Ma-ala-ala Mo Kaya (Part 2)
Panciteria Moderna was the place to go for pancit miki and miki bihon already
wrapped in their version of 'tetra pak' (banana leaves on wrapping paper tied
with a rubber band). Pancit bihon was the specialty of Panciteria Wa Nam. Kung
gusto mo naman ng chop suey rice doon ka sa Hen Wah, tabi ng Avenue Theatre.
At Ma Mon Luk siopao was at 30 centavos; mami was at 70 centavos or 2 pcs of
siomai (large) w ith unlimited soup for 30 centavos. So with one peso busog ka
na. Ngayon bigay mo piso sa pulubi, titignan ka pa ng masama.
The Shangri-la in the basement of Shelborne Hotel (at the back) was the place to
go for dates if you wanted a dark and cozy atmosphere. The Black Angel along
Shaw Blvd near the corner of Kalentong in Mandaluyong was a very good place to
listen to soft music (Fleetwoods, Lettermen, Cascades ) and the lights were also
quite low. Then with the introduction of the 'black light' you look like Dracula
about to devour a beautiful victim. Kaya lang pag may pustiso ka itim ang labas
kaya mukhang kenkoy ka. So do not dare to smile. With Php 30- 50 in your pocket
you were in pretty good shape for a date.
'Bakuran' was the in-thing at parties with 'screening' from a friend to assist
you in getting a dance with a girl who was very sought after.
Wack-Wack, the Sky Room in Jai-Alai, the penthouse at the Rufino Bldg. as well
as Capri at the Sarmiento Bldg right opposite it were the favorite places for
proms and balls. Sikat ang event if the DynaSouls (dubbed the Beatles of the
Philippines), The Tilt Down Men (the Sotto brothers, Tito, & Val, favored the
Dave Clark 5) , Hi-Jacks, the Electromaniacs (later Electros) or the Bad Habits
was the 'combo' playing. Other popular bands then were the Bits and Pieces
(after the Dave Clark 5 hit), Purple People, Versatiles (remember the late Bobby
Lim), Technicolors (whose drummer Tony Tuviera is now the producer of Eat Bulaga),
Red Fox (forerunner of Hotdog), Jungle Cats, Glenmores, Robins, Crystals,
Phantoms, and the Downbeats (where most of the Juan de la Cruz band came from
notably Pepe Smith or Joey Smith then).
What about gate crashing a 'Tipar' (for party) and the ensuing rumble between
feuding barkadas: Havocs, Combat, Axis, Amboys, Mobs & Exotics, meron pang
kanya-kanyang busina (car honking ID).
Remember BMI (Baguio Military Institute)? That school was a dumping ground for
kicked out students from Manila and kids that needed discipline. Let us not
forget ang mga taga 'Baste' (San Sebastian). Ang daming siga noong araw.
Alta Vista along Roxas Blvd. was the favorite place for wedding receptions at
Php 8.50 per cover! Ngayon, kulang pang pambayad ito sa parking fee.
Stencil Special ringside seats for performances at the Araneta Coliseum were at
P5.00 per. So with P20.00 you could safely invite someone and still have enough
for a snack afterwards or a game of 'putt and putt' at the mini-golf place
located at the back of Araneta. Among the more popular celebrities
who performed at the Big Dome were Neil Sedaka, Anita Bryant, Teddy Randazzo,
Nat King Cole, Jo Ann Campbell, Paul Anka, Johnny Mathis, Matt Monro, Gary Lewis
& the Playboys, Dave Clark 5, Zombies, Peter and Gordon and many many more.
Noon 5 centavos sa mga bata at 10 centavos naman para sa matatanda ang bayad sa
jeep. Manila and Suburbs ang lahat ng biyahe ng jeep noon na 3 seater lang (AC
ang tawag nila dito) at talagang Upong Diyes lang ang sigaw ng driver. Sa
Avenida Rizal at Sta. Cruz, Blumentritt, Tayuman, Espiritu Santo Church, Grace
Park, Pasay-Taft, Dakota - Harrison, Paco-Taft, Sta. Ana Tulay at BBB-Monumento
ang mga=2 0sikat na lugar. Did you get an opportunity to ride the G-Liner from
San Juan to Quiapo? It would crawl up to the corner of N. Domingo to pick up
passengers. That's why we called it Gapang Liner. Gas was very cheap then and
they can afford to keep the motor running for 2 hours at a snail's pace.
Gasoline prices then were at 25 centavos per liter and there were only two types
of gas; Premium or Regular. Caltex called their premium 'Boron' as advertised by
that multi-colored dancing lights on top of the old San Miguel Ice Plant. Near
those dancing lights was the big white kettle pouring hot chocolate on a giant
cup. It was sponsored by Cocoa Ricoa. Esso named theirs Extra to 'put a Tiger in
your tank'.
Yung Good Earth Emporium pwede ring idagdag sa mga magagandang shopping mall
noong araw. Yung Manila Grand Opera house, Clover, Odeon, Roxan, Hollywood,
Cinerama, Avenue, Universal, Dalisay, Ever, Galaxy, Ideal, State, Lyric, Capitol
ang mga sikat na `first run' na sinehan noon. Movie tickets were selling at
P1.20 and P1.50 kung Advanced Roadshow (meaning kasabay sa international
release). Kung medyo nagtitipid ka naman doon ka na lang sa `second run'
theatres for P0.85 lang double program pa mapapanood mo. Remember those second
run theatres like Main, Times, Society, Scala, Globe, Esquire, Vista, Republic,
Mayfair, and Palace. Pero iyong last two theatres e medyo notorious sa mga `singit'
where they show the `censored' portions of the movie. These two theatres also
showed the early foreign `bomba' films, or skin flicks. Bodavil was still a hit
during the early 50s where Opera House featured the Lopito, Patsy, the Lou
Salvador clan, Toto, Chichay, Ike Lozada, Pabo, Cachupoy etc. while Clover
Theatre featured Pilita Corrales, Wing Duo, Reycard Duet, Bobby Gonzales, Sunday
Contreras (anak ni Pugo), Eddie Mesa, Pugak & Tugak, Chuchi, Aruray, Doro &
Popoy. Did you know that German Moreno started as a utility man at Clover
Theatre and did bit parts until he was discovered later on by Sampaguita
Pictures.
Sa Q.C ay sikat yung Max's Chicken,20Aristocrat Cubao at Dayrit. Ang dollar rate
noon ay P3.70/1$ ang palitan. Kung medyo kapos ka e takbo muna kay Tambunting or
A. Aguirre pawnshop.
Ang Cosmos Sarsaparilla ay 5 centavos at 10 Centavos ang Coke. Mayroon din
Cosmos Orange kung ayaw mo ng Sarsi. Kung may extra ka e di Royal Tru-Orange na.
Pero sikat din yung 7-Up, Lem-O-Lime, Canada Dry, Uva at Bireley's strawberry
and pineapple. Kalaban ng Cosmos noon ay Ideal at Avenue softdrinks. Remember
Fress Gusto, Yes Cola, Grassland Milk, Choco Vim. Pag may sakit ka naman
pinapa-inom lang sa iyo Royal Soda Water at soda crackers. Kaya naman pag galing
natin e takbo kaagad sa intsik (yun ang tawag natin sa kanilang sari-sari store
noon bago sila nag diversify sa mga malls, transport, food production) at bili
ng Coke and junk foods.
Pag Pasko madalas kami sa Sta Cruz para manood ng palabas sa Manila COD para sa
Xmas season. Mas magaganda ang mga palabas pag Christmas kasi wala pang Metro
Manila Film Fest noon kaya lahat ng sinehan pagandahan ng pelikula. Noon wala
pang Chippy at nachos, ang merienda ay banana cue, camote que, palitaw, biko,
pinipig, halo-halo, carioca, pilipit, butsi, hopiang hapon, hopiang munggo,
hopiang baboy, bibingka, puto, cassava, cake o budin, suman at mani.
Ang mansanas ay apat-piso ang benta sa Lawton Bus terminal at sa Avenida. Mas
mahal pa yung local na chico na pineras. Ang grapes, pear, at apple ang
karaniwang binebenta sa mga bus terminal na papuntang south (BLTB). Ang bus noon
ay bukas lahat yung isang side kaya doon dumadaan ang mga pasahero. Puwede ka
rin bumili nito sa Echague (now C. Palanca) tapos bili ka na rin ng hopia at
mani. Mga sikat noon ay Kim Chong Tin at United Foods. Dito din nakakabili ng
Chinese ham na por kilo or isang buo na nakabalot pa sa papel at plastic net.
Ang sikat na mga Plaza noon ay Plaza Goiti, Plaza Miranda at Plaza Sta. Cruz. Sa
mga bakery sa Manila ay sikat yung Herran Bakery, Jo-Ni's, Hizon's (favorite ni
Dolphy kahit noon pa), Sta. Romana Bakery.
Remember Halili Beer (baka sa mga lolo ni Katrina ito) , Tody chocolate drink in
cans, Horlicks malted milk tablets; Halili (baka kila Katrina din ito) bus,
Super (dog logo) Transit, Yujuico, JD & MD buses; MM Liner, Medina Transit,
Capistrano Transit, Pantranco, La
Mallorca buses and taxis, Golden Taxicab and Yellow Taxicab, Dollar Taxi.
Your favorite past time then was reading comics like Pilipino Komiks, Espesyal
Komiks, Hiwaga Klasiks, Kenkoy Komiks. Kung medyo class ka naman binabasa mo mga
Classics Illustrated (sometimes we get our book report from these comic books
instead of reading the assigned novel). Dell Comics and Gold Key Comics from the
US were also available at magazine stands.
ShoeMart started in Carriedo (the first SM was named Shoe World) followed by the
2nd ShoeMart beside Ideal Theater and then SM Echague with a revolving
restaurant at the top floor.
Safari Club beside Manila Zoo at the height of the 'Twist' craze, Dance-O-Rama
with Pete Roa & Baby O'Brien every 5PM on Channel 5. If you wanted an earlier
teeny bopper show, you watched Eddie Mercado in DJ Dancetime on Channel 11.
Siyempre naman pag Friday, Nite Owl Dance Party hosted by Lito Gorospe,
featuring the Celtics. Another delight to watch was 9-Teeners hosted by Jose
Mari Chan, Rom Azanza and Tito Osias (all Ateneans) on Channel 9.
Sampaguita was first seen as a cage dancer at 9 Teeners. Her real name is Tessie
Alfonso. She got married to Nilo Santos of the Jungle Cats. Jeanne Young also
hosted another teeny bopper show called The Insiders which guested the more
popular combos at that time.
Siyempre sikat pa rin ang Student Canteen pag tanghali followed by Darigold
Jamboree, hosted by Leila Benitez with Eddie Ilarde and Pepe Pimentel and Bobby
Ledesma. Sa primetime naman nandoon ang The Big Show nila Cris de Vera, Oscar
Obligacion at Sylvia La Torre. Then it evolved into Oras ng Ligaya when it
migrated to ABS-CBN. Remember Uncle Bob's Lucky 7 Club. Who would forget Buhay
Artista starring Dolphy and Panchito and a take off of a popular radio program
Sebya Mahal Kita, Tang Tarang Tang with Pugo and Bentot on the lead.
Sa radio naman siyempre ang Kapitan Kidlat. Kidlat, Kwentong Kutsero, Gabi ng
Lagim, Salamat Po Doctor, and of course Kahapon Lamang and Tia Dely's program
which followed. Konti pa lang may TV set noon kaya sikat ka sa kalye niyo pag
mayroon ka nang television at minsan SRO pa nga pag basketball.
Now anyone who missed those days can't really claim they've seen and tasted the
best. Every generation has its own set of 'Aces'. Do you recall when: You tasted
Darigold Evap, Liberty Condensada, Sunkist Orange (in tetra packs), Magnolia
Chocolait, Klim (the word 'milk' spelled backwards), Big 20 Hamburgers,
Foot-long hotdog, Nectar choconut, Tweet & Jiggs Candies (by Mr. Krieger),
Tootsie Roll, Serg's Chocolate, kerosene-flavored popcorn and kropeck along
Dewey Blvd, dirty ice cream, Magnolia Ice Cream sandwich, Selecta ice cream (now
Arce Dairy) and their fresh carabao's milk, Magnolia popsicles in orange,
chocolate and tutti frutti, langka flavors, Sison Ice Drop in mongg o, and buko
flavors, Milky Way's buko sherbet, Acme Supermarket' s sundaes and Coney
Island's 32 flavors?
You went to: Arcegas at the Maranaw Arcade, Funhouse at Bricktown, Aguinaldo ,
Erehwon Bookstore, Alemars Bookstore, Bookmark, Botica Boie, Makati Supermarket
D'Bankers Barbershop and Leila's Coffee Shop, Tropical Hut along Estrada , Acme
Supermarket, Cherry Supermarket (now Foodarama), The Regent of Manila, Hotel
Mabuhay, Manila Hilton, Christmas carnival (at Lawton in front of Letran
College), Villa
Pansol and Lido Beach, Aroma Beach and Jale Beach?
Rizal what?' 'Who would be crazy to build a cinema in the middle of nowhere?' It
turned out to be the best theater in the city of Makati then (at the same site
now occupied by Shangri-La Hotel).
We ate at: The original A&W along UN Avenue in Manila, Aristocrat's Flying
Saucer (across Malate Church), Bonanza Restaurant, Little Quiapo, Country Bake
Shop, Selecta Restaurant, Taza de Oro, New Europe, Madrid, Cucina Italiana, La
Cibeles at A. Mabini, Luau, The Makati Automat, Sulo Restaurant (Makati),
Bulakena, Casa Marcos, Au Bon Vivant, Salambao Restaurant, Dairy Queen, Di
Mark's Pizza in Cubao, the elegant dining room of the old Army & Navy Club.
Botica Boie in Escolta, Alba's in Florida St., Malate, Brown Derby and their
signature foot-long hotdog came with its special, extra tarty mustard sauce and
a hot, crispy bun. We used to park at their drive-in bays after we were
exhausted from all-night partying
but with enough energy to gobble down sausages and soft drinks.
The Plaza was the favorite venue for all formal school and social functions.
Every Friday night the Plaza became an instant discotheque called `POW'. Food
was not a big factor so long as cozy couples could have their special table for
two.
You shopped at: Bergs, Soriente Santos, Assanda's, Oceanic Commercial (where you
bought original watches and jewelries), Syvel's, Walk-Over in Escolta, Good
Earth Emporium, 15c and Up, Manila COD, Avesco at Avenida Rizal, Rustan's San
Marcelino, Aguinaldo's in Cubao.
The original Rustan's was the garage of the Tantoco's residential house which
was eventually converted into a dazzling shop filled with eclectic things and
collectibles.
You would want your wardrobes (pang-porma) tailor-made. So you went to RM
Manlapat, Toppers, Fifth Avenue, Estacio's, Sleek's (owned by Eddie Ilarde) or
D'Sharp (owned by Dolphy) for your Continental style pants and shirt-jack
(Marcos loved this style) or the ¾
sleeve shirt. If you wanted a groovy denim pants, you would buy the finest denim
material at Divisoria and brought it to Gulapa's. Levi's was not a by-word then.
For school uniforms, we would love to wear our khaki pants from the famous RTW
shop called Macomber in Quiapo. Or, our parents would just buy us a pair of
Sabur or Savalbarro khakis. When it came to
footwear, siyempre mas maganda pasadya especially when you want a good Chuka
Boots, Spanish Boots or Beatles Boots. You went to Glenmore or Camara shoe
makers. Pag casual naman siyempre US Keds, pero kung medyo low budget lang e
puwede na rin ang US Kids. For sports shoes you would want a pair of Converse
Chuck Taylor, and if you were on a low budget you bought Custombuilt or
Edwardson. But if you wanted to float on water (as the advertisement claimed)
you wore Marcelo Rubber Shoes black! Yan ang sinusuot ni Kenkoy.
Blockbuster movies were: The Ten Commandments, Shane, High Noon, King and I,
South Pacific, Horrors of Dracula, Gunfight at OK Corral, Psycho, House on
Haunted Hill, Magnificent Seven, The Alamo, Spartacus, West Side Story, Ben Hur,
Longest Day, Madame X, Guns of Navarone, King of Kings, El Cid, Breakfast at
Tiffany's, The Birds, Elvis' movies like Love Me Tender, Loving You, Jailhouse
Rock, King Creole, Blue Hawaii, GI Blues, and the Beatles' Hard Days Night,
Help, Yellow Submarine, The Graduate, Romeo and Juliet and of course the ever
popular The Sound of Music.
You had your hair styled or permed by: Nomer's, Lita Rio, Grace Lagman, Dick &
Lucy, and Kayumanggi. That was the time of Aqua Net stiff, foot-high beehives,
French twist and Kiss Me liquid eye liners and Pretty Quik instant facial
blotters.
You sang: Don't Be Cruel and Hound Dog by Elvis, April Love by Pat Boone, Fool's
Paradise by Buddy Holly, Mack the Knife by Bobby Darin, Bobby, Bobby, Bobby by
Jo Ann Campbell, Devoted to You by the Everly Brothers, Someday by Ricky Nelson,
One More Chance by Teddy Randazzo, Calendar Girl by Neil Sedaka, Puppy Love by
Paul Anka, Young Ones by Cliff Richard, Walk Don't Run by The Ventures, Apache
by the Shadows, A Hard Days Night, All My Lovin, Yesterday, Hey Jude by the
Beatles, World Without Love by Peter and Gordon, Cherish by the Association,
Because by Dave Clark Five, Distant Shores by Chad and Jeremy. Saved your whole
month's allowance of P50 to watch the Beatles perform live at Rizal Memorial
Coliseum in 1965.
It was hip to listen to: Bingo Lacson, Lito Gorospe, Bong Lapira, Eddie Mercado,
Jack Henson, Art Galindez of DZMB and Jo San Diego (past midnight) of DZMT,
Sonia Basa, Ronnie Quintos, Naldy Castro of DZWS, Harry Gasser, Joe Cantada and
Jose Mari Velez of DZHP; the singing sensations from Ateneo de Manila? RJ and
the Riots, The Loonilarks, Jose
Mari Chan and the Twofus (Ronnie Henares and Jojit Paredes) and dance to live
combo music garbed in cocktail dresses and dark suits.
DZMT was affiliated with the Manila Times and was one of two radio stations
operating after 12 midnight. The other station was DZHP whose program was taped.
Jo San Diego of DZMT went on live (she with the velvety bedroom voice. She could
still be heard today at DWBR every Sunday afternoons).
And danced at: Manila Hotel's Jungle Bar, Stargazer, Bayside Night Club (with
live music by the Carding Cruz band), the Nile, D'Flame, Rino's, Wells Fargo,
Nautilus, Hi-Ball and Bulakena. Or, maybe rode a Motorco with your date and went
around Dewey Boulevard. When you got hungry you would drop by the Barbecue
Plaza. You tried your luck at
the Pula-Puti joint in Russell Street.
Do you remember when: Malate streets were named after US States (Pennsylvania,
Tennessee, California, Colorado, etc.); Paranaque, San Juan, Makati, Pasig, Las
Pinas, Taguig, Pateros and Muntinlupa were municipalities of Rizal province;
DLSU was De La Salle College, Poveda was Institucion Teresiana, Adamson
University was the original St. Theresa's campus in San Marcelino, Robinsons
Mall was the Assumption Convent campus, Petron was Esso, Villamor Air Base was
then known as Nichols Air Base, bancas were aplenty in the Baclaran side of
Dewey Blvd. (now Roxas Blvd.) and traffic was non-existent in Tagaytay.
PLDT telephone numbers were five digits and you used your index finger to dial a
number one at a time.
Sikat ka sa barkada kung may 'syota' kang 'Colegiala' (Assumption, STC, St..
Scho, Maryknoll, Holy Spirit, St. Paul's, St. Joseph's , Sienna, PWU, Sta..
Isabel). Siyempre hindi rin naman papahuli ang mga coeds natin from UP, UST,UE
and FEU. As proof, you
should be wearing her high school ring in your pinkie finger.
If you remember all these things, you're history in great company and I dare
say......... ......... .