Cecile Licad has just wrapped up her seven all-Chopin recitals in 10 days nationwide. The series ran Nov. 28 to Dec. 8.
Did you know that there is a recreated Ilocos Norte heritage house which boasts a room named after pianist Cecile Licad?
Cecile Licad returns to Iloilo where she performed 43 years ago when she was only 14.
Science City of Muñoz, Nueva Ecija, Mayor Nestor Alvarez hosted the outreach production of Philippine Ballet Theater’s (PBT) Prokofiev’s “Cinderella.”
I believe my last precious moments with “Tita King” were at the launch of her autobiography, “Lucrecia Roces Kasilag: My Story,” when she was 79. By then, she was hard of hearing, nearly blind and always on a wheelchair.
On Oct. 27, acclaimed pianist Cecile Licad will return to Carnegie Hall as the only musician among the Ten Outstanding Filipinos in America (Tofa) of 2018.
Georges Feydeau’s 1907 play, “A Flea In Her Ear,” will have another revival at the Cultural Center of the Philippines through an adaptation which transports the setting from Paris to Manila.
Tenor Arthur Espiritu was in perfect from Sept. 26 during his debut recital at the Cultural Center of the Philippines and got not just one but two screaming standing ovations from his predominantly millennial audience.
Arthur Espiritu, who has gained acclaim as Rodolfo in “La Boheme” at the Sydney Opera, Alfredo in “La Traviata” in Vienna, and Gualtiero in “Il Pirata” in Switzerland, will make his concert debut at Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP) on Sept. 28.
Despite heavy monsoon rains and flash floods, the 100-member Asian Youth Orchestra (AYO) capped its two-night engagement at the Cultural Center of the Philippines recently, with Manila audiences giving it a shouting ovation.