Aliwan Fiesta is an annual event that gathers different cultural festivals of the Philippines in Star City Complex in Pasay City wherein contingents compete in dance parade and float competitions, as well as in a beauty pageant. Organized by Manila Broadcasting Company (MBC) together with Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP) and the cities of Manila and Pasay, the event is dubbed as "The Mother of All Fiestas," with prizes totaling to P3 million (roughly US$70,000). Aliwan Fiesta, which began in 2003, aims to showcase the different Filipino cultures and heritage not only to the people in Metro Manila but also to the rest of the world.[1] The contingents, meanwhile, aim to promote their respective regions both economically and tourism-wise.[2] It was originally organized as a visual extravaganza for the Christmas season, but it has since been held during the summer months of either April or May.[3] Aliwan is a Tagalog word for "entertainment" or "amusement." For 2010, the colorful banner at the Roxas Blvd. entrance proclaimed the fiesta as THE PHILIPPINES GRANDEST FIESTA.[4]
Competition
The
parade float of
Panagbenga Festival of Baguio City was decorated with local flowers and handicrafts. Seated on top is the city's
Reyna ng Aliwan 2008 contestant
Aliwan Fiesta is divided into three categories: Cultural Street Dance Competition (the main event), Float Parade, and Reyna ng Aliwan (Queen of Entertainment/Amusement) beauty pageant. Each of the country's 17 regions have the option to send up to two contingents representing its respective cultural festival, as well as an option to send a representing float and or beauty pageant contestant.[5] However, the roster of entries for the cultural dance and float competitions are limited. In 2008, the number of slots for cultural dance was increased from 20 to 24 groups, which was completed as early as January.[3] Each contingent in the cultural street dance competition—totaling up to 100 dancers as well as hundreds of musicians and support staff members—have undergone stringent elimination cycles during various local festivals before being chosen to compete in Aliwan Fiesta.[1] The highlight of the event is when all competing festivals show off their dance skills while parading for four kilometers (about 2½ miles) along Roxas Boulevard from Quirino Grandstand to Aliw Theater grounds located near CCP.[6] The festivals range from the well-known such as Sinulog of Cebu City, and Panagbenga of Baguio City, to the obscure but just-as-interesting feasts like Alikaraw of Hilongos, Leyte, Padang-Padang of Parang, Shariff Kabunsuan, and Pamitinan Festival of Rodriguez, Rizal.[1] Side events also include a bazaar featuring different regional products, a photography contest, an inter-scholastic dance competition (interpreting dance tunes played on MBC radio stations), Filipino street games, and a fireworks display.[6][7]
Meanwhile, the participating floats are only allowed to use local textiles, produce, flowers, and other products specific in their representing city in decorating the vehicles. Each float, portraying local folklore and indigenous traditions, is topped by a participant of Reyna ng Aliwan serving as muse. The province of CEBU holds the record of the most number of wins in the Reyna ng Aliwan Pageant a total of six consecutive times from Reyna ng Aliwan 2009 until 2014. Last Aliwan Fiesta 2014 another cebuana beauty won the Reyna ng Aliwan 2014 title and a record sixth peat set by Steffi Aberasturi of Cebu City.[3][7] The beauty pageant contestants have competed a day before the parade.[8]
The top ten contingents in the cultural dance and float competitions receive cash prizes, with the top float winner receiving P500,000 (roughly US$11,000) and the winning cultural dance group getting P1 million (about US$23,000) as well as the bragging rights of becoming the champion of Aliwan Fiesta. Meanwhile, the Reyna ng Aliwan receives P100,000 (roughly US$2,300).[5]
Aliwan Fiesta winners
Streetdance[9]
Year | Winner | Origin |
2015 | Manaragat Festival | Catbalogan City |
2014 | Sinulog Festival | Cebu City |
2013 | Dinagyang Festival | Iloilo City |
2012 | Dinagyang Festival | Iloilo City |
2011 | Dinagyang Festival | Iloilo City |
2010 | Dinagyang Festival | Iloilo City |
2009 | Buyogan Festival | Abuyog, Leyte |
2008 | Sinulog Festival | Cebu City |
2007 | Sinulog Festival | Cebu City |
2006 | Sinulog Festival | Cebu City |
2005 | Pintados de Pasi | Pasi, Iloilo |
2004 | Dinagyang Festival | Iloilo City |
2003 | Halad Festival | Midsayap, Cotabato |
By wins
Festival name |
Wins |
Winning years |
Dinagyang Festival |
5 |
2004, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 |
Sinulog Festival |
4 |
2006, 2007, 2008, 2014 |
Buyogan Festival |
1 |
2009 |
Pintados de Pasi |
2005 |
Halad Festival |
2003 |
Manaragat Festival |
2015 |
- Dinagyang Festival of Iloilo City and Sinulog Festival of Cebu City has won the most number of wins in the cultural dance category with Dinagyang first winning in 2004 including four straight championships from 2010 to 2013.
- Sinulog Festivals' Lumad Basakanon is the first and only festival contingent to be inducted to the Aliwan Hall of Fame for winning three consecutive times in Aliwan 2006, 2007, 2008 (Lumad Basakanon of Sinulog Festival recently reclaimed their championship crown in Aliwan 2014).
- Another contingent from Cebu, Sinulog sa Carmen, also won 3rd place year 2008 (both contingents, Lumad Basakanon for Sinulog Festival of Cebu City and Sinulog sa Carmen from the Cebu Province, landed in the top three (1ST and 3RD placers respectively) Lumad Basakanon was elevated to the Aliwan Hall-of-Fame).[3]
- Other Aliwan Fiesta streetdancing champions include Halad Festival of Midsayap, Cotabato (2003) and 2004 Dinagyang's Tribu Atub-Atub, 2005 Pintados de Passi of Passi City, Iloilo 2010 Dinagyang's Tribu Paghidaet, Dinagyang's Tribu Pan-ay in 2011, and in 2015 the Manaragat Festival of Catbalogan City.
- In Aliwan Fiesta 2014 the Aliwan Hall of Fame awardee Lumad Basakanon of Sinulog Festival of Cebu reclaimed the Aliwan Fiesta Streetdancing Championship. Meguyaya Festival of Upi, Maguindanao came in second place, T'nalak Festival of South Cotabato in third place, followed by Pamulinawen Festival of Laoag City, Ilocos Norte in fourth and Caragan Festival of Mabalacat City, Pampanga in fifth place.
Tugtog Aliwan
Float design[10]
Year | Champions | Runner Up | Third Placer |
2015 |
Santo Niño Fluvial Float of Samar |
Sagayan Festival of Datu Piang Maguindanao |
Sakuting Festival of Dolores, Abra |
2014 |
Bambanti festival of Isabela |
Utanon festival of Dalaguete, Cebu |
Indayog ti Sabsabong of Baguio City |
2013 |
Bahandi Han Eastern Visayas of Alang-Alang, Leyte |
Balinali Sang Gadung of Mangudadatu, Maguindanao |
Gak't A Kastili sa Banobo of Northern Kabuntalan, Maguindanao |
2012 |
Pamulinawen (Laoag, Ilocos Norte) |
Ang Lingganay (Alang-alang, Leyte) |
Sagayan Fiesta (Parang, Maguindanao) |
2011 |
Biday a Pinangasturian (Buluan, Maguindanao) |
Kumpit sa Kutawato (Cotabato City) |
Singkaban Fiesta (Bulacan) |
2010 |
Kanggulagna sa Maguindanao (Cotabato City) |
Bahandi Han Dagat (Tanauan, Leyte) |
Kagkawing sa Maguindanao (Shariff Aguak, Maguindanao) |
2009 |
Abel Iloko (Laoag, Ilocos Norte) |
Lemba (Cotabato) |
Dinagyang (La Paz Iloilo) |
2008 |
Kalesa - Pamulinawen (Laoag) |
Peacock - Boling Boling (Catabauan, Quezon) |
Sinulog (Cebu) |
2007 |
Guinakit of Sultan Kudarat, Shariff Kabunsuan |
Disposorio Festival of Hagonoy, Bulacan |
Iloilo City: The Next Big Thing of Iloilo Dinagyang |
2006 |
Biag-Ni-Lam-Ang of Laoag City |
The Sabutan Rainbow Parrot Fish of Palanan, Isabela |
Boling-Boling Festival of Catanauan, Quezon |
2005 |
Sabutan Festival of Isabela |
Paradise Found of Baguio City |
Idiay Bangir of Laoag City |
2004 |
Tawid (A Legacy) of Laoag City |
Let Thousands of Flowers Bloom More Than The Usual of Baguio City |
Kanggunina of South Cotabato |
Reyna ng Aliwan Winners[11]
Cebu has won the crown in six consecutive years (2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014) followed by Baguio (2005, 2006) then Davao, Bulacan and Laoag.
Tally
Festival Origin |
Wins |
Winning years |
Cebu |
6 |
2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 |
Baguio |
2 |
2005, 2006 |
Davao |
1 |
2008 |
Bulacan |
2007 |
Laoag |
2004 |
Midsayap |
2015 |
Coffee table book
MBC presented a coffee table book in 2008 entitled Aliwan Fiesta: Celebrating Life In These 7,107 Islands. It was documented by cultural affairs specialist Susan Isorena-Arcega, featuring various photographs taken during Aliwan Fiesta's first five years. The book aims to tackle the Filipino's festive psyche, the multi-pronged treatise on what the Philippine festivals are rooted in, and the display of cultural heritage through dance and craftsmanship.[7]
External links
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Aliwan Fiesta ’07: The mother of all RP festivals". Manila Bulletin. March 25, 2007. Archived from the original on 2008-02-16. Retrieved 2008-07-16.
- ↑ Recebido, Bennie (April 27, 2007). "Tagalog News: Sorsogon City Pili festival dance troupe kalahok sa Aliwan fiesta". Philippine Information Agency. Retrieved 2007-07-28. (Tagalog)
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Valisno, Jeffrey (May 2, 2008). "Fiesta islands". BusinessWorld. Retrieved 2008-02-27.
- ↑ Phillips, Eric (May 5, 2010). "THE PHILIPPINES GRANDEST FIESTA". manilatop10. Retrieved 2010-05-05.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Calubiran, Maricar M (April 20, 2007). "P2.5M at stake in Aliwan Fiesta". The News Today. Retrieved 2008-07-27.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 "Aliwan Fiesta: Festival of champions". Malaya. April 4, 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-27.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 Artifex, Lex (April 27, 2008). "Aliwan Fiesta: A celebration of diversity". The Daily Tribune. Retrieved 2008-07-28.
- ↑ "Reyna ng Aliwan". Abante Tonite. April 13, 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-28.
- ↑ http://aliwanfiesta.com.ph/aliwan2.5/index.php/our-stations/streetdance-winners
- ↑ http://aliwanfiesta.com.ph/aliwan2.5/index.php/our-stations/float-design-winners
- ↑ http://aliwanfiesta.com.ph/aliwan2.5/index.php/our-stations/reyna-ng-aliwan
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