Aliwan

MBC relaunches Aliwan Fiesta

May 24, 2023 Ian F. Fariñas 362 views

Aliwan Fiesta will be back in the streets of Pasay and Manila on July 13-15.

This was announced by Manila Broadcasting Company (MBC) when it formally relaunched the mammoth cultural showcase dubbed as the festival of champions.

Officially signing the memorandum of agreement with MBC President Ruperto Nicdao Jr. were Pasay City Mayor Emi Calixto-Rubiano and Dennis Marasigan, Vice President and Artistic Director of the Cultural Center of the Philippines.

Since its inception in 2003, Aliwan Fiesta has gathered participants from north to south of our festive islands, harnessing regional pride in a kaleidoscopic preview of their socio-cultural and economic profiles through music, dance, pageantry and physical theater.

But due to circumstances brought about by the pandemic, the festival was put on hold, and Manila Broadcasting Company turned to its digital platforms to continue the excitement and the fervor.

The online search for Aliwan Fiesta Digital Queen (AFDQ) brought forth lovely young ladies from Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao, who epitomized social responsibility and community leadership.

The virtual search, which carried an award for Pride of Place, also enabled young filmmakers relegated to working from home throughout the lockdown, in showcasing cultural traditions, eco-tourism and one-town-one product campaigns of their respective regions.

At the press launch last week, MBC also unveiled the new Aliwan Fiesta logo, with its multi-colored hues and shapes, but using the Kagitingan font designed by Edsel Pingol, harkening to the valiant stand Filipinos took amid the pandemic years.

Witnessing this were former Reynas ng Aliwan Jamie Herrell (2013) and Marla Alforque (2017) along with AFDQ winners Jannarie Zarzoso (2020) and Marikit Manaois (2022).

When Aliwan Fiesta takes to the streets once more, albeit on a smaller scale due to the road repairs along RoxasBoulevard, the nightly festivities and the grand parade will be contained within the CCP Complex.

Nevertheless, it is a highly awaited return, and one that regional festivals all over the country have been gearing up for since the government started easing public restrictions.

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