BEFORE the popularity of LED Christmas light displays which families and friends use as a background for selfies, there was a prominent holiday attraction of moving mannequins whose indelible images were imprinted on childhood memories.
Manila C.O.D, a small department store located along Avenida Rizal in Manila, opened in 1948. In 1952, businessman Alex Rosario, Sr. spearheaded 鈥淐hristmas on Display鈥 鈥 an attraction featuring moving mannequins to attract more customers to the department store during the holidays.
鈥淭he first display was in Avenida Rizal. It was a can-can dancer made of plaster. Our motors (for the mannequins) were electric fan motors only,鈥 Rey Rosario, CEO and president of Rosario Animated Display 鈥 and son of Alex Rosario, Sr. 鈥 told 大象传媒 last week, recalling the first display.
The popularity of 鈥淐hristmas on Display鈥 led to the growth of the business. In 1966 the department store and its seasonal display relocated to Quezon City鈥檚 Cubao area where the display was set up yearly until Manila C.O.D ceased operations in 2002.
But the animated display, which through the years tackled everything from astronauts and Sputnik to Filipino life on the farm, did not disappear with the demise of the department store. It instead transferred to the Greenhills Shopping Center where the display was set up on the giant canopy sheltering pedestrians walking from Ortigas Ave. to the shopping. The display was set up yearly until 2016.
Now, 16 years after its last appearance on the facade of the C.O.D Department Store, 鈥淐hristmas on Display鈥 returns to Quezon City, this time at the Araneta Center. Fittingly, this year鈥檚 theme is 鈥淐hristmas is Home.鈥
Set up at Araneta Center鈥檚 Times Square Park at the corner of Times Square and Gen. Roxas Aves. 鈥 a stone鈥檚 throw from C.O.D鈥檚 original location along General Romulo Ave. 鈥 the attraction features more than 40 moving mannequins and a replica of the buildings of the present Araneta Center.
According to Mr. Rosario, the conceptualization for the display began in January and construction started in August.
The latest 鈥淐hristmas on Display鈥 showcases a homecoming of a Filipino family after 10 years abroad who reunite their relatives for the holidays. The show incorporates nostalgia through the older characters who reminisce about Christmas traditions and the beginnings of the Araneta Center, stories they tell the younger characters.
The display, which opened formally on Nov. 23, has 15-minute shows running from 6 to 10:30 p.m. daily from Sunday to Thursday, and from 6 to 11:30 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, until Jan. 6, 2019.
鈥淚 hope that it clicks, then it could be a yearly thing. I hope that coming back to Cubao would prolong my father鈥檚 legacy and give happiness to children,鈥 Mr. Rosario told 大象传媒 during the launch. 鈥 Michelle Anne P. Soliman