A SIGNIFICANT, HISTORIC ROYAL RETURN

“E Kani Mau (To Resound Forever),” the Royal Hawaiian Band’s exquisite freebie one-nighter last night (Oct. 14) at the Hawaii Theatre, was a major, significant event on the entertainment calendar.

With bandmaster Clarke Bright at the helm, the concert was everything you might have expected —  and more:

  • It marked the first time the municipal band was able to perform, en masse, since the pandemic shut down operations.
  • It was chicken-skin feel-good, to hear Hawaiian songs, in a parade of stars that included Danny Kaleikini, Karen Keawehawai‘i Nathen Aweau, Augie Tulba, Keauhou, Kala‘i Stern, and Amy Hanaiali‘i …. and the evening’s favorite act, the Kamehameha Schools Children’s Chorus.
  • It was all about ‘ohana, as singer Keawehawai‘i  earlier shared with maestro Bright, since her family of dancers (including Pi‘ikea Lopes), singers and chanters (Traci and Keawe Lopes) were part of the show, and his wife, Linell Bright, was the night’s heroine who has shaped and nurtured the young Kamehameha of chorus members, the lone troupe to earn an impromptu standing ovation. Bright also said his ‘ohana, including mother Mo, was in the audience (plus brother, sister-in-law, grandkids) with his late dad Ron Bright watching and spiritually applauding from Up There.
Keauhou, from left: Zackary Lum, Kahanuola Solatorio and Nicholas Lum.

Emcee Kimo Kahoano stuck to his script, introducing each act, with the performers’ names, the dancers’ identities, and composers and arrangers all properly credited in projections. Those credits thus identified a corps of historical greats not physically part of the show, but present and accounted for via their contributions. The names included Jack de Mello, John Almeida, Queen Liliuokulani, John Keawehawai‘i, Jennie Napua Hanaiali‘i Woodd, Harry Owens and Willie Kahaiali’i.

The theme of the event, “E Kani Mau,” also was a musical premiere, with composer Michael-Thomas Fourmai in the house to hear his creation, and the audience able to see him and applaud him. How cool was that?

Bandmaster Clarke Bright, center, and Amy Hanaiali’i, right.

There was a lot to swoon over:

  • Hanaiali‘i’s signatures, “Palehua” and “Hale‘iwa,” never before staged and supported by the grand band, with roots from the Hawaiian monarchy. And boy, she was at her career best, following a European fashion tour and trek to trace Hawaiian monarchy leaders who made pilgrimages to Britain. Her finale, “Queen’s Anthem,’ was also astounding, with the Kamehameha chorus joining her in the premiere of a video in front of Iolani Palace, with the video sound muted so that the band and the chorus, featured in the clip could give the tune a historical multi-media debut.
Karen Keawehawai’i.
Nathan Aweau.
  • Keauhou, the trio comprising Zachary and Nicolas Lum and fellow Kamehameha Warrior of music Kahanuola Solatorio exhibiting delicate, swooning voices, including falsetto via melodies including “Na Ali‘i” and “Dancing Under the Stars.”
  • Nathan Aweau, not often visible in recent years, continues to display depth and breadth in his vocals; his “Ho‘olana” and “I Ka La‘i ‘O Kahakuloa” connected with the audience.
  • Danny Kaleikini, also not commonly on stage, remains an active ambassador of aloha, though his “Mapuana” had a brief moment of uncertainty. Always great, however, to see him performing again.
Amy Hanaiali’i with Kamehameha Schools Choir.

Tickets were free to those who requested them, online at the Hawaii Theatre site, and the show was virtually a sell-out, with some no-shows.

Mayor Rick Blangiardi, a booster of this gig, was away on mayoral business, but his wife, Karen Chang Blangiardi, supported the concert as founder of The Creative City.

Fittingly, there was a crowd singing, with hand-holding wherever possible, of the traditional “Hawaii Aloha.” It had a resounding flavor and tone, attuned to the show’s theme. …

And that’s Show Biz. …

GETTING TO SOUND LIKE CHRISTMAS

It’s not yet Halloween, but it’s getting to sound like Christmas. Yep, some acts have announced its December concerts, which will include holiday music as well as Hawaiian.

Here’s the early outlook:

First up: “Ho’okena for the Holidays” is the theme of a two-show visit Dec. 11 at 4:30 and 8 p.m. at Blue Note Hawaii at the Outrigger Waikiki resort. Yes, there will be some holiday tunes, but expect Hawaiiana, too.

First up: “Ho’okena for the Holidays” is the theme of a two-show visit Dec. 11 at 4:30 and 8 p.m. at Blue Note Hawaii at the Outrigger Waikiki resort. Yes, there will be some holiday tunes, but expect Hawaiiana, too.

Technically, Ho’okena and Makena, will be featured acts. The first is the usual trio featuring Horace Dudoit III, Chris Kamaka, and Glen H.K. Smith.  The second is a combination of Ho’okena with the Makaha Sons members Louis “Moon” Kauakahi and Eric Lee, thus the moniker Makena, a union of Ma-kaha and Ho’o-kena.

Horace Dudoit III

Nani Dudoit, new kumu hula (and wife of Horace) will hula. And special guests will be the duo of Kala’e Paris and Kalenaku DeLima.

Earlier reports of this show had different curtain times, so note the changes.

Tickets: (808) 888-4890 at www.bluenotehawaii.com

Next up: Na Leo Pilimehana will stage a dinner concert Dec. 17, at the Kalakaua Ballroom of the Hawaii Convention Center.

Na Leo is comprised of Nalani Jenkins, Lehua Kalima and Angela Morales-Escontria, high school classmates who turned the friendship into a lasting performance and recording career.

Na Leo;s Morales-Escontria, Kalama and Jenkins.

Doors open at 5 p.m., with guest performer Maunalua aboard. A buffet dinner will precede the 7 p.m. concert that will include Na Leo’s holiday and Hawaiian tunes.

Tickets: $185, includes the buffet dinner plus a Na Leo CD. Keiki up to 2 years are free, but those bringing strollers that take a seat place must buy a ticket.

Tickets are available at www.hawaiiconvention.com

Kalani Pe’a

Finally: Kalani Pe’a will headline a Hawaiian Christmas show, at 7 p.m. Dec. 22 at the Hawaii Theatre.

Pe‘a is a three-time Grammy winner, whose repertoire includes Hawaiian Christmas songs and he’ll embrace holiday tunes, too.

Tickets: $45 to $100, available at www.hawaiitheatre.com

Rady or not, ‘Magnum’ is filming

There’s still no word when “Magnum P.I.” will surface under the NBC banner, after CBS nixed a season five. However, filming’s under way here.

Michael Rady

And there’s good news:  Michael Rady, a familiar face from “Chicago: Med” and “Timeless,” has been tapped for a recurring role.

He’ll play Det. Chris Childs of the Honolulu Police Department, and he’ll debut in the fifth season’s premiere, airdate not yet announced.

So Rady joins series regulars Jay Hernandez, Perdita Weeks, Zachary Knighton, Stephen Hill, Tim Kang, and Amy Hill, in the new chapter. And “Magnum” has a planned two-season run …

Broadway grosses, for week ending Oct. 9

Broadway continues to rack up decent grosses, despite the waning pandemic.

The top five in terms of gross: No. 1, “The Music Man,” $3.099 million; No.2, “Hamilton,” $2.158 million; No. 3, “The Lion King,” $2.066 million; No. 4, “Wicked,” $1.839 million; and No. 5, “MJ the Michael Jackson Musical,” $1.765 million.

The list of grosses, courtesy The Broadway League:

And that’s Show Biz. …

ANGELA LANSBURY: AN APPRECIATION

Murder, she wrote.

Musicals, she played.

Magic, she created.

Angela Lansbury, a Londoner who became an icon of theater, TV and films, died  in her sleep Oct. 11 in Los Angeles. She was 96; she would have turned 97 in five more days.

She was a global sensation, bringing dignity, charm, and radiance to any role she tackled. Her incredible career spanned eight decades and embraced television, movies, and the Broadway stage. Clearly, she was one of the rare ones, who kept reinventing herself in all phases of show biz.

Adults remember her for playing Jessica Fletcher, on CBS’ long-time crime caper, in which she was the irrepressible sleuth and busybody who always tried to solve a case before the usual investigators.

Angela Lansbury

On stage, there was nothing she couldn’t portray. I first saw her in “Mame” on Broadway, in 1996, which earned her the first of five Tony Awards (six, counting a Lifetime Achievement Award), which proved she could sing and dance and act. But she also won hurrahs for “Gypsy,”  which I saw in London, which added Rose in her repertoire. In perhaps her most challenging Broadway musical, Stephen Sondheim’s  “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street,” she was perfection as Nellie Lovett, the baker creating meat pies, in a stunning adult musical directed by Hal Prince and co-starring Len Cariou as the murderer. She brought her own version of Madame Armfeldt, in Sondheim’s “A Little Night Music,” which earned her a Tony nomination.

One of her last roles on Broadway was “Deuce,” in 2007, a drama by Terence McNally, which  paired Lansbury with Marian Seldes in a not-so-popular vehicle that also starred an invisible but audible bouncing tennis ball, with both actresses conversing and looking left and right and left and right in  a monotonous exercise in tedium. This was a rare  Lansbury; she forgot her text and you could hear the prompter throwing out her lines. Ouch!

In films, she provided the voice of charm as Mrs. Potts, the teapot in Disney’s animated movie, “Beauty and the Beast,” singing the title tune that youngsters adopted. ‘Twas a tale as old as time, still resonating with nostalgia.

She was a character actress, too, in a slew of films, like “Gas Light,” “The Picture of Dorian Gray” and “The Manchurian Candidate,” earning Oscar nominations. Her lone Academy Award was an honorary one, for her dramatic roles.

And one of her little known roles – she played the mother of the Elvis Presley in “Blue Hawaii” – gave her island ties and perhaps provoked a trivia question in her filmography.

Lansbury might have been the right actress at the right time, on the Great White Way.  She was a Broadway musical headliner, in the wake of Ethel Merman, and  logically the inspiration for the next and current-generation of Broadway divas like Bernadette Peters, Kelli O’Hara and Sutton Foster.

She was legendary in a craft requiring triple-threat skills and I’m blessed to have experienced her grace and magic in  live in shows that are now  classics in the Broadway library. May she be taking her bows in the great theater in the skies. …

Commercial break

Frank DeLima

I’ve been missing the chuckles, watching Frank DeLima do his multi-tutu-in-muumuu TV commercials for The Cab, so I asked him recently why the spot – which even used to be shown in movie theaters – was yanked.

“Because the cab business is down,” he said. During the pandemic, visitors to Hawaii were down, perhaps locals just stayed home, and it’s likely Lyft and  Uber services were up due to their cheaper fares?

DeLima’s comedic presence made the commercial particularly effective, since his utterance of the cab company’s phone number, (808) 422-2222, helped make it a household number hard to forget. …

Shelton will exit ‘The Voice’

Blake Shelton

Blake Shelton will wind up his career as judge on NBC’s “The Voice,” exiting his turn-around chair in Season 23, which begins in January 2023.

Joining remaining coach Kelly Clarkson will be Chance the Rapper and Niall Horan, formerly of One Direction.

Shelton, a singer with roots in country music, has been the winningest coach on the talent competition over the past 12 years, with eight of his picks resulting as the last one standing.

His wife, Gwen Stefani, has been an intermittent judge; they married in 2021.

Show host Carson Daly also will continue.

With two shows a week, during a typical run of the competition, judging is a mammoth task.

The question, however, is the show has yet to have a bona fide breakout star. Like, can you name at least three “Voice” winners of the past?  Didn’t think so. ..

And that’s Show Biz. …

NEW YORK CREDS FOR LEE CATALUNA

Kudos to playwright Lee Cataluna, who has taken a huge leap in her prolific career, and applause, too,  to the New York Times to recognize and spotlight her journey as a storyteller in a community far, far away from her island roots.

Cataluna, a former journalist for the Honolulu Advertiser and now a columnist for Civil Beat,  was interviewed by NYT reporter Laura Graeber, in an article published Oct. 4, that explores her storytelling skills.  Cataluna’s latest play, “Heart Strings,” is in production through Oct. 23 at the Linda Gross Theater in Chelsea. It is being produced by  Atlantic Theater Company as the initial Atlantic for Kids production since the COVID-19 pandemic shutdown.

It’s quite an achievement for Cataluna to take her play beyond the reef and across the continent. It’s also a moment for the state to support her mission — and others in her footsteps — to bring island themes and tales for audiences elsewhere to enjoy and discover.

Lee Cataluna

At a time when even the Honolulu media shamefully does not acknowledge or write about local playwrights launching a play with clear Hawaiian roots, it’s  an astonishing accomplishment for Cataluna to attract a New York group to stage the world premiere  of “Heart Strings.”

The thread throughout her play focuses on hei, the centuries-old small-kid-time game, where a simple string or cord is the centerpiece, and game-players use their fingers to create varying triangles or rectangles and players delicately transfer the network of loops to each other. You might remember it as “Cat’s Cradle,” which has also been the name for this string game.

 And, natch, batteries are not required. Simple idea, with historical roots, about everyday events or relationships, is at the core of Cataluna’s plays. Think “Folks You Meet at Long’s,” “Musubi Man,” “Home of the Brave,” “You Somebody,” “Flowers of Hawaii,” and “Extraordinary Stories for Ordinary Ohana.” Locally, her works have been staged by Kumu Kahua, Honolulu Theatre of Youth and Diamond Head Theatre. …

“Heart Strings” was intended to be staged by Iolani School actors (Cataluna previously taught there; her son remains a student there), but plans changed because of the pandemic. Who knew New York would kick off a Hawaii play? Like Kumu Kahua on steroids!

I recall when Cataluna was researching this play, seeking  how-to’s of hei via Facebook. Not surprising, she got the job done — with no strings attached. She’s opened the doors for other island playwrights to attempt to get their works noticed and produced beyond the seas. …

Bruno Mars

A heavenly milestone for Bruno

So maybe now is a good time to talk about Bruno. You know, Bruno Mars, not the “Encanto” Disney Bruno.

Our local superstar now has six Diamond Single Awards, the first pop star to achieve this status. His “Locked Out of  Heaven” tune has been certified Diamond, by RIAA’s Gold and Platinum Program. His earlier five Diamond hits are “Just the Way You Are,” “Grenade,” “When I Was Your Man,” “That’s What I Like,” and the collaborative “Uptown Funk” with Mark Ronson.

Way to go, Bruno! …

Sunday Manoa

Manoa Marketplace (rear area, beyond Safeway but not blocking Long’s) is undergoing renovations, so there are some concerns behind the boarded eateries and shops. I dined at Paisano one night, before taking in “Cabaret,” and navigating to the Italian restaurant was a challenge.

So folks thinking of going to Medici’s on the second floor, where the Tommy James Trio (with Dave Bixler and Dean Taba) perform on Sunday (Oct. 9), should anticipate a bit of a maze to get to the club; doors open at 5 p.m., show at 6:30 p.m.

Tommy James

And an update: Medici’s earlier raised its dinner-and-show prices to $75 (I had bought tickets at that price, for a postponed Shari Lynn Trio show), with meals served by waitstaff. But the return of the buffet brings down the price to $59 (partly because of patron outcries and perhaps a drop in attendees), with reimbursements to be made at the door, according to the Medici’s website. …

And that’s Show Biz. …

SCHUMAN READY TO ‘BRING HIM HOME’

Does Craig Schulman, known for his role as Jean Valjean in “Les Miserables,” ever shed tears when he delivers his signature tune, “Bring Him Home”?

“Never,” he said in a phone interview from his New York home. “I have a routine that goes through my head. You have to control it (the tears).”

Schulman is heading to Honolulu for a much-delayed performance when he appears with two Broadway colleagues in “The Three Phantoms,” at 7 p.m. Oct. 29 and 2 p.m. Oct. 30 at the Hawaii Theatre. It’ll be a night of Broadway tunes from a myriad of shows, including “The Phantom of the Opera.”

Schulman, who is the producer of the event, will naturally render “Bring Him On.” So he’ll have to keep up his guard, since fans and followers often drop tears due to the emotion in the song, even out of context of “Les Miz.”

Craig Schulman, as the Phantom, himself, and Jean Valjea.

Some years ago, when he did the first national tour of “Les Miz,” he thought “Bring Him Home” might bring out the waterworks.

“At that time, my dad was having cancer surgery, and I kept that memory, which keeps me in control. But when I lost a daughter, I was having emotional pain.”

His determination to maintain discipline, so he doesn’t “lose it,” has been helpful. But there have been a few instances “when my body couldn’t keep up with my mind.”

He misses “Les Miz,” specifically, and the stage, generally.

So “Phantoms” will enable him to embrace Broadway biggies that feature a panorama of familiar tunes performed by male tenor soloists, like Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “The Phantom of the Opera.”

Keith Butergaugh
Gary Mauer

Schulman organized the concept back in 2000. The Hawaii Theatre edition — with support from Honolulu arts patron Carolyn Berry Wilson — will be the first resurrection of the show since the pandemic shut down theater everywhere. He has assembled the substantial talents of two buddies – Keith Buterbaugh and Gary Mauer, who, like Schulman, have donned the mask of the “Phantom” over the decades, as well as performed in other key leads in the Broadway repertoire.

Dan Riddle, musical director, will helm a six-piece group of island musicians for the evening.

Schulman, who has performed Valjean in previous Honolulu visits of “Les Miz,” earlier partnered with Cris Groenendaal, who played the phantom here, and Kevin Gray, who starred as Scar in “The Lion King” at Blaisdell Concert Hall, in the phantom trio portfolio. Groenendaal has retired from active singing and Gray died of a heart attack while shoveling snow at his New York home.

Craig Schulman

Collectively, the original Phantom buddies accrued an average of 20 years of Broadway experiences and  performances in regional shows, opera and TV roles.

“When we do a set show, with a symphony or a six-piece orchestra, you have to stay with the script,” said Schulman about “Phantom.” “You can do some shtick, but you have to be consistent.”

The planned repertoire includes male-delivered hits from shows like “Miss Saigon,”  “Guys and Dolls,” “ Annie Get Your Gun,” “Kiss Me Kate,” “South Pacific,” “Jesus Christ, Superstar” and “Damn Yankees.”

Tickets are $30 to $50, available at www.hawaiitheatre.com or by calling (808) 528-0506. During the pandemic, the theater box office is closed, so ticket access is via online or phone.

After Honolulu, the threesome  will have two more “Phantom” bookings,  in Muncy, Ind. But Schulman said he always keeps a stable of singers in tow, just in case. “You need to keep eight to ten people, as singers come and go. I had hoped to have Mark Jacoby aboard, but he is one of two Neil Diamond actors (the younger is Will Swenson), in the Broadway-bound ‘A Beautiful Noise’” which is launching in Boston next June before heading to New York later.

 Of course, he’s open to do a legit Broadway biggie, should an opporutunity arise.

Otherwise, he said, “I still do voice-teaching. And I’m enjoying my grandchildren.”

But It’s been a frustrating past decade, for the whole theater industry. “The industry retired me, making a decision that I stop (doing traditional theater). And that makes me angry.” …

And that’s Show Biz. …