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KIHEI PAST PERFECT, A Hawaii Mystery
Hawaii Blog:
Walking in Waikiki
With Cloudia
Charters, "Kitty Takes a Dip" 10.31.07
Our
third mate, Miss Kitty, is very adept at boat life and usually
leaps to the dock with all the aplomb of a life-long sailor.
But something must have gone terribly wrong the other day.
Perhaps a juicy bird or captivating fish distracted her at just
the crucial moment, a sudden breeze, or a feline brainfart.
. . I'll never know for sure, but from below decks I
could hear the pitiful, guttural yowling of a deeply discomfited
kitty!

There on the shore rocks sat a VERY bedraggled and miserable
creature resembling a water rat. I wanted to rinse the
muck and who-knows-what out of her fur before she could ingest
it with that busy little tongue of hers, but she must have
thought I was trying to finish her off when I rinsed her in warm
water. Being swaddled in a towel, rubbed, loved-up,
and spoken to reassuringly was more to her taste, and she
endured an unprecedented amount of it. In fact she didn't
leave my side for the rest of the day and night, though I'm
proud to report that she is back to her old flair acrobatics.
She does continue to spend more time with me than she used to,
but I guess she's simply learned a new appreciation for a warm
lap in this sometimes wet and yucky world. . .
Actually, the harbor seems cleaner since the refurbishment of
the Duke Kahanamoku Lagoon. Five
200-foot wells have been drilled that are bringing deep,
brackish water into the lagoon refreshing it up to five times a
day. The outflow
sluices through the harbor bringing fresh clean water and
flushing what were stale eddies collecting debris. Walking
along the harbor's edge, behind the Ilikai and across the lane
from the lagoon, you can even see sand collecting on the bottom
and a new eco-balance taking shape. The fish seem to
adore it (so do I!).
And speaking of reanimation (perhaps I came up with that
Frankenstein word because it's Halloween time) there may
be snow flurries in hell, because our long absent "F Dock" has
been reborn as a modern, modular place to safely moor boats!
The project is not finished yet, but progress continues, and if
the new harbormaster is not careful this place might start
looking like the first class marina it once was. .
.
A tip or two for swimmers: For the past 20 years, Waikiki
has seen a regular influx of jellyfish 10 days AFTER the
full moon. So if you are planning a water-sports vacation
here you may want to take this into consideration; of course the
lagoon will be open to swimmers next month, and there is SO much
to do here that many never even dip a toe in the surf.
Of course I
like to dip a toe in the surf. . . and
then lie in the shade of a palm tree (of which the lagoon has
several wonderful new examples). . .
Ah
the moon! The full moon just passed was at
the near side (perigee?) of the elliptical lunar orbit.
It was 14% wider and 3% brighter than your average full moon,
and though the experts said that it would not be that
noticeable, believe me, we NOTICED. There may be
moon over Miami, honeymoons, and moon pies, but there is NO moon
like the moon sailing over Waikiki! See for yourself.
There's another trip planning tip: be here for the whole lunar
pie-in-the-sky if you can; you may decide to stay for the next
one, and the next one, and. . .
The Beach Walk project on Lewers Street has a new, classy
Italian restaurant at the corner of Don Ho lane. I love
Italian food, but can't help comparing new places with the
authentic South Philly parlors of my youth. Being
taken to Dante & Luigi's on it's narrow city street, with it's
hundred year old waiters, and that unforgettable scent of red
tomato "gravy" that has been percolating in the same seasoned
pots for decades, was an authentic experience that newer places
will simply take time to develop. I wish them Buena
Fortuna!
And speaking of Don Ho, local funny man Andy
Bumatai tells about the time he and Don were driving down
Kalakaua, when Don leaned over and tooted Andy's car horn at a
red light. The driver ahead of them climbed down
from his giant pickup looking furious and walked back to their
car. He was all ready to "beef" until he saw Mr.
Waikiki
in the passenger's seat! "Hey Brah, that's a 'howzit horn'
no need to get all huhu about it!" said Don, in that unique
ultra-relaxed way that he had. Needless to say, the guy was
"shame" but he walked back to his truck with a great story to
tell about the day Don Ho tooted "howzit" at him. .
.
"Honolulu" literally means: "Sheltered Bay." The
old folks say that we should call our town "Honolulu Town"
or we're just referring to the downtown harbor itself. OK!
Honolulu Town it is. And remember: Manoa, Mo`ili`ili, and
Kaimuki were all little towns of their own before the
incorporation of the City and County of Honolulu. Today's C&C
covers not only the entire isle of O`ahu, but some surrounding
islands and waters, making
mayor Mufi the leader of quite a little empire.
Take that mayor Bloomberg! (New York City). .
.
Walking in Waikiki, I feel as if I'm on the visitors' turf, but
when I stroll the other direction to Ala Moana Shopping Center,
I feel that the visitors are on our turf (and they are
most welcome!) Best international people watching in the
world, they should charge admission. Here's a secret: if
you crave a quick, affordable lunch in Japan, simply ascend to
the second floor of our own (now locally owned) Shirokiya
Japanese-style Department Store. There you will find a
delightful confusion of traditional Japanese prepared foods like
you might buy and eat on the streets on Tokyo or Osaka.
New visiting vendors celebrating regions or seasons rotate
through all the time, so check it out. . .
Ah! That snap in the air, the hint of Alaska snow in the trade
winds, sleeping with a light blanket (and without "below decks
sweat") the hot weather is finally passing. Now
comes the good stuff! The hot fudge sundae of cool breezy
temps and warm, healing sun that kicks Waikiki a few levels up
the heavenly scale are just beginning.
Soon the Royal Hawaiian Shopping Center will complete its major
re-imagining, complementing and adjoining Beach Walk. The
former cement bunker between Kalakaua Avenue and the beach has
been opened up and modernized. A festival of
Hawaiian culture and entertainment is promised. Even the
venerable pink lady, The Royal Hawaiian Hotel,
is so impressed that she will turn around and place her grand
entrance to meet the party when she completes her renovations,
beginning soon. Instead of cement and shop windows
we will see palm groves, sky and the pink Grande Dame too.
. . just the thing. . . when
you are walking in Waikiki. . . ALOHA!
Be sure to check out Cloudia's Hawaii Novel "Aloha Where You
Like Go?" at
Amazon.com
or local bookstores! Contact her about performing
YOUR AFFORDABLE BEACH WEDDING at
cloudia.charters@gmail.com
Walking in Waikiki
With Cloudia Charters, 10.25.07, "41 Miles Away"
C
ongratulations to well respected Waikiki beach boy Joseph "Nappy"
Napoleon on his golden 50th crossing of the
Kaiwi Channel between Molokai and O`ahu. The "Molokai Hoe"
(started in 1952) is perhaps the world's premier paddling event,
and Nappy has been a part of it since the 1958 race when he was
17.
Today's canoes are longer, the paddles much lighter, but the
channel is still 41 miles and sometimes the seas are rough. On
October 7th his sons and grandsons alternated
paddling but Nappy steered the entire way.

This Kapahulu / Palolo clan is anchored by Nappy's wife
Anona who he met (of course!) at the beach 42 years ago.
When the "family" canoe reached Duke Kahanamoku Beach you could
hear the roar of cheering all the way to the Hawaii Yacht Club!
With his bright yellow shirt and dozens of lei, Nappy was a
sight to behold under the smiling tropical sun. I know we
witnessed a nice bit of local history. Paddling is
more than just a sport, you see, it is a cultural and spiritual
thing to Hawaiians who have traveled between islands in canoes
for centuries. Long may they carry on. Hana Hou
("one more time!"). . .
The Honolulu Phone Book is very interesting! All
the unique local names, and the many ethnicities represented,
never fail to draw me in whenever I pick it up. Now
who or what was I searching for?
Oh well, look at all these "Makekau's" "Manabog's"
"Manuel's" "Masuda's" "Ming's" "Mook's" and
"Moon's!" . . .
Cloudia's Gallery of Unknown Greats: There are folks
in any community who the "public" (that's us!) will never get to
know, and that's too bad. We pass them on the street
never realizing the amazing stories we will never get to hear.
I think of them as "Unknown Greats."
They are celebrities in a certain circle: a profession, hobby or
neighborhood; great people like my friend, pilot Gene W.
Gene flies those "ambulance planes" around the islands. I know
that they are lucky to have him. Though he never
discusses it, "Gino" was a copter pilot in Viet Nam pulling our
wounded folks out of firefights. No wonder nothing
gets him rattled today.
There's no one I'd feel safer flying with; and you'll never be
bored either! Even with my famously bad memory I'll never
forget one story Gene told me about his flying days in Africa.
Jobs were very precious commodities to the Africans that he
worked with.
One day the big boss called one of the local mechanics into his
office and fired the fellow with a loud flourish.
The man, who had seen much of life, looked back at the boss
calmly, and in a soft voice said: "What? You are not going to
cut my hand off, kill my family or poison our well?
It's just a job."
Then he walked away with a dignity that I think about whenever
I'm upset about some "big problem." There aren't
many mechanical problems (big or small) that Gino can't figure
out and calmly repair.
A longtime Kama`aina with his own rented hanger on the outskirts
of HONO airport, he fixes and even BUILDS airplanes! Every pilot
in town has borrowed Gene's time, wisdom, and tools at one time
or another. He knows every gaily-painted little
private plane at the Lagoon Drive hangars personally.
So here's to Gene W – our first unknown great – who also built
my 1973 BMW motorcycle from the frame up. But that's
another story. . .
The Hawaii Super Ferry is stilled moored in controversy, but the
City's Commuter Ferry between Kalaeloa and the
Aloha Tower (a one year demonstration project) is a quiet hit
with downtown workers. The 4:20pm Pau Hana (work
done! Happy Hour!) cruise is especially popular.
Don't you agree that a short sea cruise with snacks and free
wireless internet is more pleasant than a packed freeway?
When I hear "Boutique Condo" I think of a chic little place in a
ritzy neighborhood with limo's idling out front. But
Honolulu's neighborhoods, like Mo`ili`ili, boast many
small-scale apartment buildings on family properties, many of
them built by little-guy contractors (veterans) in the post WWII
Hawaii economic boom.
Suddenly grandma's house was a source of income, and perhaps a
small part of our easygoing local lifestyle is rooted in these
longtime family properties. Many of our humble,
working class neighbors are cash-poor millionaires, which is why
our ever-rising property taxes are an issue to local retirees
with new wealthy mainland Mc Mansions on the block.
. .
Hey, City! Cut grandma a break already!! Cruising
our neighborhoods is fascinating if you are AT ALL interested in
unusual tropical "chop suey" architecture. . .
Caught local funny man Andy Bumatai at the Hawaii
Motorcycle Dealers' annual dinner. The relaxed
total professional clearly had no fixed idea of where this gig
was going, but he quickly warmed up to the local (just us!)
crowd and built an amusing set one riff at a time.
Intrepid
Editor and I plan to crash the audience for Andy's
weeknight half hour TV variety show that tapes right over here
at the Hilton. Editor should bring his guitar and
sing a song. Me? I'm polishing off my
"novelist persona" and want to sell more copies of "Aloha Where
You Like Go?" Look for us soon. . .
on the sidewalk outside the studio. That Hilton
security means business ;-). . .
Got a sec? Save the World! We are all so busy
that our "to do" lists seem to get longer instead of shorter.
Believe me, I know! But if you could save over 12
feet of genuine Amazon Rainforest (our Earth's lungs) just by
clicking over to a web site would you? I love
the feeling of tangible accomplishment every day, just knowing
that I've made at least ONE good thing happen. And
the Rain Forest Site sponsors offer cool fair-trade stuff
so shop till your clicking finger hurts!
The Great Pumpkin!? Part of me misses the cool-kissed
nights, sheaves of corn and jack-O lanterns on neighborhood
porches (mainland lanai). Trick or treat! That
smell of colored leaves being burned, when mixed liberally with
the moan and distant drum solo of a night train miles away,
calls to me at this time of year, so join me at the Aloun
Farms
pumpkin patch out on the Ewa plain, O`ahu's "big sky" country.
The hayrides and dirty knees had been reserved for over 20,000
local school kids – till now! You and I can pick our
own
pumpkins and get our nostalgia-fix over the last two weekends of
October.
Yes, autumn is the one time of year when I think wistfully of
the "continent." But then I notice a rainbow over
the mountains, hear the surf, smell the flowers and I feel
lucky, very lucky once again, just to be Walking in Waikiki.
. . ALOHA!
Be sure to
check out Cloudia’s Hawaii Novel “Aloha Where You Like Go?” at
Amazon.com or local bookstores! Contact her about
performing YOUR AFFORDABLE BEACH WEDDING at
cloudia.charters@gmail.com

The new Hilton
Lagoon
What a little
imagination will do
Papa Al 10.16.07
It took tons of rock.
Truckload after truckload of sand. The designers ripped
out the old manmade island and built a new one. They
trucked away old muck. Filled the lagoon with rock.
Covered it with a plastic sheet. Covered that with two
feet of sand.
Viola. A new lagoon.
And it really looks nice.

They say, in the old days, after
Henry J. Kaiser first built the Duke Paoa Kahanamoku Lagoon,
people swam in it. I don’t remember.
I do remember years of seeing a
beautiful body of water go unused. The bottom was mucky.
It was not just a few years of muck. That area had always
been a marshy kind of reef. When the bulldozers and front
end loaders went to work, they discovered how deep the muck
went. Way deep.
They dug a lot of it out and
filled the rest with boulders. Not just your tiny boulders
but big ones three, four feet across. Then they covered
that with gravel.
$15 million worth of work.

That’s surprising since the
lagoon is really owned by the state of Hawaii.
Hilton has a deed to use the
lagoon in perpetuity as long as it’s kept clean for recreational
purposes.
“The Lagoon Rejuvenation fits
perfectly in the “story” about Waikiki’s continual
transformation and improvements, but with a twist,” says Jon
Conching, regional vice president for sales & marketing, Hilton
Hawaii.
“The significant additions and
improvements to retail and commercial facilities throughout
Waikiki, are focused on bringing ‘what’s new’ to our visitors.
Hilton’s improvements to the Lagoon are of an environmental
nature, restoring a unique landmark for the benefit of Hilton’s
guests and residents.”
The project is a “gift” to the
people of Waikiki and Hawaii, the hotel said.

The old lagoon was up to 14 feet
deep. I never knew that. I never went swimming in it
and tried diving to the bottom. It was always kind of
spooky, to tell the truth.
The new lagoon is a flat 5 feet
deep, in the center, with a shallow slope all around. It
uses a water circulation system from seven saltwater wells 250
feet deep that will draw 15,000 gallons of water per minute from
the ocean.
This will turn the water in the
lagoon about five times a day.
That means the lagoon will
always have a positive flush going on. Even when it rains.
The mucky brown water coming down from the vallies will not
flush into the lagoon.

In addition, the lagoon has been
landscaped with a boardwalk, waterfalls, 60 coconut trees, a few
park benches, lauapaka and other beach plants.
The project is tied in with the
Hilton Grand Vacation Club’s new Grand Waikikian timeshare
project, which will have a pool area fronting the timeshare and
next to the lagoon.
Builders included Delta
Construction Corp., Alcon and Associates, Tom Manace Water
Resource Engineering, and Belt Collins.


Walking in Waikiki
With Cloudia
Charters,
"A Taste of Genoa
Keawe", 10.7.07
When
I moved to Oahu from the Big Island, Kalihi was
Honolulu to me. To most visitors, heck – even to
many locals- Kalihi is synonymous only with industrial Nimitz
Highway taking us past small factories, commercial businesses,
docks, oil transport, and all the other necessities that most of
us ignore as we drive between the airport, or the H-1, and
Downtown/Waikiki.
Kalihi is working
class and affordable, and (most importantly) a genuine
neighborhood, perhaps Honolulu's (or even Hawaii's!)
signature neighborhood – its lots more than a dusty highway!
Kalihi Kai is the area makai of Nimitz: little streets full of
tiny, urban residences, the like of which are rarely seen this
side of Hawaii 50 reruns.
Tiny,
indispensable industries line Kalani and Colburn Streets.
At the shore one can look out at tiny Mokuea Island,
which once was a flourishing Hawaiian fishing village, and is
still visited by locals to fish or just get away from the city
for a while.
Between Nimitz and
School Street (towards the mountains) is called Kalihi Waena,
served by King Street and Dillingham Boulevard. This is a tough
urban enclave where successive waves of immigrants work hard,
move up, and move on – possibly to lovely Kalihi Valley way up
in the hills, where the Like Like Highway travels over the
Ko`olau mountains like the Pali Highway's poorer sister, ending
in working class country-town Kaneohe, rather than the
Pali's rapidly gentrifying Kailua destination with it's
art galleries and beachfront homes.
Being from Kalihi,
saying that you graduated from Farrington High School, MEANS
something in this town. It means that you are a down-to-earth
person who has worked hard for all you ever got, and who never
forgets where you came from.
Yes, when I was
fresh off the jet from Kona, Kalihi WAS my Honolulu, the bars,
the jobs, the affordable housing, the amazing mix of people and
cultures, the friends-for-life. That's my Kalihi – which is why
I enjoyed my visit to the first annual Taste of Kalihi
last Saturday. It had everything: food stands,
happy-sticky children, the music, the great grassroots
organizations like KOKUA Kalihi Valley, and the smell of diesel
from Dillingham Blvd mixing with the Kalbi. I wouldn't have
missed it for the world.
If you go,
especially check out Bob's Barbecue at Dillingham &
Waiakamilo, Spots Plate Lunch, Mitsu Ken on School
Street (go early in the day for garlic chicken!), or Papa Al's
favorite "classic hole-in-the-wall", Ethel's . You
GO Kalihi! You'll always be special to me! . . .
Well GOL-LY!
Everyone's favorite neighbor-around-town, Jim Nabors, TV's
Gomer Pyle, was FINALLY promoted to US Marine Corporal in a
nifty ceremony at Fort Derussy last week – just 43 years to the
day after his show's pilot episode. Jim's a true
kama`aina, available for every good work, a great guy, renowned
for his splashy Christmas Show that he gifts us with every year.
Did I hear that this time will be the last?! .
. .
Boats are lovely
things, dancing at the end of their lines. The
Ala
Wai Harbor is a special neighborhood WITHIN a special
neighborhood. Our neighbors mean a lot to us, especially
the good folks like Captain Dave Silvey, who's always
available to help anyone who needs it. Over 200 folks
gathered recently at the Hawaii Yacht Club to wish him a happy
85th
Birthday.
Our intrepid
editor, Papa Al, played his guitar and sang a few of his own
compositions. They tell me that I played my flute with the
jazz band – but I was having such a good time that I don't
really remember it. What a blow out! Hope I get a cool party
like that when I turn 85! Happy Birthday Dave ;-).
. . .
Did you hear? The
Royal Hawaiian Hotel (1927) is closing in June for
renovations. I sure hope they keep that unique patina of
another, gentler time. I intend to visit often and soak it all
in before June. If you ever dreamed of being a guest at this
classic and historic property NOW is the time! . .
.
Have you been
watching Ken Burns' "The War" on PBS? On Sunday
September 30th our surviving heroes of the famed 442nd
& 100th, the "Go for Broke"
Japanese-American soldiers who fought in the toughest WWII
European battles, often against superior German numbers, and who
were openly considered expendable because of their race, were
honored at Punchbowl National Cemetery of the Pacific by Kauai
boy General Eric Shinseki.
These aging men,
in their youth, saved 230 Texans (the "lost" regiment") at the
cost of 400 of their own; but they won more decorations than any
unit of comparable size in the US Army. Every day we pass these
neighbors on our streets and in the aisles at Longs, though
everyday there are fewer and fewer of them. In my opinion they
are the greatest of the greatest generation; and what these men
did will never be forgotten. . .
Everyone's
favorite living legend, Aunty Genoa Keawe is celebrating
her 89th birthday all this month (October 31 st).
Festivities kicked off at this past Saturday's "Na Mele No Na
Pua – Music for the Generations" at Embassy Suites at Beach
Walk. Over half the audience were locals, and it turned
into a real back yard luau as aunty was joined by her sons,
grandchildren, friends, and spontaneous hula dancers from the
audience.
Even co-host
Brickwood's mom got up and sang, what a talented lady she
is! Now we see where her popular son "gets it from!" It was an
amazing experience! Just don't call Aunty's style "falsetto."
She sings her full range. Proper Hawaiian Falsetto singing
(which some say underlies today's distinctive country music
lonesome "twang.") is the exclusive province of the men, and
stems from a cultural time when Hawaiian women didn't sing in
public – so men sang the high wahine parts (like Japanese
Kabuki, or Shakespearean Theater).
There was
good falsetto singing by New Jersey native Bill Wynn who won
last year's Falsetto competition and told us that he's selling
his house back east and moving "home" real soon. Of
course Mz. Keawe sang her classic hit "Alika" (Alaska) with it's
unbelievably long, long, LONG, held notes. Host Kimo
Kahuano told us about when he was just starting out in
music, and how "this lady sitting here always treated me, a kid,
with true respect. I never forgot that, and if we can't treat
our kids and each other with that kind of Aloha, we aint never
going to get anywhere good."
This veteran
performer and MC had tears in his eyes and his voice as he said
this. You could have heard a lei drop to the floor.
Then Aunty sang for us the first song she ever recorded (on 49th
State Records), "My Hawaiian Souvenirs: A photograph, a
calabash, a paper lei – these are my Hawaiian souvenirs.
. .
When I'm old and
gray. . . " Now there wasn't a dry
eye in the house; and no one wanted it to end, even Aunty Genoa
at the curtain call of a two hour show; so we spontaneously sang
"Hawaii Aloha" all holding hands, then "God Bless America," and
finally "Happy Birthday." I noticed a white dove
fluttering in place just above the party, just like the Holy
Spirit in a stained glass window. At the end, Aunty shouted out
happily: "I'm proud to be 89!" What a special day for us all!
Just the sort of magic that can be found around most any corner.
. . when you're walking in Waikiki. . .
Aloha!
Be sure to
check out Cloudia’s Hawaii Novel “Aloha Where You Like Go?” at
Amazon.com or local bookstores! Contact her about
performing YOUR AFFORDABLE BEACH WEDDING at
cloudia.charters@gmail.com
Story
coming soon!

Hawaii man
reaches
The top
echelon of sailing
By Papa Al, 10.2.07
This is a story about something we… you, me, us… cannot picture.
A high speed sailing boat going more than 20 miles per hour in
the middle of the ocean, not over, but through the top of waves,
causing huge masses of water to sweep over the boat, completely
covering the man on deck every few seconds.
It’s more like swimming than sailing. For hours on end,
days really.

Some of us might say, god, that’s really stupid.
Or whoa, unreal!
Unbelievable.
It shocked me just watching the video. (Click on the picture on
top to download an 11M WMA file or see the website
http://www.andrewlewissailing.com/ .)
And the really amazing thing is that one of the best and
youngest competitors in this esoteric, king of sports, at the
top of the heap, the furthest edge, is a Hawaii boy-man, 25 year
old Andrew Lewis.
Lewis has always been a water person. He started sailing
at age 11. He surfed, swam, played baseball and hockey.
So far, just like many kids his age in Hawaii.
He started in Junior Sailing. At 14, he was asked to work
with Olympic sailor John Myrdal. Myrdal told him he had
talent, he should go to the Mainland and do some Mainland
events. He had to earn his own money with a paper route to
do it.
He began winning everything in sight.
He sailed El Toros, Lasers and the Melges 24. At the 2000
Olympic trials, he was the top junior sailor but he didn’t make
the team. Undaunted, he moved up to international events.

By 2002, he was the top American in the World Laser
Championships. A year later, he made the US Sailing team
and the USA Laser World team. In 2004, he tied for third
and missed the Olympics again.
In 2005, he tried out as one of 5,000 applicants for a spot in
the Volvo Open Ocean Race, 30,000 miles around the world.
It is the Everest of sailboat racing. He became one of two
Americans on an international team on a nine-month long regatta.
Instead of a 14 foot Laser, he sailed on the 70 foot ABN AMRO
TWO, owned by a Dutch bank, one of the largest in the world.
Lewis was in the big time. In the big, sailors earn up to
$1,000 a day. If you’re team leader for something like an
America’s Cup boat, it could go up to $1 million in a year.
On one leg, Andy’s boat broke the world speed record for a
sailing boat with a run of 563 miles in a day. That’s 23.5
miles per hour if you’re counting. The catamarans off
Waikiki never go that fast. Not even for a minute.
Not for a second downhill on a big wave.
Lewis believes part of his skills were gained windsurfing in
Hawaii. Check out his website. The clip of him
windsurfing is amazing.
“It gives you a feel for the water. Even on a big boat,
you need the feel.”
Lewis’ boat was a big in the news in the sailing world after a
crew member was swept overboard. The young crew hit a
button on their Global Positioning System GPS, got the boat
turned around and went back. Amazingly, they found the
man. But he was dead. A while later, they rescued
the crew of another Volvo boat which ran into trouble and sank.
This is in case you’re wondering if this sport is safe in this
modern, high tech world of carbon fiber laminates and instant
communication.
Next was the America’s Cup for the Swedish team in Spain, one
year of work, then the 90 foot Rambler, owned by Connecticut
businessman, George David, CEO of United Technologies.
Rambler won the Nordbank Blue Race 2007 from Newport, Rhode
Island to Hamburg, Germany.
A few days after that, Lewis flew back to Los Angeles to help
out with the 45 foot Rancho Deluxe in the TransPac race to
Honolulu.

When we interviewed him, he was just in from Italy and had to
leave in a few days to France.
“It looks a lot more glamorous from the outside,” Andy says.
“When you’re racing, it’s more like work. Of course, I love it,
but you go hard all day practicing, then when you get home, you
just want to relax.”
Of course, when you race, it could be days before you get a
nice, cushy bed.
Still, Lewis recommends it for kids.
“Where else but sailing do they let a 10 year old kid drive?
It’s a good way of bonding, it’s very physical, you learn to
take care of yourself, and surfing down a wave in front of
Diamond Head, you can’t beat it.”
I guess so.
Be sure to
check out Cloudia’s Hawaii Novel “Aloha Where You Like Go?” at
Amazon.com or local bookstores! Contact her about performing
YOUR AFFORDABLE BEACH WEDDING at
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Aloha
October November
News
November 16
Jasmine’s party, TV show
Recording artist and American Idol finalist, Jasmine Trias, celebrates
her 21st birthday with a spectacular party at from 8 p.m. to 4 a.m.
Friday, November 16 at the Pearl Ultra Lounge. The champagne pink-themed
event, sponsored in part by KUMU 94.7 FM, includes a full line-up of
unforgettable fun with celebrity emcees, entertainment on the main stage
and a fashion show featuring boutique items by Blue Buddha.
As
part of the entertainment, four female models and four male models will
strut their stuff on the catwalk in a fashion show celebrating the
recent grand opening of the Blue Buddha on Kapiolani Boulevard.
In addition, get ready for the premier of Jasmine's new TV endeavor,
Pacific Groove. Jasmine hosts the innovative new show, a lifestyle
program that showcases the fashion, food, entertainment and nightlife of
Hawaii. On this night only, Pacific Groove will be shown on every screen
throughout the intimate luxury lounge.
Pearl
Ultra Lounge is located on the 3rd floor Ho'okipa Terrace at Ala Moana
Center.
November 16
King Kalākaua’s 171st
A ceremony honoring the 171st birthday of King David Kalākaua
will be held at 9 a.m. on Friday, November 16, 2007, at King
Kalākaua Park in Waikiki. The public is invited to attend the free
program, which will take place in front of the King Kalākaua statue. The
ceremony includes live entertainment, dance performances and more.
The ceremony is presented by The Free and Accepted Masons of Hawai‘i and
the Lodge Le Progres de I ‘Oceanie. For more information, call 699-4940.
Kalākaua was born on November 16, 1836 and ruled from 1874 to 1891, when
he died in San Francisco. During his reign, ‘Iolani Palace was
constructed.
Thanksgiving offerings
Spend Thanksgiving with your loved ones alongside the famous Waikiki
beach enjoying an indulgent buffet prepared for royalty at the Royal
Hawaiian’s Surf Room. On November 22, 2007, the Surf Room will offer
a superb Thanksgiving Day brunch buffet (first seating at 11:00 a.m.,
second at 1:00 p.m.) priced at $50.00 per adult and $25.00 per child
ages 6-12 years old. The Surf Room will also offer a Thanksgiving dinner
buffet (first seating at 6:30 p.m., second at 9:00 p.m.) at $55.00 per
adult and $27.00 per child ages 6-12 years old. For reservations or more
information, please call the Dining Reservations desk at (808) 921-4600
or visit
www.royal-hawaiian.com.
Xmas at
City Hall
Honolulu City Lights Opening Ceremony
Saturday, December 1, 4 p.m.
Honolulu Hale
Honolulu City Lights features live
entertainment, a Christmas tree lighting ceremony, Electric Light
Parade, Christmas tree and wreath exhibits and more. Opening festivities
will be followed by a month long holiday celebration with live
entertainment from 7-8 p.m. on select nights. There will also be nightly
visits with Santa. Visit
www.honolulucitylights.org.
City’s 22nd Annual Holiday
Wreath Contest Exhibit
Saturday, December 1 to Monday, January
2, 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Honolulu Hale, Lane Gallery
View decorative Christmas wreaths from
the City’s 22nd Annual Holiday Wreath Contest. This year’s
theme is “A Royal Holiday,” in honor of our Hawaiian ali‘i which is also
celebrated in this year’s Christmas ornament “Lanakila Ka Ahi Ali‘i” (Lanakila
the royal train).
Exhibit viewing is free. Call 523-4674.
Toys for Tots Christmas
Giving Station
Saturday, December 1 to
Sunday, December 16, 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Honolulu Hale, Courtyard
The U.S. Marine Corps Reserve Toys for
Tots Program welcome Honolulu City Light event-goers to bring new and
unused toys to help make the holiday season brighter for a deserving
child. A collection box will be stationed in the Courtyard of Honolulu
Hale. Call 523-4674.
Star Wars Stormtroopers Converge For Toys
for Tots
Thursday, December 13, from 6 to 8 p.m.
Honolulu Hale, Courtyard
Darth Vader and Stormtroopers from the
501st Legion Star Wars fan costuming club will be in full
gear to support the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve Toys for Tots Program.
Photo opportunities with characters from the Galactic Empire will be
available. Call 523-4674.
Arts With Aloha
Schedule of
Events for the Visual and Performing Arts, by the Hawaii Arts Alliance
Oahu,
Hawaii January – March 2008
Arts with Aloha promotes opportunities for cultural travel on the island
of Oahu in Hawaii. The following calendar of cultural events highlights
visual and performing arts programs from January through March 2008 on
the Hawaiian island of Oahu. It is followed by continuing and ongoing
events. Complete contact information for each organization is provided
at the end of the
calendar.
For a free 44-page, full color brochure, send a self-addressed envelope
with $1.41 cents postage to Arts With Aloha, c/o Bishop Museum PR
Department, 1525 Bernice Street, Honolulu, HI 96817; or call the
24-hour hotline at
(808)
847-8271 and leave your name and address on the recording; or email the
address to
bishoppr@bishopmuseum.org. Visit our web site at
www.artswithaloha.com and see for yourself: Oahu offers much more
than our beautiful beaches and great weather!
EVENTS
OPENING JANUARY – MARCH, 2008
JANUARY
HONOLULU
SYMPHONY POPS FEATURING BURT BACHARACH
January 4 –
6, 2008
Fri. & Sat.
8 p.m., Sun. 3 p.m.
$14, $32,
$47, $57, $79; 20% discount for seniors, students & military (ID
required)
(808)792-2000; 1-877-750-4400/Ticketmaster.com/Blaisdell Concert Hall
Multi-talented composer and pianist Burt Bacharach returns to Honolulu
with
his
unforgettable songs. We’ll feature Bacharach’s work for film with music
from film
scores such as “Casino Royale,” “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance
Kid,” and
“Arthur” plus so much more.
PELE MĀ
January 10
– February 10, 2008
Thursday,
Friday & Saturday @ 8 pm: January 10, 11, 12, 17, 18, 19, 24, 25,
26, 31;
February 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 2008, Sundays @ 2 pm: January 13, 20, 27;
February
10, 2008
Thursdays -
$13 General, $11 Seniors, $5 Students & Unemployed
Fri/Sat/Sun- $16 General, $13 Seniors, $10 Students
(808)
536-4441 / Kumu Kahua Theatre / 46 Merchant Street
Adapted by
John Wat, Laurel Nakanishi, and Kennley Asato Pele Mā is a
narrative
theater adaptation based on the book "Pele Mā: Legends of Pele
from Kaua`i"
(Bamboo Ridge Press, 2001) by Frederick Wichman.
MAKAHA SONS
IN CONCERT
Friday,
January 11, 2008
8:00 pm
$35 & $25
general; discount for students/seniors/military (ID required)
(808)
528-0506/Hawaii Theatre Center/1130 Bethel St./www.hawaiitheatre.com
The
traditional Hawaiian music of the award-winning Makaha Sons has been
celebrated
in Hawaii and throughout the world.
LIVE FROM
THE LAWN – GRAMMYS CONCERT
Friday,
January 11, 5-9 p.m., FREE
(808)
586-0307/Hawai‘i State Art Museum/250 South Hotel
Street/www.hawaii.gov/sfca
This
popular annual concert features the Grammy Award nominees for Best
Hawaiian
Music Album performing on the front lawn of the Hawai‘i State Art
Museum.
This event will be simulcast on television and the Internet by
Oceanic
Time Warner and KITV Island Television.
SECOND
SATURDAY – THE HAWAI‘I HANDWEAVERS HUI
Saturday,
January 12, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., FREE
(808)
586-0307/Hawai‘i State Art Museum/ 250 South Hotel
Street/www.hawaii.gov/sfca
Members of
the Hawai‘i Handweavers Hui will give arts demonstrations at this
family-friendly event held at the Hawai‘i State Art Museum.
DOUBT
January 16
– February 3
Wed. – Thur.
7:30 p.m.; Fri. – Sat. 8 p.m.; Sun. 4 p.m.
$25 adults;
$20 senior/military; $15 for patrons age 25 and under
Manoa
Valley Theatre/2833 East Manoa Rd./(808) 988-6131/
www.manoavalleytheatre.com
Set in a
parochial school in the Bronx in 1964, the play is shaped as a
battle of
wills between the severe, absolutist Sister Aloysius and the more
doctrinally
flexible Father Flynn. As Sister pursues her intuition that the
priest is
molesting a boy in her school, the play presents a balance of
conflicting
viewpoints.
BOYD SUGIKI:
ELEMENTS
Monday -
Thursday 8:30 a.m. – 4 p.m.; Friday 8:30 a.m. – 6 p.m.
January 18
– May 27, 2008; Free Admission
(808)
526-0232 /The Contemporary Museum At First Hawaiian Center/ 999 Bishop
Street
Born and
raised in Honolulu, Boyd Sugiki’s recent series of blown glass and
works on
paper draw on images of architecture, Sugiki states, “I like to
imagine the
bottles as towers or buildings, and their groupings as modern
urban
landscapes. I believe architectural structures are containers or
vessels of
life and hope that my bottle compositions will contain messages
for the
viewer. He currently lives and works in Seattle, Washington.
MAPPED
Monday -
Thursday 8:30 a.m. – 4 p.m.; Friday 8:30 a.m. – 6 p.m.
January 18
– May 27, 2008
Free
Admission
(808)
526-0232 /The Contemporary Museum At First Hawaiian Center/ 999 Bishop
Street
Eight
artists are brought together in this group exhibition for their use of
maps as a
visual vocabulary. The resulting images range from tales of
fictitious
world travels to discussions of land division and personal
identity.
Artists include, Gaye Chan, Vincent Goudreau, Wendy Kawabata,
Joyce
Kozloff, Maya Portner, Abigail Lee Kahilikia Romanchak, Laura Smith,
and Lori
Uyehara.
MAUI vs
HERCULES
Opening
Night: Friday, Jan 18, 7:30 p.m.
Saturdays,
January 19 - February 23, 1:30 & 4:30 p.m.
Honolulu
Theatre for Youth/Tenney Theatre, St. Andrews Cathedral, 229 Queen
Emma
Square/(808) 839-9885
$16 adults;
$8 youth
Maui has
just used his magic hook to fish up a new island where he can be
king. Tired
of being told what to do, his first decree is to outlaw all Hula
practice.
But just as Maui is getting settled Hercules arrives looking for
an island
where he can rule without being pestered to practice his poetry.
What
follows is a hilarious competition filled with dangerous quests,
surprising
twists and a visit from a mysterious woman who seems to know a
little too
much about both of them. Recommended for ages 5 and up.
GRAND
OPENING: NEW PICTURE GALLERY AT BISHOP MUSEUM
January 19,
2008; Hawaiian Hall Complex
Admission
is $15.95 for adults; $12.95 for youth 4-12 years and seniors 65+,
special
rates for kama‘āina and military; children under 4 years and Bishop
Museum
Members are free.
(808)
847-3511/ Bishop Museum/ 1525 Bernice Street/
www.bishopmuseum.org
<http://www.bishopmuseum.org>
For more
than 70 years, this one-of-a-kind collection of Hawaiian art has
been unseen
and unknown to the greater Hawaii community because the Museum
lacked
appropriate gallery spaces for displaying the unrivaled collection.
Bishop
Museum’s extraordinary collection of visual art of Hawaii and the
Pacific
focuses on art from the 18th and early 19th centuries. This
collection
represents a remarkable window into the past—a visual
documentation of Pacific cultures at the time of western contact and
beyond.
PARENTHESIS
January
20–February 22, 2008
Gallery
hours: Mon.–Fri. 10:30–4:00; Sun. 12:00–4:00. Closed Saturdays and
holidays.
Free
admission. Parking fees may apply.
(808)
956-6888/University of Hawai‘i Art Gallery/University of Hawai‘i at
Manoa
Graduate
art students from the University of Hawai‘i at Manoa present their
current
paintings, sculptures, prints, and multi-media works at their annual
exhibition.
ART LUNCH –
RICK MILLS – THE HISTORY OF GLASS IN HAWAI‘I
Tuesday,
January 29, 12-1 p.m., FREE
(808)
586-0307/Hawai‘i State Art Museum/250 South Hotel
Street/www.hawaii.gov/sfca
Artist Rick
Mills will discuss the history of glass as an art form in
Hawai‘i.
Mills is the recipient of the SFCA Individual Artist Fellowship
Award in
Visual Arts. His glass artworks are in many local and national art
collections.
FEBRUARY
LIVE FROM
THE LAWN – MOVIES AT THE MUSEUM
Friday,
February 1, 5-9 p.m., FREE
(808)
586-0307/Hawai‘i State Art Museum/250 South Hotel
Street/www.hawaii.gov/sfca
A selection
of short films will be shown on the front lawn of the Hawai‘i
State Art
Museum.
HAWAII
THEATRE FOLLIES
February
1-3, 2008
Fri. & Sat.
7:30 p.m.; Sun. 2 p.m.
Ticket
prices TBA
(808)
528-0506/Hawaii Theatre Center/1130 Bethel St./www.hawaiitheatre.com
A pinch of
New Orleans Mardi Gras, a dash of Rio’s Carnivale, the feathers
and
rhinestones of Las Vegas, and the tropical sparkle of Hawaii are all
wrapped up
in this delightful musical revue.
BAREFOOT IN
THE PARK
February 1
– February 17, 2008
Thursday &
Friday at 8:00 p.m., Saturday at 3:00 p.m. & 8:00 p.m.,
Sunday at
4:00 p.m.
Tickets are
$12, $22, $32, $42
(808)
733-0274/Diamond Head Theatre/www.diamondheadtheatre.com
After a
honeymoon, a new lawyer and his young bride, move into their new,
high rent
apartment, where one has to climb six wheezing flights. Their
apartment
situation is enough to break the heart of any stylish young
lawyer; and
it does, on the night he refuses to join his wife in a barefoot
walk
through the snow in the park.
GRAND
OPENING – 2008 HAWAI‘I SCHOLASTIC ART EXHIBITION
Saturday,
February 2, 4 to 6 p.m., FREE, This exhibition runs thru April 4,
2008
(808)
586-0307/Hawai‘i State Art Museum/Ewa Gallery/250 South Hotel Street/
www.hawaii.gov/sfca
This
exhibition features gold and silver award-winning artwork by 7th to
12th grade
students throughout the state of Hawai‘i. The Tadashi Sato Living
Art
Scholarship will be presented to two Hawai‘i students, whose artwork is
in the
exhibition.
NEW
TRADITIONALISTS CONCERT
Friday,
February 8, 2008
8:00 p.m.
$35 & $25
general; discount for students/seniors/military (ID required)
(808)
528-0506/Hawaii Theatre Center/1130 Bethel St./www.hawaiitheatre.com
This
concert is a showcase of some of Hawaii’s up-and-coming musical talent.
SECOND
SATURDAY – HAWAI‘I STUDENT FILM SHOWCASE
Saturday,
February 9, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., FREE
(808)
586-0307/Hawai‘i State Art Museum/250 South Hotel
Street/www.hawaii.gov/sfca
This event
will feature a screening of films made by Hawai‘i students. There
will also
be hands-on arts activities at the Hawai‘i State Art Museum.
BISHOP
MUSEUM PRESENTS: ANIMAL GROSSOLOGY
February 9
through April 20, 2008; Castle Memorial Building, First Floor
Admission
is $15.95 for adults; $12.95 for youth 4-12 years and seniors 65+,
special
rates for kama‘āina and military; children under 4 years and Bishop
Museum
Members are free.
(808)
847-3511/ Bishop Museum/ 1525 Bernice Street/
www.bishopmuseum.org
<http://www.bishopmuseum.org>
Gross
Out! Get the scoop on poop! When was the last time you were really
en-GROSS-ed?
Welcome to Animal Grossology, the interactive exhibition that
takes a
slightly different view of Fluffy, Fido, and the rest of the animal
kingdom.
Prepare to meet frogs that give birth by belching. Play
Transfusion
Confusion to discover which animals have what color blood. This
is the
slimiest, stinkiest, and downright yuckiest creatures on Earth—you’re
gonna love
it!
BISHOP
MUSEUM PRESENTS: MARY KAWENA PUKUI PERFORMING ARTS FESTIVAL
February
24, 2008; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Admission
is $15.95 for adults; $12.95 for youth 4-12 years and seniors 65+,
$3 special
rate for kama‘āina and military with ID; children under 4 years
and Bishop
Museum Members are free.
(808)
847-3511/ Bishop Museum/ 1525 Bernice Street/
www.bishopmuseum.org
<http://www.bishopmuseum.org>
Native
storytellers from Hawai‘i, Alaska, and Massachusetts will gather on
the Great
Lawn at Bishop Museum to “talk story” and join in a celebration of
native
cultures through the ancient art of storytelling and dance.
ART LUNCH –
TO BE ANNOUNCED
Tuesday,
February 26, 12-1 p.m., FREE
(808)
586-0307/Hawai‘i State Art Museum/250 South Hotel
Street/www.hawaii.gov/sfca
A guest
lecturer will describe their art, show visual aids, and answer
questions
from the audience.
ELTON JOHN
& TIM RICE’S “AIDA”
February
28, 29; March 1, 7, 8, 14, 15; 7:30 p.m.; $15-28
(808)
438-4480,Army Community Theatre, Richardson Theatre, Fort Shafter/
www.armytheatre.com
ACT
continues its blockbuster series of musicals with Broadway’s hit “Aida,”
the
timeless love story adaptation of the classic opera in unequaled Elton
John and
Tim Rice style. Directed by Vanita Rae Smith in the tradition of
her “Miss
Saigon” and “CATS” smashes, “Aida” stars Hawaii’s best young
talents and
offers a unique opportunity to see a major presentation in the
Army’s
historic 808-seat house.
MARCH
READERS
THEATRE PRESENTATION OF “THE VISIT”
March 2, 9,
16; 2 p.m.; Free
(808)
438-4480/Army Community Theatre, Richardson Theatre, Fort Shafter/
www.armytheatre.com
ACT is
known for its highly-praised Readers Theatre series where actors read
scripts and
audiences sit on stage with them, using their imagination to see
the set,
props and costumes. Friedrich Durrenmatt’s tragic-comedy “The
Visit” will
be no exception in this Sunday at 2 presentation, free to the
public.
I LOVE YOU,
YOU’RE PERFECT, NOW CHANGE
March 5 –
24; Wed. – Thur. 7:30 p.m.; Fri. – Sat. 8 p.m.; Sun. 4 p.m.
$30 adults;
$25 senior/military; $15 for patrons age 25 and under
(808)
988-6131/Manoa Valley Theatre/2833 East Manoa Rd./
www.manoavalleytheatre.com
This
celebration of the mating game takes on the truths and myths behind
that
contemporary conundrum known as “the relationship.” This hilarious
revue pays
tribute to those who have loved and lost, to those who have
fallen on
their face at the portal of romance, to those who have dared to
ask, “Say,
what are you doing Saturday night?”
FIRST
FRIDAY
Friday,
March 7, 5–9pm, FREE
(808)
521-2903/ARTS at Marks Garage-A Project of the Hawai‘i Arts Alliance/
1159
Nu‘uanu Avenue
First
Friday Honolulu Downtown-Chinatown Gallery Walk. A self guided tour.
LIVE FROM
THE LAWN – ART AND ARIAS
Friday,
March 7, 5-9 p.m., FREE
(808)
586-0307/Hawai‘i State Art Museum/250 South Hotel
Street/www.hawaii.gov/sfca
This
special concert features members of the Hawai‘i Opera Theatre
performing
highlights from the 2008 opera season. The performance will be on
the front
lawn of the Hawai‘i State Art Museum.
SECOND
SATURDAY – THE HAWAI‘I QUILT GUILD
Saturday,
March 8, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., FREE
(808)
586-0307/Hawai‘i State Art Museum/250 South Hotel
Street/www.hawaii.gov/sfca
Members of
the Hawai‘i Quilt Guild will give quilting demonstrations at this
family-friendly event to be held at the Hawai‘i State Art Museum.
MAGNO RUBIO
March 13
through April 13, 2008
Thursday,
Friday & Saturday 8pm: March 13, 14, 15, 20, 21, 22, 27, 28, 29;
April 3, 4,
5, 10, 11, 12, 2008; Sundays 2 pm: March 16, 30; April 6, 13,
2008
Thursdays -
$13 General, $11 Seniors, $5 Students & Unemployed
Fri/Sat/Sun- $16 General, $13 Seniors, $10 Students
(808)
536-4441 / Kumu Kahua Theatre / 46 Merchant Street
Written by
Lonnie Carter and set in a bunkhouse for migrant Filipino farm
workers,
the play tells the story of Magno Rubio, an idealist and dreamer
who is both
admired and taunted by his fellow workers. This is the Hawai`i
premiere of
this award-winning play based on a short story by Carlos
Bulosan.
THE
BROTHERS CAZIMERO IN CONCERT
Friday,
March 14, 2008
8:00 p.m.
$35 & $25
general; discount for students/seniors/military (ID required)
(808)
528-0506/Hawaii Theatre Center/1130 Bethel St./www.hawaiitheatre.com
For the
past 30 years, the award-winning musical talent, incredible
showmanship
and infectious humor of The Brothers Cazimero have placed them
in a league
of their own among Hawaii’s music industry.
HONOLULU
SYMPHONY POPS FEATURING KENNY G
Mar. 15 &1
6, 2008
Sat. 8 p.m.
& Sun. 3 p.m.
$29, $47,
$62, $72, $94; 20% discount for seniors, students & military (ID
required)
(808)792-2000; 1-877-750-4400/Ticketmaster.com/Blaisdell Concert Hall
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