June 11, 2005
SWEET SUNSHINE:
Rice takes to stage to aid ailing soprano (BARRY SCHWEID, 6/11/05, AP)
A musician long before she became an academic and then a world-famous diplomat, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice took to the Kennedy Center concert stage Saturday to accompany a young soprano battling an often-fatal disease.Posted by Orrin Judd at June 11, 2005 9:43 PMRice's rare and unpublicized appearance at the piano marked a striking departure from her routine as America's No. 1 diplomat. A pianist from the age of 3 she played a half-dozen selections to accompany Charity Sunshine, a 21-year-old singer who was diagnosed with pulmonary hypertension a little more than a year ago.
The soprano is a granddaughter of Rep. Tom Lantos, D-Calif., and his wife Annette, who Rice has known for years. The Pulmonary Hypertension Association, formed in 1990, presented the concert to draw attention to the disease from which more than 100,000 people are known to suffer. [...]
Rice, whose first name is a variation on the Italian musical term "con dolcezza," which is a direction to play with sweetness, learned to read music at the age of 3.
She's just trying to one-up Madeleine Allbutbright, who danced with "Dear Leader" in North Korea.
Posted by: obc at June 11, 2005 10:33 PMWhy would this not be publicized? How would this raise more money?
Posted by: Randall Voth at June 12, 2005 6:55 AMRandall:
It gives the GOP a human face not wanted by the MSM.
Posted by: Bartman at June 12, 2005 4:23 PMMaybe Condi was nervous about playing in public. Anyway, I heard that tickets were free, and that the point was to raise awareness, not necessarily cash. Whether or not the event was officially publicized, it certainly has gotten a lot of attention.
Posted by: Kelly T at June 13, 2005 11:22 AMMaybe Condi was nervous about playing in public. Anyway, I heard that tickets were free, and that the point was to raise awareness, not necessarily cash. Whether or not the event was officially publicized, it certainly has gotten a lot of attention.
Posted by: Kelly T at June 13, 2005 11:23 AMI think it was just a reflection of Condi's dignity and class as a public figure. As it becomes common knowledge it will gender respect ... at least in my eyes.
Posted by: Genecis at June 13, 2005 12:20 PM