rossel.

“Kapag tumatawag sa akin, ‘Daddy, umuwi ka na,’ tapos sasabihin ko may work pa ako, magkwe-kwento sila ng, ‘Yung classmate ko nga eh, ang nag-fetch sa kanya yung daddy niya,’ Naku po,” he says with his voice starting to crack. “Pagka narinig ko yung mga ganung klaseng pasakalye, minsan nagpapaalam ako sa boss ko, tatakas lang ako susunduin ko yung mga bata. Di ba tayo pagod na pagod lagi madaling araw hanggang gabi nagta-trabaho? Akala ko dati lokohan lang yung sinasabing nakakapagpaalis ng pagod ang mga bata. Totoo pala.”

Weekends are sacred to the Taberna family, doing their kids’ projects together (“Hindi nila tinatapos lahat, gusto nila may participation ako lagi”), going to the mall, watching movies (“Nagsi-sine, kasi may atraso din ako sa oras sa misis ko”), going to Church (“Nagtuturo ako sa mga bata sa church every Sunday”), and when possible, taking the kids to go swimming.

8. Three people he has not interviewed that he would like to interview, and the one question he would ask them.

1. President Noynoy Aquino: “Hindi ko pa siya nai-interview since naging Presidente siya. Itatanong ko kung galit ba siya sa akin.”

2. Celebrity Kris Aquino: “Kung tototohanin ba niya yung ayaw na niya magtrabaho, na magre-resign na siya? At tungkol sa pulitika, kung magpre-Presidente din ba siya. Palagay ko, ako ha, ang opinyon ko, mas magiging magaling na Presidente si Kris kay P-Noy.”

3. Senatorial candidate Nancy Binay: “Hindi kaya napapasubo lang siya sa pinasukan niya? Tingin ko hindi niya gusto eh, ramdam ko.”

He believes the country’s biggest problem is corruption. And how to solve the problem? “Cultural revolution na ang kailangan dito. Kapag sinimulan ng Presidente, at totoong gusto niya, magagawa niya. Leadership by example andiyan na eh, kailangan pa niya hatawin ng todo. Imagine nakaka-three years na si P-Noy, meron siyang 60 percent approval rating? Saan ka naman kukuha pa ng ganun? Kung baga ito nang pinakamagandang pagkakataon para hatawin niya lahat.”

9. Anthony Taberna in numbers:

21: Number of years in the industry. He started out as a news writer in 1992 for DZEC, became a reporter, then a producer, before he became a news anchor.

5: Number of years he and wife Rossel (who is 10 years younger than him) have been married.

6: Number of major awards he has won for TV and radio broadcasting, including Best Newscaster at the PMPC Star Awards in 2011.

30: Units of insulin he injects himself with daily, with a diabetes level of 170 (the highest normal level is 110).

2: Number of libel cases filed against him. “Na-abswelto at na-dismiss na yung mga kaso.”

10. On where he gets his fearlessness: “Kapag nakikita ko yung mali, o mga bagay na sa tingin ko ay mali, hindi ko yata kayang magsawalang kibo.”

“Takot ako lagi, especially nung nagka-asawa at mga anak na ako. Paano na sila kung madidisgrasya ako? Pero ang bilin kasi ng magulang ko, lalo na ng tatay ko, ang mali ay mali. Ang tama ay tama. Ipinapaliwanag ko lagi yan sa misis ko, lalo na pag sobrang natatakot siya. Naniniwala pa rin kasi ako na sa pamamagitan ng maliliit na tinig ng mga taong nabibigyan ng tsansang magsalita, gaya ko, may pag-asa pa rin ang bansang ito. Kapag naging maayos, mga anak ko rin at ang henerasyon nila ang makikinabang sa mas maayos na lipunan at mas malinis na gobyerno.”

* * *

I personally look up to Tunying and in fact, so many people who found out I would be interviewing him told me to tell him na “idol” nila siya. Even actor John Lloyd Cruz (who is idolized by millions) once revealed that his idol among news personalities is Tunying. What is it about him, despite being naughty, green-minded at times, and seemingly happy-go-lucky, that makes him admirable? In the words of his wife Rossel, when asked what trait she loves most about him, she says: “God-fearing. And you know pag God-fearing ang isang tao everything follows. Kampante ako that he will be a good boy all the time!”