Maria Ressa (Photo: Yahoo News UK)
Cover Maria Ressa (Photo: Yahoo News UK)

In this list we have Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Maria Ressa, Ramon Magsaysay Award recipient Roberto "Ka Dodoy" Ballon, and Volpi Cup holder John Arcilla

Through the years, Tatler has been keen on putting the spotlight on world-class talents and passionate individuals whose works gave hope and honour to the country. This year, the magazine recognises the unwavering efforts of individuals like journalist Maria Ressa, fisher Roberto "Ka Dodoy" Ballon, and actor John Arcilla who bagged a Nobel Peace Prize, Ramon Magsaysay Award, and Volpi Cup respectively. 

Read more: Maria Ressa’s 7 Greatest Quotes on Press Freedom, Integrity and More

1. Maria Ressa

Tatler Asia
NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 23:  Chief Executive Officer of Rappler Maria Ressa attends the 2019 Time 100 Gala at Frederick P. Rose Hall, Jazz at Lincoln Center on April 23, 2019 in New York City.  (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/WireImage)
Above NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 23: Chief Executive Officer of Rappler Maria Ressa attends the 2019 Time 100 Gala at Frederick P. Rose Hall, Jazz at Lincoln Center on April 23, 2019 in New York City. (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/WireImage)

Journalism

As the first-ever Filipino Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Maria Ressa is a beacon of light for the many who look up to her bravery and her call to keep speaking truth to power. The co-founder and CEO of news outlet Rappler received the prestigious recognition alongside Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov for their efforts to safeguard freedom of expression.

In 2020, Ressa was charged with cyber libel by the Philippine court, a case that was ultimately dismissed. Years prior, the brazen writer was bombarded with a series of other accusations ranging from tax evasion to securities fraud, and was issued a total of ten arrest warrants in just two years.

Ressa’s unwavering devotion to protecting Filipinos’ democratic rights through journalism has been well-documented. She was named Person of the Year and a Guardian in the War on Truth by Time in 2018.

The multi-awarded journalist was the subject behind the documentary film, A Thousand Cuts, which explores the conflicts between the press and the Filipino government. Her book titled How to Stand Up to a Dictator, with a foreword by Amal Clooney, is set to be released in 2022.

Read more: Maria Ressa Makes History as the First Filipino to Ever Receive the Nobel Peace Prize

2. Roberto Ballon

Tatler Asia

Community Service

Fifty-three-year-old fisherman Roberto “Ka Dodoy” Ballon won the Ramon Magsaysay Awards, considered Asia’s equivalent of the Nobel Prize, for 2021. Ballon leads his community in preserving the coastal environment of Zamboanga Sibugay. In 1986, Ballon and 30 other fishermen started Kapunungan sa Gamay nga Mangingisda sa Concepcion (KGMC).

The organisation seeks to empower fisherfolks, provide sustainable livelihood and enterprise and protect environmental resources.

Through the efforts of the KGMC, the fishermen were granted tenurial rights to the reforested land in 2000 under a government forestry comanagement programme. The 50 hectares they replanted by 1994 had expanded to 500 hectares of mangrove forests in 2015. Ballon said, “Besides being a haven for marine life and other animals, mangroves help reduce the impacts of climate change.”

See also: The Untold Story Behind Fisherman Ka-Dodoy's Road to the Ramon Magsaysay Award

3. John Arcilla

Tatler Asia

Cinema

For his role as the journalist Sisoy Salas in the 208-minute crime thriller On the Job: The Missing 8, veteran actor John Arcilla put the Filipino stamp on the coveted Volpi Cup at the 78th Venice Film Festival. Arcilla’s name is placed on the roster of internationally renowned artists who bagged the same title for their exemplary performances on screen. Past winners of the Cup are Hollywood’s who’s-who, such as Sean Penn, Ben Affleck, Brad Pitt, Adam Driver, Joaquin Phoenix and Willem Dafoe.

More from Tatler: John Arcilla on His Road to the Volpi Cup—'acting and expressing do not have boundaries'

As a young boy in Baler, Aurora, Arcilla had limited things to entertain him; he only relied on his imagination and the company of his loving family. “We stayed in a house in the middle of a coconut plantation,” he recalled. “That’s how my imagination grew wilder. Every night I would look up the ceiling and imagine myself performing on stage, being on television and shaking hands with people.”

Before reaching the big screen, Arcilla was first a theatre actor under the Tanghalang Pilipino, the resident theatre company of the Cultural Center of the Philippines’ (CCP). There, he was able to play leading roles in Orosman at Zafira and in National Artist Ryan Cayabyab’s Rizal musical trilogy: El Filibusterismo (1993), Noli Me Tángere (1995) and Illustrado (1996). Later, Arcilla joined the Actors Workshop Foundation. Contrary to what many of his new fans know, Arcilla’s big break was not his portrayal of Philippine General Antonio Luna in Jerrold Tarog’s historical biopic Heneral Luna. He first became a talent for a food commercial where he repeatedly uttered: “coffee na lang, dear [just coffee, my dear]”.

The wildly successful commercial caught the attention of different gag and night-time shows and eventually opened opportunities for Arcilla. “After Tanghalang
Pilipino, I got this commercial ‘coffee na lang, dear’ [just coffee, dear]. That opened a lot of doors for me because the phrase became a household tagline, a lot of Filipinos spoofed it,” he said.

The acting experiences that Arcilla had in the past brought him to where he is today. The Volpi Cup holder shared that there was an outpour of congratulatory
remarks the morning he received the good news. Arcilla’s win at the Venice Film Fest has set a premise among equally-talented Southeast Asian actors who were once deprived of winning the award due to language barriers and cultural differences in filmmaking.

In the coming years, Arcilla hopes to see more Filipinos on the list of Volpi Cup holders. “Like I always say, ‘acting and expressing do not have boundaries, we all cry, we all aspire,’ [so], I do not really think we’re different.”

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This story was originally published on Tatler Philippines' November 2021 issue. Download it on Magzter for free.

Credits

Words  

CHIT LIJAUCO and JOVE MOYA

Images  

RAMON MAGSAYSAY AWARD FOUNDATION, AMIE MACCARTHY/GETTY IMAGES

Photography  

PEP PE/ONQ TALENT NY (JOHN ARCILLA)