Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
2009: Hula ("Let the Story Be Told") Operation Aloha Thanksgiving Dinner community dinner in Hawaii in 2008, sponsored annually by the Waialua Community Association. 2008: Hula ("The Art of Hawaiian Dance") 2007: Ke Kahua Lani o Hawaii; 2006: Na Paniolo Nui o Hawaii - The Great Cowboys of Hawaii; 2005: Nā Honu Hawaiʻi ("The Spirit Within")
The center, owned by Kamehameha Schools at the time, completed a $100 million renovation in 2007 to include more retailers and restaurants. [2] The center was sold to RHC Property Holding LLC in 2013. [3] The Apple Store at the Royal Hawaiian Center was permanently closed on January 20, 2024. [4]
The festival is dedicated to the memory of King David Kalākaua, the last king of the Kingdom of Hawaii, who reigned from 1874 until his death in 1891. [1] Kalākaua was “a patron of the arts, especially music and dance,” and is credited with reviving many endangered native Hawaiian traditions such as mythology, medicine, and chant. [1]
The first festival was in 1991 by the Molokai Visitors Association and John Kaimikaua, a Kumu Hula.It is currently organized by the Halau Hula o Kukunaokala. [2]It is held in annually in Kaana because according to Hawaiian legend, Laka, now regarded as the goddess of hula, created hula at Pu'u Nana, a sacred hill in Kaana, before spreading the art form across the islands.
In 1985, he founded a company of dancers, known as Nā Lei Hulu i ka Wēkiu in San Francisco. [1] [2] The company's style blends traditional movements with non-Hawaiian music like opera, electronic, dance, alternative, and pop. The company's visually captivating stage productions showcase both hula mua and authentic, traditional pieces.
Print/export Download as PDF ... move to sidebar hide. Royal Hawaiian may refer to: Royal Hawaiian Hotel, Honolulu; Royal Hawaiian Center, a retail complex in Waikiki ...
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
The Royal Four siblings were raised in the Protestant Christian faith, but saw the hula as part of their cultural heritage. One of the leading critics of the Kalākaua era was Presbyterian minister Sereno E. Bishop, who often incorporated his revulsion of the "bestialities of the hula hula" [18] into his sermons. He took particular offense at ...