Remembering Rico Yan

Former matinee idol died in his sleep one Good Friday
By ROWENA JOY A. SANCHEZ
April 2, 2010, 11:21am

The solemn observance of Good Friday 2002 was abruptly disrupted when news broke out that Rico, at a tender age of 27, died in his sleep at the Dos Palmas Resort in Palawan.

Rico was reportedly at the resort to shoot a TV commercial for a local telecoms company. According to a news item filed by the Manila Bulletin on March 29, 2002, the police report filed by Southern Tagalog police director, Chief Supt. Domingo Reyes, Rico’s body was found inside his room at around 9 a.m. by his friend, actors Dominic Ochoa and Janna Victoria.

Dominic and Janna were said to have come looking for Rico when the latter failed to show up for their scheduled rendezvous at the resort lobby. Rico was reportedly rushed to the Seventh Day Adventist Hospital, where doctors failed to revive him. A later autopsy revealed the matinee idol had died of acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis leading to cardiac arrest.

With initial investigations by the Palawan police yielding no signs of foul play in Rico’s sudden death, his older brother, Bobby, flew to the town to pick up his brother’s body. A televised funeral rites in Manila for the fallen youth idol was said to have been attended by an estimate 10,000 people.

Later, part of the proceeds from his posthumously released movie “Got 2 Believe” (with former girlfriend, Claudine Barretto) and documentary “Forever Young: Remembering Rico” packaged with “Dahil Mahal na Mahal Kita” also reportedly went to the Rico Yan Foundation.

Fast forward to March 29, 2010, Holy Monday. Virtual noise enveloped the World Wide Web as fans commemorated the fallen idol's eighth death anniversary.

Twitter and Tumblr dashboards, as well as Facebook walls of his Fan Page and “I will always remember Rico Yan” Group were flooded with tribute photos, reposts of archive articles, and simple messages of love and remembrance of the late actor.

Even threads on forums like PinoyExchange as old as 2004 were suddenly revived. A new one, titled “Remembering Rico Yan,” was also created, waking yet again the long buried regret and perhaps, some resentment, why such a person at the pinnacle of his career, and with still so much ahead of him, had to go so soon.

Rico was also a businessman. He had a number of ventures, from pearl shakes to a resto bar and a coffee shop. Before he became the Rico Yan of show business, who flashed his dimples and charm to girls of all ages, the actor studied Business Management at the De La Salle University.

These days, when we hear “The Warrior Is a Child” by Gary Valenciano, we are taken to April 4, 2002, when he was finally laid to rest at the Manila Memorial Park. Rico, however, lives through through his 11 movies (including the classic “Got 2 Believe”), four soap operas (including "Mula sa Puso"), sitcoms like “Whattamen” (with Dominic and Marvin Agustin), and variety shows such as “Magandang Tanghali Bayan.”

Fr. Tito Caluag II, S.J., Rico's spiritual adviser, recalls a quote from the actor:

"If we can teach young people to work hard, to persevere -- to endure the pain -- in making something out of themselves and in pursuing a dream, they will surely have character. And when our generation takes over the leadership of this country, imagine, father, we will be a nation of character!"