Education
Born in Bontoc, Mountain Province, Avellana was educated at the Ateneo de Manila Bachelor of Arts "37, where he developed what turned out to be a lifelong interest in the theater.
Born in Bontoc, Mountain Province, Avellana was educated at the Ateneo de Manila Bachelor of Arts "37, where he developed what turned out to be a lifelong interest in the theater.
In 1976, Avellana was named by President Ferdinand Marcos as the very first National Artist of the Philippines for Film. While Avellana remains an important figure in Filipino cinema, his reputation as a film director has since been eclipsed by the next wave of Filipino film directors who emerged in the 1970s, such as Lino Brocka and Ishmael Bernal. Avellana made his film debut with Sakay in 1939, a biopic on the early 20th century Filipino revolutionary Macario Sakay.
The film was an immediate sensation, particularly distinguished for its realism which was atypical of Filipino cinema at the time.
The treatment is the subject of some controversy today. Avellana"s Sakay toed the line with the American-fostered perception of Sakay as a mere bandit, different from the current-day appreciation of Sakay as a fighter for Filipino independence.
Raymond Red"s 1993 film, Sakay hews closer to this modern view of Sakay. Interestingly, Leopoldo Salcedo, who played Sakay in the 1939 Avellana version, portrayed Sakay"s father in the 1993 version in his final film role.
Avellana directed more than 70 films in a career that spanned six decades.
Anak Dalita (1956) and Badjao (1957) perhaps stand as the most prominent works from his oeuvre. Anak Dalita, which was named Best Film at the 1956 Asia-Pacific Film Festival, was a realistic portrayal of poverty-stricken Filipinos coping with the aftermath of World World War World War II Badjao was a love-story among the sea-dwelling Badjaos, an indigenous Filipino people hailing from Mindanao. Rolf Bayer was the screenwriter for both films.