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New 'Miss Saigon' cast continues legacy of past Filipino stars

MANILA, Philippines — Every individual has their favorite stage musical, but it can't be denied the strong connection Filipinos have to Claude-Michel Schönberg and Alain Boublil's "Miss Saigon."

The legacy dates back to the production's first-ever run on the West End when Lea Salonga starred as Kim, a role she would reprise on Broadway leading to historic Olivier and Tony Award wins.

Schönberg himself expressed praise for Filipino singers, even calling the Philippines "a soup of talent" as original cast members were found in the country apart from Salonga like Isay Alvarez, Cocoy Laurel, Pinky Amador, Jon Jon Briones, Jamie Rivera, Jenine Desiderio, Robert Seña, and Monique Wilson.

The ongoing run of "Miss Saigon" — an adaptation of Giacomo Puccini's opera "Madama Butterfly" set during the tail-end of the Vietnam War — at The Theatre at Solaire is the musical's first in the Philippines since the turn of the millenium when it was fronted by Salonga herself.

Leading the new run are Filipino-Australians Abigail Adriano and Seann Miley Moore as Kim and the Engineer, respectively, with Nigel Huckle as Chris, Filipino-Kiwi Laurence Mossman as Thuy, and homegrown actress Kiara Dario as Gigi.

Without a doubt the star of the cast is Moore, who dubs their character the "EnginQueer" and portrays them with "bakla energy," a performance that earned praise from producer Cameron Mackintosh.

Related:  'Big Slaysian energy': Abigail Adriano, Seann Miley Moore on their 'Miss Saigon' roles

The role of the Engineer has always been a flamboyant one, expertly performed in the past by the likes of Jonathan Pryce and the previously mentioned Briones (currently on Broadway opposite his daughter Isa in "Hadestown").

But there is something truly different in having a queer, half-Asian actor like Moore play a character who is a victim of societal imbalance, searching for a ladder to climb out of the pit they've unluckily been born into.

Moore steals the show in large-scale numbers like "The Heat is On in Saigon," "What a Waste," and definitely the penultimate "The American Dream" as they command the stage in all their diva energy.

Adriano of course faces the weight of expectations on her

Read more on philstar.com