News:

Comedian Redford White, 54, leaves with laughter
By Bayani San Diego Jr.
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 13:22:00 07/25/2010


MANILA, Philippines – (UPDATE) Comedian Redford White succumbed to brain and lung cancer Sunday morning. He was 54.

True to his calling as a funnyman, White took his final bow, not with tears but with laughter.

Friends who visited him at his Quezon City home last week, recalled that the comedian was in a jovial mood.

“For the first time, we saw him laughing heartily,” said frequent movie and TV costar Ces Quesada.

His colleagues remember White, or Cipriano Cermeno II in real life, as a “quiet, unassuming fellow.”

Director Wenn Deramas, who worked with White on “Kokey,” one of his last TV shows on ABS-CBN in 2007, said the comedian was always “quiet, sitting in a corner and reading books on the set.”

“Buddy en Sol” costar Eric Quizon described White as a “dedicated actor [whom] everyone admired.”

Although he wasn’t rowdy, White was “a fun coworker … [who was] always ready to collaborate,” Deramas added.

A native of Cebu, White shot to fame as a cafeteria waiter on the IBC 13 sitcom, “Iskul Bukol,” which ran from the late 1970s to the early 1980s.

Quesada said the comedian first worked with the comic trio, Tito, Vic and Joey, and director Bert de Leon.

“I actually discovered him,” De Leon told the Philippine Daily Inquirer in a phone interview. “I spotted him at the old Broadcast City. I learned from the staff that he was an aspiring comedy writer from Cebu.”

De Leon sensed that White had talent and asked him to do a scene with the late comedian Bing “Mang Tim-I” Angeles. They clicked instantly.

“People in the studio kept laughing,” he said. White’s screen test eventually became part of an episode of “Iskul Bukol.”

“His real name, Cipriano, was hard to remember. Joey [de Leon] and I thought of the screen name Redford White instead,” Bert de Leon said.

He added that White “never changed at all. He remained painfully shy and soft-spoken” even after he became famous.

“I feel bad that I didn’t get to see him. Bert and I were supposed to visit him this week,” Vic Sotto told the Inquirer.

Quesada, who worked with White for five years on the RPN 9 sitcom, “Buddy en Sol,” in the 1990s, agreed: “Red was never the type who sought to be the center of attention. He was playful and funny on camera, but he was a tad serious off-camera.”

Like the best comedians, Dolphy and Vic Sotto, Redford wasn’t a boisterous clown in real life, she added.

The “Buddy en Sol” family, led by costars Quesada and Quizon, assistant director Boots Plata, and talent manager Dolor Guevara, visited White at his home last Tuesday.

“We kept laughing,” Quesada said. “He was cheerful. He was in high spirits. I remember it was the first time we ever saw him laughing out loud. But it was also painful because we knew it would be the last time we would see him.”

Quizon described White as “a truly honest and good man. He was my comedy partner. My Sol. Together, we made people laugh and smile. I couldn’t have done it alone. He was a man who believed in his craft and valued his work. Today is one of the saddest days in my life.”

Film Academy of the Philippines (FAP) head and fellow comedian Leo Martinez, who also directed “Buddy en Sol,” visited White last Tuesday.

“He seemed ready to go,” Martinez said.

Friends said White fought a valiant battle with cancer—an illness he kept secret even from his closest friends.

In the social networking site, Twitter, comedian Gabe Mercado wrote: “He kept his condition secret, even from close friends. I didn’t even know he was ill.”

“He was a very private person,” Quesada told the Inquirer. “He’d rather hide on the sidelines. In press conferences, he’d hardly talk. He was very shy.”

The Internet was flooded with poignant messages from colleagues.

Actress and TV host Ruffa Gutierrez said on Twitter: “Woke up to sad news … I will cherish our ‘Kokey’ days and remember you with a smile.”

Also on Twitter, Mercado called White a “mentor … who had tremendous respect for his craft … [he was] perhaps the most generous man I knew.”

Singer Gary Valenciano said on Twitter that he “felt bad about [White’s] passing … I had wonderful moments with this man.”

According to Deramas and Quesada, White’s wake will be held at his home, near the Sto. Niño de Maligaya Shrine in Novaliches.

 

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