Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Anne Curtis slaps other Celebrities


(can't find the original author of this article)

JR Isaac is in his forties, and is currently the editor and publisher of Circuit Magazine, a free city-life guide providing information on parties, places, and events.

He is also engaged in boutique advertising and remains a creative consultant for events, which makes him a rather connected fellow, something that he admits he is.

He says that last November 22, “a typical Friday night,” he and some friends were at a favorite hangout, the PrivĂ© Luxury Club, located in The Fort Strip at the Bonifacio Global City complex, Taguig City.

These friends included Leah de Guzman, Charina Zarte, Nix Alano, and showbiz personalities Phoemela Barranda, Jake Cuenca, and John Lloyd Cruz, aka JL. Also at their table was Privé co-owner JM Rodriguez.

They were on the club’s second floor, in the VIP section, one half of which had been cordoned off that night for a private party. That private party, it turned out, was a bachelorette affair hosted by Anne Curtis for a girlfriend about to get married.

The layout of the VIP floor, explains JR, is such that the toilet was shared by the guests on that floor. The toilet entrance was also near the VIP bar. JR adds, “If you’re going to the toilet, you have no choice but to pass near the cordoned-off area.”

He relates the seconds leading up to the incident. “Leah and I are just between the toilet door and the bar. I think I was standing and waiting for my drink, talking to Leah.

“Then we heard a loud voice saying, ‘Who’s banging my door?’ We didn’t know who or where it was at first! Just loud, coming from behind us. When we turned around, we saw, stepping out of the toilet, Anne, very mad.

“Then all of a sudden, pak-pak. My left cheek. Then Leah was also slapped. Then JL was also slapped. “This all happened so fast. Anne was making so much noise, shouting at JL: ‘You are an addict!’

“Ang bilis, di ko na alam ang nangyayari. Basta wala akong narinig from JL, he behaved like a gentleman. Makikita mo talaga kung sino yung well-mannered pag may ganyan.”

The next thing JR remembers is that Anne had turned her ire on Phoemela, and said, ‘You, what are you doing here?’” JR continues, “Anne screamed, with finger pointing at Phoem the whole time, like she pointed it at JL. She had all this rage, she was agit [agitated].

“She was drunk but, di ba, when you’re drunk, you’re wobbly? She was not wobbly. She was strong, parang she could hurt us all! “Anne screamed, with finger pointing at Phoem Barranda, saying, ‘I can buy you, your friends, and this club!’

“Commotion na. Pinaghiwalay na kami ng bouncers ng management.” Asked to recall how he and his friends Leah and John Lloyd—the three who had been slapped—reacted, JR says: “Shocked! We didn’t know how to retaliate. Wala. “I was ushered away. I was trembling. They calmed me down.

“A lot of people saw the whole thing. I had never been slapped like that before. I didn’t know what to do. 

“The management and [club] PR all came to our table and apologized to us. They saw the whole thing. They know we were the ones slapped. “In the end, we stayed. We didn’t allow it to ruin our night.

“Then, minutes after the commotion, I saw Anne escorted out. We, we stayed. We had been coming here so many times! Anne was not a regular, so why should we let her make us leave? “But we didn’t want to talk about it. It was a relaxed night with friends.”


ANNE CURTIS’ APOLOGY

JR says that the incident must have lasted less than an hour, between the hours of 1 a.m. to 2 a.m. of that Saturday, November 23.

When he woke up, it was towards late afternoon of Saturday. He saw that many texts and calls had come in. Word on the incident had spread.

As he tells , “I can only guess that it was because there were so many witnesses, guests of the club, that night. And remember, I wasn’t the only one slapped. “And each of us has friends, who tell friends, ang dami na! I found out we were all receiving texts, calls, about the same time. All asking if it was true.”

Also that same day, at about 4 p.m., JR says he received a text message from Anne. It said (published as is): “JR! It’s Anne. Got your number from Monique! Tried messaging you on Facebook this morning. Just want to apologize for my behavior! I’m so so so sorry. I’m so ashamed Frown would never act like that in the right state of mind! I’m so sorry. Please forgive me!”

JR says he answered, also by text (published as is): “Hi Anne, just woke up and read your text. Apology accepted… On a lighter note, you owe me a tight hug!!! Going back to sleep, nursing my hang over.”

We asks JR if there had been bad blood between him and the movie/TV star before this, and he answers, “None. None. We know each other way back! Both of us, we were batchmates in Metro Body Shots, around 2004 or 2006. I escorted her once in a Mega event, and she became cover pa of Circuit! So, socially noon pa.”

He also says that, although the last time he was with Anne was around two years ago—”at a Century Tuna event in Boracay, she’s an endorser”—he has had no history of a skirmish with her before, during, or after the November 23 incident.

“Sabi nga ng friends ko, ‘Ikaw pa?’ Kasi, I’m really friendly. I like to be friends with everybody,” JR says, still sounding a bit befuddled.

When we suggests that JR has no anger in his voice and that he seems to have forgiven Anne quickly, the fellow answers, at once seriously and lightly: “Never harbor ill feelings. It’s bad for the skin.”


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