In this script, . She has a ten-page monologue in Act II, Scene 4— “Ang Halamanan ng Pagdududa” (The Garden of Doubt)—where she debates whether to fake her own death to escape Adolfo’s advances. She is no longer a trophy. She is a tactician.
By: [Staff Writer]
For over a century, Filipino students have memorized its verses, debated its allegories, and fallen asleep to its awit (metrical romance). Francisco Balagtas’s Florante at Laura is the cornerstone of Philippine literature—a 19th-century narrative poem wrapped in the guise of a courtly love story, yet throbbing with a revolutionary heart. Florante At Laura Full Script
Director-playwright Ramon G. Alcantara, who led the restoration project, explains: “Balagtas didn’t write a poem to be read silently in a library. He wrote a performance for the plaza. Our ‘full script’ restores the ‘entr’acte’—the live music, the shadow puppetry of the crocodiles, and the three-minute comedic interlude by the character of Menandro, which was censored in the 1860 printed edition.” In this script,