The plot
The play depicts the last few days of Spanish rule in a town inNotable characters
* Elena - a young mestiza (daughter of a Spanish father and an ''indio'') * Marcial - Elena's lover * Ciriaco - Elena's father * Salvadora - Elena's mother * Commander Kidlat -The GeneralAnalysis
The conclusion of the play underscores its real theme of Motherland Filipinas and brings the development of the theme into full circle. Early in the plot, Salvadora's embittered confession to Elena about the real state of her marriage to a Spanish husband describes the unhappy state of the Motherland under Spanish domination: "I want you to know Elena how deeply I regret having married your father. He is making it clear to me now that my wealth was all he was after; my wealth that he has dissipated in gambling, drinking, and wenching. He snarls at me all the time. At the slightest pretext, he kicks me like an animal. He has brutalized over me most severely. In his eyes, I'm nothing but a lowly servant, a slave, now that he has dissipated the money that I've made. This is what I've got for marrying a man of alien race, blood, language, and culture.Background
It took nothing less than heroic courage for Sotto to write and produce this play when he did. At this time, the Filipinos were still seething with resentment at the American betrayal of their hopes and the new colonizers were retaliating with restrictions on the freedom of expressions.The Author of Elena
Vicente Sotto, also known as Nyor Inting (1877–1950), was a former senator of the Philippines, and considered as one of the greatest Cebuanos of the 20th century. He was a man of protean accomplishments: "father of modern Cebuano Literature", prolific writer and publisher, pioneering labor leader, renowned lawyer, and quintessential principled politician. His principal achievement lies in two areas: (1) law, politics, and government; and (2) culture and letters. Senator Vicente Yap Sotto is considered one of the unsung heroes of the Philippines. WikiPilipinas refers to Senator Vicente Sotto as one of the so-called “Forgotten” People in Philippine history – people who, unfortunately, were not given much attention in traditional studies and mainstream histories, but are equally heroic in their own simple yet significant ways. They are the peripherally discussed or rarely mentioned people who have nonetheless distinguished themselves for their heroic deeds and martyrdoms. They have often worked behind “prominent” heroes but have done dangerous and complicated tasks which made many battles and revolts possible if not successful. He was called the "most militant and aggressive" of the Filipino advocates of complete and immediate independence in the first decades of the 20th century. His contemporaries called him the "Great Dissenter", an archetypal political oppositionist who fought for his convictions with little regard of the cost.A fighter of lost causes and "defender of the poor and oppressed", he was one of the most active and best-known criminal lawyers of his time. The acknowledged "Father" of Cebuano journalism, literature and language, Sotto was one of the leading Filipino intellectuals of the early twentieth century. He was elected councilor, mayor, congressman, Constitutional Convention delegate and senator. Exiled abroad for seven years, disbarred on two occasions and imprisoned five times, few public figures led a more colorful life. All of these do not quite sum up the totality, or the historical particularity of VICENTE SOTTO(1877–1950). (from the book "Vicente Sotto, The Maverick Senator" by Resil Mojares, winner of five Philippine National Book Awards).References
External links
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Elena (Play) Cebuano plays