Jorrybell Agoto, a 31-year-old actress from Ilocos, reprises her role as Isabel in Rafael Manuel's feature film Filipiñana, which won the Special Jury Award for Creative Vision at the 2026 Sundance Film Festival. The languid class satire follows an underpaid tee girl at an elite Manila golf course uncovering sinister secrets, executive produced by Jia Zhangke and acquired by Kino Lorber for North American distribution. It builds on her breakout role from the 2020 short film that secured a Silver Bear at Berlin.
Jorrybell Agoto began performing at an early age, recreating scenes from telenovelas like Rosalinda, which once led to her tumbling down a small cliff. Now 31, she earned Best Actress at the 2024 Tokyo Film Festival for her role in Sam Manacsa's 2023 labor drama Cross My Heart And Hope To Die. That marked her breakout year, with debut features at Cinemalaya: Kevin Mayuga's When This Is All Over, which garnered a Gawad Urian nomination for her supporting role, and Gian Arre's Tether. She also appeared in shorts like Sonny Calvento's TIFF-selected Primetime Mother and Mark Felix Ebreo's Congratulations, DX!.
Her international breakthrough came with Rafael Manuel's 2020 short Filipiñana, which won the Silver Bear at the Berlin Film Festival. For the 2024-shot feature adaptation, Agoto worried about portraying her teenage character, stating, “It was one of the struggles and challenges for me: to capture the naïveté and childlike behavior of the character.” She and Manuel prepared by interviewing tee girls, performing the job, and playing golf, including iPhone test shoots.
From Ilocos, Agoto moved to Manila to study theater arts at the Polytechnic University of the Philippines, where community theater for Super Typhoon Yolanda survivors taught her artists' responsibilities. Her film transition started in 2015 as an intern on Jet Leyco's Matangtubig, serving as body double for Mailes Kanapi, which inspired her. After failed auditions in 2016, she entered music videos through photographer Belle Dinglasa, honing a natural style refined by Meisner training with Angeli Bayani.
In Filipiñana, Agoto delivers a stoic, subdued performance as Isabel, lending weight to the country club's faux placidity and the film's class satire. The story highlights divides inherent in golf courses. Recently, she appears in Jun Robles Lana's Sisa, providing comic relief. Agoto said, “I’ve learned to accept these roles because they are the manifestation of the current state of the Philippines.” She views art as inherently political, urging filmmakers to make it so to shift views on systemic injustice, as in her response to Wim Wenders' Berlinale comments.