20.31 The Wild Silken Universe of Akihiiko Izukura, January 12, 2017, Volume 20, Issue 31, MauiTime

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January 12, 2017 ✚ Volume 20 ✚ Issue 31 ✚ FREE

The Wild

SILKEN UNIVERSE RIP EDDIE

KAMAE

PG.7

PEACOCK CHAIR HISTORY

LION ISN"T

PG.10

LYIN'

PG.19

PG.13

MAUITIME.COM

PLUS

of Akihiko Izukura


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JANUARY 12, 2017


Contents

Two Convenient Locations to Serve You in Kahului & Lahaina

VOLUME 20 ✚ ISSUE 31

URGENT CARE • ACUTE INJURY • XRAY

ON THE COVER:

THIS WEEK’S QUESTION: What’s your favorite museum?

January 12, 2017 ✚ Volume 20 ✚ Issue 31 ✚ FREE

Publisher: Tommy Russo (808) 283-0512 / tommy@mauitime.com @tommyrusso on Twitter SF MOMA

The Wild Silken Universe of Akihiko Izukura Photo Courtesy: MACC

The Wild

SILKEN UNIVERSE

of Akihiko Izukura

PLUS

RIP EDDIE

KAMAE

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Culinary, Lifestyle & Business Editor: Jennifer Russo (808) 280-3286 / jen@mauitime.com @jenrusso on Twitter Advertising Executive: Sarah Gerlach (808) 283-3260 / sarah@mauitime.com California Academy of Sciences Art Director & Production Manager: Darris Hurst artdirector@mauitime.com / darrishurst.com National Museum of Natural History Graphic Designer: Jenn Carter Field Museum of Natural History

PG.7

PEACOCK CHAIR HISTORY

LION ISN"T

PG.10

LYIN'

PG.19

Cover Design By: Darris Hurst

PG.13

MAUITIME.COM

Editor: Anthony Pignataro (808) 283-1308 / anthony@mauitime.com @apignataro on Twitter National Air & Space Museum

NEWS & VIEWS FEATURE STORY A&E THIS WEEK’S PICKS FILM CRITIQUE FILM TIMES DA KINE CALENDAR THE GRID CLASSIFIED HOROSCOPE MIND, BODY & SPIRIT

Photographer: Sean Michael Hower mauiweddingmedias.com / howerphotography.com Contributors: Jenn Brown, Caeriel Crestin, Suzanne Kayian, Andrew Miller, Alex Mitchell, Ron Pitts, Chuck Shepherd, Barry Wurst II Admin Executive: Shannon Kekahuna (808) 244-0777 / shan@mauitime.com Pearl Harbor National Historic Site Proofreader: Dina Wilson

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MauiTime is published every Thursday by MauiTime Productions, Inc. Its contents are Copyright © 2017 by MauiTime Productions, Inc. All rights reserved. Subscriptions are available at $110 per year. Reproduction or use without permission is strictly prohibited. MauiTime may be distributed only by MauiTime’s authorized independent contractor. MauiTime is valued at $.50 per copy and permits one complimentary copy per person. No person may, without written permission of MauiTime, take more than one copy of each weekly issue. All opinions expressed throughout MauiTime are those of the authors and not necessarily the same opinions as MauiTime Productions, Inc. and MauiTime. MauiTime 16 S. Market St., Ste. 2K, Wailuku, HI 96793 office (808) 244-0777 www.mauitime.com @mauitime on Twitter Deadlines: Display Advertising: Friday Noon Classified: Monday 4pm Calendar: Monday Noon Circulation: 18,000 copies of MauiTime

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News & Views

by Anthony Pignataro

QUIZ understood before Dec. 1, 2016 have since been placed in other jobs? A. 124 B. 77 C. 45 D. 15 E. 7

2.

The SOST has 56 members from 28 different organizations, companies and government agencies. According to the Jan. 6 report, how many of its members come from either HC&S or its parent company Alexander & Baldwin? A. 1 B. 3 C. 8 D. 10 E. 14

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Southpointe 26-103. $265K 1. The first report of the Sugar Operators Support Taskforce (SOST)– charged with assisting the workers laid off by the Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar (HC&S) mill closure–came out on Jan. 6. According to the report, how many of the 268 workers let go

According to the SOST report, many HC&S workers were let go after Dec. 1, 2016? A. 306 B. 316 C. 326 D. 336 E. 346

See answers, page 29

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News & Views

by Anthony Pignataro

PHOTO COURTESY WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

Coconut Wireless

Senator Mazie Hirono

Such are the times we live in that a group of Democratic U.S. Senators, including Hawaii’s own Mazie Hirono and Brian Schatz, are sponsoring a new bill that would “prohibit the creation of any immigration-related registry program that classifies people based on their religion, race, age, gender, ethnicity, national origin, nationality, or citizenship.” Other Senate introducers include Cory Booker, D-New Jersey; Elizabeth Warren, D-Massachusetts; Ed Markey, D-Massachusetts; Patty Murray, D-Washington; Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont; Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont; and Jeff Merkley, D-Oregon. Known as the “Protect American Families Act,” the bill stands a legislative bulwark against the worst racist impulses of incoming President Donald Trump and his toadies, who have long advocated radical discrimination against Muslims (even to the point of advocating that the loathsome and unconstitutional Japanese internment camps represent useful “precedent” for dealing with Muslims. “This bill reinforces the core American value that no person should be discriminated against based on their religion, origin, race, ethnicity, or nationality,” said Schatz in a Jan. 5 news release from his office. “In Hawai‘i, one of the most diverse states in our country, we hold this belief as being central to our strength, resilience, and prosperity.” Needless to say, Hirono agrees with Schatz. “The protection of our Constitution is not conditional; it applies to all of us,” said Hirono in the same news release. “We must take all steps possible to keep the incoming administration from using fear and prejudice to target the Muslim community, or any other faith or nationality. We will continue to fight for an inclusive and vibrant America.” Given that Republicans currently control the U.S. Senate, it’s doubtful the Protect American Families Act will stop the Trump

Administration. At the same time, every bit of resistance against Trump and his Republican allies is valuable and necessary.

HAWAII STATE JUDICIARY WANTS YOU! Across the nation, honest people (or, at least, people who expect that our public officials act honestly) are shaking their heads in a combination of shame and nd anger at

PHOTO COURTESY WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

Overheard “…watch the Christmas special five days after Christmas…” -Guy at Maui Mall, Jan. 8

The application deadline is Feb. 4. Those interested can get application for both commissions at Courts.state.hi.us.

COMING SOON: COUNTY COUNCIL HEARING ON COMMITTEES New/old Maui County Council Chair Mike White has scheduled a fascinating public hearing for Monday, Jan. 16. Because Councilmembers Elle Cochran, Kelly King, Alika Atay and Don Guzman pushed back so hard on White during the Jan. 2 meeting in which he once again won the Council

PHOTO COURTESY WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

HAWAII SENATORS BACK PROTECT AMERICAN FAMILIES ACT

President-Elect Trump’s compulsive lying and fascist contempt for any behavior considered ethical. Most appallingly, he openly thumbs his nose at the insistence that he must divest himself of his Trump business empire before taking the oath of office, or risk violating the U.S. Constitution’s emoluments clause (which prohibits U.S. officials from taking any sort of payment from foreign governments). “When he takes the oath to uphold the Constitution he would be lying,” said Laurence Tribe, constitutional law professor at Harvard Law School, in a Dec. 1, 2016 Huffington Post article. “He can’t uphold the Constitution, one of whose central provisions he would be a walking, talking violation of.” Our incoming president may be an insult to our collective intelligences, but that doesn’t mean we should excuse such behavior everywhere. In fact, there are new openings in both the state Ethics Commission and the Campaign Spending Commission, which means you personally may one day soon be in a position to demand the highest ethical behavior from Hawaii officials and candidates. The five-member Ethics Commission “addresses ethical issues involving legislaregistered lobbyists, and tors, reg state employees [except for judges, who are overseen by a sepao rate body],” according to a Jan. 6 news release from the state Judiciary. As for the Campaign Spending Commission, that panel oversees all political campaign contributions and expenditures in the state. “Members of both commissions serve on a voluntary basis,” states the news release. “Travel expenses incurred by neighbor island commissioners to n attend meetings on O`ahu will be reatt imbursed. Applicants must be U. S. citiimbu residents of the State of Hawai`i and zens, res may not hold any other public office.”

Kalana O Maui Building in Wailuku

Chair job, White relented on one of his more hardline proposals–paving the way for this hearing. Originally, White bucked past precedent by not only naming all the County Council committee chairs, but the committee memberships, too. To no one’s surprise, he arranged the memberships so the councilmembers who were backed by the anti-GMO, slowgrowth SAFE Action Fund (that would be Cochran, King, Atay and Guzman) were in the minority in every single committee. Making matters even less democratic, he also unilaterally decided that some committees would have just five members. But at the Jan. 2 Organizational Meeting, White relented on all that. In fact, he retreated so far that he called for a public hearing to decide on the makeup and membership of the various council committees. That hearing will take place at 1:30pm on Monday, Jan. 16. The meeting will take place in the Council Chamber on the 8th Floor of the Kalana O Maui Building (200 S. High St., Wailuku). And yes, the public will get a chance to offer testimony. ■ editor@mauitime.com + @apignataro For more news articles, visit: mauitime.com/news

JANUARY 12, 2017

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News & Views

by Anthony Pignataro & Suzanne Kayian

MauiSphere award from the National Endowment for the Arts; the lifetime achievement award from the Hawaiian Academy of Recording Arts; and an honorary doctorate from the University of Hawaii “for a lifetime of achievements in preserving Hawaiian language and culture through music and film.” In lieu of flowers, Kamae’s family is requesting that people donate to the Hawaiian Legacy Foundation. -Anthony Pignataro

MAUI ARTIST BRAD FORSYTHE GETS LA EXPOSURE

PHOTO COURTESY EDDIE KAMAE

Maui artist Brad Forsythe was selected to exhibit a work of art in The Billboard Creative 2016-17 juried exhibition in Los Angeles. Forsythe was one of only 45 artists selected for the show from more than 1,000 entries. The Billboard Creative began in 2012 as an experiment with a single billboard. In April 2015, TBC placed 15 contemporary artists’ works on billboards in Los Angeles. Through that effort, The Billboard Creative met Mona Kuhn who signed on as curator with a vision to help the young organization expand in scale and depth of talent. Beginning early last month, TBC exhibits art on some of the busiest intersections in Los Angeles. These open air galleries feature renowned celebrated artists as well as a mix of established and emerging artists from eight countries.

Eddie and Myrna

MUSIC AND FILM LEGEND EDDIE KAMAE DIES

PHOTO COURTESY LAURA FORSYTHE

Hawaii lost another of its great cultural treasures this weekend. On the morning of Saturday, Jan. 7, Eddie Kamae died next to his wife Myrna in Honolulu. He was 89. According to the news release his foundation sent out following his death, his song “‘E Ku‘u Morning Dew” was playing in the background when he died. A wonderful ukulele player and of the founders of the Sons of Hawaii, Kamae helped bring about a Renaissance of Hawaiian music thought lost to history. “Together with Joe Marshall and David ‘Feets’ Rogers, Kamae and [cofounder Gabby] Pahinui brought to life an amazing repertoire of authentic Hawaiian music that might otherwise have been lost to the ages, including songs that were written by Queen Lili‘uokalani during her incarceration in ‘Iolani Palace after the U.S. Marines overthrew the Hawaiian monarchy in 1893,” states a news release from the Hawaiian Legacy Foundation sent out shortly after his death. “Kamae found them in the Bishop Museum archives, arranged the scores and began playing them. Soon everyone wanted to hear and sing them. By his persistent efforts to

reclaim Hawaiian music for his people, Kamae played a key role in helping Hawaiians regain the rich culture that continues to flourish today.” Kamae was also a gifted storyteller and documentarian. He and Myrna (his wife since 1966) created the Hawaiian Legacy Foundation to make and distribute their films. In 2007, when he released his film Lahaina: Waves of Change on the closure of the Pioneer Mill, Kamae sat down with writer Paul Wood for the MauiTime story “Eddie Sees It Go.” Here’s Kamae telling Wood why he made documentaries: “Change will always come,” Kamae told Wood. “That’s why I make documentary films. Because my teachers told me, do it now. For there will be no more. It’s true. You look at things today, the change is happening. All the people I have filmed, they’ve all passed away. But their stories and the places, I have that on film. And that’s what I’m trying to share with the children in the schools.” He was born Edward Leilani Kamae in Honolulu on Aug. 4, 1927. His 10 films are still shown today, especially to students statewide. In his lifetime, he’s won nearly 50 awards and honors, including the Master of Traditional Arts

numerous billboards that they view every day. “The injection of artistic speech into the urban environment offers an occasion for commuters to pause and contemplate,” said show curator Kuhn. “We hope to facilitate a cultural exchange, connecting artists with large audiences and bringing art to many people who might not otherwise have the opportunity to see it.” Forsythe has spent a lifetime working in the creative arts field and has been honored with numerous local, regional and national industry awards for creative excellence. Through a variety of collaborations, his art has appeared on products ranging from Tuscan made scarves to custom snowboards and skis. In 2014, he began collaborating with legendary surfboard shaper and global brand Jimmy Lewis, creating original art used for surface graphics on a new pro level SUP surfboard model. Most recently he teamed up with a retail apparel chain to develop an exclusive line of beachwear. Forsythe, who was recently honored with recognition from the International Design Awards competition, also creates non-traditional lens-based art merging his paintings with abstract digital images. His work has been selected for numerous exhibitions in Hawaii and throughout North America and appears in several international corporate and private collections. Kuhn is an internationally acclaimed artist best known for her large-scale dream-like images of the human form. Kuhn’s work has been exhibited in museums and galleries

Not a bad spot to hang a painting

“The LA culture is so connected to their automobiles; and LA has become a great city for art,” Forsythe said. “The idea of using billboards as a public display platform for an art exhibition is such a brilliant idea. To represent Hawaii and have one of my paintings reproduced on a large scale on Wilshire Boulevard is such a thrill.” Through this unusual public forum, TBC makes art as accessible to Angelenos as the

around the world including The J. Paul Getty Museum, the Royal Academy of Art in London and Le Louvre in France. The works for TBC exhibition were selected through a curated, blind-submission process. -Suzanne Kayian ■ editor@mauitime.com For more news articles, visit: mauitime.com/news

JANUARY 12, 2017

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We Like You Too!

News & Views

News Of The Weird OH-SO-SWEET DREAMS The Hastens workshop in Koping, Sweden, liberally using the phrase “master artisans” recently, unveiled its made-to-order $149,900 mattress. Bloomberg News reported in December on Hastens’ use of superior construction materials such as pure steel springs, “slow-growing” pine, multiple layers of flax, horsehair lining (braided by hand, then unwound to ensure extra spring), and cotton covered by flame-retardant wool batting. With a 25-year guarantee, an eight-hour-a-day sleep habit works out to $2 an hour. (Bonus: The Bloomberg reviewer, after a trial run, gave the “Vividus” a glowing thumbs-up.)

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AFTER

by Chuck Shepard

Humanity has accumulated an estimated 30 trillion tons of “stuff,” according to research by University of Leicester geologists–enough to fit over 100 pounds’ worth over every square meter of the planet’s surface. The scientists, writing in the Anthropocene Review, are even more alarmed that very little of it is ever recycled and that buried layers of technofossils that define our era will clutter and weigh down the planet, hampering future generations. (Don’t just think of “garage sale” stuff, wrote Mother Nature News; think of every single thing we produce.)

FINER POINTS OF THE LAW A federal appeals court agreed with a jury in December that Battle Creek, Michigan, police were justified in shooting (and killing) two hardly misbehaving family dogs during a legal search of a house’s basement. Mark and Cheryl Brown had pointed out that their dogs never attacked; one, an officer admitted, was “just standing there” when shot and killed. The officers said that conducting a thorough search of the premises might have riled the dogs and threatened their safety. (Unaddressed was whether a dog might avoid being shot if it masters the classic trick of “playing dead.”)

IF YOU SEE SOMETHING, SAY SOMETHING Hamden (Connecticut) High School was put into lockdown for an hour on Dec. 15 when a student was seen running in the hallway, zig-zagging from side to

side, swinging an arm and leaping into the air. Police were called, but quickly learned that it was just a 12th-grade boy practicing a basketball move and pretending to dunk.

BRIGHT IDEAS The Immigrants Wanted to Believe: For about 10 years, organized crime rings operated a makeshift U.S. “embassy” in a rundown pink building in Accra, the capital of Ghana, issuing official-looking identification papers, including “visas” that theoretically permitted entry into the United States. The U.S. State Department finally persuaded Ghanian officials to close it down, but it is unknown if any purchasers were ever caught trying to immigrate. The “embassy,” with a U.S. flag outside, had well-spoken “consular officers” who reportedly collected about $6,000 per visa.

WEIRD OLD WORLD Wu Jianping, 25, from China’s Henan province, complained in November that he had been denied home loans at several banks for not providing fingerprints–because he has no arms (following a childhood accident) and “signs” documents by holding a pen in his mouth. He was not allowed to substitute “toeprints.” And classes were canceled in early December in the village of Batagai in the Yakutia region of Siberia when the temperature reached minus 53 Celsius (minus 63 Fahrenheit)–but only for kids 15 and under; older children still had to get to school. Yakutia is regarded as the coldest inhabited region on the planet.

SEX TOYS IN THE NEWS The government in Saxony, Germany, chose as third-place winner of its 2016 prize for innovation and startup companies the inventor of the ingenious silent vibrator (leading to shaming of the economy minister Martin Dulig, now known as “Dildo Dulig”). And an unknown armed robber made off with cash at the Lotions and Lace adult store in San Bernardino, California, in December–although employees told police they angrily pelted the man with dildos from the shelves as he ran out the door.

LEAST COMPETENT CRIMINALS Leonard Rinaldi, 53, was arrested in Torrington, Connecticut, in November following his theft of a rare-coin collection belonging to his father. The coins were valued at about $8,000, but apparently to make his theft less easily discoverable, he ran them through a Coinstar coin-cashing machine–netting himself a cool $60. And James Walsh was arrested in Port St. Lucie, Florida, on Dec. 12 at a Wal-Mart after carting out an unpaid-for bigscreen TV. Walsh said he had swiped a TV on Dec. 11 with no problem–but failed to notice that, on the 12th, the store had a “shop with a cop” event at which St. Lucie County deputies were buying toys for kids. ■


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Send anonymous thanks, confessions or accusations, 200 words or less (which we reserve the right to edit), changing or deleting the names of the guilty and innocent, to “Eh Brah!” c/o MauiTime, 16 S. Market St, Ste. 2K, Wailuku, HI 96793 or send an e-mail to

ehbrah@mauitime.com

E

h brah! I’ve had better days and worse days. It happens. But I hit the bottom rung this time and realized that all I had left of any value was my cell phone. That was all I needed to restart the CLIMB! That’s when I saw a guy in a suit and his well-dressed (I think) girlfriend. They had a flat tire and were struggling with the jack. I stopped and helped them. When I started, I put my cell on top of their fender. I needed it near my ear because it’s my friend. When I finished, we shook hands and I put the jack away properly in the trunk. Then I got back in my car and drove away–forgetting that I left my phone on their rear fender. That’s when I went back to my job and the guy I work with told me a guy called from MY PHONE! It was safe and the guy was calling my recent numbers. He told me his address and I met with him. He said he saw an “unusual” shape in all the wet leaves on the center yellow stripe on Kanani Road. It was my phone, face down. I guess karma works both ways! Mahalo, brah! ■

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The Peacock Chair By Anthony Pignataro

PHOTO COURTESY MAUITIME

How a curious error at Hale Ho‘ike‘ike taught me Hawaiian history

T

hough a large chair, it doesn’t look all that comfortable. That’s possibly because the woven chair, though possessing a wide and high back, had a rather narrow sitting surface. More likely, it’s due to its lack of a comfortable seat cushion. In any case, on Saturday, Dec. 3, my girlfriend and I made a visit to Hale Ho‘ike‘ike (formerly known as the Bailey House Museum) in Wailuku, where I found the old, brown, woven peacock chair pushed against the wall up on the top floor. I stared at the chair a while, not because I was imagining how uncomfortable it would be to actually sit in it, but because there was something about its information label that didn’t seem right. “Peacock Chair,” read the printed card placed on the seat. “Brought to Hawaii

10 JANUARY 12, 2017

by General John Schofield aboard a transport circa 1916.” As far as American military figures are concerned, there are few more recognizable names than John Schofield. A sprawling U.S. Army base on Oahu bears his name, which was made famous in the book and movie versions of From Here to Eternity. I also knew that Schofield had once commanded the Army of the Pacific, and had been stationed in Hawaii. Not wanting to give up, I photographed the chair’s label and moved on to the rest of the museum. The chair gnawed at me on the drive home. Once inside, I got on my computer and searched for information about Schofield. The answer hit me in the face almost from the get-go. John Schofield died in 1906.

Of course. Schofield had been sent to Hawaii–in 1873 (his report even recommended that the U.S. establish a port at Pearl Harbor). It would have been impossible for Schofield to bring the chair to Hawaii in 1916. For three days, I debated what to do with this small but somewhat significant revelation. On the one hand, the museum seemed to be giving out bad information. On the other hand, I wasn’t a historian and didn’t want to sound like a know-it-all mansplainer. Finally, on Dec. 6, I gave in and emailed the Maui Historical Society (MHS), which runs Hale Ho‘ike‘ike. I told them that while I’d had a great time at the museum, I did notice that the Peacock Chair on the top floor seemed to have a problematic description, in that apparently Schofield

had died a decade before he supposedly brought the chair to Hawaii. Two days later, MHS archivist Marianne Klaus emailed me a response. “Our records state exactly what is written on the object label,” she wrote. “The only information that is not included on the label is that the chair was made at Bilibid Prison in the Philippines.” This didn’t seem promising at all. But she also wasn’t done. “Many thanks to you for pointing out that General John Schofield died in 1906,” Klaus wrote. Since that is the case, the information we have is wrong, the chair was definitely not brought to Hawaii by him, or it was brought by him but before 1906. The chair was given to the Maui Historical Society in 1958 and it has been on exhibit for a long time. I


doubt we will be able to find out what really happened with that chair, but we will remove the label.” I was elated. I’d done the right thing, and a small mistake was being corrected. But then I got to thinking–it wasn’t being corrected, just deleted. In fact, museum officials never seemed to have known anything about the chair, except that it was very old and came from a Philippine prison that dated to Spanish colonial days. Not sure what to do, I called up the image of the chair’s original label that I’d photographed. It was then that I realized that I’d completely missed the point of the chair.

Farrington was away and his daughter, Frances, was then a debutante and rather than have the matrons without their husbands, he had the debutantes. And the H.M.S. Hood and all these ships were there. We had a ball.” Wood was able to enjoy such access to wealthy and powerful in 20th century colonial Hawaii because of her grandfather, Dr. John Strayer McGrew. “A name that will stand out prominently in Hawaiian history as long as history endures, is that of Dr. John S. McGrew, famous physician and esteemed citizen of the old Hawaii, whose long activities in promotion of a political union between the islands and the United States won him the title of ‘The Father of Annexation,’” stated the Honolulu Star-Bulletin in 1925. “Dr. McGrew is believed to have been the first proponent of the proposition that Hawaii should be American, the first man to realize that under the American flag the islands and their people would find their greatest opportunity and the fullest realization of their destiny.” Born in Ohio in 1825, McGrew became a medical doctor. During the American Civil War, he worked as an army surgeon and served on the staffs of Generals George McClellan, William T. Sherman and Ulysses S. Grant. After the war, he and his family moved to Hawaii, where he beHale Ho‘ike‘ike came a fervent advocate of deposing the indigenous Hawaiian kingdom and making the islands U.S. territory. In today’s asked her father if he’d like to be gover- terms, we’d consider him an advocate of insurrection and rebellion. nor of Hawaii (he said no). “Immediately after the overthrow of “So it was fun living in the heyday of Queen Liliuokalani in 1893, Dr. Mcthe islands,” Wood recalled in an oral Grew was named by the “Annexation history she recorded for the Watumull Foundation Oral History Project in 1980. Club” as honorary editor of the Hawai“Every boat would bring people with ian Star,” the Star-Bulletin reported back letters of introduction and then later on, in 1925. “Dr. McGrew vigorously advoafter the Hackfield home had been sold, cated the cause of annexation through we moved down to Pearl Harbor to a the columns of the newspaper.” place my grandparents had and there the Given that today’s historians view the family entertained informally and we’d overthrown of the Hawaiian monarchy have as many as thirty to sixty people. I and the subsequent American annexation of Hawaii in far more negative terms (especially for the Hawaiian people, who lost their citizenship in the new, horribly named “Hawaiian Republic”) than those windblown words from the Star-Bulletin 90 years ago, It’s understandable that Hale Ho‘ike‘ike doesn’t have big displays explaining who Wood and McGrew actually were. But that’s fine–I’ve long believed PHOTO COURTESY MAUITIME that museums were meant to start conversamean, we had stacks of china and I could tions about history, not end them. bring home five or eight people just by Klaus is right–we’ll probably never telephoning a half hour ahead. We would know how peacock chair up on the top start a party and call up our friends and floor of the Wailuku museum actually got say, ‘Oh, we’re having a good time. Come to Hawaii. But that doesn’t diminish its on, join us.’ We had Victrola records and role as a signpost pointing to some of the whatnot and, ‘course, we had so many powerful individuals who shaped Hawaii’s navy friends and we would be able to go destructive colonial past. ■ aquaplaning in Pearl Harbor. And when editor@mauitime.com + @apignataro the British special service squadron was For more news articles, visit: in Honolulu, when Governor [Wallace Rider] Farrington was governor, Mrs. mauitime.com/news

looked them up. Today, we’d call Frances Cooper Wood a child of extraordinary privilege. Born in 1904, in Hawaii in the earliest years of the 20th century, she met Lucius Pinkham–”Uncle Pink” to her–when she was a small child (he was Hawaii Territorial Governor from 1913 to 1918). During her childhood, it was common for diplomats, generals and other powerful world leaders to visit her home for parties and social gatherings–President Warren Harding even

PHOTO BY SEAN M HOWER

The idea of the museum is ancient– the first known such museum opened about 2,300 years ago in Alexandria, Egypt, according to the late Emmanuel Arinze, who was president of the Commonwealth Association of Museums. They are, to put it simply, vital to health and maintenance of civilization. “The traditional role of museums is to collect objects and materials of cultural, religious and historical importance, preserve them, research into them and present them to the public for the purpose of education and enjoyment,” Arinze said in a 1999 lecture at National Museum in Georgetown, Guyana. “The museum as an institution tells the story of man the world over and how humanity has survived in its environment over the years. It houses things created by nature and by man and in our modern society it houses the cultural soul of the nation. It holds the cultural wealth of the nation in trust for all generations and by its function and unique position, it has become the cultural conscience of the nation.” Nationwide, there are more than 800 million visits to museums each year, according to the American Alliance of Museums (AAM). According to the organization, these museums “preserve and protect more than a billion objects.” It’s hard to overstate the importance museums play in culture–especially to young people. “Students who attend a field trip to an art museum experience an increase in critical thinking skills, historical empathy and tolerance,” states the AAM. “For students from rural or high-poverty regions, the increase was even more significant.” Here on Maui, Hale Ho‘ike‘ike is the home of the Maui Historical Society. Formed in the 1950s by the Maui Women’s Club, the society began leasing the Bailey House–the old Wailuku Female Seminary, which missionary teacher Edward Bailey had run in the early 19th century–in 1957 from the Wailuku Sugar Company for a buck a year. In 1991, Wailuku Sugar sold the house to Masaru “Pundy” Yokouchi, who proceeded to give the structure to the Maui Historical Society.

Today, the Historical Society holds some 10,000 artifacts and 8,000 photographs (not all are on display, obviously) that range from pre-European contact Hawaii to the missionary era, the overthrow of the monarchy and Hawaii territorial times. Balancing those times is a delicate process, to say the least. Interestingly enough, the AAM also insists that “Museums are considered a more reliable source of historical information than books, teachers or even personal accounts by relatives.” This must be because history

found in a book is an abstraction, while the actual sword carried by King Kalakaua is a tangible, touchable piece of reality. Of course, as I found out, the museum archivists and officials are people, and people can make mistakes on the informational labels and cards placed on exhibits–mistakes that can go uncorrected for years. But sometimes, even those errors can be instructive. In the end, the mislabeled chair still had a great deal to teach me. Not about Scho-

field, but about the person who’d donated the chair to the museum in the first place. Though I didn’t know it at the time, the chair is a link back to a tremendously important time in Hawaii history. According to the Peacock Chair information card, the chair was donated to the museum by Mrs. Frances C. Wood, who is identified as the “Granddaughter of Dr. John S. McGrew.” At first, the names meant nothing to me, so I did what all museums hope their visitors will do–I

JANUARY 12, 2017

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A&E

by Jen Russo

Wild Silken Universe

PHOTO COURTESY MACC

HOW AKIHIKO IZUKURA TURNED TEXTILES INTO MARVELOUS ART

Izukura feeding his silkworms Mulberry leaves

W

take on the spherical form as opposed to harsh sharp lines. The middle sphere has some sharp corners, and because it is constructed in a different fashion it can never replicate the spherical quality of the other two. I wanted to show the clumsy element of building things. When you look at the two round spheres, one I made and one the silkworms made, in my opinion the silkworms did the better job–they are naturally better weavers. Even though the shape is similar and we use the same weaving process, the worms have better craftsmanship.” The outside of the tunnel is looped by hanging silk panels that Izukura created with a method called Jinin. “This tunnel is actually all hand woven over the course of three months,” he says. “I use a small hand-held loom, 1.6

meters wide and five meters long. I really want to feel nature when I work. This is all one continuous piece of cloth. There are no seams and it has been all woven by one loom. By creating something so continuous and spherical, it feels like being part of nature. The outer grouping of panels was done over the course of three years. The flatness represents the human way in the world; the need to flatten things out or make sense of things architecturally. Taking the cocoons and stretching and spreading them as netting together, it is called Jinen. Each of the threads is 1,300 meters long and I do not cut them.” Izukura started working in his family textile business as a young man, and has been working with silk for a long time. I

PHOTO COURTESY MACC

hen you step into the Schaefer International Gallery this week, you’ll be spun into the wild silken universe of Akihiko Izukura. It starts with a massive room-sized woven silk gauze throat, a marvel that was all hand-loomed by Izukura. Expect to take your shoes off, and feel the silk beneath your feet as you gaze up at three giant silk orbs. This enormous interactive exhibit piece is titled “Eternal.” “I value nature in my process,” Izukura tells me through an interpreter. “In terms of materials, I use silk, mostly. This ball was created by 10,000 silkworms from the thread that they wove. That was over the course of four days. We used the thread directly from the silkworms on this one– they did not go into cocoons.” The orb was literally created by the worms. A little shelf off to the side shows images of how Izukura had the worms hanging on the circular shape as it took form. It’s a new style of weaving that he discovered–letting the silkworms take off and weave the thread on their own rather than just using their cocoons. “The silk used in these other two orbs are silk taken from the cocoons, but it is the same kind of silk,” he says. “The colors within the middle sphere are colors pulled from everyday life. Dyed using natural materials. This third final sphere I wove. I made it in competition with the silk worms creating their sphere, and it took me seven hours.” Izukura likens his orbs to planetesimals. “This sphere form is symbolic of nature,” says Izukura. “When you look at the planets and universe, so many things

Dyes from nature

don’t think I’ve met a person more dedicated to textiles and their research. “I don’t mesh well with ordinary life, or typical life in society,” he says. “I use almost all silk for my medium. It is the easiest fiber to work with for me. It is the cheapest material to work with. I actually cultivate the silkworms myself. Each silkworm will emit 13,000 meters of silk thread, which is about 10 square centimeters of fabric when flattened out. It makes it easy to calculate how many silkworms I need to create as much fabric as I want to create. The silkworms don’t mind being close. In that way, it is almost like society in Japan. Even if you have a lot of silkworms, they don’t fight for space, and they make their own cloth.” Letting the worms weave their own cloth was a recent breakthrough in his work. “To use cocoons, you do have to kill the pupae inside to get the silk,” he says. “Letting them weave the thread as they go is a way of creating the silk without having to kill the worms. Even from a young age, I have been interested in weaving, so instead of buying the silk I decided to raise silkworms myself. I have simplified my techniques since my younger days. Like letting the silkworms weave the textiles rather than working the fabric myself.” Izukura has spent a lifetime working in textiles. His family has been in the textile business for four generations. He became CEO of the textile company his father created called Hinaya when he was a freshman in college. Izukura took over when the market was changing and western clothing was becoming a part of Japanese life. He desperately wanted Continued on page 15

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A&E

by Jen Russo Continued from page 13

PHOTO COURTESY MACC

Coming to Maui to show his work has been a dream of Izukura’s. He met with Gallery Director Neida Bangerter to make it happen. “Akihiko came to my office in 2012 to talk about doing an exhibit here,” says Bangerter. “He had exhibited at Honolulu Museum of Art and at Hilo. He wanted to do a body of work created for the Schaefer space. It was a dream of his to create a work just for this gallery. It really aligned with our goals to bring in works that make people just go ‘wow’ when they walk in the door. It’s breathtaking, what art can make you feel like when you are surrounded. This affects me differently than anything that has come before. “His place is beautiful in Kyoto, it was very hard to find it,” she continues. “I visited in 2016. It’s across from a bamboo forest. His father’s ceramic pieces line the pathway. There is silk with dye matter in the yard, silkworms under the house. The looms and staff in the main house. Everything is utilized with ultimate efficiency, which I respect so much. That is part of my philosophy, as all things will return to nature. At 74, it is amazing what he accomplishes with his day.”

PHOTO COURTESY MACC

to do something different with the company yet keep the competitive edge. He began researching textiles first in Japan, resurrecting some of the ancient styles of weaving and braiding in his company’s fabrics. There is a kimono in the show that demonstrates. “This is a kimono from my work from 40 years ago in the textile industry,” says Izukura. “I could have become a living national treasure. I was not interested in that. This is a style of fabric that was done in 400 BC that I replicated by hand. It can only be done by hand. I felt that if I only created the textiles for my company, I wouldn’t be able to survive/live. By studying all of the textiles forms of weaving, braiding and netting and putting them together, I was able to piece together my life as an artist and businessman.” Ultimately, life as a businessman did not fulfill him. He had to live his artist self, a desire not usually pursued by Japanese businessman. “Even now the person that I am is unusual for society,” he says. “I do get invitations from galleries around the world to exhibit. It is because of the unusual quality of utilizing only the natural resources and working by hand. I don’t think I have anything more than that to offer.” His most current work, “Sun,” shows the culmination of those different forms of fabrics, and his sun-dying techniques. “This technique is called ‘netting’ and it was used in the 9th century,” says Izukura. “It is a very ancient technique and it can only be done by hand, not by machine. It has a lot of flexibility. It was used for catching fish in ancient times. This is a modern day technique of weaving in this section, and I have mixed it between netting and weaving. All of the technique used in the ‘Sun’ piece are covering the course of the last 20 thousand years in textile. [For] each of these techniques, in modern times we have built machinery to expedite our processes. But by doing this by hand I have the freedom to work between the techniques to shift between weaving, braiding and

netting. Entwining, braiding, weaving and netting in one fabric.” The show also features a couture line of clothing, dresses, shawls and tops. All are handwoven by Akihiko Izukura, and are the only items that will be for sale in this show. Several of the dresses are woven flat in their shapes and then seamed down the sides–the designs basically made without cutting. “I use all the silk from the silkworm,” he says. “As opposed to taking the good portions and discarding the rest. I use everything. Even the irregularities I find beautiful. In a few of the sun-dyed pieces, the silk sat in rainwater and dye for two years before they were pulled apart and dried. With the garments I use more permanent dyes because that is what the women want. All of my work is an experimental process. Since I live life in a secluded way, I feel at peace.”

Circular shapes are common themes There is a specific soundtrack for the show that reverberates softly around the silks. In addition to the indoor gallery pieces, there will be four outdoor exhibits on display. “We commissioned San Francisco composer Christopher Willits to create a soundscore for Akihiko’s work,” says Bangerter. “While you’re in the gallery, you have a sensory experience. When they have a sound background, it creates the ambiance that something else is happening here, with a higher level of consciousness. Christopher Willits will be coming in March to do a live performance with the exhibition.” Izukura has made a lifestyle of textiles, from the family business to his time as an artist. Ultimately, he’s always taken the road-less-travelled approach. “The only thing to do in life is to do what you love,” says Izukura. “There is no other way. You may find yourself in perilous situations but you will just have to persevere. At this point in my life, I am very happy.” ■ jen@mauitime.com + @jenrusso

Izukura installation

For more A&E news, visit: mauitime.com/entertainment

ArT=Mixx: METAMORPHOSIS Saturday, Feb. 4, 2017 Yokouchi Pavilion & Courtyard/ Schaefer International Gallery 7-11pm Held in conjunction with the exhibit, the event will feature FUZZBOX Productions, DJ SOLE from Los Angeles and live performances. This event is Free and open to anyone 21 and over. Food and beverage will be available throughout the evening. Costume up, mingle, and connect to the arts. FREE ADMISSION

Observe and Play Family Day March 4 Open 10am-12pm. This family day offers a walkthrough of the installation in the gallery with a live performance by composer Christopher Willits, and a fun handson art-making activity dyeing silk. FREE EVENT

JANUARY 12, 2017 15


16 JANUARY 12, 2017


Picks

by Alex Mitchell

This Week's Picks THURSDAY, JAN. 12 MALAMA AHUPUA‘A – Here’s a workshop titled “Perspective on Native Hawaiian Sustainability: Malama Ahupua‘a” from Edventure at UH Maui College. It will be an opportunity to learn more about Hawaiian culture. Learn how Hawaiian traditions can enhance your life in this two-part series on Hawaiian sustainability efforts and an on-site tour of the Waihe‘e Coastal Dunes and Wetlands Refuge. $109. 5pm. Edventure at UH Maui College, (310 Ka‘ahumanu Ave, Kahului); 808-984-3231; Edventuremaui.com. Photo: Forest & Kim Starr/Flickr

PEACEFUL MEANS CONCERT – The Peaceful Means s Concert with ion Church. Lei‘ohu Ryder and Friends will take place at Makawao Union Featured during the season of Makahiki, the evening will be a tribute ma Gandhi to Hawaiian history, Dr. Martin Luther King and Mahatma en sushi and with music, pule, blessings and hula. Healthy pupus, garden t. beverages will be available for purchase after the concert. Advance tickets are $25 and are available online. e. n $35. 7pm. Makawao Union Church, (1445 Baldwin Ave., Makawao); 808-579-9261; Alohainaction.com.. Photo courtesy Facebook/ Lei‘ohu Ryder

FRIDAY, JAN. 13 LAHAINA TOWN PARTY – It’s time for the next edition of the Lahaina Second Friday town party. Bring your family and friends down to Lahaina Town for delicious food from West Maui restaurants, food truck and vendors. The monthly event will also provide many opportunities to get to know the Lahaina community better and enjoy live entertainment and music under Maui’s magical sunset. It’s also Art Night, so make sure to visit all of the local art galleries for a variety of special events. Free. 4:30pm. Lahaina Town Party,, (Front Street, Lahaina); 808-270-7710; Mauifridays.com.

‘HER BODY OF STORIES’ – A performance of Her Bodies of Stories will take place at the Maui Arts and Cultural Center (MACC). It will feature Jocelyn Ng, Serena Simmons and Grace Taylor and will explore themes of diaspora, settler colonialism, hopeful de-colonization and growing up in Hawaii. Expect slam poetry, acting and entertainment that will move from fierce to playful to thought-provoking. $20. 7:30pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-SHOW; Mauiarts.org. Photo courtesy of MACC

SATURDAY, JAN. 14 ABSINTHE ROSE – Boston-based Absinthe Rose is a politically charged band based around singer/songwriter Kimbo Rose. As Riotska Records describes them, they mix “different styles of music into their own blend of Folk with a strong DIY ethic” that blends with their own mix of politics. Sounds fun! No cover. 8pm. Steel Horse Saloon, (1234 L. Main St., Wailuku); 808-245-2206. Photo courtesy Absinthe Rose Facebook page

J RAZ & SHERMAN – J Raz and Sherman will perform at Casanova. J Raz is from the Bay Areas’s Sunset Sound System and Kauai’s Disco Nights camp. Maui’s own Sherman will also be putting it down. Matt Brunn of Galaxy Lighting will do sound and lighting, and the music will be bumping! $10 before 11pm and $15 after. 21+. 9:45pm. Casanova Italian Restaurant and Deli, (1188 Makawao Ave.); 808-572-0220; Casanovamaui.com. Photo courtesy of Facebook/ Jason Rasmussen J Raz

SATURDAY, JAN. 14 YOUNG THE GIANT – Young the Giant will play the MACC. Formerly known as The Jakes, this Los Angeles-based rock band is comprised of Sameer Gadhia, Jacob Tilley, Eric Cannata, Payam Doostzadeh and Francois Comtois. They’ve been called the “Thinking Man’s Band” for many reasons, winning over the country with radio hits, amazing press and live shows. $35-45. 7:30pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-SHOW; Mauiarts.org. Photo courtesy of Facebook/Young the Giant

CREATIVE C CRITTERS – Maui OnStage will host Creative CritSa ters from Saturday, Jan. 14 until Saturday, Mar. 11. The program is best suited for budding actors who want to explore drama, dance, an creative play. Kids 5-8 will love this program because singing and t it offers them an opportunity to create bold characters and sing da and dance. Teachers: Brett Wulfson (pictured here) and Brianna Kenar. $135. 9am. Maui OFFStage Studio, (830 Kolu St., Wailuku); 808-244-8680; Mauionstage.com. Phot courtesy of Facebook/ Brett Marynn Wulfson Photo

SUNDAY, JAN. 15 AKIHIKO IZUKURA EXHIBIT – Akihiko Izukura’s “The Way of Natural Textile” exhibit will be on display at the Schaefer Gallery from Sunday, Jan. 15 to Sunday, Mar. 19. A master textile artist from Kyoto, Japan, he creates work that honors sustainability and symbiosis with nature. The exhibit will feature a fiber installation made entirely of hand-woven, naturally dyed silk that’s produced by silkworms. You’ll also see a combined dialog of weaving, netting, entwining, and dying that will be visible in a large structural form to walk through and experience. Free. 10am-5pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-SHOW; Mauiarts.org. Photo courtesy of MACC

RAKUHAKU WORKSHOP – There’s a Rakuhaku Workshop at the MACC. Taught by artist Akihiko Izukura, the class will explore spinning, dyeing and weaving silk fibers on a loom. Attendees will leave the workshop with their own unique takeaway piece. This is a great Maui art class for those interested in textile art and fashion design. You must reserve your spot ahead of time by emailing neida@mauiarts.org. $60. 10am. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-SHOW; Mauiarts.org. Photo courtesy the MACC

MONDAY, MOND N DAY ND Y, JA JJAN. AN. 16

SUNDAY, JAN. 15 JUDY’S GANG – Judy’s Gang will perform at the MACC. Produced by Judy Ridolfino, guests can see the production of One World, which features many of Maui’s performance-inclined keiki. Expect sparkling costumes, jazz and tap dancers aged 3 and older. These kids are talented, confident, fun and full of excitement. Free for kids 4 and under. $13. 5pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-SHOW; Mauiarts.org. Photo courtesy of Facebook/Judy’s Gang

NEW SHANGH SHANGHAI CIRCUS – The New Shanghai Circus M is back at the MACC this Monday, Jan. 16 and Tuesday, Jan. Mau favorite, here’s a chance to bring your family 17. Always a Maui g and friends to a great stage performance of contortionists, jugar glers, balance artists and daring acrobats. This group of talentperform ed performers from China will most definitely wow you with their living sculptures and graceful moves. $12-35. Ma Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron 4pm. Maui Way, Kahului); K 808-242-SHOW; Mauiarts.org. Photo courtesy the MACC

TUESDAY, JAN. 17 E-CYCLING – There will be an E-Cycling event in Wailuku. Bring your old electronics like computers, televisions, microwaves, cell phones, stereos, copiers, fax machines and other items with circuit boards to recycle responsibly. This service is provided free of charge; the public is asked to be courteous by not leaving any items at the gate after hours. Free. 8am. E-Cycling Program, (901 L. Main St., Wailuku); 808-270-7880; Mauicounty.gov/recycle. Photo courtesy of Flickr/ Wonderlane

MAUI HUMANE SOCIETY FUNDRAISER – Dine-Out For Maui Humane Society is happening at Flatbread Company in Paia. A percentage of all the night’s pizza sales will go to the Maui Humane Society, and there will also be a pretty cool silent auction. Every Tuesday is a benefit night at Flatbread, so please make sure to head to the North Shore with your family and friends so you can help support Maui’s furry friends in need this week. Free. 5pm. Flatbread Company, (89 Hana Hwy., Paia); 808-579-8989; Mauihumanesociety.org. Photo: Flickr/Jeffrey Villamin

JANUARY 12, 2017 17


2017

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18 JANUARY 12, 2017


Film

by Barry Wurst II

'Lion' Turns out a harrowing childhood experience can translate into a good movie ★★★★★ Rated PG / 127 Min.

W

hen Saroo Brierly was five, he took a ride on a train that changed his life. Growing up in a poor neighborhood in India, Saroo accompanied his brother to a train station for a work assignment. While Saroo’s older brother, Guddu, went to work on a train, Saroo slept on a bench at the station, only to wake up and find himself alone. Saroo searched for his brother by entering a locomotive that quickly left the station and thrust the boy into another world. Suddenly, Saroo found himself in a place where no one would help him and no one could be trusted. His struggle to find his home eventually led to his being adopted and flown to start a new life with a family in Australia. Saroo’s journey, captured in the 2014 book A Long Journey Home, is now a motion picture that portrays his harrowing childhood experience. The film is at its strongest when the story is set in India. When the location moves beyond

India, the intensity wanes a bit. Sunny Pawar plays Saroo as a boy and Dev Patel plays him as a young man. Pawar had me in his corner from the moment he first appeared on screen and gives a fine performance. Patel finally has a role unlike any other he’s played before and sinks his teeth into a real character. It’s refreshing to see the actor outside of the typecast roles he’s been playing in subpar films like Chappie and The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel. In Lion, Patel gives a soulful, internalized but passionate turn. He’s so good in this, you won’t feel gypped when he’s stepping in for the captivating Pawar. The harrowing first half is made vivid and nightmarish, like a Dickensian odyssey with the threat of child exploitation. We believe in the scary journey Saroo takes and root for him to escape. Director Garth Davis makes plausible a world of threatening adults and outsized obstacles keep Saroo from his family. As the mother who adopts both Saroo, Nicole Kidman is great in an immersive, layered character turn but we

This photo alone is better than Slumdog Millionaire

want to know far more about her role than the movie ever tells us. A far bigger problem is with Rooney Mara, always a welcome presence but, unfortunately, she’s stuck here playing the supportive, long-suffering girlfriend role. The dynamic star of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo and Side Effects shouldn’t be playing this kind of thankless role in a movie that doesn’t need her. Lion is always involving and engrossing but it’s also kind of a drag. We see Saroo board a plane for Australia and I was counting down the minutes until he will inevitably be returning to India. The character of Saroo’s adopted brother is another, like Kidman’s, who needed more time to develop. Davis keeps the focus on Saroo’s long held pain of separa-

tion but doesn’t allow the people around him to come into focus. The final scene is deeply satisfying and the closing post-script offers a few unexpected surprises on how the story turned out. Although the movie works, I wonder if this would be far better as a documentary. The addition of very-Hollywood touches (such as Mara’s character and the familiar qualities of the film’s second half) suggest that the true story would be better represented without screenplay requirements. Yet, Lion is a more focused, authentic-feeling tale than the flashy, utterly contrived Slumdog Millionaire. The best and worst thing about Lion is that it plays like the finest, longest and most persuasive commercial for Google Earth ever produced. â–

Dear Maui Cat Lovers,

IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER!

These two beautiful cats sadly lost their mama (Ronnie Massin), a beloved friend and dedicated volunteer for the Maui Humane Society, to cancer in November. They are now in desperate need of a new, loving home to someone willing to open their hearts to both of them. Ronnie requested that they continue to be strictly indoor only cats and be homed with someone who is a true cat lover. These precious felines are truly some of the sweetest cats you will ever meet!

! *5.0 (.Â?! %Â?ÂŁ šÞ Ăž%Â?/4.04 / (% "š¥/! ˜ 4 % /! %OÂĄ 4 %-% /Â? šÞ 5$$%0! ˜ ÂĄ2%'!4 % .OÂĄ] Reserve space now to be sure our readers can plan for the dinner date they've always wanted! Call today to inquire about our special Valentine’s Day advertising rates!

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Pau Hana Time is the third novel in the Charley Ridgway series, set in contemporary Maui. It’s written by local author Anthony Pignataro and published by Event Horizon Press.


Film

by Alex Mitchell

Showtimes KA‘AHUMANU 6

The Bye Bye Man- PG13- 2D THU 9:10, FRI

Queen Ka‘ahumanu Shopping Center, Kahului. 1-800-326-3264 (Matinees: every day until 4pm)

(11:50 2:10 4:50) 7:20 10:40, SAT (11:50 2:10) 4:50 7:20 10:40, SUN (11:50 2:10) 4:50 7:20 10:50, MON (11:50 2:10 4:50) 7:20 10:40, TUE (11:50 2:10 4:50) 7:20 10:40, WED (11:40 2:10 4:50) 7:20 10:40, THU (11:50 2:10 4:50) 10:40. Monster Calls- PG13- 2D THU 11:30 2:10 4:50 7:30 10:40, FRI (2:40 5:10) 7:50 10:30, SAT (2:40) 5:10 7:50 10:30, SUN (2:40) 5:10 10:30, MON (2:40 5:10) 7:50 10:30, TUE (2:40 5:10) 7:50 10:30, WED-THU (2:40 5:10) 10:30. Underworld: Blood Wars- R- 2D THU 2:20 7:40, 2D FRI-SUN (2:20) 7:30, 2D MON (2:20) 7:30, 2D TUE-THU (2:20) 7:30, 3D THU 11:30 5:10 10:10, 3D FRI (11:40 5:10) 10:30, 3D SAT-SUN (11:40) 5:10 10:30, 3D MON-THU (11:40 5:10) 10:30. Hidden Figures- PG- 2D THU 11:30 2:10 4:40 7:40 9:50, FRI (11:30 1:50 4:50) 7:50 10:00, SAT (11:30 1:50) 4:50 7:50 10:00, SUN (11:30 1:50) 4:50 7:50 10:00, MON (11:30 1:50 4:50) 7:50 10:00, TUE-THU (11:30 1:50 4:50) 7:50 10:00. Why Him?- R- 2D THU 11:30 2:30 4:30 7:50, FRI (11:50 2:20 4:50) 7:30 10:10, SAT (11:50 2:20) 4:50 7:30 10:10, SUN 7:30 10:10, MON (11:50 2:20 4:50) 7:30 10:10, TUE (11:50 2:20 4:50) 7:30 10:10, WED 7:30 10:10, THU (11:50 2:20 4:50) 7:30 10:10. Sing-PG- 2D THU 2:20 4:50 7:20, FRI (11:30 4:40) 7:10, SAT (11:30) 4:40 7:10, SUN (11:30) 4:40 7:10, MON (11:30 4:40) 7:10, TUE (11:30 4:40) 7:10, WED (11:35 4:40) 7:10, THU (11:30 4:40) 7:15. 3D THU 11:40 10:00, 3D FRI-TUE (2:40) 9:40, 3D WED (2:40) 9:50, 3D THU (2:40). Fences-PG13- 2D THU 12:50 3:50 9:40, 2D FRI-SAT (11:30), SUN-THU (11:30). Rogue One - PG13- 2D THU 12:40 3:50 7:00 7:30 10:10, FRI (11:30 2:30 4:40) 7:40, SAT (11:30 2:30) 4:40 7:40, SUN (11:30 2:30) 4:40 8:00, MON (11:30 2:30 4:40) 7:40,

Moana- PG- 2D THU 11:00 12:00 1:45 2:45 4:25 7:00. 2D FRI-SUN 10:45 11:45 1:30 2:20 4:15 7:00 9:45, 2D MON-THU 10:45 11:45 1:30 2:20 4:15 7:00 Sing-PG- 2D THU 11:15 2:00 4:35. 2D FRI-SUN 11:15 2:00 4:35 7:15 9:50, 2D MON-THU 11:15 2:00 4:35 7:15 Hidden Figures-PG- 2D THU 11:00 1:45 4:30 7:15. 2D FRI-SUN 11:00 1:45 4:30 7:15 10:00, 2D MON-THU 11:00 1:45 4:30 7:15. Live By Night-R- 2D THU 7:45, FRI-SUN 10:35 1:25 4:15 7:05 10:00, 2D MON-THU 10:35 1:25 4:15 7:05. Passengers-PG13- 2D THU 11:15 2:00 4:45 7:30. 2D FRI-SUN 4:55 7:30 10:00, 2D MONTHU 4:55 7:30 Patriots Day-R- 2D THU 7:00, FRI-SUN 10:30 1:20 4:10 7:00 9:50, 2D MON-THU 10:30 1:20 4:10 7:00. Assassin’s Creed- PG13- 2D THU 5:15. Lion- PG13- 2D THU 10:45 1:30 4:15.

MALL MEGAPLEX Maui Mall, Kahului, 808-249-2222 (Matinees: M-Th until 6pm, F-Su until 3:30pm) Singin’ In The Rain (1952)- NR- 2D SUN 2:00 7:00, WED 2:00 7:00. Monster Trucks- PG- 2D FRI (2:00 5:00) 7:40, 2D SAT (2:00) 5:00 7:40, 2D SUN (2:00) 5:30 7:40, 2D MON (2:00 5:00) 7:40, 2D TUE-THU (2:00 5:00) 7:40. 3D FRI-TUE (11:30) 9:50, 3D WED (11:30) 10:20, 3D THU (11:30). Sleepless-R- 2D THU 7:20 10:00, FRI (11:30 2:30 5:30) 8:00 10:40, SAT (11:30 2:30) 5:30 8:00 10:40, SUN (11:30 2:30) 4:50 8:00 10:40, MON (11:30 2:30 5:30) 8:00 10:40, TUE (11:30 2:30 5:30) 8:00 10:40, WED (11:30 2:35 5:30) 8:00 10:40, THU (11:30 2:30 5:30) 8:00 10:40.

TUE-THU (11:30 2:30 4:40) 7:40. 3D THU 12:10 1:10 3:20 4:20 6:30 9:40 10:40, FRIWED (12:30 3:30) 6:30 9:30 10:20, THU (12:30 3:30) 9:50. La La Land - PG13- 2D THU 11:40 1:50 5:00 7:10 10:20, FRI (11:50 2:00 4:30) 7:20 9:50, SAT (11:50 2:00) 4:30 7:20 9:50, SUN (11:50 2:00) 4:30 7:20 9:50, MON (11:50 2:00 4:30) 7:20 9:50, TUE-WED (11:50 2:00 4:30) 7:20 9:50, THU (11:50 2:00 4:30) 7:20 9:55. Moonlight- R- 2D FRI (11:40 2:00 4:30) 7:10 10:00, SAT (11:40 2:00) 4:30 7:10 10:00, SUN (11:40 2:00) 4:30 7:10 10:00, MON (11:40 2:00 4:30) 7:10 10:00, TUE (11:40 2:00 4:30) 7:10 10:00, WED (11:40 2:00 4:35) 7:10 10:00, THU (11:40 2:00 4:30) 10:20. Assassin’s Creed-PG13- 2D THU 4:40 7:20, 3D THU 11:30 2:00 9:50. Collateral Beauty-PG13- 2D THU 11:40 2:00 4:20 6:40.

WHARF CINEMA CENTER 658 Front St., Lahaina, 808-249-2222 (Matinees: Tue all shows, until 6pm every other day) Monster Trucks- PG- 2D FRI-MON (1:00) 7:15, 2D TUE-WED (1:00 7:15), 3D FRI-SUN 4:00 9:50, MON (4:00), TUE (4:00 9:50), WED-THU (4:00). Underworld: Blood Wars - R- 2D THU (1:00) 7:10. 2D FRI-MON (1:15) 7:30, 2D TUE (1:15 7:30), 2D WED-THU (1:15) 7:30. 3D THU 4:00, 3D FRI-SUN 4:15 10:05, 3D MON (4:15), 3D TUE (4:15 10:05), 3D WED-THU (4:15). Patriots Day-R- 2D THU 7:00, FRI-SUN (12:30) 3:45 7:00 10:00, 2D MON (12:30 3:45) 7:00, 2D TUE (12:30 3:45 7:00 10:00), 2D WED-THU (12:30 3:45) 7:00. Sing-PG- 2D THU (12:45 3:30) 6:30. Rogue One -PG13- 2D THU 12:30, 3D THU (3:45).

THINK YOU HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO ILLUSTRATE A MAUITIME COVER? Issue 06 ✚ FREE July 26, 2012 ✚ Volume 16 ✚

Big

Waste

Large capacity cesspools became illegal seven years ago, but the EPA only recently discovered that the Kihei Marketplace has one. Even if you don’t have one, here’s why this should worry you. PG. 10

NEW THIS WEEK

dying mother. Stars Lewis MacDougall, Sigourney Weaver and Felicity Jones. 108 min.

THE BYE BYE MAN - PG13 - Horror - Three friends discover the secret of the Bye Bye Man, who happens to be the cause of all evil (“Bye Bye Man” is a registered trademark of the The Trump Organization). 96 min.

FENCES - PG13 - Drama - Denzel Washington and Viola Davis star in this story about an African-American family trying to survive in 1950s America. 138 min.

LIVE BY NIGHT - R - Crime/Drama - Ben Affleck and Elle Fanning star in this picture about organized crime during Prohibition, because Hollywood never makes movies about that. 128 min.

HIDDEN FIGURES - PG - Drama - The story of three female African-American mathematicians who played a crucial role in early NASA space missions. Based on a true story. 127 min.

MONSTER TRUCKS - PG - Animation/Action A high school senior builds a monster truck that has an actual monster living in it. Woo!!! 104 min.

LA LA LAND - PG13 - Drama/Musical - A pianist falls for an aspiring actress in Los Angeles. Then crazy stuff happens. Stars Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone. 128 min.

PATRIOTS DAY - R - Drama - A look at the Boston Police Commissioner before, during and after the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing. Stars Marky Mark and Michelle Monaghan. 133 min.

MOANA - PG - Animation - In this new Disney film a young navigator (voiced by Auli‘i Cravalho) sails to a fabled island, with the demigod Maui (Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson) accompanying her. 113 min.

SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN - NR - Musical/Romance - Special TCM screening of the 1952 classic musical that stars Gene Kelly, Donald O’Connor and Debbie Reynolds. 103 min.

MOONLIGHT - R - Drama - The story of an AfricanAmerican man, from childhood to adulthood, who grows up in Miami. Stars Mahershala Ali. 111 min.

SLEEPLESS - R - Action/Thriller - Jamie Foxx stars in this story of a cop with underworld connections who searches for his kidnapped son. 95 min.

NOW PLAYING A MONSTER CALLS - PG13 - Drama/Fantasy A boy seeks help from a tree monster to help his

PASSENGERS - PG13 - Sci-Fi/Fantasy - A creepy jerk (Chris Pratt) accidentally wakes up too early on a century-long trip to another world, then gets lonely and decides to revive some hot chick (Jennifer Lawrence), dooming her to the same miserable existence that plagues him. 116 min. ROGUE ONE: A STAR WARS STORY - PG13 - Sci-Fi/Action - The evil galactic empire has built a Death Star (paid for, undoubtedly, after privatiz-

K PG.5 RK YOU WORK D WHILE YOU LAND L TAL T COUNTY TALKS PG.13 A SEVEN YEARS CE CELEBRA L CELEBRATES GRILL GRI GR LL P PINEAPPLE August 16, 2012 ✚ Volume 16 ✚ Issue 09 REVIEW PG.19 LM RE S FILM T RISES HT

ing Medicare and Social Security), and a plucky group of rebels want to steal its blueprints. Hmm… I wonder if they’ll succeed… 133 min. SING - PG - Animation/Comedy - A koala wants to restore his theater to glory by holding a singing competition. Voices by Matthew McConaughey, Reese Witherspoon and Seth MacFarlane. 108 min. UNDERWORLD: BLOOD WARS - R - Action/ Horror - Vampire Selene (Kate Beckinsale) returns to fight the Lycan clan and other vampires because I don’t know–I just write film caps. 91 min. WHY HIM? - R - Comedy - A family gets together for the holidays, but old pop doesn’t much care for his daughter’s boyfriend. Stars Zooey Deutch and Bryan Cranston. 111 min.

KNIGHT AR KNIG THE DARK

✚ FREE

Sharing Aloha Through Music

Inside this weekend’s free second

annual Lanai Slack Key Festival

LAST CHANCE ASSASSIN’S CREED - PG13 - Action/Fantasy - In this video game adaption, some guy discovers that he’s descended from a master assassin in 15th century Spain. 108 min. COLLATERAL BEAUTY - PG13 - Drama - A man (Will Smith) discovers that truth and beauty can come from tragedy. Also stars Kate Winslet and Edward Norton. 97 min. LION - PG13 - Drama - A man in Australia returns to his native India to find his lost family. See this week’s film review. 118 min.

We are always looking for talented local artists to help create select cover designs throughout the year. Email your design samples to:

artdirector@mauitime.com WALK-INS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED.

JANUARY 12, 2017 21


Calendar

by Alex Mitchell & Shannon Kekahuna

Da Kine Calendar BIG SHOWS GUITARIST ROGER FISHER - Fri. Jan 13. Mana‘o Radio is excited to partner with the Maui Coffee Attic for a memorable concert with Roger Fisher, the founding guitarist of the rock group Heart. Following the performance there will be an hourlong documentary showing. 6pm. Maui Coffee Attic, (59 Kanoa St, Wailuku); 808-250-9555. CREATIVE HUSTLE TOUR - Fri. Jan 13. Creative Hustle Tour’s first Maui show will be with Jahsun, Q-Dogg and The Visually Gifted, and have with performances by Qwali Zuse, Supreme Beings, Killa B-Rex and Jay Kuro. $10 General, $15 VIP. 21+. 8pm. Casanova Italian Restaurant and Deli, (1188 Makawao Ave.); 808-572-0220; Casanovamaui.com MATT DEL OLMO BAND - Fri. Jan 13. Rock out with Matt Del Olmo, Erik Guzman, Udi Cohen, Sweet Beets and Stuart Owens. 21+. $10. 10pm. Charley’s Restaurant and Saloon, (142 Hana Hwy., Paia); 808-579-8085; Charleysmaui.com ABSINTHE ROSE - Fri. Jan 13. From Boston to Maui: Absinthe Rose is a politically charged lyrical and personal songwriter that grounds herself in the depths of punk, while keeping the roots of folk, country and blues. 7pm. Treehouse at Pauwela, (375 W. Kuiaha Rd., Haiku); 808-931-9243. NEVER LEFT TOUR - Sat. Jan 14. The Never Left Tour coincides with the 10th anniversary of the passing of one of hip hop’s greatest producers, JDilla. As a tribute to his brother Illa J will be joined by DJ Rhettmatic with opening set by local Maui DJs Jay P and Joralien. 21+. $30. 9pm. Charley’s Restaurant and Saloon, (142 Hana Hwy., Paia); 808-579-8085; Charleysmaui.com PIANIST, XAK BJERKEN - Tue. Jan 17. Xak Bjerken, of Cornell University, offers a recital exploring “the colors of the modern piano.” The recital launches a new series Na Makana: A Cultural Series Celebrating the Abundance of Makena, organized by John Rowehl, Director of Music. Bjerken will play works by Debussy, Scriabin, and a trio of American composers, Stephen Hartke, Steven Stucky and Jesse Jones. 6pm. Keawala‘i Congregational Church, (5300 Makena Rd.); 808-879-5557; Keawalai.org

STAGE SHOWS KUPANAHA MAGIC SHOW - Tue-Sat. Watch “Maui’s Magical Family” team up with the Kupanaha dancers. See scintillating hula interpretations bring spectacular illusions, charm and culture to the stage. $65-99. 4:30pm. Kupanaha Magic Theatre, (2525 Kaanapali Pkwy., Lahaina); 808-667-0128; Kupanaha.com WARREN AND ANNABELLE’S MAGIC SHOW - Mon-Sat. Warren Gibson, one of the country’s premier sleight-of-hand magicians, treats you to the best “close-up” magic and comedy in a beautiful 78-seat venue! Annabelle, our resident ghost, will entertain you while you dine, enjoy cocktails, appetizers, and yummy desserts. $64-104.50. 5pm. Warren and Annabelle’s, (900 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-6244; Warrenandannabelles.com ‘ULALENA - Mon, Tue, Thur, Fri. Delight in the richness of Hawaiian history and culture through authentic Hawaiian music, dance and over 100 instruments played live in a dynamic, colorful, emotional, and entertaining theatrical performance. Embark on this powerful journey, and leave with a deeper understanding of island culture, and the true essence of aloha. $29.99 Keiki / $59.99 Adults. Children 5 and under are free. Kama‘aina and military rates, and dinner partner offers are available. 5pm. Maui Theatre, (878 Front St., Lahaina); 808-856-7900; Mauitheatre.com

22 JANUARY 12, 2017

NA LIO DINNER - Thu. Jan 12. Sit back and enjoy the story of the horse in Hawaii and discover how the Hawaiian Cowboys, and the horse became a part of Hawaiian culture. Check-in at the shop and the shuttle will transport you to Kahalawai Farms and Stables for the dinner and show. The Menu will be seasonal and prepared on location by Kalei’s Food Truck and Catering. Visit with miniature horses Julio and Freedom, take pictures and meet the horses and cast of Na Lio. BYOB. $99. 5:30pm. Na Lio Gift Shop, (335 Keawe St., Lahaina); 808-270-2255; Naliomaui.com ‘BURN’N LOVE’ - Thu. Jan 12. Mon, Tue, Thur, Fri. Maui Theatre’s Burn’n Love brings back the golden era of Elvis in Hawaii. Starring Darren Lee, relive the days of Blue Hawaii with one of the best Elvis impersonators in the world. $60-110. 7:30pm. Maui Theatre, (878 Front St., Lahaina); 808-856-7900; Mauitheatre.com

grades 5-10 learn vocal, physical and mental skills which help create a character from the top of their heads to the tips of the toes and from the inside out. Students also work as an ensemble to create final performance presentations for the March showcase. $250. 4pm. Maui OFFStage Studio, (830 Kolu St., Wailuku); 808-244-8680; Mauionstage.com

MAUI FOODIE KING’S COTTAGE TASTING ROOM - Thu. Jan 12. Built for King Kalakaua in 1856, the King’s Cottage is where you can taste complimentary MauiWine varieties, also offering free historical and cellar tours. 10am. MauiWine, Ulupalakua Vineyards, (14815 Pi‘ilani Hwy., Ulupalakua); 808-878-6058; Mauiwine.com

KINGS VISIT WINE TASTING AND TOUR Thu. Jan 12. Maui’s only winery is now offering the King’s Visit Wine Tasting and Tour. This is ISLAND RHYTHMS SUNSET COCKTAIL a great o opportunity for wine lovonbo oard for lots of fun, CRUISE - Fri. Jan 13. Get onboard ers, an and for those that want to ific Whale food and dancing on Pacific lear learn more about grape proms Foundation’s Island Rhythms du duction on Maui. This exe Sunset Cocktail Cruise c clusive tour includes viswith local Reggae star iting the Old Jail, tasting Marty Dread. This cruise small-production single includes delicious appevarietal Ulupalakua tizers, perfectly mixed Mai Vineyards estate wines, Tais and other cocktails. a walk through the Call or book online and OUT vineyard grounds, and K C save 10 percent. Additionlots of opportunities to CHE EK al savings for PWF MemWE CAN t talk story about the hisU HE T bers and kama‘aina. 21+. YO to tory of Rose Ranch. $50. OF 17. S or, 5:00pm. Ma’alaea Harbor, K E 3:3 3:30pm. MauiWine, UluPIC PAG 49(Maalaea, Maalaea); 808-249ON palak palakua Vineyards, (14815 8811; pacificwhale.org Pi‘ilani Hwy., Ulupalakua); 808H SETH 878-6058; Mauiwine.com MAGIC ON MAUI WITH d d GRABEL - Sun. Jan 15. S Sundays and KAPALUA SUNSET DINNER - Thu. Jan Wednesdays. America’s Got Talent star Seth 12. Tuesday-Saturday. Sit back, relax and take in Grabel is on Maui. Grabel is a magician, illusionist the beautiful Maui sunset while enjoying a special and headlining entertainer. Direct from Las Vegas, three-course Sunset Menu which includes a glass he brings to Maui a skillful show that’s fun for all of sparkling wine and an amuse bouche from the ages. Tickets start at $49 for adults and $24.50 chef. $50. 5:30pm. Banyan Tree Restaurant at The for children under 12. Special VIP meet-and-greet Ritz-Carlton, Kapalua, (1 Ritz-Carton Dr., Kapalua); packages, Kama‘aina and group rates are avail808-665-7096; Ritzcarlton.com/banyantree able. 5pm. Maui Theatre, (878 Front St., Lahaina); 808-856-7900; Mauitheatre.com ALOHA FRIDAY SUNSET GRILL NIGHT - Fri. Jan 13. Grill Night is a casual and fun way to celMUSICAL THEATRE - Mon. Jan 9 - Mon. Mar ebrate Aloha Friday on the scenic point overlook13. Mondays. Combines singing techniques with ing Kapalua Bay while enjoying the picture-perfect movement while exploring character development sunsets over Molokai with live entertainment. A through warm-up exercises, improvisation and thevariety of BBQ selections will be featured each ater games. Students grades 3-8 gain confidence, week with such favorites as Huli Huli Chicken skills and musicianship as well as movement. Two and Kalbi Ribs as well as specialty cocktails and musical numbers will be rehearsed for the March drinks. The regular pool bar menu will also be showcase, with opportunities for solos and features. available. 5:00pm. Hana Hou Bar at Montage Ka$180. 3:30pm. Maui OFFStage Studio, (830 Kolu palua, (1 Bay Dr., Kapalua); 808-662-6600; monSt., Wailuku); 808-244-8680; Mauionstage.com tagehotels.com/kapaluabay/dining/hana-hou-bar BROADWAY ROCKS - Mon. Jan 9 - Mon. Mar CASTAWAY’S SEAFOOD NIGHT - Fri. Jan 13. 13. Mondays. Push students’ musical theater perEnjoy a seafood extravaganza with fresh fish, clams, formance skills to the next level! Your musical numshrimp, crab leg cluster, Portuguese sausage, new ber will stand out by strategically combining strong potatoes, corn on the cob and garlic bread. $47.95. singing skills with dance, movement and acting. 5pm. Castaway Cafe, (45 Kai Ala Dr., Ka‘anapali); Students grades 5-10 will also develop a strong 808-661-9091; CastawayCafe.com warm-up routine and relaxation practices which will help with the next audition or performance. Two PROJECT COCKTAIL: ICE AGE - Fri. Jan 13. musical numbers will be rehearsed for the March Experience a vodka-themed Ice Age in partnership showcase with opportunities for solos and features. with Ocean Organic Vodka. Cocktail specials and $250. 4:30pm. Maui OFFStage Studio, (830 Kolu live entertainment. 7pm. Luana Lounge at Fairmont St., Wailuku); 808-244-8680; Mauionstage.com Kea Lani, (4100 Wailea Alanui Dr.); 808-875-4100; Fairmont.com/kea-lani-maui/dining/luana BRENTON KEITH AND HIS BAG O’ TRICKS - Tue. Jan 17. High-Energy Comedy and Magic HAPA DINNER SHOW - Sat. Jan 14. Enjoy a fun Show! Fun for all ages with Brenton Keith and his filled evening of awesome Hawaiian music and Bag O’ Tricks at Mulligan’s. Free. 6:30pm. Muldine from a select menu of exceptional entrees, ligan’s on the Blue, (100 Kaukahi St., Wailea); pupus, and cocktails. $35 in advance, $40 day of. 808-874-1131; Mulligansontheblue.com 6pm. Kahili Restaurant, (2500 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Waikapu); 808-242-6000; Kahilirestaurant.com THE ACTOR’S TOOLBOX - Wed. Jan 11 - Wed. Mar 15. Wednesdays. Explores character developCANE AND CANOE SUNDAY BRUNCH - Sun. ment, script analysis and monologue. Teen actors Jan 15. Featuring an enhanced a la carte breakfast

'T N O D T! E G FOR

menu created by Executive Chef David Viviano, Sunday Brunch will be a celebration of savory and sweet culinary delights. Relax and enjoy a live musical jazz performance with new brunch selections each week in addition to the regular menu including favorites Shrimp and Grits, Chicken and Waffles and Steak and Eggs. Enjoy a “Build-your-own Bloody Mary Bar” with an assortment of liquor, mixers and all the trimmings to make a most decadent libation. 10am. Cane and Canoe at Montage Kapalua, (1 Bay Dr., Kapalua); 808-662-6681; Caneandcanoe.com HAWAIIAN MUSIC JAM SESSION - Sun. Jan 15. Willie K and friends will entertain while you enjoy Sunday Brunch. $50. 10am. King Kamehameha Golf Club, (2500 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Waikapu); 808-249-0033; Kamehamehagolf.com WINE SOCIAL - Sun. Jan 15. Sundays and Mondays. Join in an intimate wine and food pairing with restaurant and wine list manager Jim Hansen. His thoughtful selections will be paired with light bites. 4:30pm. Pulehu, an Italian Grill at Westin Ka‘anapali Resort, (6 Kai Ala Dr., Ka‘anapali); 808-667-3254; Pulehurestaurantmaui.com KO’S SUNDAY NIGHT LAULAU - Sun. Jan 15. Enjoy Chef Tylun Pang’s healthy and modern take on a traditional Hawaiian dish, the special seafood laulau includes Maui fresh catch fish, shrimp, scallops, spinach, mushrooms and baby bok choy, all wrapped in ti leaf, steamed, and served with jasmine rice. 5pm. Ko at Fairmont Kea Lani, (4100 Wailea Alanui Dr.); 808-875-2210; Korestaurant.com

ART SCENE GREG DIPIAZZA ART EXHIBITION - Fri. Jan 6 - Tue. Jan 31. Stop by the shop and view Greg’s 2017 collection of works which will be on display. 6am. Wailuku Coffee Company, (26 N. Market St., Wailuku); 808-495-0259; Wailukucoffeeco.com 2017 HUI NO‘EAU ANNUAL JURIED EXHIBITION - Fri. Jan 6 - Thu. Feb 16. This prestigious exhibition offers an opportunity to view current work of local artists in all media. The guest juror this year is Duncan Dempster, a Honolulu-based artist and educator working primarily in print media. 9am. Hui No‘eau Visual Arts Center, (2841 Baldwin Ave., Makawao); 808-572-6560; Huinoeau.com ARTIST ELIZA GERMAN - Fri. Jan 13. Join in an evening of art and “Fresh Squeezed” cocktails, prepared by house craftsmen Adam Rio and Bree Richardson. Local artist Eliza’s work will be on display and available for purchase. She will have one of her pieces for silent auction, benefiting the Lahaina Arts Association, Youth Outreach Program. Followed by the Official Art Walk After Party featuring a local DJ. No cover. 5pm. Down the Hatch, (658 Front St., Lahaina); 808-661-4900; Dthmaui.com GOURD CARVER, NEOLA CAVENY - Thu. Jan 12. In old Hawaii, gourds were used for cooking, musical instruments and headdresses and were often highly decorated using the same time consuming techniques as are still used to this day. 8am. Maui Hands Makawao, (1169 Makawao Ave.); 808-572-2008; Mauihands.com JERRY SULLIVAN - Thu. Jan 12. Jeweler Jerry Sullivan will show off his work in the Old Lahaina Courthouse. Stop by, talk story and see his creations. 10am. Lahaina Arts Society, (648 Wharf St., Lahaina); 808-661-0111; Lahainaarts.com FINE ART EXHIBITION - Thu. Jan 12. Original art featuring local Maui artist. Public viewing with complimentary refreshments. Dinner and Cocktails available for purchase. 5:30pm. Kahili Restaurant, (2500 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Waikapu); 808-242-6000; Kahilirestaurant.com DIANE APPLER - Fri. Jan 13. Painter Diane Appler will show off her techniques in the Old Lahaina Courthouse. Stop by and talk story with her.


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY

1/12

1/13

1/14

1/15

1/16-1/18

FIND THE GRID ONLINE AT MAUITIME.COM/GRID OR TO HAVE YOUR BUSINESS ADDED TO OUR WEEKLY GRID SEND YOUR INFORMATION TO CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

AMBROSIA 1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 891-1011

Service Industry Night w/ DJ, 10pm

Saturday Night Diva, 10pm

Creative Hustle Tour w/ Jahsun, Q-Doggs and more 9:45pm, $10

J RAZ & Sherman 9:30pm, $10

Matt Del Olmo Band 10pm, $10

Illa J: Never Left Tour w/ J-Dilla, DJ Jay P & DJ Joralien 9pm, $25/$30

NFL Sunday Brunch & Bloody Mary Bar 7am,

MON- Live Band & Open Mic 7-10pm, TUE- Brian & Meryl, 6:30pm, WED-Randall Rospond, 6:30pm

Johnny Ringo 7:30-10pm; no cover

Dave Carroll 7:30-10pm; no cover

Justin Phillips 7:-9pm; no cover

MON-TBA, TUE - Jazz at the Cat 7:30-10pm WED-Benny Uyetake 7-9pm; no cover

NFL & SIN (closed at 9pm for a private party)

DJ $Mike, 10pm

NFL & Satterday Saints, 9:30pm

NFL & Gina Martinelli Band, 7pm

MON- Drink Specials, TUE & WED- Pool League

Pub Quiz 7pm, DJ Jamo 10pm

TBA

TBA

SIN 9pm

MON- MA’s Mix, 10pm, TUE- Ladies Night 10pm, WED- Jessica & Kanoa, 10pm

Late Night w/ DJ Illz

Jon Kanekua 11-1pm, Late Night w/ DJ Casey

Jon Kanekua 11-1pm

no music

MON-Jon Kanekua 11-1pm, TUE- Noa Zeb & Late Night w/ DJ illz, WED- Noa Zeb

Gretchen Rhodes & Houseshakers, 6:309:30pm

Kaniela Q 2-5pm, I-Drive 6:30pm, Late Night w/ DJ Gary, 9pm-12am,

I-Drive 6:30pm

Paul Johnson 2-5pm, Ryan Robinson 6:309:30pm

MON- Mick, Willie K & Gretchen 7pm, TUEPaul Johnson 2-5pm, Paul Johnson 7:30pm, WED- Kaniela Q 2-5pm, Paul Johnson 6:30pm

TBA

Dat Guyz 9pm

Island Reggae, 9pm

NFL 8am-6pm, Karaoke Industry Night 8pm

MON-Karaoke 8pm, TUE-Karaoke & $1 Tacos, WED- Open Mic 9pm

CASANOVA 1188 Makawao Ave. - 572-0220

CHARLEY’S 142 Hana Hwy., Paia - 579-8085

Mark Johnstone & Friends 6:30-8:30pm, no cover

COOL CAT CAFE Wharf Cinema Center, 658 Front St #160, Lahaina - 667-0988

DIAMONDS ICE BAR 1279 S. Kihei Rd. - 874-9299

DOG & DUCK IRISH PUB 1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 875-9669

DOWN THE HATCH 658 Front St., Lahaina - 661-4900

FLEETWOOD’S ON FRONT ST. 744 Front St. (Rooftop), Lahaina - 669-6425

HAUI’S LIFE’S A BEACH 1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 891-8010

10am. Lahaina Arts Society, (648 Wharf St., Lahaina); 808-661-0111; Lahainaarts.com STACY VOSBERG - Fri. Jan 13. Meet Stacy Vosberg an, see a collection of her colorful paintings, drawings and murals. Watch her paint every Friday in January. 11:30am. Maui Hands Paia, (84 Hana Hwy., Paia); 808-579-9245; Mauihands.com CHRISTINA DEHOFF - Fri. Jan 13. A clear and recognizable theme runs through Christina Dehoff’s paintings. Check them out. 4:30pm. Maui Hands Lahaina, (612 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-9898; Mauihands.com FRIDAY NIGHT ART NIGHT - Fri. Jan 13. Visit the gallery, for live music and Mai Tais while they showcase a new artist of the week. Free. 6pm. Lahaina Printsellers Ltd., (764 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-5815; Printsellers.com OIL PAINTINGS BY VALENTIN MIRO-QUESADA - Fri. Jan 13. Launching off the new year with an art show, Goin Left presents Valentin Miro-Quesada, a local Maui oil painter. His latest works highlight the landscape, gesture and atmosphere of soul surfing. 6pm. Goin Left, (143 Dickenson St., Lahaina); 808-868-3805; Goinleft.com MICHAEL GODARD ART SHOW - Fri. Jan 13. Meet Michael Godard and see his new releases that he will unveil at the show. 6pm. DeRubeis Fine Art of Metal Art Gallery, (770 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-0515; Signaturegalleries.com CELEBRATION OF HAWAII 2017: DIVERSITY - Sat. Jan 14 - Wed. Mar 1. The entire gallery is transformed into a comprehensive display of new works in a wide variety of media by a selection of Hawaii’s most celebrated fine art artists. The opening reception includes a Hawaiian Blessing and Hula by Halau Wehiwehi O Lelehua. 5pm. Viewpoints Gallery, (3620 Baldwin Ave., Makawao); 808-572-5979; Viewpointsgallerymaui.com JEANNE YOUNG - Wed. Jan 18. Come by the gallery to me this talented painter and watch her technique every Wednesday in January. 4pm. Maui Hands Hyatt, (200 Nohea Kai Dr., Ka‘anapali); 808-667-7997; mauihands.com

POLITICAL EVENTS WEST MAUI TAXPAYERS ASSOCIATION ANNUAL MEETING - Thu. Jan 12. The purpose

of the meeting is to have elected officials address issues of interest to the West Maui community. Guest speakers are Senator Rosalyn Baker, Representative Angus McKelvey, Mayor Alan Arakawa, Council Member Elle Cochran, Sharon Mielbrecht, Anna Foust, General Bruce Olivera, Kaloa Robinson, Ted Lennon, Don Smith, Lauren Armstrong and Tom Yamachika. There will be complimentary food service catered by Maui Food Style. 5pm. Lahaina Civic Center, (1840 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Lahaina); Westmaui.org AREAA ALOHA CHAPTER LUNCH & LEARN - Fri. Jan 13. Solving the Affordable Home Issue on Maui. Guest speakers are Councilmember Elle Cochran and Lokahi Pacific Executive Director Susie Thieman. Free for members and $15 for non-members. Register at Areaa. org. 11am. Tante’s Island Cuisine, (100 W. Ka‘ahumanu Ave, Kahului); 808-877-0300; Tantesislandcuisine.com MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. INTERFACE SERVICE - Mon. Jan 16. The keynote speaker will be Rick Blangiardi, General Manager of Hawaii News Now, KGMB and KHNL. The primary issue of concern is the lack of affordable housing. Affordable housing not only provides shelter, lies to grow, but offers stability for families develop and strive to become contributing members of socing ety. 5:30pm. Christ the King Church, (20 W. Wakea Ave.,., Kahului); 808-877-6098; Ctkchurchmaui.org

Sundaze Sessions, 10pm

MON-Movies, Games & Music10pm, TUETequila Tuesdays w/music 10pm, WED-Wine Down Wed w/ Music,10pm

Frisky Friday w/ DJ, 10pm

WED- Famous Ladies Night with DJ Kurt, 10pm $10

TICKETS ON SALE THE POLISH AMBASSADOR, AYLA NERO AND WILDLIGHT - Thu. Jan 19. They’re teaming up for the first time on Maui for A Woven Dance Journey. Ayla will begin the evening with a sound healing, then Wildlight will jumpstart the night into a syncopated bounce and The Polish Ambassador will take that bounce and turn it into an all out dance party. This is a drug-free and alcohol-free gathering! Kids 10 and under are free. $32. 7pm. Makawao Union Church, (1445 Baldwin Ave., Makawao); 808-579-9261; Makawaounionchurch.org BLACK ARM BAND PRESENTS DIRTSONG Thu. Jan 19. Black Arm Band is an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (ATSI) organization and one of Australia’s leading performing arts companies, widely acclaimed in Australia and internationally for its distinctive music theatre performances, celebration of indigenous music, culture and language and uniquely powerful visual imagery. $35. 7:30pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-SHOW; Mauiarts.org BHAKTI AND BHAJANS KIRTAN - Fri. Jan 20. Join Gina Sala and Daniel Paul, in a follow up “Power of Sound” workshop (satsang) followed intima concert (kirtan). There by a rare intimate de will be delicious vegetarian Indian dinner, desserts and beverages availa available for purchase. $2535. 4pm. Temple of Peace M Maui, (575 Haiku Rd.); 8 808-575-5220.

ADD YOUR OWN EVENTS ONLINE

LEGISLATIVE TOWN HALL MEETING - Mon. Jan 16. All interested members of the public are invited to attend the Legislative Town Hall Meeting with Senator eRosalyn Baker and Reprevey. sentative Angus McKelvey. They will address some of the legislative issues for the upcoming session and updates on a variety of community issues such as the Maui Memorial transition, the small boat harbor and Lipoa Point. 5:30pm. West Maui Senior Center, (788 Pauoa St., Lahaina); 808-661-9432.

UB40 REUNITED HANA HOU! - Fri. Jan 20. The iconic reggae band UB40 Reunited, ffeaturing original founding m members Ali Campbell, As Astro, and Mickey Virtue, re is returning to Maui. They’re gr the group that defined reggae fo a generation, produced music for multiple Top 10 gold- and platinumlli albums, lb f selling four #1 hits worldwide and multiple Grammy nominations. $49-179. 5:30pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-SHOW; Mauiarts.org

MAUITIME.COM/ADD

IT'S EASY!

JAMIE ADKINS: ‘CIRCUS INCOGNITUS’ - Sat. Jan 21. In Circus Incognitus, virtuoso clown Ja-

mie Adkins is the vulnerable everyman who has just written a terrific show. He wanders onto stage with the new show in a box, delighted to find the audience waiting. Knowing he has just the thing, Jamie struggles to build the scene around him using everyday objects. Things go awry as his props prove most unhelpful. $35. 7:30pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-SHOW; Mauiarts.org BROADWAY POPS - Sun. Jan 22. The annual Broadway Pops concert welcomes back Doug LaBrecque and new Maui Pops Orchestra guest artist Christiane Noll. The program includes favorites from the Great American Songbook, including works by Cole Porter, George Gershwin, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Irving Berlin and more. $20-55. 3:00pm. Maui Arts and Cultural Center, (1 Cameron Way, Kahului); 808-242-SHOW; Mauiarts.org

CALENDAR OF EVENTS THURSDAY, JANUARY 12TH SPAY AND NEUTER CAT CLINIC - Tue. Jan 10 - Sat. Jan 14. Maui Humane Society will offer a high quality Spay and Neuter Clinic for cats. Be a part of the solution-spay or neuter your kitty to prevent unwanted litters on Maui. Call to make an appointment now. Free. 8am. Maui Humane Society, (1350 Mehameha Lp., Pu‘unene); 808-877-3680; Mauihumanesociety.org FIRST FREE YOGA TEACHER TRAINING ON MAUI - Thu. Jan 12. Application Deadline Jan. 15. Maui Yoga Studio is excited to partner with renowned yogi Zeek Vincent, founder of ZFlow Yoga, to present a free yoga teacher training from February 20 to March 11. Aspiring instructors are invited to gather on Maui for giveaways, fun events, live music and instruction. 8am. Maui Yoga Sudio, (161 Wailea Ike); 808-868-0849; Mauiyogastudio.net

FRIDAY, JANUARY 13TH ‘BEING MORTAL’ - Fri. Jan 13. Hospice Maui invites the community to join a screening and discussion of the PBS Frontline documentary Being Mortal. This film explores the hopes of patient and families facing life-limiting illness and their relationships with the doctors, nurses and family members. Doctors, nurses and other professionals will be available for Q & A. 10am. Kaunoa Senior Center Paia, (401 Alakapa Pl., Paia); 808-270-7308.

JANUARY 12, 2017 23


24 JANUARY 12, 2017


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY

1/12

1/13

1/14

1/15

1/16-1/18

FIND THE GRID ONLINE AT MAUITIME.COM/GRID OR TO HAVE YOUR BUSINESS ADDED TO OUR WEEKLY GRID SEND YOUR INFORMATION TO CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

JAVA JAZZ 3350 L. Honoapiilani Rd. - 667-0787

KAHALE’S 1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 875-7711

KIMO’S 845 Front St., Lahaina - 661-4811

Rick Glencross, 7-10pm (acoustic guitar)

Mike Madden, 7-10pm (acoustic 70s-90s)

Fulton & Paul, 7-10pm (jazz)

John Bowser, 7-10pm (guitar)

MON- Soundlab (classic rock) 7-10pm, TUE- Nino Tascano (guitar) 7-10pm, WED- Paul & Fulton (jazz) 7-10pm

Natalie Nicole, 8pm

TBA

TBA

Brandt Quick, 8pm

MON-Brandt Quick, TUE- John Grover 8pm, WED-Maui Blues & Co 8pm

Ma’a, 6:30pm-8:30pm

Willie K 9-11pm, $5

Ma’a, 6:30-8:30pm

Benny & Rock, 6-8pm

MON-Benny & Rock 6-8pm, TUE & WED- Sam Ahia 6:30-8:30pm

Karaoke w/ “Auntie” Toddy Lilikoi, 9:30pm; no cover

Karaoke w/ “Auntie” Toddy Lilikoi, 9:30pm; no cover

Jim Spector, 5:30pm

Sal Godinez, 5-8pm

Neto, 5:30pm

Island Soul, 5:30pm

TUE- Tantalizing Tues w/Gina Martinelli & Friends 5-8pm, WED-Jim Spector, 5:30pm

Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; no cover

Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; no cover

Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; no cover

David Wolf 5:30-8:30pm; no cover

MON - David Wolf / TUE - The Benoits WED - Ranga Pae (all 5:30-8:30pm)

Pat Simmons Jr., 6:30-8:30pm

Willie K Dinner Show 6:30-8:30pm

TBA

Celtic Tigers, 7-9:30pm

MON- WED TBA

Video Mix

DJ Big Mike , $5 cover

Special Event

Video Mix

MON-Video Mix, TUE- SIN, WED- Video Mix

Thirsty Thursdays & Free Pool

Brant Quick 7-11pm & Free Pool

Ladies Night w/ drink specials, 9pm

NFL Football, Breakfast & Dart Tournament

MON-NCCF & Free Pool, TUE- $2 Taco Tuesday’s all day, WED- Drink Specials & Dart Tournament, 7pm

KOBE STEAKHOUSE 136 Dickenson St. (Lounge Area), Lahaina - 667-5555

KONO’S ON THE GREEN 470 Lipoa Pkwy, Kihei - 633-4220

MERRIMAN’S 1 Bay Club Pl., Kapalua - 669-6400

MULLIGAN’S ON THE BLUE 100 Kaukahi St., Wailea - 874-1131

PARADISE GRILL

2291 Kaanapali Pkwy, Lahaina - 662-3700

PLAYMAKERS SPORTS BAR 928 Lower Main St., Wailuku - 244-4084

PAU HANA AND LIVE ENTERTAINMENT - Fri. Jan 13. Pau Hana at The Shops is more than just a happy hour. Pau Hana celebrates the end of the work week with live musical performances by Maui’s talented up and coming artists as well as Maui’s more well established musicians. Meet-up with friends and co-workers or gather the family together and start your weekend on a beautiful note. 4pm. The Shops at Wailea, (3750 Wailea Alanui Dr.); 808-891-6770; Theshopsatwailea.com

SATURDAY, JANUARY 14TH ECO FARM TOURS - Sat. Jan 14. Join in an educational tour of permaculture design features. Rather than depending on outside inputs which have a carbon footprint and often carry toxic components such as heavy metals and antibiotics, they strive to grow needed amendments right here on their land. $2025. 4pm. Ahimsa Sanctuary Farm, (4505 Hana Hwy., Haiku); 808-283-8057; Ahimsasanctuaryfarm.com CRUISE NIGHT WITH NOCTURNALS CTC - Sat. Jan 14. Cruise with Maui’s car and truck club and their friends as they showcase their lowriders and lifted vehicles. Free. 5:30pm. Queen Ka‘ahumanu Center, (275 W. Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului); 808877-3369; Queenkaahumanucenter.com LIVE LOCAL LIVE HEALTHY FESTIVAL - Sat. Jan 14. The event will feature an interactive fitness challenge by Justin Yanagida of Yanagida Strength and Fitness, healthy cooking demonstrations by Sous Chef Christopher Ledger of Sheraton Maui Resort, aerobic fitness demonstrations, community health booths, State of Hawaii and County of Maui health initiatives and introduction to the HMSA Blue Zones project and prizes. 9:30am. Queen Ka‘ahumanu Center, (275 W. Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului); 808877-3369; Queenkaahumanucenter.com INTRODUCTION TO IYENGAR YOGA - Sat. Jan 14. Join certified lyengar yoga teacher Lee Raden for a heart-full introduction to the practical tools of the profound and transformative lyengar method. Class is open to students of all levels of experience in any traditional yoga. Free. 10am. Wisdom Flow Studios, (95 Makawao Ave.); 808-205-0908; WisdomFlowYoga.com WEST AFRICAN DANCE WITH QUINCEY - Sat. Jan 14. Live drumming! Have fun following the beats of the drums, learn new steps and moves with this great teacher. $10. 11am. Pahu Creations, (870 Hali‘imaile Rd., Makawao); 808-385-2642; Pahumaui.com YU-GI-OH CARD SESSION - Sat. Jan 14. Free card session at Maui Toy Works. 3pm. Lahaina Cannery Mall, (1221 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Lahaina); 808-661-5304; Lahainacannerymall.com

IMPROVE YOUR PUBLIC SPEAKING SKILLS - Thu. Jan 12. Come to a Toastmasters evening. On going (except holidays) every Thursday at the Kapalua Adventure Center conference room. Free for visitors. Membership available. Free. 6pm. Kapalua Adventure Center, (1 Ritz Carlton Dr., Kapalua); 808-866-4986; Toastmasters.org BUILDING OPERATORS CERTIFICATION Sat. Jan 14. This is a rare opportunity for building engineers, HVAC technicians, maintenance workers, facility coordinators and supervisors. This SLIM training gears participants to attain a nationallyrecognized certification. It focuses on commercial energy efficiency for HVAC, lighting and all heavy energy users in facilities. $1,600. 8am. Edventure at UH Maui College, (310 Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului); 808-984-3231; Edventuremaui.com PHOTO: MAC AND IOS - Sat. Jan 14. This 7-week training will provide introductory skills for entry level Dental Assisting positions. Utilizes lecture, exams and clinical experiences to teach, assess and evaluate learning. Certificate awarded upon completion. $79. 9:30am. Edventure at UH Maui College, (310 Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului); 808-984-3231; Edventuremaui.com

SUNDAY, JANUARY 15TH HULA BY HA‘A HEO O MAUI - Sun. Jan 15. Enjoy a traditional Hawaiian hula performance by Ha‘a Heo o Maui on the mall’s center stage. 11am. Maui Mall, (70 E. Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului); 808-871-1307; Mauimall.com YIN AND YANG YOGA FOR HEALTHY EVERYTHING SERIES - Sun. Jan 15. A series of six comprehensive practices of quiet and active postures for strength, flexibility, balance, agility and equanimity for mind and body, designed for healthy aging with principles of Yin and Yang for vital organs, connective tissues and muscles. Sequences for hips, back, shoulders, hip flexors and restorative yoga. Check website for schedule updates. $15. 4pm. Lumeria Maui, (1813 Baldwin Ave., Makawao); 808-579-8877; Lumeriamaui.com ISLAND SOUL DANCE PARTY - Sun. Jan 15. Enjoy your favorite old school, new school, Rock, Funk and Blues with Island Soul Band while you enjoy the panoramic Maui sunset views at Kono’s. $5. 5pm. Kono’s on the Green, (470 Lipoa Pkwy., Kihei); 808-633-4220; Konosonmaui.com FREE ZUMBA - Sun. Jan 15. Get your sweat on with Keoni’s Hot Lava DanceFit! Every Class is a Party! Every body is welcome. You’ll Sweat, You’ll Laugh, You’ll Cheer… and you’ll wanna come back for more. Free. 8:30am. Keoni’s Hot Lava

DanceFit at Outlets of Maui, (900 Front St., Lahaina); 808-344-7122; Hotlavadancefit.com FREE ZUMBA - Sun. Jan 15. Get your sweat on with Keoni’s Hot Lava DanceFit. Free. 9am. Keoni’s Hot Lava DanceFit at Maui Mall, (70 E. Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului); 808-344-7122; Hotlavadancefit.com

MONDAY, JANUARY 16TH SALSA DANCE CLASS - Mon. Jan 16. Maui dance enthusiasts and Latin music lovers can take Salsa Dance Classes with Demian and Lasensua, singles and couple welcome. Beginners class starts at 6pm with Intermediate class to follow at 6:45pm. $10 per class, $15 per couple. 6pm. Makawao Union Church, (1445 Baldwin Ave., Makawao); 808-579-9261; Makawaounionchurch.org OUTDOOR YOGA - Mon. Jan 16. No matter your age or fitness level, this gentle approach increases life’s enjoyment while empowering life’s journey. Sandy Callender, Registered Yoga Teacher, will show how traditional yoga postures and breath work brings you greater flexibility and strength, a deeper connection to your wholeness and turns on your relaxation response. Donation. 8am. Waipulani Park, (Kihei); 808-214-2766; Easyyogamaui.com

TUESDAY, JANUARY 17TH MAUI ORCHID SOCIETY MONTHLY MEETING - Tue. Jan 17. Meeting activities open with member Ted Plume sharing his knowledge on “Repotting Phalaenopsis.” The featured speaker is Dave Sorokowsky from Paph Paradise in Lockeford, California. The meeting is open to the public; however, only members are able to participate in door prize orchid giveaways, show and tell exhibits and silent and live auctions. Annual membership is $15 and free for seniors over 80. 6:30pm. Wailuku Community Center, (395 Waena Pl., Wailuku); 808-250-1585; Mauiorchidsociety.org DOMESTIC VIOLENCE SUPPORT GROUPS Tue. Jan 17. Child and Family Services in Wailuku offers weekly Domestic Violence Support Groups for Survivors, Teens, and Children every Tuesday. Please call for more information and/or to register. (Registration is required). 5:30pm. Child and Family Services, (392 N. Market St., Wailuku); 808877-6888; Childandfamilyservices.org FIRST ZERO-EMISSION COMMERCIAL VESSEL TOURS - Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Shadowfax is an 44’ islander sailing yacht and will be operating exclusively under clean, quiet wind or electric power. Silently and gracefully cruising the waters of Ma’alaea bay,

taking small groups of tourists and local residents to experience Maui’s near shore coastal paradise and humpback whales in the least invasive way possible. 6am. Maui Ocean Charters, (Ma‘alaea Harbor, slip 70); 808-870-1739; Sailmauinui.com

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18TH OUTLETS OUTDOOR MARKET - Wed. Jan 18. The Market will feature chef demonstrations, live music, hula show and cultural activities. Maui farmers and artisans will feature locally-grown produce, handmade goods, creative crafts, apparel, island artwork and more. The Outlets retailers will also host a sidewalk sale with special sales and promotions. Get a free parking validation with any purchase from a market vendor. 4pm. Outlets of Maui, (900 Front St., Lahaina); 808-661-8277; Outletsofmaui.com WAILEA WELLNESS WORKSHOP: WINTER IMMUNE AND DETOX SUPPORT - Wed. Jan 18. Join Naturopathic Physician Dr. Teri Jackson as she provides healthy strategies to help you stay healthy and and fight winter illness. Free. 6:30pm. Wailea Pharmacy, (34 Wailea Ike Pl.); 808-879-0123; Waileapharmacy.com

LIVE MUSIC WEST MAUI AUNTIE’S KITCHEN AT WESTIN KA‘ANAPALI RESORT - Fri, Live Music 4-7pm; Mon, Live Music 4-7pm; (6 Kai Ala Dr., Ka‘anapali); 808-667-3254; Westinkaanapali.com/dining CANE AND CANOE AT MONTAGE KAPALUA - Thu, Piilani Arias 5:30-8:30pm; Fri, Kapali Keahi 5:30-8:30pm; Sat, Daniel Querubin and Dayan Kai 5:30-9pm; Sun, Joseph Chee 5:30-8:30pm; Mon, Kincaid Kipahu 5:30-8:30pm; Tue, Brian Haia 5:30-8:30pm; (1 Bay Dr., Kapalua); 808662-6681; Caneandcanoe.com CAPTAIN JACK’S ISLAND GRILL - Thu, Jonny Ringo 2-5pm; Fri, Will Hartzog 2-4:30pm; Mon, Will Hartzog 2-4:30pm; Tue, Jonny Ringo 2-5pm; (672 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-0988; CaptainJacksMaui.com CLIFF DIVE GRILL AT SHERATON MAUI Thu, Tim Osborne 6:30-8pm; Fri, Scott Baird 6-8pm; Sat, Larry Golis and Hollis Lee 6am-8pm; Mon, Larry Golis 6-8pm; Tue, Scott Baird 6-8pm; (2605 Ka‘anapali Pkwy.); 808-661-0031; Cliffdivegrillmaui.com COOL CAT CAFE - Thu, Will Hartzog 7:3010pm; Fri, Johnny Ringo 7:30-10pm; Sat, Dave Carroll 7:30-10pm; Sun, Justin Phillips 7-9pm; Tue, Jazz at the Cat 7:30-10pm; (658 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-0908; Coolcatcafe.com

JANUARY 12, 2017 25


THURS | 1/12

MARK JOHNSTONE & FRIENDS

EVENTS

6:30PM-8:30PM • NO COVER FRI | 1/13

New Spoken Art Work by Lyz Soto

MATT DEL OLMO BAND

Her Bodies of Stories

10pm • $10

FRI Jan 13 7:30 pm McCoy

SAT | 1/14

Rising Indie Rock Band

ILLA J : NEVER LEFT TOUR A TRIBUTE TO HIS BROTHER J-DILLA WITH SPECIAL GUESTS DJ’S JAY P & JORALIEN

9:00pm • $25 presale • $30 Door

Young the Giant

SAT Jan 14 7:30 pm Castle

Showcase Jazz & Tap Dance !

Judy’s Gang in ‘One Word’

TICKETS @ JDILLA.EVENTBRITE.COM

SUN | 1/15

SUN Jan 15 5:00 pm Castle

NFL SUNDAY TICKET

A Maui Favorite Returns!

CATCH THE GAMES ON OUR BIG SCREEN

The New Shanghai Circus

BREAKFAST SERVED 7AM

DON’T MISS OUR BLOODY MARY BAR!

MON | 1/16

CHARLEY’S LIVE BAND OPEN MIC & JAM

MON/TUE Jan 16 - 17 Castle 2 shows per day!

TUES | 1/17

Australia’s Black Arm Band presents

7PM-10PM • NO COVER

“dirtsong”

BRIAN & MERYL

6:30PM-8:30PM • NO COVER WED | 1/18

THU Jan 19 7:30 pm Castle

RANDALL ROSPOND

GALLERY

Akihiko Izukura: The Way

6:30PM-8:30PM • NO COVER 142 HANA HWY

PAIA

of Natural Textiles

808.579.8085

Opens Sunday, Jan 15

WILD WAHINE WEDNESDAY

CASANOVA’S FAMOUS LADIES NIGHT DJ KURT MUSIC STARTS @ 10PM

$10 COVER

THE EVENING THAT EARNED CASANOVA’S THE AWARDS

“BEST LATE NIGHT IN MAUI” “BEST SINGLES SCENE IN MAUI”

FRIDAY JANUARY 13TH

MAUI’S FIRST SHOW BY

CREATIVE HUSTLE TOUR JAHSUN

SHOW STARTS AT 9:45PM $10 COVER

Q-DOGG & THE VISUALLY GIFTED

QWALI ZUSE — SUPREME BEINGS KILLA B-REX —JAY KURO

HIP HOP & RAP

SATURDAY JANUARY 14TH FROM THE CREATORS OF OUTLET

J Raz

SHERMAN

MUSIC STARTS AT 9:30PM $10 BEFORE 11PM $15 AFTER

MAKE IT A MEMORABLE EVENING DINE & DANCE AT CASANOVA FOR DINNER RESERVATIONS | 808.572.0220 | CASANOVAMAUI.COM

26 JANUARY 12, 2017


TheGRID

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY

1/12

1/13

1/14

1/15

1/16-1/18

FIND THE GRID ONLINE AT MAUITIME.COM/GRID OR TO HAVE YOUR BUSINESS ADDED TO OUR WEEKLY GRID SEND YOUR INFORMATION TO CALENDAR@MAUITIME.COM

SANSEI - KAPALUA 115 Bay Dr., Lahaina - 669-6286

SANSEI - KIHEI 1881 S. Kihei Rd., Ste. KT116 - 879-0004

SOUTH SHORE TIKI LOUNGE 1913 S. Kihei Rd. - 874-6444

STEEL HORSE SALOON 1234 L. Main St., Wailuku - 243-2206

STOPWATCH SPORTS BAR 1127 Makawao Ave. - 572-1380

THREE’S BAR & GRILL 1945 S Kihei Rd. - 879-3133

TIFFANY’S 1424 L. Main St., Wailuku - 249-0052

WATERCRESS Waiehu Beach Center, Wailuku - 243-9351

DOWN THE HATCH - Fri, Jon Kaneakua 11am1pm; Sat, Jon Kaneakua 11am-1pm; Mon, Jon Kaneakua 11am-1pm; Tue, Noa Zeb 11am-1pm; (658 Front St., Lahaina); 808-661-4900; Dthmaui.com DUKE’S BEACH HOUSE - Thu, Ben DeLeon 3-5pm; Thu, Garrett Probst and Guest 6-8:30pm; Fri, Garrett Probst 3-5pm; Fri, Henry Kapono 5-7pm; Fri, Damon Parrillo and Tim Osbourne 6-8:30pm; Sat, Danyel Alana 3-5pm; Sat, Damon Parrillo and Ron Hetten 6-8:30pm; Sun, Keali’i Lum 3-5pm; Sun, Damien Awai 6-8:30pm; Mon, Keali’i Lum 3-5pm; Mon, Danyel Alana and Guest 6-8:30pm; Tue, Ben DeLeon 3-5pm; Tue, Roy Kato and Guest 6-8:30pm; (130 Kai Malina Pkwy., Ka‘anapali); 808-662-2900; DukesMaui.com FLEETWOOD’S ON FRONT ST. - Thu, Kaniela Q 2-5pm; Fri, Kaniela Q 2-5pm; Sat, Paul Johnson 2-5pm; Sun, Paul Johnson 2-5pm; Mon, Kaniela Q 2-5pm; Tue, Kaniela Q 2-5pm; (744 Front St., Lahaina); 808-669-6425; Fleetwoodsonfrontst.com HULA GRILL - Thu, Kealii Lum and Friends 2-5pm; Thu, Damon Parillo and Friends 6-9pm; Fri, Derick Sebastian 11am-1pm; Fri, Ma’a 2-5pm; Sat, Kawika Lum Ho 2-5pm; Sat, Danyel Alana and Friends 6-9pm; Sun, Josh Lum 2-5pm; Sun, Lahui 6-9pm; Mon, Ua Aloha Maji 2-5pm; Mon, Keali’i Lum and Friends 6-9pm; Tue, Kawika Lum Ho 2-5pm; Tue, Wili Pohaku 6-9pm; (2435 Ka‘anapali Pkwy.); 808667-6636; Hulagrillkaanapali.com JAPENGO AT HYATT REGENCY MAUI - Thu, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; Fri, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; Sat, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; Sun, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; Mon, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; Tue, Nightly Entertainment 6-8pm; (200 Nohea Kai Dr., Ka‘anapali); 808-667-4727; Japengomaui.com JAVA JAZZ - Thu, Rick Glencross 7-10pm; Fri, Guest Performers 7-10pm; Sat, Fultone Tashombe and Paul Bunuan 7-10pm; Sun, Jon Bowser 7-10pm; Mon, Soundlab 7-10pm; Tue, Nino Toscano 7-10pm; (3350 L. Honoapi‘ilani Rd., Honokowai); 808-667-0787; Javajazzmaui.com KIMO’S - Thu, Ma’a 6:30-8:30pm; Fri, Willie K 9-11pm; Sat, Ma’a 6:30-8:30pm; Sun, Benny and Rock 6-8pm; Mon, Benny and Rock 6-8pm; Tue, Sam Ahia 6:30-8:30pm; (845 Front St., Lahaina); 808-661-4811; Kimosmaui.com LAHAINA CANNERY MALL - Fri, Mitch Kepa 5:30-7pm; (1221 Honoapi‘ilani Hwy., Lahaina); 808-661-5304; Lahainacannerymall.com LAHAINA PIZZA COMPANY - Thu, John Kane 7:30-9:30pm; Fri, John Kane 7:30-9:30pm; Sat, Joseph Chee 7:30-9:30pm; (730 Front St., Lahaina); 808-661-0700; Lahainapizzaco.com LEILANI’S ON THE BEACH - Thu, Josh Kahula and Dave of ‘Nuff Sedd’ 3-5pm; Fri, JD and

Free Karaoke 10pm-1am; no cover

Free Karaoke 10pm-1am; no cover

Free Karaoke 10pm-1am; no cover

Free Karaoke 10pm-1am; no cover

Free Karaoke 10pm-1am; no cover

Jamie Gallo, 4-6pm, DJ Big Mike, 10pm

Randall Rospond 4-6pm, DJ Gemini & Ynot, 10pm

TBA

Viva La Rumba 4pm, Sunday Lounge w/ DJ Joralien, 10pm

MON - Kanoa 4pm & DJ Big Mike SIN 10pm, TUE - Jon Bowser 4-6pm, DJ Salvo, WEDNatalie Nicole 4pm, DJ Lobstah, 10pm

$4 Maragarita Specials (all day)

Jus Us, 9pm no cover

Absinthe Rose from Boston

Football Specials

MON-Martini Monday w/ Dlishz, TUE- $2 Tuesday w/free pool all day, WED- Karaoke & free pool 6pm-close

FREE Karaoke w/ Dudley 9pm-12am; no cover

Luna Overdrive, $4 cover, 8-12pm

FREE Karaoke w/ Dudley 9pm-12am; no cover

Karaoke, 8pm-close

MON-WED-Karaoke, 8pm-close

Free Karaoke & Drink Specials

TUE- Free Karaoke & Drink Specials, WED- Dinner Music 6-8pm

Salsa Night w/ Barbara & Ernesto, 8pm-no cover

Capt Dan, 6:30-8:30pm

Karaoke, 8:30pm-close

Karaoke, 8pm-close

$3 Thursdays

Ladies Night, 10pm

Karaoke, 8pm-close

Friends 3-5pm; Sun, ‘Kilohana’ Merv Oana and Duane Feig 3-5pm; (2435 Ka‘anapali Pkwy.); 808-661-4495; Leilanis.com

Albert Kaina 7-9pm; Mon, Albert Kaina 7-9pm; Tue, Albert Kaina 7-9pm; (5900 L. Honoapi‘ilani Rd., Napili); 808-669-1500; Seahousemaui.com

LONGHI’S - Thu, Summer Macedo and Shawn McLauglin 5:30-7:30pm; Fri, Brian and Meryl 5:30-7:30pm; Sun, Two Cats 6-9pm; Mon, Chad Kaya 5:30-7:30pm; Tue, Wilmont Kahaialii and Shawn McLaughlin 5:30-7:30pm; (888 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-2288; Longhis.com

SOUTH MAUI

MERRIMAN’S - Thu, Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; Fri, Brian Massa and Meryl Yecies 3-5pm; Fri, Peter deAquino 3-5pm; Fri, Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; Sat, Gabe and Austin 10am-1pm; Sat, Ranga Pae 5:30-8:30pm; Sun, Peter deAquino 3-5pm; Sun, David Wolf 5:30-8:30pm; Mon, David Wolf 3-5pm; Mon, David Wolf 5:30-8:30pm; Tue, Brian Massa and Meryl Yecies 3-5pm; Tue, Phil and Angela Benoit 5:30-8:30pm; (1 Bay Club Pl., Kapalua); 808-669-6400; Merrimanshawaii.com PACIFIC’O ON THE BEACH - Fri, The Armadillo 4:30-6:30pm; Sat, David King 4:30-6:30pm; (505 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-4341; Pacificomaui.com

BOTERO LOUNGE AT GRAND WAILEA - Thu, Contemporary Hawaiian Music 5-10pm; Fri, Contemporary Hawaiian Music 5-10pm; Sat, Contemporary Hawaiian Music 5-10pm; Sun, Contemporary Hawaiian Music 5-10pm; Mon, Contemporary Hawaiian Music 5-10pm; Tue, Contemporary Hawaiian Music 5-10pm; (3850 Wailea Alanui Dr.); 808-875-1234; Grandwailea.com/experience/dine/botero-lounge CHEESEBURGER ISLAND STYLE - Thu, Mark Burnett 5:30-8:30pm; Fri, Brooks Maguire 5:308:30pm; Sat, Brooks Maguire 5:30-8:30pm; (3750 Wailea Alanui Dr.); 808-874-8990; Cheeseburgernation.com DIAMOND’S ICE BAR AND GRILL - Sun, Gina Martinelli Band 7-9pm; (1279 S. Kihei Rd.); 808-874-9299; Diamondsicebar.com

PAILOLO BAR AND GRILL AT WESTIN KA‘ANAPALI RESORT - Thu, Live Music 6-9pm; Tue, Live Music 5-8pm; (6 Kai Ala Dr., Ka‘anapali); 808-667-3200; Westinkaanapali.com/dining/pailolo

KONO’S ON THE GREEN - Thu, Jim Spector 5:30-8:30pm; Fri, Sal Godinez Band 5-8pm; Sat, Neto Peraza 5:30-7:30pm; Sun, Island Soul Dance Party 5-8pm; (470 Lipoa Pkwy., Kihei); 808-633-4220; Konosonmaui.com

PAU HUAKA’I TIKI BAR - Fri, Josh Sumibcay 5-8pm; Mon, Kawika Ortiz 6-8pm; (180 Nohea Kai Dr., Ka‘anapali); 808-662-1000; Kaanapalibeach.hyatt.com

LUANA LOUNGE AT FAIRMONT KEA LANI Fri, Live Entertainment 7-10pm; Sat, Live Entertainment 7-10pm; (4100 Wailea Alanui Dr.); 808-8754100; Fairmont.com/kea-lani-maui/dining/luana

PI ARTISAN PIZZERIA - Thu, Danyel Alana 6-9pm; Tue, Nestor Ugale 6-9pm; (900 Front St., Lahaina); 808-667-0791; Pi808.com

MAUI BREWING COMPANY KIHEI - Thu, Yum Yum Beast 5-8pm; Fri, Lewis and Louis 5-8pm; Sat, Bristol Dunlap 6-8pm; Sun, Randall Rospond 5-8pm; Mon, Johnny Ringo 5-8pm; (605 Lipoa Pkwy., Kihei); 808-213-3002; Mauibrewingco.com

PINEAPPLE GRILL - Fri, Johnny Ringo 3-6pm; Sat, Guest Musician 3-6pm; Sun, Codae and Daesha Dee 3-6pm; (200 Kapalua Dr.); 808-669-9600; PineappleGrillMaui.com PIONEER INN - Thu, Greg di Piazza 6-9pm; Mon, Kalani 6-9pm; Tue, Ah-Tim Eleniki 6-9pm; (658 Wharf St., Lahaina); 808-661-3636; Pioneerinnmaui.com RELISH OCEANSIDE BAR AT WESTIN MAUI RESORT - Thu, Braddah Keoki Ruiz 6:30-9pm; Fri, Braddah Keoki Ruiz 6:30-9pm; Sat, Braddah Keoki Ruiz 6:30-9pm; Sun, Braddah Keoki Ruiz 6:30-9pm; Mon, Braddah Keoki Ruiz 6:309pm; Tue, Braddah Keoki Ruiz 6:30-9pm; (2365 Ka‘anapali Pkwy.); 808-667-2525; Westinmaui. com/dining/relish-oceanside SANGRITA GRILL AND CANTINA - Thu, Live Flamenco Music by Indio and Avi 6:30-8:30pm; (2580 Kekaa Dr., Ka‘anapali); 808-662-6000; Sangritagrill.com SEA HOUSE RESTAURANT AT NAPILI KAI RESORT - Thu, Phillip Stevens 7-9pm; Fri, Phillip Stevens 7-9pm; Sat, Fausto Allosada 7-9pm; Sun,

MONKEYPOD KITCHEN - Thu, Dat Guyz 1-3pm; Thu, Levi and Chad 4-6pm; Thu, Louis and Lewis 7-9pm; Fri, Stay EZ 1-3pm; Fri, Tom Conway 4-6pm; Sat, Ron Kualaua 1-3pm; Sat, An Den 4-6pm; Sat, Randall Rospond 7-9pm; Sun, T-Flatz and The Highlights 1-3pm; Sun, Dat Guyz 4-6pm; Sun, Ohana Groove 7-9pm; Mon, Tom Conway 4-6pm; Mon, Josh Kahula 7-9pm; Tue, Stay EZ 4-6pm; Tue, Ohana Groove 7-9pm; (10 Wailea Gateway Center); 808-891-2322; Monkeypodkitchen.com/wailea MULLIGAN’S ON THE BLUE - Thu, Pat Simmons Jr. 6:30-8:30pm; Fri, Soul Kitchen Big Band 7-9pm; (100 Kaukahi St., Wailea); 808-874-1131; Mulligansontheblue.com OHANA SEAFOOD BAR AND GRILL - Thu, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; Fri, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; Sat, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; Sun, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; Mon, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; Tue, Contemporary Island Music 4-8pm; (1945 S. Kihei Rd.); 808-868-3247; Ohanaseafoodgrill.com

PITA PARADISE - Sat, David Wolf 5:308pm; Sun, Phil and Angela Benoit 6:30-9pm; (34 Wailea Gateway Center); 808-879-7177; Pitaparadisehawaii.com SOUTH SHORE TIKI LOUNGE - Thu, Jaime Gallo 4-6pm; Fri, Randall Rospond 4-6pm; Sat, Tom Conway 4-6pm; Sun, Viva La Rumba 4-6pm; Mon, Kanoa 4-6pm; Tue, Jon Bowser 4-6pm; (1913 S. Kihei Rd.); 808-874-6444; Southshoretikilounge.com THE RESTAURANT AT HOTEL WAILEA Fri, Mark Johnstone 7-9pm; Sat, Mark Johnstone 7-9pm; (555 Kaukahi Rd., Wailea); 808-879-2224; Hotelwailea.com/rhw

CENTRAL MAUI BEACH BUMS MA‘ALAEA - Fri, Mike Finkiewicz and Tom Cherry 5-8pm; Fri, Mark Burnett 5-8pm; Tue, Randall Rospond 5-8pm; (300 Ma‘alaea Rd.); 808-243-2286; Beachbumshawaii.com KAHULUI ALE HOUSE - Thu, Local Live Music 5-8pm; Fri, Local Live Music 5-8pm; Sat, Local Live Music 5-8pm; Sun, Local Live Music 5-8pm; Mon, Local Live Music 5-8pm; Tue, Local Live Music 5-8pm; (355 E. Kamehameha Ave., Kahului); 808-877-9001; Kahuluialehouse.com SEASCAPE MA‘ALAEA RESTAURANT - Fri, Kaulike Pescaia 5-7:30pm; (192 Ma‘alaea Rd.); 808-5149-3071; Mauioceancenter.com/dine STEEL HORSE SALOON - Sat, Absinthe Rose 7-7pm; (1234 L. Main St., Wailuku); 808-245-2206. WHOLE FOODS MARKET - Fri, Aloha Friday Music Jam 11:30am-2:30pm; (70 Ka‘ahumanu Ave., Kahului); 808-872-3310; Wholefoodsmarket.com

UPCOUNTRY MAUI CAFE MAMBO MAUI - Tue, Brant Quick 4-8pm; (30 Baldwin Ave., Paia); 808-579-8021; Cafemambomaui.com CAFE DES AMIS - Mon, Mark Johnstone 6:308:30pm; (42 Baldwin Ave., Paia); 808-579-6323; Cdamaui.com CHARLEY’S RESTAURANT AND SALOON - Thu, Mark Johnstone 6:30-8:30pm; Mon, Charley’s Live Band 7-10pm; Tue, Brian and Meryl 6:30-8:30pm; Wed, Randal Rospond 7-10pm; (142 Hana Hwy., Paia); 808-579-8085; Charleysmaui.com STOPWATCH SPORTSBAR AND GRILL - Fri, Luna Overdrive 8-11pm; (1127 Makawao Ave.); 808-572-1380. TREEHOUSE AT PAUWELA - Fri, Absinthe Rose 7-9pm; (375 W. Kuiaha Rd., Haiku); 808931-9243.

JANUARY 12, 2017 27


B LE & A D A P TA T H IG R B E MUST B IR A B LE S K IL LS D E S R E T U P M CO IT OOL CRED EARN SCH Email Inquiries to interns@mauitime.com 16 S. Market Street, Ste. 2k Wailuku, HI 96793

The Business Card District APRIL 18 DEADLINE APPROACHING! Help Me Rhonda, Inc. Tax Preparation Service

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by Caeriel Crestin

Horoscope

Sign Language CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19)

I look for people who surprise me. I’m thrilled when someone does something I never would have guessed them capable of, or displays some part of themselves that I find shocking. Capricorns, as it turns out, are quite often capable of these kinds of surprises–you just don’t often let us experience them. You have many facets, but your life is so compartmentalized that the people in it generally don’t see more than one (or occasionally, two). Mix it up a little. You might be right in assuming that no one in your life is prepared to enjoy all sides of you, but most of us are ready to experience a few more. AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18)

I’ve met many a brilliant Aquarian–some virtual geniuses, even. But most of them are also notoriously impractical. They don’t value doing things the easy way. This isn’t such a bad thing, generally. But when you turn aside from the simplest route to your destination, even when it’s mapped out before you, simply out of principle, you’ve got a problem. Imagine that in this case (and in at least a few others), the easiest way to get where you’re going might actually also be the best way. I know it goes against all your (backwards) instincts, but please–at least consider it. PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20)

Beware of cliques, because they’re going to rule this week, at least from your perspective. Since you’ve never especially been the clique-y sort, you’re apt to feel quite cut off and isolated from these obnoxious little groupings whose main purpose appears to be to fuel your sense of isolation and alienation. What are we going to do with you, dear? I know you’re not much of a joiner, but that doesn’t mean you need to spend the next little bit totally alone? Why not invite people to gather around you? Start your own damn clique. People want to be around you. This week, they just need an excuse.

CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22)

Some studies show that if you eat less you’ll live longer. Those that consume less than the recommended daily allowance are more likely to have longer, healthier lives. Why, then, does it feel good to overeat? What kind of shitty evolutionary trait is that? Who knows why our bodies can’t catch up with our minds? What I do know is that even though listening to your gut and body are generally good ideas, they can, occasionally, lead you astray. This week, let logic, reason, and hardcore evidence sway you, even if they go against your gut instinct, or belly’s rumbling desires.

QUIZ understood 1: A–124 2: C–8 3: E–346

LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22)

Even enlightened Leos are more susceptible to flattery than most other signs. Big deal. What are you supposed to do? Not feel good when someone gives you a sincere compliment? You should enjoy it when you receive praise. You have a problem, though, when you start to feel bad when you don’t get the admiration or tribute you think you deserve. That’s when it’s time for a thicker skin, so you can stop caring quite so much about what others think of you. Is what you’re doing important to you, for its own sake? Whatever the answer, it should be all you need. If it’s not, yet, make it so.

tattoos by Rachel G

VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22)

Right now, you’re probably (secretly) semi-frantically searching for a new project to fill a recently vacated space in your agenda. However, may I encourage you to hold off, at least, on jumping into any new commitments? There’s simply nothing, at the moment, that’s especially worth your while. Keep yourself as free and available as possible as long as possible, because the right project (or person) lies just over the horizon out of sight. It’d be a shame to miss out on that chance because you jumped the gun on something or someone who’s simply not worthy of what you have to offer.

VOTED BEST

LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22) ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19)

This is a dangerous thing to tell an Aries, but it’s nevertheless true: It’s not you, it’s them. Yep, it’s just not your problem, darling. There’s nothing wrong with how you are, much as some people don’t like or understand it. Instead of feeling bad about that, you’ve just got to get with some folks who get it and dig it. I’m one, and there are plenty more Ram fans out there. Stop forcing yourself on those who aren’t feeling it, and locate the ones who are not only ready to feel it, they’re desperate to. TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20)

You’re renowned for your stick-to-it-iveness, but don’t confuse determination and persistence with just plain stubbornness. If what you’re doing isn’t working, you may be right in assuming it’s because you haven’t put enough blood, sweat, and tears into it yet. But please consider the possibility that it’s simply not the right path for you, and will never really work, no matter how long and hard you labor at it. Don’t be afraid to change your course, especially if a seemingly better route (or slightly different destination) presents itself. In that case, sticking to your own original plan, even though it’s not working at all, would be sheer lunacy. GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20)

Sorry, I keep getting distracted every time I sit down to write your horoscope. It’s almost as if the universe is conspiring to keep me from doing it. Sound familiar? You often let your situation get the best of you, and are kept from being in top form because you’re frazzled, overtired, or easily diverted. The difference is, I know I’m in this predicament because of my mind, not because reality is conniving to impair my productivity. Are you really faced with more distractions than the average person, or simply more susceptible to being sidetracked by them? All I know is this: until you decide that your lack of focus is about you, and not about your circumstances, nothing about the situation will improve.

ANSWERS

...to questions from page 4

Imagine for a moment being lost and alone on a tropical island. There are no conflicts to mediate, no lovers to please, no expectations to live up to, no other people to react to in any way. How would you act? Would you even know what to do? It seems lately that everything you do is a reaction to someone else in some way. What about who you are really comes from you? This week, check yourself. Notice how much of what you’re doing is because you really and truly, deep down, want to do it, and how much is because someone else wants you to (or you think they do). It’s all right to bend to other people’s desires sometimes, but all the time (or even most of the time)? That’s just not right. SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21)

Of all the signs in the zodiac I am perhaps most intrigued and fascinated with you Scorpios. You have the potential to develop into some of the most powerful and intensely alive people around–but it takes time. You usually need many years to ripen into your full power; before that you’re usually charmingly idealistic or sweetly inexperienced. At those times, people can sometimes treat you with something less than the respect (and awe) you know you deserve. Please don’t blame them, though. You know what’s inside you, waiting to come out. They don’t, at least not yet. This week, seek out the company of those who are able to see and appreciate your potential, even if it hasn’t fully manifested yet.

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SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21)

Darling, you can’t polish a turd. Your attempts to dress up some less-than-impressive chapter of your history are embarrassing, and simply not worthy of you. Everyone has screwed up at some point. There’s no need to try to make it look like anything but a mistake you made. Your honesty is one of the main qualities people will admire in you, not your supposedly unblemished past. Own the shit you’ve done, both good and bad. The people you want in your life are those who can admire and appreciate a whole person–and that means someone who’s made a lot of mistakes. To contact Caeriel send mail to sign.language.astrology@gmail.com

JANUARY 12, 2017 29


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