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Molina was born on December 26, 1894, in Quiapo, Manila, the son of Juan Molina, a government official, who founded the Molina Orchestra. [1]: 147 In 1902, he attended the Escuela Catolica de Nuestro Padre Jesus Nazareno in Quiapo, Manila, [3] and college at San Juan De Letran where he was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1909.
Busto de Antonio Molina en el monumento a Antonio Molina, en el paseo marítimo Antonio Machado, obra del escultor Santiago de Santiago del año 2002. El busto se asienta sobre un pedestal revestido de granito en cuya cara frontal se sitúa una placa donde se lee: «En memoria / de Antonio Molina / malagueño universal / 9-3-1928 / 18-3-1992 ...
Antonio Molina may refer to: Antonio Molina (singer) (1928–1992), Spanish flamenco singer and actor; Antonio Molina (cyclist) (born 1991), Spanish cyclist; José Antonio Molina Rosito (born 1926), known as Antonio Molina, Honduran botanist and professor; Antonio Molina (composer) (1894–1980), Filipino composer, conductor and music administrator
Juan Simón's Daughter (Spanish:La hija de Juan Simón) is a 1957 Spanish musical drama film directed by Gonzalo Delgrás and starring Antonio Molina, María Cuadra and Mario Berriatúa. [1] It is based on the play by Nemesio M. Sobrevila. A 1935 film of the same title had previously been made.
Antonio Molina De Oses (9 March 1928 - 18 March 1992) was a Spanish Flamenco dancer and popular singer and actor in films and on theatrical stage. Born in Málaga , from the age of 10 he showed great aptitude for flamenco singing, and became popular by participating in various radio shows.
Calderón evidently exerted no direct influence on English playwrights before 1660, although one play by John Fletcher and one by Philip Massinger are probably based to some extent on Spanish originals, and James Shirley's The Young Admiral and The Opportunity are adaptations of plays by Calderón's contemporaries Lope de Vega and Tirso de Molina respectively.
Jovita Flores Fuentes (February 15, 1895 – August 7, 1978) was a Filipina soprano singer. She was known to be the first Filipina to receive recognition as a National Artist for Music in 1976 and one of the few Filipinas to receive international acclaim in the European opera scene.
The Spanish writer and historian Wenceslao E. Retana recorded in 1888 the lyrics of a popular kundiman in Batangas. The melancholic lyrics in the Tagalog original as recorded in Retana's book El Indio Batangueño reads: [3] Aco man ay imbi, hamac isang ducha Nasinta sa iyo, naghahasic nga Di ba guin si David ng una ay aba