Lady Dada
Lady Dada | |
---|---|
Genre | Sitcom, Drama |
Developed by | Perci Intalan |
Written by |
Elmer Gatchalian Andrew Paredes |
Directed by | Joyce Bernal |
Creative director(s) | Benedict Mique |
Starring |
Ryan Agoncillo Mylene Dizon Keempee de Leon |
No. of episodes | 5 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Shirley Fabella |
Release | |
Original network | TV5 |
Original release | September 8 – October 6, 2010 |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | 5 Star Specials |
Followed by | Broken Hearts' Club |
Lady Dada was a comedy-drama miniseries aired on TV5. This was the first starring role of Ryan Agoncillo on the station, although he made his popularity as the host for the network's talent show, Talentadong Pinoy. The program was supposedly a part of 5 Star Specials.[1]
Plot
“Lady Dada” tells the story of hard luck Dindo (Agoncillo) who barely succeeds in every business and job he gets into. His star-crossed ventures eventually ruined his marriage with Rina (Dizon). After series of unfortunate events, he proves to be a bad luck magnet as he was restrained to get near his son Miko (Britt); this after he became violent in a bar owned by his wife and her ex-suitor Brian (Eigenmann). Macario, his closeted high-school best friend, enters the picture in literally gay fashion as Kylie (de Leon) on the rescue. He convinced Dindo to mask his identity as a pretty woman and audition to be the next drag queen in Rina’s bar. In order to get closer to his wife and son, Dindo is left without a choice but to turn from a man to a woman to a drag queen! His woman pretense gets even awkward as she, err, he gets courted by Rina’s widower brother Henry (Paulate).[2]
Cast
- Ryan Agoncillo as Dindo/Dada/Lady Dada
- Roderick Paulate as Henry
- Keempee de Leon as Macario/Kylie
- Mylene Dizon as Rina
- Ryan Eigenmann as Brian
- Edgar Allan Guzman as Junior
- Nathaniel Britt as Miko