It鈥檚 fun being a dame.

InterviewJohanna Poblete | Photography Jonathan Baldonado

There鈥檚 something very engaging, even sassy, about Joy Virata. As a young girl, she convinced everyone at school to call her by a made-up name, and it took ages for them to catch on.

Now 80, Ms. Virata is one of the grand dames of Philippine theater, as well as a director, playwright, classical singer, and lyricist. After 40 years and 160 productions since her breakout play, she鈥檚 a pro at costume changes鈥 just last season, completing 25 three-second changes per show for Repertory Philippines鈥 Stepping Out.

Her talent for make-believe is such that theater stalwarts who have worked with and trained under her sometimes fail to recognize her onstage.

It doesn鈥檛 matter if it鈥檚 a supporting or starring role: she鈥檚 just as happy playing Edith Piaf (Piaf) andEvita Peron (Evita) as she is playing Madame Th茅nardier (Les Miserabl茅s) and Adara/Sara (Care Divas). It doesn鈥檛 matter if she plays a sickly 88-year-old (Elva in Mind鈥檚 Eye, a play Ms. Virata produced herself in 2012), or a tap-dancing 45-year-old (Vera from Stepping Out).

Her trade secret? An ever-revolving collection of varicolored costume wigs, from long skeins and romantic ringlets, to steel-grey buns and close-cropped styles.

HL: When did it start鈥攜our love affair with the hair?

JV: When we started doing French comedies. I went to New York and I discovered this wig store, Lacey Costume Wigs.When we did La Cage aux Folles, I had to buy all the wigs for the Cagelles, all the underwear, all the shoes… For The Game鈥檚 Afoot, they all wore wigs that I bought them. That was set in the 1920s, close curls, so I insisted that the whole cast be properly wigged. That aids in the suspension of disbelief.

HL: How did you bring the wigs?

JV: In my suitcase. But oh, the funniest thing, before, I used to ask my husband [businessman Cesar Virata] to bring some home. So he said, 鈥榃hat if they opened my suitcase and they see all of these wigs!鈥 But he鈥檚 game. He was the one who brought Lea Salonga鈥檚 wig for Annie.

HL: How many wigs do you own?

JV: Not very many because they don鈥檛 last. And also, because I recycle it. Long, curly hair鈥攖hose wigs just last for one run, and then they become put-up wigs, and then they become rat鈥檚 nests.

HL: I assume it gives audiences their visual cue.

JV: Yes, absolutely. For me, it鈥檚 a wig. When I first get a script and I am trying to figure out a character, the first thing I think about is the hair. Because your hair characterizes the kind of person, often, you are. It determines your age, your personality, a lot of things. Your script defines what character you have. And then you outfit yourself. Sometimes you can鈥檛 afford a real costume designer, so you have to create something yourself.

HL: Why not use your own hair?

JV: I can鈥檛. It鈥檚 not my hair, it鈥檚 not me, I鈥檓 not on that stage鈥攊t鈥檚 this character on that stage. And if it鈥檚 my hair, it鈥檚 me.

HL: Is this common practice?

JV: That鈥檚 what I鈥檓 known for here. I always knew: Never show a wig without makeup. Never say, 鈥楥an I have this wig?鈥 without the proper makeup. In the past, [Bibot Amador and Baby Barredo] would turn me down in two seconds flat. I had to have the full look, so they could see the whole idea.

HL: Is it still hard to look for roles for women of a certain age?

JV: Oh, there鈥檚 a lot of material, but nobody will buy it. In this country, the youth take over everything. How many old movie stars do you have in the Philippines? How many old movie stars do you have abroad鈥攕ome of the best movie stars are old鈥攁nd all those great dames of the British theater. But here, it鈥檚 all very young people.

HL: Why aren鈥檛 we interested in stories about older people?

JV: Entertainment is sort of escapist sometimes. You have to accept the reality that Filipinos like youth, beauty, and to laugh.

HL: Has it ever occurred to you to leave the stage?

JV: You can鈥檛. When you鈥檙e bitten, that鈥檚 it, it鈥檚 a drug. And you鈥檙e there. My husband always says 鈥業f you鈥檙e not doing a show, you get sick.鈥 And honestly, I wasn鈥檛 in a show for two years, and I was really hurting. I like directing but I don鈥檛 enjoy it as much.

I just like being another person. It鈥檚 wonderful to create another person that you鈥檙e not. I like the process of creating a character. It鈥檚 not that I don鈥檛 like myself, it鈥檚 just that I enjoy being someone else for a couple of hours, onstage.

And the more I can convince people I鈥檓 not me鈥攎y greatest compliment is when people say, 鈥業 didn鈥檛 know you were in that! I didn鈥檛 see you when I was there!鈥 That means it wasn鈥檛 me; I was that character and they believed it, which is helped a lot by the wig and the makeup.