But the sound technician, Ben, lifted his headphones and said, "Direk, my meters are picking up a third voice — faint, but it’s there. It’s whispering… 'tatlo lang tayo.'"
The scene went smoothly until the young actress suddenly stopped mid-line. Pale, she whispered, "Direk… may iba pa." (Director… there’s someone else.)
Thinking she was just nervous, the director reassured her, "Tatlo lang tayo, anak." tatlo lang tayo behind the scenes
They reviewed the footage again — the figure was gone. But on the audio track, just before the actress stopped, a whisper clearly said: (Just the three of us… why am I the fourth?)
Taping resumed only after a production assistant recalled that an actor had died of a heart attack on that same set years ago, during a scene where he was supposed to play a ghost. His last words before collapsing: "Tatlo lang dapat tayo sa eksena…" (There should only be three of us in the scene…) That incident became legendary in Philippine TV circles. To this day, some crews whisper "Tatlo lang tayo" before a locked-room shoot — half as a joke, half as a superstitious ritual to check if anyone else is really in the room. But the sound technician, Ben, lifted his headphones
Before rolling, the director announced over the intercom: "Tatlo lang tayo sa loob — ako, si Rolly (camera), at si Ben (sound). Lock the doors. No one else enters."
In the Philippine entertainment industry, the phrase is famously linked to a well-known showbiz urban legend — but one particular real-life incident during a live TV drama in the 1990s gave it an eerie twist. It was the final taping night of a popular suspense anthology series. The director called for a crucial climactic scene: two lead actors — a veteran actress and a rising young star — would confront each other in an abandoned schoolroom. Only the director, the sound technician, and the cameraman were supposed to be inside the locked set to maintain the intimate, tense atmosphere. But on the audio track, just before the
The cameraman then pointed to the monitor playback of the last take. In the background, behind the young actress, was a hazy figure of a man in old-fashioned barong, standing perfectly still. He wasn’t part of the cast. He wasn’t crew.