Regine at 20
Out There On Her Own
By Lani T. Montreal
Sun. Inquirer Magazine, July 8, 1990
She was 15 when I first
met her on board a ferryboat bound for Calapan, Mindoro. She was a wisp
of a girl, so thin and pale I was half-afraid she would break, like a fragile
China doll.
Yes, she said, she was the
girl who had won that singing contest on television the year before. She
was on her way to perform in a stage show at a school gym somewhere in Mindoro,
she explained in a tiny, quivering voice. She was scheduled to sing two
songs for a talent fee of P1,500 and she was excited. Her hair, done in
outdated curls, framed her made-up face and her loose, nondescript clothes
overwhelmed her petite figure. She looked like a very old 15-year-old.
Her almond eyes squinted
into slits as she looked out into the open sea like an expectant lover.
She was alone in that corner of the deck, but nearby stood a scraggly, dark-complexioned
man of about 40. Her father, someone said. He taught her how to sing, another
commented. I wanted to hold her steady lest she will fall into the water
or the strong wind blow away her tiny body. But her father beat me to it
by reminding her not to stay too close to the railing. On the opposite of
the deck, Janice de Belen Roderick Paulate and some other celebrities were
engaged in small talk.
In Mindoro, my friends and
I found ourselves staying in the room next to her in a cheap, elevatorless
hotel. We invited her to join us and teasingly urged her to sing. Without
much ado she obliged, and soon, her melancholy voice, no longer small and
unsure filled the cramped hotel room. "All at once, I looked around
and found that you were with another love," she sang the Whitney Houston
number, cautiously at first, sounding like a wind song. There her voice
rose to an awe-inspiring crescendo. "Ever since I met you, you're the
only love I know." A rap on the door rudely interrupted our mini-concert.
Her father peeped in. "I heard someone singing, was that you, Chona?"
he asked. "Hindi po, Siya po," she lied, pointing a finger at
me. But Papa knew better. "Kailangan i-conserve mo ang boses mo para
sa show mamaya," he scolded her. She fell silent, her head bowed in
embarrassment. "Sige, ha," she bade us goodbye in a voice we couldn't
reconcile with that of our impromptu entertainer.
The next time I met the
girl named Chona was at a decent sing along bar along West Avenue in 1986.
Her voice effortlessly glided through the difficult notes of the EDSA revolution
song "Mag-kaisa." The show was a regular stint for her, her father
said. Commuting from Bulacan to Manila had been a problem initially, but
they mad friends with a taxi driver to whom they became suki. They paid
him P200 pesos for waiting and taking them home to Bulacan every time Chona
had a performance.
The next time I saw Regina
Asuncion Velasquez she was performing at a small, art decoish cafe/bar.
She was no longer Chona but Regine. A singer/TV host had re-christened her,
saying her nickname sounded too parochial for someone so young.
The shy provinciana, now
a year older, felt burdened by the high-sounding moniker. She must act like
a Regine now and leave chokingly boring Chona behind. Her new manager, Ronnie
Henares, who had discovered her in that sing-along joint, felt that her
repertoire and general appearance should change along her name. Her outmoded
clothes were thrown into a baul (native chest) and sweatshirts, high-cut
rubber shoes and jeans became her regular fashion fare. Her straight, shoulder
length hair was left as it was, with no spraynet to hold it in place, while
she danced to more upbeat songs. She was a teenager, for heaven's sake,
no matter that she was the breadwinner for a family of six.
Gone was the dark colored
eye shadow she used to put on her narrow lids, that mad her cat like yes
look bruised and heavy. No more cheekbone highlighter that gave her an emancipated
look. The new light make-up emphasized rather than hid her small face. The
girl was beautiful, after all.
She was also gaining quite
a following. The young habitues of the cafe and a sprinkling of yuppies
and middle-aged music lovers filled the place to standing room capacity.
The entrance fee had been raised - a sure sign of her growing celebrity.
Mang Gerry, her father, remained zealous guardian. "From manager to
alalay," he said, laughing away his demotion.
"I've got a crush on
you," she belted out on a disco number, her wiry limbs, camouflaged
by thick clothing, gracefully maneuvering the stage floor. I didn't know
she could dance so well. Between songs she gave spiels in Taglish contorting
her face when someone from the audience commented or grunted a request.
She hated having to talk, but "Regine" sounded like the name of
a glib-tongued girl.
I did not just "see" Regine the next time, I sought hr out for
an interview. She was 17 by then, and among her fans was Larry Henares,
who immortalized her in his column. She had just recorded her first single,
"Urong Sulong," which was thinking of going back to school the
following year.
It was Mang Gerry who did
most of the talking that time. Regine, surprisingly, still had much of the
reticent Chona in her. One thing brought a glow to her eyes though the second
hand Toyota car she had just acquired. "I bought that with my sweat
and blood," she proudly says.
It's been three years since
that last interview, but the girl who greets us as we alight from Primeline's
delivery jeep is still pale and thin. "Magandang tanghali po,"
Regine says, her naked face made even more startling by her cropped crown.
The gamine charm shows through the maong jeans and handpainted T-shirt.
She looks more 15 than 20. But more Regine now than Chona.
We have come all the way
from Manila to San Juan (Balagtas, Bulacan), a barrio by the river where
Regine has spent most of her growing-up years. If not for her accommodating
townmates who led us from one narrow thoroughfare to another, we would not
have found her house.
A gray Hi Ace is parked outside her studio type apartment across the family's
house. The receiving area, separated from her bedroom by a makeshift wall,
bears much of her provincial character. No one would suspect that a celebrity
lives in this carelessly trimmed house. It looks more like the house of
a movie fan with its mounted faded posters of Regine's past concerts intermingling
with inexpensive paintings of nature. The concert posters have documented
Regine's metamorphosis, so to speak. In one, for instance, she seems naive
and uncaring. She transforms into a sensuous young lady in another. And
from pastel-colored attire she graduates to a more intense black and red.
A red Sto. Nino statuette stands atop an old piano. The sala set, flower
printed and brightly colored is the ultimate assault on a modern decorator's
sensibilities.
It's been a year since Regine moved into her own place, for no special reason,
but just so she would have enough space for all her growing number of things
wardrobe, appliances and friends. But there seems to be no effort to make
the apartment look more stylish and sophisticated, or at least presentable.
On a magazine shelf she has a cheap photo album of showbiz stars Randy Santiago,
Janno Gibbs, Bing Loyzaga, Lilet and an autograph of Maricel Soriano on
a small piece of paper, among others. A stack of foreign fashion magazines
-Vogue, Elle, Mademoiselle looks out of place among the albums and clippings.
In those magazines lies the secret to her new found sophistication in fashion.
Atop the improvised divider are her trophies, most of which still bear her
old name: Chona Velasquez. There are 67 of them, including her latest, the
Asia Pacific grand trophy which she won in Hong Kong last month. "I
joined 200 contests but won first place in only 67," she blurts out
unexpectedly. Recently, the Lions Club of Hong Kong honored her with a three
foot high trophy in ruby red and gold. "My father had a hard time carrying
it," she says while putting on make up for the pictorial.
She has just returned from that Hong Kong trip and has barely unpacked.
She is bothered that she wasn't told about the pictorial because she could
have fixed herself before we arrived. "Sana nag-Easy Call kayo,"
she reprimands her PR. But there's actually very little on that face that
needs covering, and she finishes jiffy .
"Can we have her pose by the river where you used to submerge her?"
the SI photographer asks Mang Gerry. "It wasn't here where I used to
submerge her but in Leyte, where my wife was born," Mang Gerry clarifies.
"We moved to Bulacan only when Chona was already 10."
The Velasquezes led a mobile lifestyle in the early '70s. Mang Gerry's job
as a constructor estimator required him and his family to move from one
province to another. With the children's schooling interrupted so often,
it is a wonder that Regine finished high school at all at St. Lawrence Academy
in Bulacan. She attributes her good English diction to her years at St.
Lawrence and to her favorite foreign singers, to whom she listens carefully.
"I told her never to get the lyrics of the songs from song hits. Listen
to the original singers and capture every word correctly," says her
omnipresent singing coach.
"Si Chona!" a little girl excitedly says upon seeing Regine walk
toward the ancient camachile tree for the pictorial. The child runs to her
mother when I begin asking her about Regine. "Ninang niya si Chona,
e," says Aling Leonila, Regine's neighbor and distant relative.
"Hindi naman nagbago yang batang 'yan. Gustong-gusto siya rito. Lahat
nga yata ng bata rito ay inaanak niya," she continues.
Regine's neighbors remember
when their mornings were not complete without hearing little Chona, then
about 10, vocalizing. "Palagi niyang kinakanta nuon yung kay Eva Eugenio
at kay Imelda Papin, they recall with amusement. Of course now she rehearses
in air conditioned studios, although her barriomates are still occasionally
treated to free mini concerts whenever she practices in her apartment. Right
now she's more into jazz music.
Regine has never thought of moving to Manila. Not even now. She has all
the love she needs in San Juan. And that, to her, is the most important
thing. Certainly it couldn't have been by coincidence that almost every
female in this rural neighborhood,, whether young or old sports Regine's
daring, boyish do.
"I feel I have matured a lot since I started six years ago. Marami
na akong na experience, Regine intimates. "That Hong Kong trip for
me was a big deal. It contributed a lot to my growth.
"You see, I was scared
at first of going there to compete. I felt I wasn't that good. Beside, it's
like I've gotten tired of competing. All my life that was what I did. I
was tired of the pressure," she says. It took her good friends and
mentors Nanette Inventor and Ivy Violan to convince her. "They said,
'You were chosen by Channel 7 of all singers. That means they believe in
you.: That did it."
Before the contest proper Regine had been obsessed with winning. "I
didn't think of anything else. I didn't realize that the reason I was there
was no t just to compete but to interact with the other competitors who
were from other countries, to make an impression of my country on them.
When I got there, I forgot all about the contest and making friends with
the other foreign contestants became a bigger challenge. At first it was
difficult because some didn't even know how to speak English. Now two have
already written me."
It was in that contest that she rendered what she considers the most difficult
song she has ever sung: "I'm Telling You' from the Broadway play Dream
Girls.
A mongrel comes along and waits for a pat on the head. "This is my
dog Askar, Regine says as she runs her skinny fingers through the dog's
tan-colored hair. "Askar means Asong Karaniwan."
It is only now, she confides, that she is able to savor the fruits of her
labor. "Before, I always had to think of what was needed first before
I would buy what I wanted. Now, I can get both...Ang pangarap ko ngayon
ay ang mapatapos ang mag kapatid ko."
Her sister Maricar, 19, is a business administration student at St. Paul
College, Manila; brother Jojo ,16, high school senior at La Consolacion,
Bulacan; and twin sisters Deane and Decca, 13 are in first year high school
at La Consolacion. "They make lambing to me whenever they need something
in school or maybe want something," Regine says, stressing the difference
between "need" and " want" .
She has no regrets that at 20 she has felt neither the throbbings of passionate
love nor the pain of unrequited love. "I think my maturity came from
the experiences I had with my family," she says confidently. "I'm
still very young. Love can wait. for now, my concerns are my family's needs.
I might o back to school when Maricar graduates and is able to help in sending
the other children to school."
Regine still dreams of enrolling in a fine arts course someday. When not
singing on TV or concertizing, she indulges in her favorite pastime...sketching.
She's not hand painting shirts now, and explains that she herself did the
t-shirt she was wearing when we arrived. She fetches the tee and shows the
painting of a woman's face whose long hair sensuously covers her left eye
She colored the hair orange and lips neon pink. "I like sketching and
painting women's faces. The contours of the eyes and lips are just beautiful.
They're so nice to draw," she explains.
She tells the story behind her new haircut: "I had it shortened to
ear length on my 18th birthday. I was supposed to have a concert then but
a foreign band, The Jets, came over and I was advised against staging my
concert on the same date which was my birthday. In rebellion, I cut my hair,
which was already down to my chest, very short."
But after that act of rebellion came, the stories in the tabloids and movie
columns that her face had undergone cosmetic surgery. So why didn't they
make your nose better, I kid her. She laughs.
"You've seen me before, do you see any change?" Oh, but I don't
mind those intrigues. I try to tell them it's just my make up, that now
I already know how to blend with colors or enhance my features but then
they say I'm being defensive.
Inside her room clothes
are strewn here and there, the improvised shelves over her bed are stacked
with encyclopedia volues and innumerable little stuffed dolls. She plans
to clean all the dolls for Christmas and distribute them to orphanages.
"Not that I've outgrown my love for them. Actually, they're so precious
to me because they were gifts from my good friends But doesn't that fact
make the dolls more special and worthy of given as gifts to orphaned and
abandoned kids?"
Regine disputes rumors that she is auditioning for the role of Kin in Ms.
Saigon. "I'm afraid I might not be able to endure the rehearsals. I
developed nodules in my throat before and they had to be taken out by surgery.
And with my hair, I might be considered for the part of soldier," she
says, laughing at herself.
We keep quiet as she teats us to an a capella rendition of her favorite
song, "On My Way To You" by Barbara Streisand. Softly, at first,
like a wind song but full of intense and emotions. I remember that day in
Mindoro when she sang that Whitney Houston song, except this time, her father
doesn't interrupt. He listens as intently as we do.
Mang Gerry's girl has definitely grown up. And how!
"Powerful...Captivating...The
Best"
Regine Velasquez was only 14 when she won first place in the amateur singing
contest on television's Bagong Kampeon in 1984. She shed tears of triumph
as she sang her winning song, "In Your Eyes," at the end of the
show. It was the culmination of all the years she had spent joining and
winning singing contests in remote barrios and provinces, and the start
of her showbiz career.
On July 14, Regine celebrates her sixth year as an entertainer with a concert
at the FAT.
Columnist Larry Henares once described Regine as "a voice unbounded that soars and lingers
and lights up the world, with so young and so pretty face."
What do her colleagues say
about her?
"The ultimate singer.
I said it once, I'll say it again. She's the best singer in the country,
maybe even the world." - Martin Nievera.
"I know talent when
I see one and again my instinct proves me right with Regine. She' got talent
and sincerity in her craft. I wish her all the best in her upcoming concert
at FAT." - Kuh
Ledesma.
"When I had my Birthday Blow-Out concert at the
ULTRA in 1987, I guested her because I believe that among the new breed
of singers she has what it takes to make it big. I was right. After giving
birth, I did 'Bakbakan' with her and the series "String Fever."
The nicest thing about Regine is her attitude towards her singing career.
Walang maraming arte dahil alam niyang kaya niya kahit ano but you could
see the humility that is very evident." - Joey Albert.
"Regine is one very
good singer. She has a powerful voice. Tamang-tama lang yung timing ng pagmamature
niya sa kanyang career. For her age, it is quite unusual na ma-reach niya
yung peak ng kanyang singing career compared to her contemporaries. And
we are very sure that she is going to maintain her status as Class A singer." - Apo Hiking Soceity
"As a person, Regine
has a captivating child-like quality about her. As a singer, she's at once
delicate and powerful with a voice that lingers long after the song is over." - Jose Mari Chan
Asia Week
People Section, March 2, 1990
Just 19 and raring to go,
Regine Velasquez wants it all. "I want to make a hit song, a hit movie,
and more LPs. - in that order," she declares. "I want accomplishment
soon." Not that her achievements to date are anything to sneeze at.
Trained from the age of 6 by father Gerry to sing lustily while immersed
up to her neck in the sea, Velasquez has already made a sizeable splash
in the Philippines. She has cut two albums and matched against finalists
from Hong Kong, Indonesia, Taiwan and New Zealand, walked away with the
Grand Prize at the recent Asia-Pacific Singing Contest in Hong Kong. After
sharing a Feb. 14 concert billing with mega-star Jose Mari Chan, the mermaid
who came in from the cold senses that she is just hitting her stride: "That
kind of success is what I've been dreaming of. Now, I want a bigger concert
in a bigger venue." What about the Pacific Ocean?