| Soul, Grit & Energy |
| DirectLine by Boy Abunda | |||
| Monday, 07 January 2008 00:00 | |||
|
It was a terrible evening. I was to tape my interview with Charice Pempengco, prior to her departure for The Ellen DeGeneres Show and after her special performance in a Korean variety show. Wasn’t it by fate that her performance of Whitney Houston’s I Will Always Love You was viewed and applauded by hundreds of thousands of web visitors that eventually led to her much-applauded performance in the Korean variety show and the top American daytime show, The Ellen DeGeneres Show? Where does Charice go from here? I’m sure Star Records will take good care of her. I pray that her appearance at Ellen’s show will open magical doors for her and the Filipino artist. I wish she cinches an international recording deal with the revered record producer David Foster. I beg every Filipino music lover around the world to buy her CD and turn it into a monster hit. I beg God to make this girl into a global pop star — a much-delayed break for the very talented Filipina artist. Back to that terrible night of my interview with Charice before she left for The Ellen DeGeneres Show. It was my last back pack interview for Boy & Kris that day. Everyone was tired and admittedly cranky and petulant. But showbiz is fascinating. You can be dying of fatigue but when the cameras start to roll, you leave every tired bone and nerve behind and you face the cameras as if you were doing your first spiel. In this business, we have no right to get tired or to complain as we do our jobs knowing that we are so fleeting — both our jobs and us. So we smile if asked to, we cry if need be, we holler even if the heart is bleeding or we weep even when we are at our happiest. This is showbiz — where the impossible is made possible. Bad coordination with the venue of the interview caused the irritation among parties’ concerned. I felt annoyed particularly because I looked forward to that interview with Charice. Ellen had already talked to her and to her mother over the phone but they weren’t sure yet if they could get a visa so everything was still hanging in the air but not the unflinching determination and the spunk of this 15-year-old girl. (We read later that Michael Gurfinkel helped Charice and mom get their US visas!)
Source: DIRECTLINE By Boy Abunda
Watch Your Favorite Movies, Tv Shows, News And Sports Anytime You Want Here!
|

