After Markova left home, he joined a group of six
cross-dressing performers. It was as part of this group that he was arrested by Japanese soldiers, and taken to a camp which is now the
Rizal Memorial Sports Complex. For several years he and his companions, and other "comfort gays", were put to forced labor and abused sexually by Japanese soldiers, as the "
comfort women" were abused. His story was made into a film called
Markova: Comfort Gay in 2000, directed by Gil Portes. It was included in the 2002 Seattle Lesbian and Gay Film Festival and the San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. == Personal life ==