There used to be time for Chinese classes too, said mother Hua Peng, but that extracurricular activity has fallen by the wayside. Now back at home, Pan the fifth-grader is back to her “normal” routine: two focused hours on the piano bench every day, daily GATE classes at Hicks Canyon Elementary School, swim team four times a week and gymnastics and art once a week. “He said she’s very deft at playing,” recounted Shin, adding that Buono was eager to get a recorded copy of Pan’s performance into composer Liebermann’s hands. 2, struck a chord with competition director Cosmo Buono. Her seven-minute song of choice, Lowell Liebermann’s Nocturne No. On May 18, donning a white dress, Pan took to the stage at the preeminent Manhattan venue, in the footsteps of Gershwin, Stravinsky and Ellington.Īs the second youngest person in the winner’s circle, Pan stretched herself beyond a recommended five-minute time limit. Her first place award padded an already impressive resume and entitled her to play a song of her choice in Carnegie’s Weill Hall. “Not too many kids can perform at Carnegie Hall.”Įarlier this year, Pan sonically duked it out to win a top prize in the international Bradshaw & Buono competition. That’s an understatement, said Jenny Shin, Pan’s piano instructor, who works at Opus 119 school of music in Irvine. “I want to be a scientist or an author,” she said quietly, nearly whispering. Ask 10-year-old piano prodigy Phoebe Pan about her career aspirations and she’ll shoot back an expansive – but nonmusical – shortlist.
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