HARA NAMES 2023 LIFETIME ACHIEVERS

A roster of bona fide luminaries in Hawaii’s recording industry will be honored in the Hawaii Academy of Recording Arts’ Lifetime Achievement Awards gala Nov. 5 at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel’s Monarch Room.

The 2023 inductees are:

  • Audy Kimura, left, a singer, composer, guitarist, engineer, and producer best known for his “Lovers and Friends” hit; also a longtime entertainer (now retired) at Hy’s Steak House, a commercial jingle writer and accomplished rifle shooter.
  • Karen Keawehawai‘i, left below, a veteran singer, recording artist, television host and radio personality, actress, featured voice with the Royal Hawaiian Band but also known for a floral garden in her hair.
  • Nohelani Cypriano, right, below a singer, composer, keyboardist, club performer and wife of Dennis Grau.
  • Les Ceballos, left below, a singer well known as a mainstay in the Kamehameha Schools song contest.

  • Kata Maduli, below right, is arecording artist, show presenter, and the father of McKenna Maduli and the husband of Janet Maduli.

A luncheon ceremony will begin at 10 a.m. with a silent auction and no-host cocktails, with doors opening at 11:30 a.m. for seating and a lunch at 11 a.m.  The ceremony begins at noon and will feature entertainment with biographic profiles, concluding at 2 p.m.

The event also will bestow a Legacy Recognition honor to the late Cynthia “Cindy” Ann Lance, a Hula Records executive who also was  researcher and writer and savvy and knowledgeable Hawaiiana expert.

Tickets: $90.

Details: info@HARAHAWAII.com or call  Janet Maduliat (808) 282-5577…

Hollywood strike has impacted local filming

The shutdown of Hollywood productions on the Mainland impacted Hawaii shows too.

 With actors going on strike, in support of the Writers
Guild of America walkout, all shows are on pause.

Nearly 160,000 members of the Screen Actors Guild and American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) are supporting  the 20,000 Writers Guild of America members who have been picketing since May, when negotiations broke down with writers seeking a new three-year contract with movie studios.

The SAG-AFTRA strike affects 1,200 actors in Hawaii.

The shows affected are CBS’ “NCIS: Hawai‘i,” which apparently completed its second season filming before the shutdown occurred, and Disney’s live-action “Moana” and  live-action “Lilo and Stitch” features. NBC’s “Magnum P.I.” called off part of the show’s fifth season, too, but the closure came before the WGA and SAG-AFTRA walk-out, and its status is in limbo and likely is being cut off from NBC, the network that gave it a safety net pickup.

Amy Hill, pictured, who was a “Magnum” recurring star for CBS’ four seasons of the procedural and also the shortened fifth season on NBC, also has been doing the “Lilo and Stitch” project, told Hawaii News Now that labor disputes no longer are surprising. “Having been in this business for a while I kind of, I’m always ready for losing a job,” said Hill. …

And that’s Show Biz. …

MUSEUM HOME TO MEMORABILIA

Fifteenth in a series of Broadway reports

NEW YORK – The Museum of Broadway, an immersive and intimate (by museum standards) emporium of everything Broadway, is a show-goer’s dream come true.

Opened last November, the museum has corridors of treasured and historical Broadway fare.

Like, costumes. Lots.

Sheet music. Fascinating.

Stage models. Curious.

But you can’t easily soak it all in.

Since I’m a lifelong fan, follower and reviewer of Broadway musicals, I found the density and variety of historical memorabilia gratifying. Brought back memories of so many productions, most of I’ve sat through over the decades..

So many treasures to see.

Like, Annie’s red dress. The monkey music box from “The Phantom of the Opera” auction (pictured, left). A West Side Story jacket. Patti LuPone’s “Evita” wig. A collage of  “Rent” street junk.  Puppets from “Lion King.” A cornfield as high as an elephant’s eye, representing “Oklahoma!” “Hamilton” costumes on headless mannequin. A top hat from “A Chorus Line.” A scale model of the “Chorus” finale, “One Singular Sensation” (pictured below) . A vintage jukebox, featuring labels showcasing songs from “West Side Story.” Darling “Avenue Q” puppets.

There are a couple of astounding, eye-filling installations, too. Like a Ziegfeld Follies wall full of pink feathers and a mammoth memorial Broadway Cares AIDS quilt, comprised of several dozens of show title panels, the ultimate show keepsake.

I had two favorites: the AIDS quilt (pictured above)) and a neon sign next to Annie’s dress, proclaiming “The sun will  come out tomorrow” (pictured below).

While several of his caricatures of Broadway greats are part of the exhibit, the museum currently has an Al Hirschfeld special exhibition, where you can seek out how many times he’s embedded his daughter’s name, Nina, hidden in his iconic caricatures. One of the popular caricatures is Hirschfeld’s Carol Channing memory, from : “Hello, Dolly” (pictured below).

The facility, next to the Lyceum Theatre, includes three levels of inspection and viewing. You arrive and are whisked by a docent of sorts into an elevator, to rise to the top third level, then work your way down, by stairs or elevator.

But the hallways are tight, the elevators tiny (like a tiny apartment building’s), so mobility and comfort are challenged. I visited on the second day of my experience in navigating a rental electric wheelchair, and it was a difficult task, so my buddy Kevin Iwamoto became a pusher after the chair was switched from electric to manual mode.

Vi and me, on wheelchair, in the”Oklahoma” sector, where the corn is as high as, well, you know…

The tightness of space, with the bounty of exhibits, results in a claustrophobic feeling, especially when the corridors are people with young and old alike. It minimally takes 90 minutes to navigate all three levels, including the prime exhibition zone, a floor devoted to how-a-play-evolves and the ground floor that includes, natch, a merch shop. Since I rarely buy logo-tees at the shows, anymore, I opted for a smart-looking navy sweatshirt with Museum of Broadway wordage, Broadway repeating  nine times.

And that’s Show Biz …

Museum of Broadway

The first permanent museum, focusing the history and highlights of the Broadway show experience.

Location: 145th W. 45th St., between Sixth and Seventh Aves.in Times Square

Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. daily; designate visiting time

Tickets: $39 to $49, with a portion of each ticket benefiting the nonprofit Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AID

Information: www.themuseumofbroadway.com

ANOTHER OPENING, ANOTHER SHOW…

Fourteenth in a series of Broadway reports

NEW YORK – On Broadway, something’s always opening. Many shows will survive, some will fall by the wayside.

That’s the tempo and reality on The Great White Way.

You can’t possibly see everything. The choices and diversity will continue over the next few months, leading up to the Tony Awards in June. So if you’re a Broadway fan, you need to be aware and alert.

Looking ahead, here’s what’s on the Broadway calendar. Dates may change, so check websites for the latest data.

A select list of what’s coming up:

  • “The Shark Is Broken,” opening Aug. 10, at the Golden Theatre. A hilarious sliver of history about one of the world’s top films, “Jaws.” It’s 1974, in Martha’s Vineyard, aboard a boat occupied by Ian Shaw, as his dad Robert Shaw, Colin Donnell as Roy Schneider, and Alex Brightman  as Richard Dreyfuss. Not known if the shark will get starpower.
  • “Purlie Victorious,” opening Sept. 7, at the Music Box Theatre. Leslie Odom Jr. (“Hamilton” Tony winner) stars as a black preacher in Ossie Davis’ non-Confederate comedy where he is trying to win back his church.
  • Melissa Etheridge: My Window,” opening Sept. 28, at the Circle in the Square Theatre. An evening of storytelling and music, with heart and soul, about Melissa Etheridge’s, pictured above, Kansas roots and journey that includes bumps in the road.
  • “Gutenberg! The Musical,” opening Sept. 5, at the James Earl Jones Theatre. Starring Josh Gad and Andrew Rannells, pictured below, tackling big dreams, minuscule odds, and tons of unearned confidence in the staging of a musical, with  the actors finally reuniting  10 years after starring in “The Book of Mormon.”
  • “Merrily We Roll Along,” opening Sept. 19, at the Hudson Theatre. A glimpse at the three-decades-long relationship between composer Franklin Shepard and his lifelong friends, writer Mary and lyricist-playwright Charley. With tunes by Stephen Sondheim, book by George Furth, based on a play by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart.
  • “Harmony,” opening Nov. 13, at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre. Based on the true story about the Comedian Harmonists, a hot six-member group of the 1920s and 1930s,  who sold millions of discs and made dozens of films,, and sold out the biggest theaters world-wide. A timely rags-to-riches story lost to history returns to dazzling life with a cast of Broadway favorites.
  • “I Need That,” opening Dec. 31, theater to be named. Danny DeVito stars as Sam, who doesn’t get out much, faces eviction unless he cleans up his property, so he has to reckon with what’s trash, what’s treasure, what’s not. His daughter Lucy DeVito and Ray Anthony Thomas co-star.
  • “The Wiz,” opening Dec. 31, theater to be announced. Based on L. Frank Baum’s children’s book, “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz”, with a transformational all-black cast complete with the Lion, the Tin Man and the Scarecrow.
  • “Cabaret,” spring 2024, August Wilson Theatre. A West End revival is moving to Broadway, reopening the Kit Kat Club. The evergreen musical with the enduring score by John Kander (music) and Fred Ebb will be directed by Olivier-winning  Rebecca Frecknail. A cast has not been named, but the London players included Eddie Redmayne as the Emcee and Jessie Buckley as Sally Bowles (pictured above).
  • “Doubt: A Parable,” February 2024, at the American Airlines Theatre. Tyne Daly and Liev Schreiber as the prickly nun and reformist priest, respectively, will spar in John Patrick Shanley’s Tony and Pulitzer Prize-winning psychological warfare…

Start spreading the news…

Ol’ Blue Eyes is getting the musical theater treatment in “Sinatra, The Musical.” Its world premiere will be in a Sept. 23 through Oct. 28 run at the Birmingham Rep in Birmingham, England, and the show boasts 25 trademark Sinatra tunes.

Deadline has reported that producers have tapped Matt Doyle to portray – and presumably, sing very much like – Frank Sinatra.  The show features a book by Joe DiPietro, who wrote “Memphis” and “Diana,” and Kathleen Marshall will direct and choreograph.

Of course, the show has to cross the pond, and if it materializes to expectations, it could remain and reboot at a larger venue and a longer run. A Broadway move would be logical, of course, and we can only wish and hope …

And that’s Show Biz. …

‘FUTURE’: IT’S ALL ABOUT THE DELOREAN

Thirteenth in a series of Broadway reports

 NEW YORK – “Back to the Future: The Musical” is off to a swift start. Based on the movie starring Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd, the show is soaring to hitsville while still in previews at the Winter Garden Theatre on Broadway. (Formal opening night is Aug. 3).

Seriously, however, the production is all about the car. Yes, the DeLorean from the 1985 movie is back, and it’s roaring and soaring and seemingly flying, thanks to technology.

Casey Likes is Marty McFly, Roger Bart is Doc Brown, in “Back to the Future: The Musical.”

Roger Bart, who originated the role of Doc Brown in London, has been transported to America. But Marty McFly, the character played by Fox in the flick and Olly Dobson in London, had to be a bona fide American, so Casey Likes, most recently in “Almost Famous,” likely will be Fully Famous in the months ahead, with diehard fans of the franchise flocking to the Winter Garden.

The DeLorean is the the star of the show, a “character” of sorts.

The key attraction will be the winged vehicle, which varooms and seemingly defies gravity, returning to 1955. Fans are howling with frenzied delight, even if the time travel vehicle is stationary, seemingly moving because of blurry, wheezing special effects that give it life with the help of flashing lights and smoke. The vehicle is said to be a $300,000 piece of scenery – but it can spin, tilt, and revolve. For the record, the DeLorean remains on stage, within the proscenium stage. It doesn’t actually fly. It will become a costly investment to build  more DeLoreans, since “Future” has at least eight international productions planned with additional North American companies envisioned.

I do remember a “flying” vehicle in a show years ago, one that elevated  (via hydraulics) over the orchestra audience – a fake flight, but nonetheless overhead, and thrilling.

Written by Robert Zemekis and Bob Gale, who created the film version, the stage show sticks to the familiar tale. Gale wrote the book, too, and music is by Alan Silvestri and Glen Ballard.

McFly (Casey Likes) rocks on, in an early scene of “Future.”

When the play opens, Marty McFly is visiting his friend Doc Brown’s lab, rocking out a tune with a guitar on steroids. The set is a brilliant hodge-podge of stuff, and Likes is a suitable teenager doing youthful things like auditioning for a show.

He is the John Travolta to Mikaela Secada’s Jennifer Parker, who is the Olivia Newton John, a cute teen tale couple, whose “Wherever We’re Going” duet reflects their easy-going life. There is somewhat of an unstated undercurrent that is hard to overcome: every role and many moments of the show are haunted by the iconic original film and actors. A tough act to follow.

“Future” has a lot of musical numbers but lacks the vibe of becoming hits.

Natch, the McFly clan returns – George McFly, dad of Mary, Dave, and Linda McFly, and husband of Lorraine Baines McFly – and the clocktower is back too, complete with the requisite lightning show.

There’s a lot of songs that don’t necessarily stay with you after the show. Likes’ rockin’ “Johnny B. Goode”  and Marvin Berry’s (Jelani Remy) “Earth Angel,” are oldies but goodies in the soundtrack – a reminder that nostalgia requires songs from memory lane. None of the new numbers seem to have that vibe to become a breakout singular sensation.

A few techies are also “stars” in that their craftsmanship is fuel for the DeLorean.  Sound designer Gareth Owen, lighting designers Tim Lutkin and Hugh Vanstone, and video designer Finn Ross are the magicians who bring life and motion to the vehicle.

When all is said, “Future” will be all about the car. It doesn’t speak, but it is rightfully a character of its own. …

‘Back to the Future’

“Back to the Future: The Musical,” based on the Universal film written by Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale, is a new musical with book by Bob Gale and music by Ala Silvestri and Glen Ballard.

Directed by John Rando, and choreographed by Chris Bailey, with music conducted by Ted Arthur

Previewing at the Winter Garden Theatre on Broadway, with a formal opening on Aug. 3

Broadway grosses, week ending July 9

The future looks good for “Back to the Future: The Musical,” now in previews en route to its formal Aug. 3 opening night at the Winter Garden Theatre.

In its two-week run, for the week ending July 9, the show, based on the movie that starred Michael J. Fox, the musical already made the million-dollar club, meaning its gross has topped $1.222 million, earning the No. 9 spot on the top ten.

We list the Top 7 every week, and these were the leaders:

1—“The Lion King, $2.132 million.

2 – “Wicked,” $1.967 million.

3 – “Hamilton,” $1.855 million.

4 – “Sweeney Todd, the Demon Barber of Fleet Street,” $1.740 million.

5 – “MJ, the Michael Jackson Musical,” $1.540 million.

6 – “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child,”  $1.464 million.

7 – “Moulin Rouge,” $1.175 million.

Here’s the complete list, courtesy The Broadway League.”

And that’s Show Biz. …

NEWTON TOPS BLUE(NOTE) YULE

Christmas in July?

If you’re thinking of a Blue (Note) Christmas, now’s the time to plan.

Early calendar notes from the club at the Outrigger Waikiki resort include a surprise.

  • Wayne Newton, pictured, he of “Danke Schoen” a Las Vegas megastar for decades known for his “Danke Schoen” hit, will headline six shows Dec. 8, 9, and 10.  It’ll be his Blue Note debut. Performances will be at 6 and 9 p.m., with tickets priced at $125 for premium seating and $85 for loge and bar. He might not have that big band of the years past, but he’ll have a lot of now-nostalgic music to share.
  • Sheila E. & the E-Train choo-choos in Dec. 13 and 14, with shows at 6:30 and 9 p.m. Tickets are $55 premium, $45 loge and bar.

  • Don McLean, pictured, returns for a pair of shows at 6:30 p.m. Dec. 2 and 3. Of course he’ll serve his iconic “American Pie.” Tickets are $125 premium, $65 loge and bar.

Local acts also dot the holiday roster at Blue Note. Among them:

  • Mike Lewis presents the 7th Annual Frank Sinatra Tribute Show, at 7 p.m. Dec. 12. Tickets are $35 premium, $25 loge and bar.
  • Ho‘okena features guest singer Maila Gibson, in a pair of performances at 4 and 7:30 p.m. Dec. 17. Tickets are $45 premium, $35 loge and bar.
  • Mike Lewis stages the 7th Annual ‘A Charlie Brown Christmas,” at 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. Dec. 24 and 25. Tickets: $35 premium and $25 loge and bar.

Surely, there will be other holiday shows announced in the weeks ahead, but these early-bird signings might prod early buying.

Reservations: www.bluenotehawaii.com or (808) 777-4890. …

Around town

Singer Shari Lynn, pictured, and pianist Jim Howard return to the Hilton Hawaiian Village’s Paradise Lounge, from 7 to 10 p.m. Saturday (July 15).

She was to appear July 1, but she had a medical incident after she performed at the recent memorial at Diamond Head Theatre for theater veteran Bree Bumatai Peters, that required an ER visit and hospitalization and subsequent doctor visits. She’s recovering nicely, hence  raring to return to her mike and the spotlight.

Her buddy Mary Gutzi, pictured, who happened to be in town, subbed for her at the Paradise Lounge, but that’s what friends are for. Gutzi will get more Paradise Lounge time when she’s featured again July 22 and 29, with Howard as accompanist. She’s a keen actress with Broadway creds, but she’ll take detour to South Korea at the end of September to portray Mother Superior in the musical comedy, “Sister Act.” …

And that’s Show Biz. …