Thursday, March 24, 2022

367. Creative Guild’s TV Ad of the Month, Aug. 1987: DEL MONTE SPAGHETTI SAUCE “Godfather”

The Creative Guild of the Philippines, an association of creative personnel working in the advertising industry, was just 3 years old when the 1987 Creative Guild Ad of the Year Awards night at the refurbished Metropolitan Theater was staged. One of the frontrunners for the Ad of the Year was DEL MONTE SPAGHETTI SAUCE’s “Godfather”, a much-talked about TV ad produced by McCann Erickson for Del Monte Phils.

WATCH THE DEL MONTE SPAGHETTI SAUCE 'Godfather" TVC HERE:

To drive home the “Italian-ness” of the product, the agency made use of the iconic Don Vito Corleone, a fictional character in Mario Puzo’s “The Godfather”, ably essayed in the 1972 film by Marlon Brando. McCann caster Amy Salona found a talent in the person of Enrique “Ricky” Rivero, an occasional stage actor, who, when fully-made up, became Brando’s doppelganger—right down to his raspy voice.

TV viewers took notice of this well-produced, imported looking commercial, what wit its authentic production design,  moody lighting, the supporting characters, and most especially, the uncanny duplication of the “Godfather’s” look and the cast's superb acting. It was no wonder then that the Del Monte commercial was chosen as the TV ad of the month for August 1987,  by a jury consisting of agency art directors, creative directors, copywriters and producers.

In the grand awards night, however, Nestle’s MILO “Gymnast”, headlined by SEA games gold medalist Bea Lucero,  edged out the DEL MONTE’s “Godfather”, for the plum TV Ad of the Year prize. But Enrique Rivera’s portrayal of  the “Godfather” was so unforgettable that he was  honored as one of the 10 Best Commercial Models of the Year. He was cited for his ‘effective portrayal of a distinctive character in the most natural and realistic manner, through skillful acting that captures the drama between product and consumer'.

DEL MONTE'’s “Godfather” would win more technical awards at the next Philippine Advertising Congress, but the best  was yet to come. In 1990,  the same Del Monte brand will win top honors at the  Creative Guild TV Ad of the Year for the commercial “Novices”, the most prized award for the evening. For McCann Erickson, the feeling was just—magnifico!

SOURCES:

Creative Guild Ad of the Year 1988 program

Youtube: 1986 Del Monte Spaghetti Sauce TVC, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_s1c2CNLws

Thursday, March 17, 2022

366. Creative Guild’s 1990 TV Ad of the Year: DEL MONTE SPAGHETTI SAUCE, “Novices” TVC 45

The 1990 Ad of the year reeks of foreign (specifically Italian) flavor, but was actually a locally-written, locally-produced effort full of recognizably Pinoy values and pushing a product that is an apparent bestseller among Filipino housewives.

“Novices” was a 45-sec. TV ad created by McCann-Erickson for Del Monte Philippines’ unadulterated spaghetti sauce, touted as having the most authentic Italian flavor because of its generous serving of herbs and spices.

“Del Monte had been a McCann client “forever”, recalls president Emily Abrera, who was both writer and creative directors for the ad. “When I joined the agency 17 years ago, they were already here.”McCann had already launched the product a couple of years earlier with a hugely successful spoof entitled “Godfather” featuring a Vito Corleone/Marlon Brando deadringer an won raves for the ad’s production values,

“Clients wanted something just as good,”Abrera says, “and the idea was still to do something sort of Italian,” to again underscore the product’s authentic flavor.”

 A commercial full of nuns was not the first storyboard approved for productions; the original idea was to stage a raucous family gathering in the true Italian tradition.

“My father is Italian”, Abrera asserts,”so there was certainly a lot of noise in my family!”. Everybody thought that the nuns would be more unusual, however, and then account manager Rosanna Henares went as far as consulting real-life sisters about the idea.

 WATCH DEL MONTE SPAGHETTI SAUCE "Novice" TVC Here:

Uploaded by Kape WithCream

The images were ideal; the convent  setting, with its cast of hard-working, industrious residents, stressed the points of ready-made product that tasted as heavenly as the traditionally-prepared favorite. (“Two hours, mother!”, one of the novices exclaims), and the Mother Superior, sublimely played by stage actress Benita Steiger (the production had to wait until Steiger returned from a London vacation), was the epitome of domestic authority whipping up meals with divine mandate. “Remember, it’s a Christian country,: Abrera says of the Philippines, ‘and nuns are always taught never to take credit.”

 As the possibility of offending the religious sensibilities of viewers, Abrera changed the final line from”Praise the lord”, to “Praise Him”, which Steiger delivers with upturned, knowing eyes in response to the novice’s compliment,  “Praise you Mother.” 

BENITA STEIGGER, with Repertory Phils. Actors

The end copy, “Preferred by mother” is the ideal double-entendre endorsement  from both the domestic and religious sectors. “There was definitely a chuckle factor, but we didn’t want to make fun of anybody,”Abrera says. It was certainly more charm than humor.

The ad was shot in 3 days in te arched ruins of an abandoned Manila bank building that looked appropriately solemn with proper lighting and set design. Once again, casting proved critical. “We wanted young girls who looked absolutely virginal,” Abrera says, “and this was one of those cases where, if you didn’t have the right faces, the ad wouldn’t work, even if you had a good idea.”

The youngest talent was 12 years old, and the carefree lasses were not above lifting their heavy cheesecloth costumes between takes to air their sweating legs. Smoke, camera filters, Joey Luna’s ethereal; production design on a low budget, and Butch Perez’s inspired direction contributed to the making of a polished, truly different commercial with an underlying Filipino sensibility.

“Oh, but we have a lot of common with the Italians, don’t you think?”, Abrera asks, Enoighto proper; Del Monte Spaghetti Sauce to the top of its market.

CREDITS:

AGENCY: McCann-Erickson    /    ADVERTISER: Del Monte Philippines

PRODUCT: Del Monte Spaghetti Sauce

CREATIVE DIRECTOR/ COPYWRITER: Emily Abrera

ART DIRECTOR; Ding Villamor   /   PRODUCER: Baby Enriquez

DIRECTOR: Butch Perez

CINEMATOGRAPHER: Rody Lacap  /   EDITOR: Billy de Leon

PRODUCTION DESIGNER: Joey Luna

PRODUCTION HOUSE: Electromedia

 REFERENCES:

Article lifted from: PERFECT 10: A Decade of Creativity in Philippine Advertising, edited by Butch Uy, p.54

Photo of Benita Steiger: FB page of J. Virata.

DEL MONTE SAUCE NOVICE 45s: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cfujgpORNCA, uploaded by kapewithcream

Thursday, March 10, 2022

365. MORE AMUSING BRAND NAMES YOU WON’T BELIEVE WERE USED IN THE PHILIPPINES. Part III

Another set of the strangest, most hilarious and unusual barnd names of products that were available in the Philippines from the 50s and 60s. 

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LUTO (1951). Brand Name for: Laundry soap

Philippine Manufacturing Company (PMC), founded in 1908, forayed into vegetable shortening production in 1917, and launched Purico to great success in 1919. It was made from palm oil, and sold in solid blocks, packed in cartons. When Procter & Gamble U.S.A. purchased PMC in 1935, the product portfolio expanded  to include detergents. In 1951,  the laundry soap LUTO came into the market. It had a rather strange name—LUTO—or “cook”. It also came in white blocks, which reminded people of Purico. Actually LUTO was derived from the process of making soaps, in which coconut or palm oil with lye is cooked to form a detergent soap, that is then molded into bars.  Thus, “Mag LUTO na tayo!” doesn’t just mean,”let’s cook”, but also let’s do the laundry!”, at least in the early 50s!

MONG ALING (1934)Brand Name for: Remedy for anemia

This medicine intended for a serious disease has such a musical-sounding name, that it’s hard to believe it can bring relief to anemic women and mothers with disorders associated with pregnancy and their menses. Even the ingredients do not give a clue as why it was named MONG ALING. To make it more difficult to decipher, the word and numbers “Silang Lab.  No. 8368”, are appended to the brand name. One can just imagine if someone wrote a jingle for MONG ALING. It will probably go “Mong-aling-aling-ding-dong!”

ODORODO (1956) / ODORONO (1961): Brand Names for: Deodorant

Brand names may sometimes sound alike, but these two midcentury anti-perspirant products have uncannily similarity and only a letter separates them: ODORODO and ODORONO.

The older one, ODORODO,  is a palindrome—it reads the same way when read backwards. Such literary devices were used to increase memorability of the brand name, but unfortunately Odorodo, even with its catchy name and unique Action-Proof formula, did not catch on. But at least, the euphemistic “B.O.” (for body odor) as headlined in this 1956 ad,  is still in our vocabulary today.  On the other hand, ODORONO is a cream deodorant which came out in 1961. In today’s stringent trademark rules, imitating the distinctive, perceptual features of a leader brand, such as its brand name is a violation. 

OJOKOL (1950s). Brand Name for: Eye Remedy Solution

Say that again? Say this brand name wrong, and it will sound like a slang for self-erotic gratification. Time was when medicine brands had Spanish  names, a way of branding still in practice in the 1920s—when OJOKOL  was formulated by Botica Boie. The eye solution was meant to give cool relief to sore, irritated eyes (OJO means “eye” in Spanish, pronounced as “oho”), and as for the suffix, it’s one of those add-ons used by chemicals like alcohol,  glycol, ethanol. So next time you say OJOKOL, make sure  you pronounced it the way Spaniards do—not with the hard “j” we are accustomed to.

PALIKERO (1930s). Brand Name for: Pomade. 

Playboys and dandies would surely go for this pomade brand called  “PALIKERO”, that was produced in the mid 1930s. And it even had the audacity to use  on its paper label (unauthorized, for sure)  the picture of a  Hollywood icon who was known for his “palikero” roles on screen—Rudolph Valentino. Whether this pomade lived up to its name is a big question mark, as nobody seems to know this brand, or what happened to it. 

SOURCE: By the Author. Originally appeared on esquiremag.ph under the title: Funniest Filipino Brand Names in the 20th Century - Esquire , https://www.esquiremag.ph/culture/lifestyle/old-brands-philippines-a2289-20190211-lfrm4