PAPER TRAIL FUELS SOME MEMORIES

You never know what you’ll find, when you pore through old boxes you’ve neglected for years.

As a journalist, I’m referring  to stuff I’ve kept because newspapers were the focus of my career. I often save many articles for future use.

Interestingly, the three tear sheets I discovered brought flashes of joy, because they were very much a part of my life.

Show directory

One treasure, which reflected the pulse of Broadway, was a compilation of all of the shows in New York, which helped me select shows. The New York Times maintained the tradition of collating small advertisements which – at a glance – reflected the pulse on the Great White Way. This list was dated March 15, 2020, well before the COVID 19 pandemic halted and buried Broadway a few months later.

The prevailing hits included “Phantom of the Opera,” “Come From Away,”  “Dear Evan Hansen,” “Frozen,” “The Lion King,” “Book of Mormon,”  “Mrs. Doubtfire,” “Ain’t Too Proud,” ”West Side Story” and “Six.”

I saw all of these shows – over a couple of visits – before the lights went out. And with the shutdown, The Times  and shows stopped the listings…which never were restored even when the lights were turned on again.

Yeah, I know, the data is available via your iPhone or your laptop. But the at-a-glance peek at what’s playing became history…

Indexing fun

So did the TGIF – The Great Index to Fun – which was a tradition at the Honolulu  Advertiser, a Friday tabloid in the morning paper. Disclosure: I wrote features and/or reviews in TGIF, which was a handy-dandy resource to see where or what was happening for the weekend and beyond.

My colleagues on TGIF – reporters, copy editors, page designers and chief editor (plus staff photographers) – dutifully produced the section week after week, from earlier years when entertainment ruled Waikiki and name acts brought their shows to Aloha Stadium, Blaisdell Arena and/or Concert Hall, and Waikiki Shell.

TGIF didn’t survive the merger of the morning Honolulu Advertiser and the evening Star-Bulletin, and a feature section eventually disappeared. The Star-Advertiser became a two-section endeavor – main and local news, and sports. Instead of a feature section on Sundays, a Travel section prevails – with a key New York Times story with art, week after week.

The paper truly has a content issue, or perhaps it doesn’t give  a damn… 

Bright beginnings

Then I came across a feature article I wrote, published Aug. 3, 2016, in the Star-Advertiser, sharing news that survivors, supporters and former actors in a Ron Bright musical, were launching the I’m a Bright Kid Foundation, to perpetuate the legacy of Mr. B, as he was called.

Ron Bright

The revue, entitled “Brighter Still,” was to feature a roster of Bright Kids in a production July 13 at the Hawaii Theatre, the first IABK show organized  by Ligaya Stice, executive director. The show corraled everyone who was a someone singing and dancing for the late director-educator at Castle High School, whose auditorium bears the Bright name, and at Paliku Theatre at the Windward Community College, where an IABK show usually sets anchor.

Former Bright-directed talent traditionally participate in a Bright show, coming from near and far. Mo Bright, widow of the director, said “A little bit of Ron lives in each one of them/”

IABK’s annual musical production, “Gypsy,” opens Aug. 8, with a three-weekend run at Paliku through Aug.24. For tickets,  visit  Www.iabk.org

‘Wicked” defying gravity; remains No. 1

“Wicked” retains its No. 1 on the Broadway grosses tally, for the week ending July 6.

However, “Hamilton” has jumped into the game, again, moving up a few notches to No. 2.

The Top 10:

1—“Wicked,” $2.257 million.

2—“Hamilton,” $2.110 million.

3—”The Lion King, $2.054 million.

4—” Sunset Blvd.,” $1.940 million.

5—” Aladdin,” $1.378 million.

6—” Maybe Happy Ending,” $1.331 million.

7—”MJ,” $1.232 million.

8-“Just In Time,” $1.231 million.

9—”Harry Potter and the Cursed Child,” $1.167 million.

10“The Outsiders,” $1.146 million.

The complete list, courtesy the Broadway Guild:

And that’s Show Biz…

‘LILO & STITCH’ SEQUEL IN WORKS

To no one’s surprise, “Lilo & Stitch 2” is in the planning stages at the House of Mouse.

Disney today announced the sequel to the popular live-action, Hawaii-filmed  audience favorite, which so far has grossed $914 million – and counting – as the summer’s hot ticket.

“Should’ve known we couldn’t keep a secret,” Disney said on social media. “A 626 Day surprise: ‘Lilo & Stitch 2’ is now in development!”

Stitch, with Lilo (Maia Kealoha), in the live-action “Lilo & Stitch” hit film.

Numerically speaking, June 26 – 626 Day – ties into Stitch’s origins as Experiment 626.

The sequel logically means the ultimate callback of the first live-action cast, including Maia Kealoha, Sydney Elizebeth Agudong, Kaipo Dudoit, Tia Carrera, Amy Hill,  Billy Magnussen, Hannah Waddingham, Chris Sanders, Courtney B. Vance and Zach Galifianakis.

The hit film was directed by Dean Fleischer Camp from a screenplay by Chris Kekaniokalani Bright and Mike Van Waes.

Stay tuned for more details…

‘Glengarry’ rises to No. 2 on Broadway list

There’s a major change in the weekly list of Broadway’s best, with “Glengarry Glen Ross”  moving up to No. 2, behind “Wicked” and ahead of the longstanding faves “Hamilton” and “The Lion King.”

The Top 10:

1—”Wicked,” $2.484 million

2—”Glengarry Glen Ross,” $2.234 million

3—”Hamilton,” $2.169 million

4–“The Lion King,”  $2.141  million

5—”Sunset Blvd.,” $1.827 million

6—”The Picture of Dorian Gray,” $1.655 million

7—” Aladdin,” $1.524 million

8—”Death Becomes Her,” $1.458 million

9—”MJ  the Musical,” $1.369 million

10—”The Outsiders,” $1.334 million

The complete list, courtesy the Broadway Guild:

And that’s Show Biz…

POSSIBLE 10-YEAR RUN FOR ‘CIRQUE’

I revisited “‘Auana,”  the Cirque du Soleil spectacle, the other night at the Outrigger Waikiki Beachcomber resort.

The show, launched last December,  has just passed its six-month residency, with its stunning 80-minute spectacle in the heart of the Waikiki mainstream. I said in a December review that Cirque is the future of Waikiki attractions. Highly visible, a non-stop showcase of faith in Hawaiiana, loaded with artistry and creativity. And huge.

Business has been brisk, with two performances at 5:30 and 8 p.m., Wednesdays  through Sundays.

The good news:  “‘Auana”  — Hawaiian for wandering, drifting thoughts – has an agreement with the Outrigger for a run of 10 years, a keen investment by the hotel with the team from Montreal, Canada, known for its prolific planting of performance companies in a wide range of destinations over the decades.

Honolulu is the creator’s newest production, with pure Hawaii story lines, with narrations and songs and dancers, delivered in native Hawaiian language. Though the title of the show might suggest wandering, it’s quite certain “‘Auana” will stay put here. It is the essence of the ‘olele  spirit (language, speech, texture) of original island songs and dances. And the Hawaii influences flow beautiful in the lively choreography embellished by the eye-filling island costumes

Cirque’s next launch will be Germanic, in Berlin, in November 2025.

Instead of another review of the Waikiki  show, let me share highlights via a recapitulation of images of the major segments that have resonated with an audience comprised  largely of spectators who don’t speak or understand Hawaiian. Not to fret …this is a wholly visual endeavor, and a satisfying cultural entity. Let us count the ways.

1 – A journey via canoe sets the story in motion…

2—A surfer dude defies gravity and “surfs” on cylinders…

3 – A segment on the naupaka flower depicts the bloom’s unique  idiosyncrasy: only half-a-flower emerges from the buds.

4—Let’s call this the balloon boy, whose feat is a wonderment.

5—If there’s an acrobat, and an oversized cocktail glass filled with water, she’ll share her balletic poses.

6—A salute to “Hawaii Five-O” features a tourist ork (from the audience), for comic relief. More fun than gents learning to hula.

7—The Hawaiian sand painter creates images with, yes, sand and hand…shared on the show’s huge screen…

8—And voila, her art sashays into a mystifying, colorful rainbow…backed by a sweet vocal by a gent of “Over the Rainbow,” delivered in – what else? – Hawaiian.

9—Hawaii welcomes visitors, so why not include a cache of postcards?

10 – And Hawaii means beach boys, too, so they get their moments of fame.

11—When it’s time to bid adieu, the word to know is “aloha” (again, on a postcard).

12 – Two daredevils walk, jump rope, and risks their lives in this rotating

behemoth, often featured in a traditional circus…

13—And this being Cirque du Soleil, the finale means a burst of color, too…

14 – And this is us when the bright lights go off – me, grandnephew John Rhoades, and my wife Violet…

And that’s Show Biz…

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Cirque du Soleil’s “‘Auana”

When:  5:30 and 8 p.m.,  Wednesdays through Sundays

Where: Cirque showroom, second floor, Outrigger Waikiki Beachcomber Hotel

Tickets: From $86; visit https://www.tickets-center.com

Discounts available for kamaaina and military

Information: (877) 773-6470

‘SPONGEBOB’ DIRECTOR, CAST NAMED

Greg Zane will direct and choreograph Diamond Head Theatre’s “The SpongeBob Musical,” opening a run July 18 through Aug. 3.

Jenny Shiroma will be musical director.

Nickelodeon’s undersea world of Bikini Bottom, originally a TV cartoon favorite of young kids, was transformed into a flashy Broadway musical, bringing the heart, humor, fantasy and fun to an adult sensation, with an explosion of sea-worthy colors and antics, and a  bounty of bubbly music enriching the score, with tunes by John Legend, Cyndi Lauper and David Bowie.

Greg Zane

The cast is already rehearsing for the see-worthy fun. Chad Navarro will play the beloved SpongeBob SquarePants, Zach Oldham will be his buddy Patrick Star, Nathaniel Ryan-Kern is Squidward Q. Tentacles, Mehana Stone is Sandy Cheeks, Lee Nebe is Eugene H. Krabs, Presley Wheeler is Sheldon Plankton, Aiko Schick is Karen the Computer, Sage Nguyen is Pearl Krabs, Lainey Hicks is Mrs. Puffs, Landon
Ballesteros
is Patchy the Pirate/Perch Perkins, Cassidy Ross is The Mayor of Bikini Bottom,

Genesis Kaeo is Buster Bluetang/Electric Skates, Isaiah Gundermann Graham is Old Man Jenkins/Electric Skates, and Andrew Erwin is Larry the Lobster/Electric Skates.

The ensemble will include Nanea Allen, Marisa Noelle Capalbo,
Celia Chun, Alana Clayson, Sammy Houghtailing,
James Lauer,
and Timmy “Tino” Nozaki.


Performances will be at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays and at 3 p.m. Saturdays and 4 p.m. Sundays. Extended playdates are likely, considering the popularity of “SpongeBob.”

Tickets are $41 to $68, on sale at the at www.diamondheadtheatre.com and at the box office, (808) 733-0274….

And that’s Show Biz…

WOMEN EMPOWERMENT IN ‘SIX’

“Six: The Musical”  might be deemed a musical for the Tik Tok generation. It’s now, it’s pow, it’s empowerment for women.

The Broadway show opened last night (June 17) for a two-week residency (through June 29) as the second of three Broadway in Hawaii attractions at Blaisdell Concert Hall.

“Six” plays like a pulsating concert and doubles like a talent show competition. It’s like a routine Broadway musical , but on steroids,  with unbridled energy from a versatile cast of six, which sings loudly and proudly and uncorks choreographics like disco divas. They enacting the six wives of King Henry VIII.

The cast of “Six: The Musical:” Like a “British Got Talent” competition.

With its competitive spirit, it resembles a “British Got Talent” competish, with emphasis on Tudors, but minus the judges.

 It’s a volley of twisted history – fact-checkers need not apply – about grand dames who are  “divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, and survived,” in the order of the fates of Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, Anna of Cleves, Katherine Howard and Catherine Parr. They form the exes of Henry VIII.

Alize Cruz, as Katherine Howard; she dons a pink ponytail, a la Ariana Grande.

In the touring company, the wives are portrayed by Chani Maisonet, Gaby Albo, Kelly Denice Taylor, Danielle Mendoza, Alize Cruz and Tasia Jungbauer. You won’t remember their names, so labeling the characters as numbers – 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 – would facilitate their identities and fate.

This is super cast with tireless moves and grooves. They’re the highlights of a modern playing field, with ounces of bounces like a pin ball machine.

There’s sizzle and socko animation in the scenic design and lighting (often neon), costumes that are reflective short skirts for four ladies, long pants and short pants for two, orchestration that go-go-goes with throbbing and titillating syncopation. The choreography is brisk and bold, with solo and ensemble dynamics.

Gaby Albo, as Anne Boleyn.

If there were a dance floor, hundreds would be gyrating with joy. Many dress to the nines, to reflect the party spirit. And the audience is generous in cheer and esprit.

The show runs a tidy 80 minutes, with no intermission, and clearly leaves the fans wanting more – could be the reason for the two-week residency, compared to a single week for the first show (“Tina, the Tina Turner Musical,” earlier this summer) and the finale (“Chicago,” in December).

Curiously, there are only nine numbers in the production, a solo apiece for the principals, and a trio of tunes featuring The Queens, in the opening, midway through the show, and at the finale. Because the songs are rich and robust, most with a catchy cadence and delivered by the all-star queens, it just feels like there’s a lot more in the score, thanks to the riveting deliveries.

“Six” could be described as an entertainment to empower womanhood, because of the outspoken rants and ramblings in the storytelling. Surely, the wider appeal is to women, but their beaus will find enough eye candy to relish.  The four-member house band dubbed The Ladies in Waiting is comprised of women, deliberately playing on the empowerment of m’ladies.

Pop culture influences are shared, if you explore. Alize Cruz as Katherine Howard flashes a pink ponytail which soars as an obvious tribute to Ariana Grande; Kelly Denise Taylor as Jane Seymour exudes the tone and delivery of either Adele or Beyonce on her “Heart of Stone” tune, bluesy with familiar love overtones.

You’re not likely to carch all the commotion in one visit, so consider a hana hou visit — with seats a-plent, if you buy now…/

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“Six: The Musical”

What: A historical musical by Toby Marlow and Lucy Moss

Where: Blaisdell Concert Hall

When: 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturdays, and 1 and 6:30 p.m. Sundays, now through June 29

Tickets: Visit www.broadwayinhawaii.com or the Blaisdell box office at (808) 768-5252

Top10/15th

‘Wicked’ reclaims No. 1 at the box office

With the closing of both “Good Night, and Good Luck” and
“Othello,” the $4 million-plus box office grosses each produced have disappeared.

Thus, “Wicked” has reclaimed the top spot on the weekly Broadway grosses, for the week ending June 15, with more modest $2 million-plus tallies

The Top 10:

1–“Wicked,” $2.341 million

2 — “Glengarry Glen Ross,” $2.215 million

3—” The Lion King.” $2.086 million

4—“Hamilton,” $2.062 million

5—“Sunset Blvd.,: $1.665 million

6—“The Picture of Dorian Gray,” $1.508 million

7–“Aladdin,” $1.402 million

8—“Oh, Mary,” $1.354million

9—“Death Becomes Me,” $1.378 million

10—”Buena Vista Social Club,” $1.288 million

The complete list, courtesy the Broadway Guild:

And that’s Show Bz…