TGIFr!day

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Week of Friday, October 4, 2019 | Vol. 7, No. 40

Check da Scene

Grinds & Da Kines For Your Weekend

‘TUNA’ TIME WITH A TWIST

Local play opens next week

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2 | TGIFR!DAY | Friday, October 4, 2019

FRIDAY

TOP PICKS FOR THE WEEK

KAUAI YOGA AND PEACE FESTIVAL 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., Lydgate Park BLOOD DRIVE 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., Kauai Beach Resort near Hanamaulu Info: www.bloodbanktough.org BREAST CANCER WALK 9 a.m., Ke Ala Hele Makalae Eastside coastal path, behind Kapaa Neighborhood Center The walk to celebrate life is Samuel Mahelona Memorial Hospital’s Seventh annual Breast Cancer Walk. Entertainment, light refreshments, zumba, more. Volunteers needed to push wheelchair-bound residents. Info: Josie Pablo, 823-4138, jpablo@ hhsc.org BLESSING OF THE PETS 4 to 6 p.m. Hanapepe United Church of Christ SATURDAY

MOVIE NIGHT ON THE LAWN 6:30 p.m. All Saints’ Episcopal Church and Preschool “Aladdin” and “Avengers: End Game” are the movies. Proceeds from items purchased at concession will go toward activities and mission trips for the Ke Akua Youth Group. Info: 822-4267 DOCUMENTARY MOVIE SHOWING 6:15 p.m. Hanapepe United Church of Christ The film is “Warrior Poet,” the story of the late U.S. Sen. Spark Matsunaga. Tickets are $25. ALOHA AINA CONCERT 2:30 to 5:45 p.m., Historic Waimea Theatre Kaumualii Hawaiian Civic Club celebrates

its 50th birthday with the concert. All proceeds benefit the club’s scholarship fund. Info: kaumualii.manokalanipo.org/

SIXTH ANNUAL OHANA FIT FEST 8:30 a.m., Anaina Hou Porter Pavilion and Wai Koa Loop Trail, Kilauea 5k and 10k obstacle trail run. Benefits Kauai North Shore Community Foundation’s Fit Fund. $45 includes shirt, refreshments, awards. Register at anainahou.org FREE AARP RETIREMENT WORKSHOP 1 to 4 p.m. Lihue Public Library Ten steps to getting ready for retirement; understanding Society Security retiree benefits, Medicare 101, more. Register: 877-926-8300. SIERRA CLUB HIKE Po‘omau Canyon, Koke‘e State Park Intermediate, 5.5 miles. Leader: Julio Magalhães, 650-906-2594 KAUAI YOGA AND PEACE FESTIVAL 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., Lydgate Park

Church in Kilauea A service of music, words from St. Francis, storytelling and communion. All pets are invited great and small — dogs, cats, birds, fish, lizards, pigs, sheep. TUESDAY

ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE TALK 6 p.m., Kapaa Public Library Learn the 10 warning signs of Alzheimer’s in yourself and others. The program covers typical age-related changes, how to approach someone about memory concerns, early detection, the benefits of a diagnosis and the diagnostic process, and local Alzheimer’s Association resources. Info: 821-4422 BINGO PARTY 10:45 a.m. to noon, Princeville Community Association clubhouse Healthy snacks, prizes and Bingo. Free. RSVP to el@princevillecommunity.com or 826-6687

KAUAI BALLROOM DANCE CLUB REGISTRATION AND FIRST CLASS SUNDAY 7 to 9 p.m. Hanapepe Recreation EAST KAUAI LIONS CLUB SPAGHETTI Center FUNDRAISER The Hanapepe Chapter of the Kauai Ball9 a.m. Kauai War Memorial Convention room Dance Club offers beginning classes in night club two step, mambo and Hall, Lihue intermediate rumba. Classes will continue Spaghetti plate lunch tickets are being sold by members for $10. Tickets available each Tuesday. Info: Glenda at 335-3554 or Cornelia at 335-5823 at the door. Doors open from 9 a.m. for silent auction, craft fair until 3 p.m. Plate WEDNESDAY lunches may be taken out or customers KAUAI BALLROOM DANCE CLUB may dine in from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Info: LIHUE CHAPTER REGISTRATION Lion Janice Bond, 639-9201 AND FIRST CLASS KAUAI YOGA AND PEACE FESTIVAL 7 to 9 p.m. Lihue Neighborhood Center 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., Lydgate Park Beginning classes are West Coast swing, BLESSING OF THE ANIMALS East Coast swing and intermediate foxtrot. FESTIVAL Classes continue each Wednesday. Info: 9:30 a.m. Christ Memorial Episcopal Glenda, at 335-3554

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Photos by Bill Buley / TGIFR!DAY

Jim Warrack, left, and Bailey Hutton rehearse a scene from Women in Theatre’s “A Tuna Christmas,” opening next week at the WIT’s End Theatre in Kukui Grove Center.” ON THE COVER: The two men are waitresses in some of their 20 different roles in the hilarious play.

TIME FOR A CHANGE

Women in Theatre’s ‘A Tuna Christmas’ features 40 costume changes for 2 actors who play 10 characters each BILL BULEY TGIFR!DAY

you have some 40 costume changes and sometimes just seconds to make those changes that might call for removing a hat, mustache, pants and shirt, ou won’t see Claudia Cowden and Jennifer Cul- and adding a scarf, glasses and shoes with yellow feathers. Or len on stage for “A Tuna Christmas.”You won’t even know removing everything (except the underwear) and adding red they’re backstage. But they will play major roles gloves, green slacks, earrings and in the success of this Women in red shoes. Theatre comedy. “I did the first ‘Tuna’ and it was The two will be getting cosa blast,” Cowden said as she and tumes ready — and while that sounds easy, it’s not. Not when SEE CHANGE, PAGE 4

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TGIFR!DAY | Friday, October 4, 2019 | 3

‘WARRIOR POET’

New documentary on Spark Matsunaga airs Saturday in Hanapepe Those interested in support- becoming program sponsors ing this community project by may contact Caylin Spear at

TGIFR!DAY

storybooktheatrespace@gmail. com.

H

ow often does little Kauai have an opportunity to see a world premiere movie made right here on island by local residents who happen to be media professionals? “Warrior Poet” is such a movie. The Storybook Theatre of Hawaii in Hanapepe for the last 24 years has honored the memory and legacy of “Hanapepe boy” and late U.S. Sen. Sparky Matsunaga. Now with the help of a master storyteller Alton Takiyama-Chung and veteran videotographer Dr. Robert Zelkovsky, the dream of a documentary drama creatively telling Matsunaga’s story has come about. The 45-minute movie will premiere in Hanapepe Saturday in the social hall of Hanapepe United Church of Christ, 4481 Kona Road at Kaumualii Highway. The gathering will include a pupu and dessert reception beginning at 5:30 p.m. with local style pupu and desserts, followed by a program of entertainment including taiko drumming by Taiko Kauai and special guest speakers, including Dr. Brien Hallett, professor of Peace Studies at the University of Hawaii’s Matsunaga

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“Spark Matsunaga: Warrior Poet,” is the story of the late U.S. Sen. Spark Matsunaga, a Kauai native.

Institute of Peace in Honolulu, and Stephanie Castillio, Emmy Award-winning documentary filmmaker. Edited by Zelkovsky of Bamboo Moon Video Productions, the movie captures many of the more subtle moods and expressions of Matsunaga as he faces: ◗ The daunting challenges of such times in Hawaiian/ American history as the plantation era; ◗ Growing up in relative poverty at the time of the Great Depression; ◗ Facing World War II as a Japanese American citizen, becoming a politician at the time of Hawaii statehood, becoming a U.S. congressman and senator;

◗ Dying in office after having founded the United States Institute of Peace in Washington, D.C. Matsunaga was also a family man and a great host for Hawaii visitors to D.C. The movie includes rare photos from the University of Hawaii Congressional Papers, Hawaii War Records Depository, the Japanese American Veterans Collection, and rare video and audio media from KGMB television, ‘Ulu‘ulu: The Henry Ku‘ualoha Giugni Moving Image Archive of Hawai‘i, and the Daniel K. Inouye Institute. Tickets, $25, are available at The Storybook Theatre of Hawaii, MCS Grill, Banana Patch Studios and at eventbrite.com.

ALONG THE ANDES: THE QUEST FOR QUININE TO COMBAT MALARIA TGIFR!DAY

T

he National Tropical Botanical Garden and Kauai Community College’s collaborative “Earth Matters” public lecture series continues at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 15 at

KCC. Dr. Nina Ronsted, director of science and conservation at NTBG, presents a talk drawing on her fieldwork in the foothills of the Andes mountains in a quest to better understand the anti-malarial quinine bark. Ronsted will discuss how

combining traditional knowledge and evolutionary history can lead to the discovery of new, plant-based medicines. “Earth Matters” lectures are held in the KCC Campus Center cafeteria near the Performing Arts Center.

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4 | TGIFR!DAY | Friday, October 4, 2019

Change

Continued from Page 2

Cullen penciled out each costume change recently at WIT’s End Theatre at Kukui Grove Center. “You’re behind the scenes but it’s exciting and it’s like a dance because you have to coordinate it.” “It has to be choreographed,” Cullen said, with Cowden adding, “If you miss a beat, then they come in late.” “It’s a lot of pressure,” Cullen said, laughing. Director Nell Foster and her cast of two, Bailey Hutton and Jim Warrack, are ready. Well, at least they think they will be by Thursday’s opening night.

The fast pace creates challenges, for sure, Hutton said. “It’s good when you can meet that challenge,” he said. “I’ll let you know after opening if we’ve met it.” Last year, WIT’s “Greater Tuna” sold out, and the sequel, written by Ed Howard, Jaston Williams and Joe Sears, is expected to as well. “Two of Kauai’s finest actors once again bring you over 20 characters in a fast-paced comedy set in fictional Tuna, Texas,” said a press release. “Enjoy another unforgettable evening of side-splitting theatrics. Even Uncle Bob, who rarely laughs out loud, will not be able to contain himself.” Foster said “Greater Tuna” was very well received, as it told the story of a family in

Bill Buley / TGIFR!DAY

Claudia Cowden, left, and Jennifer Cullen plan all the costume changes for “A Tuna Christmas.”

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“If Walmart and Costco can have Christmas trees out now, we’re going to do the same thing,” she said, smiling. A WIT Christmas program planned for December was canceled after WIT learned it was losing its current space of two years at Kukui Grove Center. This will be the final show there before moving to a temporary home near Macy’s. Meantime, all eyes and ears will be on “Tuna Christmas.” With each actor playing about 10 characters, it’s a lot of lines to memorize, and not everything flows in a logical progression. “It’s a collection of vignettes,” Warrack said. Bailey said in a play where he plays one character, he can focus on motivation in character development. Not so when each character is on stage briefly. “You’re just sort of opening a window into these peoples’ lives for a minute, and then you close it,” Hutton said. The two men don’t play only men in “Tuna Christmas.” Each also plays female characters with different voices, accents, body language and outfits.

“I can play one damn good woman, but then you have to do four, I’m not so sure about that. You have to be very versatile,” Hutton said. “It’s interesting how those nuances and dynamics come up,” he said. “We have a lot of fun with the different voices and movements and mannerisms,” Warrack added. Foster said a sense of humor is necessary in “Tuna Christmas.” “It’s always fun to say I want this to be realistic as I’m talking to a guy that’s dressed up as a woman, but they do a great job of it,” she said. “One thing that’s really amazing about watching these two on the stage, those relationships between the two people who are on stage, no matter which two they are, are very real. You know that these people know one another. you know that they spend time together. They share the same issues in life. It’s really pretty amazing.” Hutton said while he’s playing several female characters, there is a serious side to it. “It needs to look very realistic or it looks poorly done,” he said. “It’s not very funny if you’re just making fun of these characters the whole time.” “You have to show a very real side of them that these are real people, they just happen to be living this particular life, which is hysterical,” Hutton said. “But if you don’t play that nuance parody just right, it will bust.” Almost every prop is mimed in the show. So when coffee is poured, a phone call is made, or someone is eating a cookie, it’s pantomimed. Attention to detail matters. “If you do it sloppy, it’s not good.” Hutton said. When Warrack first

rehearsed a scene where he’s speaking while eating, he nailed it. “It sounds like he’s got a mouthful of cookies,” Hutton said. Both men are ready for the speedy costume changes. “Sometimes we have go off stage and be back on stage as somebody completely different within a few seconds,” Warrack said. “Some within a few seconds,” Hutton said. “Sometimes they walk off stage and everything comes off but their underwear,” Foster said. It could be confusing deciding what comes on and what comes on, which is where Cowden and Cullen come in. For instance, changing Stanley to Vera requires removing everything and adding a gown, robe, slippers, wig and glasses. Another change means removing everything except socks, and then adding a pink jogging suit, tennis shoes, glasses and a carry-on bag. They’ll do this 40 times between the two actors, so they must keep track of who’s coming and who’s going and have the next costume ready. It’s frantic, but meticulous, fun. “We’re going to do a show about this,” Cullen said, laughing. The play runs Thursday through Sunday, with the final show Oct. 27. Shows times are 7 p.m. each night, and 4 p.m. Sundays. General tickets are $20 or reserve a table for four for $25 a ticket at bit.ly/2pwh0o3, or phone WIT at 635-3727. ••• Bill Buley, editor-in-chief, can be reached at 2450457 or bbuley@thegardenisland.com.-


TGIFR!DAY | Friday, October 4, 2019 | 5

NATIVE AMERICAN STORY TIME Jim Jung wears a handmade Native American chief headdress he’ll have on when he reads to keiki at 11 a.m. Saturday and again on Oct. 12 at Kukui Grove Center. Jung is volunteering with the Retired and Senior Volunteer Program keiki story time program and will be reading three Native American books by Gerald McDermott, including the one he is holding, “Raven.” Jung will also be wearing his pow wow volunteer tank top with a bead necklace with dream catcher. “I’m looking forward to this opportunity to share Indian culture and tales with the kids at the mall,” Jung said.

‘THE SHAPE OF NIGHT’ INVOKES CLASSIC GOTHIC SUSPENSE

then why would she emiah Brodie, the sea ••• BOOK REVIEW have physical proof captain who owned that she had been the house over 100 years ago. Is it her imagination or n “The Shape of Night” by Tess with someone during the night? is the mansion truly haunted? Gerritsen, a writer named Ava Gerritsen creates an atmospheric The more she starts to quesCollette attempts to escape a scene with the mansion and tragic event in Boston by fleeing tion if she saw a ghost or not, the Maine coastline, and readers to a remote area of Maine where she learns that previous women will almost feel the breeze and who have lived in the house she rents an isolated, coastal hear the waves crashing against mansion. It’s a chance for her to have died under mysterious the rocks. The main story of Ava, forget and focus on finishing her circumstances. Then Capt. Brodie who may — or may not — be begins to visit her in the bednext cookbook. The mansion, descending into madness, is Brodie’s Watch, has a history, but room and they begin a relation- compelling, and a clever twist or ship that is built primarily on lust. two steers the narrative in unexrumors of a dark past and it being haunted don’t deter her from She wakes up the next morning pected ways. It’s a bit graphic in after an escapade with her ghost the sex scenes a few times, but moving in. Then one night she sees a glimpse of someone who lover and discovers bruises and that is a minor nitpick in what is scratches. If it all was a dream, looks suspiciously like Capt. Jeranother winner for Gerritsen. JEFF AYERS ASSOCIATED PRESS

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Bill Buley / TGIFR!DAY

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6 | TGIFR!DAY | Friday, October 4, 2019

EDDIE MURPHY SHINES IN VULGAR, HEARTFELT ‘DOLEMITE’ LINDSEY BAHR AP FILM WRITER

one night after he and his buddies decide to see a movie — something funny — and are left scratching their heads at a packed showing of Billy or the amount of cursing, vulWilder’s 1974 remake of “The Front garity and nudity in “Dolemite Page” with Jack Lemmon and Walter Is My Name,” (three and a half stars out of four), it might come Matthau, wondering what the appeal as a surprise that it’s is. ••• actually a rather sweet So they decide to make something MOVIE that they want to see (kung-fu, nudity REVIEW and heartfelt film. “Dolemite” is not here and action are a few of the requirements). Moore scrapes together to shock and scandalize. It’s simply a money, friends, acquaintances, some loving, R-rated portrait of Rudy Ray strangers (a playwright played by Moore, a nobody who had the guts Keegan-Michael Key, and actor D’Urto believe in himself when no one ville Martin, played by Wesley Snipes) else did, featuring a killer comeback and a few film school students and Eddie Murphy performance. sets off to make a feature. The only The self-proclaimed “Godfather problem? None of them really know of rap,” Moore was an Army veteran, how to make a movie. But they do standup comedian, musician and their best which is often funny and born performer who in the 1970s always endearing. came to niche prominence for his Aside from Murphy, who easrhythmic and raunchy Dolemite act. Francois Duhamel / Netflix via AP es back into stardom seamlessly, That character would beget both Eddie Murphy is contemplative in a scene from “Dolemite Is My Name.” the other standout performance standup albums and the 1975 Blaxand at a low point borrows some comes from Da’Vine Joy Randolph, a dog story with a big beating heart. ploitation film “Dolemite,” a low-bud- 81). It makes sense that the script Tony-nominated stage actress who Murphy plays Moore with a wide- material from a local homeless man get production (reports say it cost comes by way of screenwriters Scott bursts off the screen as comedian eyed eagerness we typically only see about a larger-than-life character around $100,000 to make) that made Alexander and Larry Karaszewski, named Dolemite, and, finally he’s Lady Reed. Moore “discovers” her on screen in much younger charsome $10 million at the box office. who did something similar for the got people’ s attention. But there are one night on tour as someone with acters. He’ s constantly told no or to cult fi lmmaker Ed Wood. But it’s almost irrelevant whethstill many, many no’ s he’ll have to presence. stay in his lane. Even his friends (Craig Directed by Craig Brewer (“Hustle er you know Moore’s name well, overcome to get an album made and “Some people walk around Robinson, Mike Epps and Tituss Bur& Flow”), “Dolemite Is My Name” and how he inspired the likes of then released. And we haven’t even with their own personal spotlight,” gess among them) look at him with transports you to Moore’s 1970s Los Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg, or are Murphy’s Moore tells her. The same that kind of half-pitying/half-support- gotten to the cult classic movie yet. learning about him for the first time: Angeles, thanks to Ruth E. Carter’s While it’s a joy spending time with could be said of Randolph, or Moore “Dolemite Is My Name” is just a good evocative costumes and Clay Griffith’s ive smile that will leave the audience wondering if this is just a big dreamer Moore as he ascends in the comedy himself, and it’s a lovely thing to have production design. There’s nothing piece of entertainment. And it’s the world, the film really kicks into gear a very good film like “Dolemite Is My terribly interesting about the way it’s who might not actually make it. kind of film that will help his legacy when he gets the idea to make a film Name” to show off both. But he has an eye for talent told, it’s just a straightforward underlive on (Moore died in 2008 at age

F

DR. DRE, JIMMY IOVINE UNVEIL NEW HIGH-TECH BUILDING AT USC ASSOCIATED PRESS

A

ndre “Dr. Dre”Young and Jimmy Iovine want a new high-tech building bearing their names at the University of Southern

California to become a place where young creatives can understand marrying the concepts of art, technology and business. The music business partners along with USC’s head school officials unveiled the Iovine

and Young Hall on the campus during a dedication ceremony on Wednesday afternoon. The school’s marching band commemorated the moment by playing its fight song “Fight On.” “What this school does is as much as what it doesn’t do,”

said Iovine, an entrepreneur who is co-founder of Interscope Records. “What it doesn’t do is cut off that potential in your freshman year and silos you into something,” Iovine continued. “To silo an undergraduate is a mistake

as far as I’m concerned.” Dr. Dre is best known as a producer, rapper and co-owner of Death Row Records. The building is named for Iovine and Dr. Dre who donated a combined $70 million in 2013 to create the Jimmy

Iovine and Andre Young Academy for Innovation. The academy provides a special four-year program for students whose interests are in several fields from marketing, computer science, visual design and other arts.


CHECK DA SCENE

TGIFR!DAY | Friday, October 4, 2019 | 7

DENNIS FUJIMOTO TGIFR!DAY

Johnny Mitsis, Kathryn Ledesma Brudda Branch Harmony, Auhea

Anita Kopp, Joe Kopp, Valerie Kopp, Elena Kopp - Germany

SUNSHINE MARKETING T

Winston Morrison, Rachel Morrison - Washington, DC, Anette Busick, Hal Bushick - Washington

Ryo Takami - Japan, Risa Clemmons

Calvin Albinana, Jace Albinana - California

Georgia - Missouri, Sage, Ty - Arizona

Kyler Schmidt, Morgen Schmidt

Tammy Fairchild, Amber Blinco - Idaho

he Koloa Sunshine Market, open from noon on Mondays, is just one of a network of Sunshine Markets coordinated through the county Office of Economic Development. The Sunshine Markets offer fresh fruits, vegetables and more, including a limited amount of value-added products, at different locations throughout the island. Tuesday markets are on the lawn of the Historic County Building and Kalaheo Neighborhood Center. The Wednesday market is at Mayor Bryan J. Baptiste Sports Complex. Thursday markets are on Kilauea Road in Kilauea and Hanapepe Park behind the fire station. The Friday market is at the Vidinha Stadium parking lot, and the Saturday morning market is at the Kekaha Neighborhood Center.

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8 | TGIFR!DAY | Friday, October 4, 2019

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