In today’s Walking History column in The Manila Times, Prof. Xiao Chua highlights the life and legacy of Letizia Roxas – Constantino
Read Manila Times Article Here
by Red Constantino
After three days of a pewter sky came sunshine.
Zachary See, an intellectual who hides the fact that he’s a baker of seriously lovely scones, and historian Ambeth Ocampo, strode into the Constantino Foundation compound the other week to see the exhibit, Letizia: A Life in Letters. They joined Girlie and Kartini Alampay, who had walked in minutes earlier.
It was the day before free public access to the Linangan Gallery ended. The exhibit’s visitors seemed gratified with their experience. Girlie and Kartini were certainly delighted to have their photos taken with Ambeth, Zach, and my mum Lourdes Constantino, Dudi to friends and family, [READ]
Historian Ambeth R. Ocampo appreciated the exhibit when he dropped by the other week: “A recording of her playing the piano accompanied me as I walked through the exhibition. I felt like a child in a candy store, not knowing where to start or where to look.” If you fill up this form (https://forms.gle/YYFDFJAfS1uejQ5Q9) you [READ]
As announced in our poster, free public access to the exhibit ended today, May 30. By popular request, however, we will not dismantle the exhibit yet, but henceforth, visits will only be by appointment, based on the availability of a resource person. Thanks again to everyone who dropped by. You were all awesome! Visit this page or our website to make sure you’re updated! We’ve more in store this year!
Letizia Constantino, her letters, and her grandson
by Liana Garcellano | May 25, 2025
An invitation from Renato Redentor “Red” Constantino to view the exhibit “Letizia: A Life in Letters” slipped into my DM shortly before Holy Week. (Red [READ]
This Exhibition Brings A Hidden Figure Into The National Spotlight
From April 9 to May 30, the retrospective “Letizia: A Life in Letters” will be open to the public and will spotlight the life and writings of the esteemed but humble historian and nationalist
By Mel Wang | April 10, 2025 | Rolling Stone Philippines Letizia Roxas Constantino, the late wife to nationalist historian and acclaimed journalist Renato Constantino, had often shied away from the spotlight. Despite being an esteemed writer, historian, and academic herself, Letizia had little desire to be a prominent figure in historical textbooks. When the matriarch was invited to be a guest speaker at The Philippine Booklovers in 1978 in place of her husband, she emphasized that she was at the podium “quite by accident.” “Instead of the major Constantino, you have this afternoon, the minor Constantino,” [READ]