Buffalo’ed: Kumu Kahua Theatre Presents a Drama of Our Forgotten History

  

Buffalo’ed Kumu Kahua

Pictured:
Maile Kapuaala, Michelle Umipeg, Rodney Osorio, Max Holt. Picture by Denise De Guzman

WHAT: Buffalo’ed by Jeannie Barroga

WHERE: Kumu Kahua Theatre, 46 Merchant Street

WHEN: January 26 – February 26, 2017

COST: $5-$25; Ticket information below

INFO: 536-4441, kumukahua.org

HONOLULU, HI—Kumu Kahua Theatre begins 2017 with a story of Anglo colonization reaching into the Philippines, and the men and women who fought to stop it.

Moving, thrilling, enriching and entertaining – Madley Katarungan

terrific..AWESOME…deeply moved… Beautifully done..a great drama! – Vangie Buell

AMAZING! The script, acting, dance, and of course, attention to this historical moment – Aimee Suzara

Powerful story retold with grace and power – Rebecca Mabanglo-Mayor

The Buffalo Soldiers were primarily in the U.S. cavalry assembled during the Civil War. Their bravery impressed everyone and they were ‘invited’ to participate in more wars for ‘freedom’ world wide: Spanish-American War, San Juan, Puerto Rico, Cuba, then Hawai‘i and Alaska, the Boxer Rebellion, the Philippine War for Independence.

“We have History, taught in our schools as part of our heritage, and most importantly, attached to our backgrounds.”  Says playwright Jeannie Barroga.  “Generations today need to know how they FIT and why they are the fabric of this diverse gathering labeled the United States. They need to know that and how in 1899 –after an empire-building sixteen months — islands south of the U.S. and westward across the Pacific were presumptuously occupied by a young nation still smarting from its own Civil War. Reminders are vital, recounting the sham trial and sentencing of Hawai’i’s Queen Liliuokalani to the closed-door sale of the Philippines. That need to remind descendants of their untaught history fueled my in-depth research for Buffalo’ed.

Told through the conduit of a wide range of theatrical tropes, this is a timely story of a part of history that needs to be told: the Filipino and Black-American experience at the hands of “manifest destiny.”

Thursday, Friday & Saturday 8pm: January 26, 27, 28; February 2, 3, 4, 9, 10, 11, 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 25, 2017

Sundays 2pm: January 29; February 12, 19, *26, 2017

*American Sign Language Interpretation upon request

(No show Super Bowl Sunday, February 5)

Tickets for performances can be purchased with a credit card by calling 536-4441, or by visiting the box office at 46 Merchant Street (corner of Bethel and Merchant Streets, downtown) between 11am and 3pm Monday through Friday. Tickets can also be purchased at KumuKahua.org.

Ticket prices are $5-$25.

Kumu Kahua productions are supported in part by The Hawai‘i State Foundation on Culture and Arts through appropriations from the Legislature of the State of Hawai‘i and by the National Endowment for the Arts. Also paid for in part The Hawai‘i Tourism Authority, The Hawai‘i Community Foundation, McInerny Foundation (Bank of Hawai‘i, Trustee); Hawaiian Electric Industries (HEI) Charitable Foundation, The Atherton Foundation and Hawaiian Electric Company; The Star-Advertiser and other foundations, businesses and patrons.

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