Lion dancers Jhayvee Sicat and Noah King, along with their drummers, practice at a basketball court in downtown Manila on Friday, 6 February 2026. The troupe will be competing for the annual lion dance competition in San Juan City, aiming to defend their title and take home the 50,000-peso cash prize. John Carlo Magallon
Jhayvee Sicat warms up ahead of practice for an upcoming lion dance competition in Manila on Friday, 6 February 2026. Sicat and his team are vying to repeat their championship run in celebration of the Chinese New Year.Jhayvee Sicat memorizes his dance steps atop a wooden platform as his crew, the Philippine Rui Dragon Dance group, prepare for an upcoming lion dance competition.Jhayvee Sicat walks along the wooden platform as he internalizes his dance steps during a practice inside a basketball court in Manila on Friday, 6 February 2026. Sicat says his troupe typically spends two to three months preparing for the country’s biggest and only lion and dragon dance competition in the country.Jhayvee Sicat’s son sits beside a lion head costume during a practice session in downtown Manila on Friday, 6 February 2026. Sicat is a second-generation performer, who grew up in a family of dragon dance artists. He says he plans to pass his skills on to his children.Jhayvee Sicat and King Noah rehearse their lion dance performance in preparation for an upcoming competition. Aside from competing, the troupe also performs at Chinese cultural events like business openings, weddings and birthdays.Drummers shout in unison as they pound out rhythms during a practice at a basketball court in downtown Manila on Friday, 6 February 2026.Jhayvee Sicat's son mimics his father’s movements during a practice in downtown Manila on Friday, 6 February 2026.Children watch through the basketball court fence as Philippine Rui Dragon Dance group practices in downtown Manila on Friday, 6 February 2026.Members of the Philippine Rui Dragon Dance group look on as Jhayvee Sicat ang King Noah rehearse their lion dance routine at a basketball court in downtown Manila on Friday, 6 February 2026.Drummers play during a practice session. They are referred to as the heartbeat of the lion by setting the pace, rhythm, and mood of the performance.Jhayvee Sicat animates a lion snake during a practice in Manila on Friday, 6 February 2026.The Philippine Rui Dragon Dance group rehearses for an upcoming lion dance competition.King Noah stretches atop a wooden platform during a practice for an upcoming lion dance competition. As demand for lion and dragon dance performances peaks only during the Chinese New Year, members of the Philippine Rui Dragon Dance group maintain their own day jobs to make ends meet.Jhayvee Sicat and Noah King catch their breath after a practice session at a basketball court in Manila on Friday, 6 February 2026, a week before they defend their Lion Dance competition title.
Jhayvee Sicat and his crew, the Philippine Rui Dragon Dance group, share a laugh as they discuss their practice at a basketball court in Manila on Friday, 6 February 2026.