Kumu Kahua Theatre Announces 42nd SeasonWHAT: Announcement of 42nd Season - Fall 2012-Summer 2013 Kumu Kahua Theatre, dedicated to producing works by Hawai‘i writers and about Hawai‘i's culture, announced their 42nd season at a press conference on Sunday, May 6th at 5:00 PM at their home on the corner Merchant and Bethel Streets. On that day, a volunteer appreciation party took place at the theatre, and was punctuated with a season announcement press conference, giving the hard-working volunteers of Kumu Kahua Theatre front row seats for the much anticipated announcement. The volunteer party was an invitation-only event, but all members of the press and general public were invited to the press conference. Managing Director, Donna Blanchard, began the press conference by welcoming and thanking the guests for being there to celebrate 42 years of the unique theatre Kumu Kahua brings to Hawai`i. Artistic Director, Harry Wong III, then spoke briefly about the selection process of each play. He then read the title of each as Board President, Jason Kanda, read descriptions of each script. Donna Blanchard then showed the logos that have been created by artist, Ryan Higa, for each production. Approximately 70 people were in attendance. One Comedy of Erras Shakespeare’s rollicking farce, local-style “Because you have da same blood, you tink you related. You tink dat’s wat makes you you?” twin brothers, separated at birth — one raised on the Mainland, the other in Hawai‘i — accidentally cross paths in downtown Honolulu. As their friends mistake one for the other, the slapstick and insults fly, and chaos ensues. The result is a true comedy of errors, a Shakespearean romp told with a pidgin flair. In the tradition of Twelf Nite o WATEVA! comes Taurie Kinoshita’s deft and dizzying farce about all the pilikia of local life. Fishing for Wives Comic confusion over a picture-bride mix-up Our most prolific playwright and the author of It’s All Relative and Aloha Las Vegas, Edward Sakamoto finds laughter and warmth in this loving portrait of historic Hawai‘i. A Cage of Fireflies A piercing kitchen-sink drama Three elderly sisters of the kibei generation — sent as children to be raised in Okinawa, then returned to live and work in Hawai‘i — are at the heart of Daniel Akiyama’s new play. Two of the sisters confine themselves to their small Honolulu apartment, enacting the rituals of daily life as they cling to a dream of returning to Okinawa. The third, charged with running the family’s orchid nursery, has inherited a title that is not hers. As long-hidden hopes and regrets surface, the sisters discover what is both selfish and selfless in their love for each other. All That Remains A ghostly World War II epic In this sweeping epic of World War II, the ghosts of 442nd and 100th Battalion soldiers return. Telling a story of loyalty and betrayal, courage and cowardice, they re-create an act of violence that torments both the living and the dead. Using an experimental style drawing from Japanese Noh theatre, Mona Z. Smith’s All That Remains offers a challenging, controversial look at the heroism and despair of war. Sound and Beauty Two haunting dramas about dark attractions “This house — my loneliness is etched into its walls.” The dark corners of human attraction are explored in David Henry Hwang’s Sound and Beauty, two one-act plays performed together in a full evening of theatre. In “The Sound of a Voice,” a samurai encounters a mysterious woman in a lonely cottage, and begins to suspect her powers are not of this world. In “The House of Sleeping Beauties,” a modern-day writer seeks out an exclusive brothel where the girls all share a haunting trait. First performed off-Broadway in 1983, Sound and Beauty reveals the strange and lyrical world of David Henry Hwang, the Tony Award-winning author of M. Butterfly and Chinglish. About Kumu Kahua |
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