00:00He's not just in one season or one generation,
00:02but does his owner feel the same way up to this day?
00:12How did it impact me and Atify?
00:17And I would say that his impact is generational.
00:21Across all seasons and across all decades.
00:25My first encounter with Atify, I will never forget.
00:30It was in the late 80s.
00:32We promoted our school play in GMA,
00:35in his program, Vilma.
00:37In Broadway Centro.
00:38I will never forget that.
00:39I was, I think, 7 years old.
00:43We promoted our school there.
00:46So that was my first encounter with him.
00:47And since then, of course, I haven't talked to him.
00:51But I know that he's Vilma Santos.
00:55That's when his impact was different.
00:57Because later on, eventually, I entered the industry.
01:01And I was really happy with my consciousness,
01:05his body of work, his persona,
01:07his appearance in general, physical or not.
01:14Because I really feel his involvement.
01:19And he's not just in one season or one generation,
01:22but his feelings are equal up to this day.
01:28Up to this day, she managed to make herself very, very relevant.
01:33And I think that's the most important thing.
01:37If this happened 10 years ago,
01:39would it be more appropriate? I don't know.
01:42But I can say that now, after experiencing all these,
01:47and especially, she just recently turned 70,
01:52and imagining the context of being in the industry for 60 years,
01:56it's like she's only 10 years old.
01:59So I think, this is what brought you here.
02:03Yes, for me personally.
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