Wai Ola, ʻAukele And The Waters Of Life

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Tenney Theatre
229 Queen Emma Square
Honolulu, Hawaiʻi
July 20th, 2024 at 7PM and July 21st, 2024 at 2PM
PURCHASE TICKETS

The Mahea Uchiyama Center for International Dance / Hālau Ka Ua Tuahine will present a rare form of hula not widely practiced today. Hula kiʻi features the use of carved or crafted images in the story telling and movements of hula. Due to Western influences in the 19th Century, the hula kiʻi and other indigenous traditions were suppressed almost out of existence. Kumu Hula Māhealani Uchiyama of Hālau Ka Ua Tuahine, in association with Kumu Hula Kiʻi Mauli Ola Cook (holder of the lineal tradition of Kumu Nona Beamer and Kauaʻi alakaʻi of Kumu Hula Victoria Holt Takamine), Kumu Hula Maile Loo-Ching who leads the non-profit Hula Preservation Society, and Kumu Hula Auliʻi Mitchell of Hālau ʻo Kahiwahiwa who is an expert in carved forms and kiʻi innovation, will present this unique art form in Honolulu through a project sponsored by the 2021 Gerbode Foundation Choreography Award and 2024 Touring Grants from the Gerbode Foundation and the Zellerbach Family Fund. The project encompasses the research of classical themes, the construction of hula puppets, and the development of a dedicated hula ki’i practice within the Berkeley-based hālau. The resultant performance is Wai Ola, ʻAukele and the Waters of Life, A Celebration of Hula Kiʻi.

ʻAukele is a Hawaiian folk hero who successfully faced many terrifying challenges and undertook myriad, mystical adventures.  The deep seated jealousy of ʻAukeleʻs brothers towards him led to several attempts on his life and journeys into the unknown. Our interpretation of the story centers on the theme of water, its value, and who controls access, current issues in both California and Hawaiʻi.

ʻAukele was the 11th and favorite son of Ikū, the chief of the celestial land of Kuaihelani. ʻAukeleʻs jealous oldest brother threw him into a deep pit hoping that Moʻoinanea (a female lizard diety) would devour him. Instead, recognizing that she was his ʻaumakua (deified ancestor), she blessed him with otherworldly gifts and powers. One of his many adventures led him to become married to Peleʻs sister Nāmakaokahaʻi. Guided by the wisdom of both Moʻoinanea and Nāmaka, ʻAukele was able to navigate through the heavens in pursuit of the life giving waters of Kane. Despite the many obstacles he faced, ʻAukele succeeded in his quest, and used the sacred waters to bring renewed life to his brothers. This epic Hawaiian story is rich and complex. It is our pleasure and privilege to share selected highlights of ʻAukeleʻs life journey with you.

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The Project

Nā Kumu Hula Kiʻi (hula kiʻi teachers) Mauli Ola Cook and Maile Loo-Ching were invited to journey from Kauaʻi and Oʻahu to California to work with members of Hālau Ka Ua Tuahine of Berkeley.

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The first of these visits was focused on the creation of the kiʻi (puppets)    using rocks, shells, fibers, and other natural materials. Each dancer was encouraged to make her own unique kiʻi, including their garments and adornments. There was specific attention given to learning how to hold and animate the kiʻi. Nā Kumu (teachers) shared a number of beautiful mele (songs) and hula.

There was considerable discussion on the history of the kiʻi tradition as well as a primer on challenges of water rights both in Hawaiʻi and here in California.

Our second visit with Nā Kumu encompassed deepening our understanding of the mele (songs) and choreography as well as working on the technique of how to hold and dance with the kiʻi.
During the two years of the project, our dancers met for weekly practice and the lead artist and Nā Kumu met monthly on Zoom to clarify logistics for the culminating performance.

We also engaged in weekly joint rehearsals with Nā Kumu zooming in from Hawaiʻi to observe us and offer notes on what they saw.

 

The Production

On March 18th, 2023, Wai Ola, ʻAukele and the Waters of Life – A Celebration of Hula Kiʻi had its world premier with two sold out performances at Rhythmix Cultural Works in Alameda, California. It was a unique presentation involving a fusion of the arts: dance, song, puppetry, the crafting of traditional regalia & adornments as well as storytelling, featuring heartfelt performances by Kumu Mauli Ola Cook, Kumu Maile Loo-Ching, and guest artist John-Mario Sevilla. 

Due to its success, plans were soon made to bring the performance home to Hawaiʻi. 


Program

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The Legend of ʻAukelenuiaikū

ʻAukele is the 11th and favorite son of Ikū, the chief of the celestial land of Kuaihelani. His jealous brothers threw him into a pit where he encountered his ʻAumakua (ancestor), Moʻoinanea. She gave him otherworldly gifts and powers which helped him to secure Peleʻs older sister Nāmakaokahaʻi as his wife. A journey into the spiritual world brought him into possession of the Waters of Life, which bestowed awareness, forgiveness and love on ʻAukele and his entire ʻohana (family).

Oli Welina
The Kumulipo
The Sons of Ikū
ʻAumakua
The Journey
Nāmakaokahaʻi
Pule No Ke Kala
The Waters of Life

Ola I Ka Wai A Ka ʻŌpua

A call to the oceans and the sweet waters of the world and a reminder to cherish these precious resources.

Te Moana
This song composed by Teneta Kong-Fou celebrates the peoples and cultures connected by the Pacific Ocean.

Ka Wai Sweet
Māhealani Uchiyama composed this song as a call to water in all its forms requesting healing and forgiveness.

Tribute to the Late Kumu Hula Kiʻi
Auntie Nona Beamer

Paʻahana
The story of a young girl who suffered in childhood but ultimately found a better life.
Auntie Nona appreciated Paʻahanaʻs resiliency and honored her through this hula kiʻi.

Kimo Hula
Helen Desha Beamer, Auntie Nona’s “Sweetheart Grandma”, wrote this song for her friend, James “Kimo” Henderson and his estate Moanikeʻala in Hilo, Hawaiʻi.

Ka Pua Lehua O Pāhoa
A song for Auntie Nona composed by Nathan Kahikolu Kalama.

Hawaiian Puppetry is Reborn!

E Ola E Nā Kiʻi E

Composed by Charles Auliʻi Mitchell of Oʻahu, who was raised in the hula tradition of his mother Kumu Hula Harriet Aana Cash and his grandfather Charles Kahiwahiwa Cash. He perpetuates carved kiʻi practices and wrote this oli to celebrate the rebirth of hula kiʻi in modern times.

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Nā Kumu

Mauli Ola Cook – Kumu Hula Kiʻi and Holder of the Lineal Tradition of Kumu Nona Beamer and Kauaʻi Alakaʻi of Kumu Hula Victoria Holt Takamine

Maile Loo-Ching – Kumu Hula Kiʻi and Director of the Non-profit Hula Preservation Society

Auliʻi Mitchell – Kumu Hula Kiʻiof Hālau ʻo Kahiwahiwa and Expert in Carved Forms and Kiʻi Innovation

Māhealani Uchiyama – Kumu Hula of Hālau Ka Ua Tuahine and Director

 

Lead Artist

Meridith Kawēkiu Aki

Featured Artist

John-Mario Sevilla as ʻAukele

Guest Artists

Hālau Hula ʻO Kahoʻoilina Aloha: Kekupu Loo-Ching, Kaua Dias, Ludwig Kalākauikekeha van Broekhuizen, Pualani Yos

Nā Mea Hula Kiʻi

Avery Kamalei Aki, Meridith Kawēkiu Aki, Clarisse Tēhau Choy, Catherine Lokomaikaʻi Dea, Lora Kēhaulani Dinga, Emily Hinareva Hawkins, Grace Kaʻimi Kang, Usha Kawena Lingappa, Elaine Mālino Mo, Amber Poliʻahu Saberton, Pamela Līʻula Saberton, Amy ʻIlikea Santana, Mariko Maunakahu Soto, Fonda Lanakila Yoshimoto-Reed

Nā Mea Hoʻokani a Hīmeni

Victor ʻAnapa Manansala, Ashley Waiʻolu Moore, Nathaniel Māhealani Stillman, Māhealani Uchiyama

Production Manager

Sonia Lōkahi Pina

Scenic Design

Aaron Sencil

Design & Construction of Moʻoinanea

Kumu Auliʻi Mitchell

Regalia Design

Clarisse Tēhau Choy

Regalia Construction

Clarisse Tēhau Choy, Lokomaikaʻi Dea, Lily Kaʻeo Hill, Grace Kaʻimiloa Kang, Irene Puaʻiti Klein, Lynne Manawa Ogawa, Amy ʻIlikea Santana, Juanita Kōnane Wilson

Dramaturge

Roberta Māpuana Uno

MAHALO NUI to the amazing team at Honolulu Theatre for Youth / Tenney Theatre and deep appreciation for our partners at the Hawaiʻi State Foundation on Culture and the Arts.

As always, we acknowledge the generous support of our funders, the Wallace Alexander Gerbode Foundation, the Zellerbach Family Fund, and donors from our extended community, for making this tour possible.

 


Artist Bios

Meridith Kawēkiu Aki was born and raised in Berkeley, CA. She began taking dance classes at the age of 2 years. Throughout her childhood she learned many different styles of dance, including many forms of “world dance”. In 1993 she took her first class from Kumu Hula Māhealani Uchiyama and has continued ever since. In 2006 she became an alaka’i of Kumu Māhea’s Hālau Ka Ua Tuahine. With Hālau Ka Ua Tuahine, Kawēkiu has performed throughout California and internationally, appearing in venues ranging from the Hollywood Bowl and Kū Mai Ka Hula of Kahului, Maui, to the Heiva celebrations of Tahiti, French Polynesia and Te Papa Tongareva, the National Museum of New Zealand. She has attended the world conference on hula, Ka ʻAha Hula ʻo Hālauaola, on the islands of Maui, O’ahu, Kaua’i and Hawaiʻi.

Mauliola Cook holds an MFA in Theater and Dance from UH Mānoa. She belongs to Hālau Pua Ali’i ‘Ilima and is a grateful haumana to her Kumu Hula, Victoria Holt Takamine and Jeffery Takamine. She has led the Kaua’i based class of their hālau for the last 22 years. Mauli began her studies of hula in Honolulu in 1978 with the late Rose Joshua. While teaching at UH Hilo Mauliola was privileged to study with the Hālau o Kekuhi for two years. When earning her MFA she was fortunate to study under Kumu Hula Kaha’i Topolinski as well as Kumu Hula Edward Kalāhiki. Mauliola met Auntie Nona when she first arrived in the islands in 1978. Auntie Nona was a cherished mentor and beloved Auntie to her in all aspects of life and hula. Mauliola was awarded an apprenticeship grant from the Hawaiʻi State Foundation on Culture and the Arts in the early 1990s to study hula ki’i with Auntie Nona. Their year of study unfolded into myriad opportunities to perform and teach hula ki’i throughout the islands. Since Auntie’s passing Mauli has been blessed by a rich friendship with Auntie’s hānai daughter Maile Beamer Loo. Together with Maile, Mauliola has enjoyed sharing performances and workshops of hula ki’i, on the continent as well as in Hawai’i, often in collaborations with Kumu Hula Auli’i Mitchell and Kumu Hula Kapono’ai Molitau.

For the past 35 years Mauli has made her home on the beautiful island of Kauaʻi, where she has had the privilege of teaching countless students the joys of creative dance and ʻIke Hawaiʻi (Hawaiian Studies). Through her work as a national Teaching Artist with the Kennedy Center she has enjoyed sharing her passion for arts integrated instruction with teachers and students in schools throughout Hawaiʻi and the continental United States.

Maile Loo-Ching and her hānai (adopted) mother, the late hula master, composer, storyteller, author, and teacher, Auntie Nona Beamer, founded the non-profit Hula Preservation Society (HPS). For the last 23 years, Ms. Loo-Ching has led HPS’s efforts to build a library hand-in-hand with our native elders, digitally documenting hundreds of hours of “talk story” sessions and public programs with the elders sharing of their lives as Native Hawaiians in the dynamic yet challenging 20th century in Hawaiʻi. The resulting archive exists nowhere else in the world and is a resource for teachers and learners of all kinds. In addition to leading the work of HPS from its Office & Archives in Kāneʻohe, Hawaiʻi, Maile perpetuates the Beamer style of hula and the traditions of Auntie Nona through her hālau. This tradition includes Hula Kiʻi, or Hawaiian Puppetry, which was one of Auntie’s most treasured forms of ancient hula. Auntie Nona’s kiʻi protégé is Mauliola Cook, and together Ms. Loo-Ching and Ms. Cook have taught and shared kiʻi on the islands of Oʻahu, Kauaʻi, Maui, Molokai, and Hawaiʻi. She is the Kumu of Hālau Hula ʻo Kahoʻoilina Aloha (The Legacy of Love) of Kāneʻohe, Hawaiʻi where she helps teach children the joys of life and the stories of Hawaiʻi through hula.

Charles Aulii Mitchell was born in 1961 on the island of Oahu. He was raised in the traditions of hula `ōlapa under the tutelage of his mother Kumu Hula Harriet Aana Cash and his grandfather Charles Kahiwahiwa Cash. Both were close companions and students of Joseph Kealiikuikamoku Ilala’ole o Kamaheameha, Samuel Pua Haaheo and Mary Kawena Pukui. Two mele (song) of the hula kiʻi were presented to his grandfather by Kawena Pukui. His grandfather never created hula kiʻi for the mele, therefore it skipped two generations before the Cash tradition of hula kiʻi came to be.

Over four decades ago kumu Aulii was challenged by his mother to research the true story of the hula ki’i. She instilled in him the importance of preserving the cultural traditions, customs, and beliefs associated with this genre of the ancient hula. Today, he continues the living traditions of this knowledge to the indigenous communities at home and the world at large.

Kumu Aulii pursued his bachelor’s degree at the University of Hawaii, Hilo in anthropology followed by a master’s degree in Applied Indigenous Knowledge in Tāmaki Makarau, New Zealand, the only one in the United States to hold this degree. He waka hiringa (The Desired Canoe) continues to thrive between Hawaiʻi and New Zealand. He is a distinguished worldwide lecturer, educator, keynote speaker, author, artist, coordinator, producer and kumu hula of both Hālau ʻo Kahiwahiwa on the islands of Hawaiʻi and Oʻahu, and their sister hula institution in Aotearoa, Hālau O Moana-nui-a-Kiwa. A lifelong practitioner, he continues to share and present the traditions of the Hula Ki’i and all things Hawaiian.

Kumu Aulii is a recipient of the First Nations, Henry Luce Foundation Fellowship 2021 acknowledged for his past, present, and future work in the realms of the ancient dance of the Hula Kiʻi, the dance of the sacred image or Hawaiian Puppetry. 

John-Mario Arcilla Sevilla, from Maui, is profoundly grateful to his ʻohana and teachers for the gift of dance. He is a haumana hula of Hōkūlani Holt, June Ka‘ililani Tanoue, and Kawika Alfiche. His Philippine folk dance mentors are Hana Gomez Trinidad, Agrifina Cabebe and H. Wayne Mendoza. His modern dance teachers are Betty Jones and Fritz Ludin. Currently the Director of Development and Operations at Luna Dance & Creativity in Berkeley, CA, he previously was the Visiting Scholar at NYU’s Asia Pacific American Institute and directed 92Y Harkness Dance Center, Dance Education Laboratory and NYC Ballet Education. His choreography has been presented at CounterPulse, The Atlantic Theater Company, 92NY, The Met Museum, LaMaMa, Movement Research, Harkness Dance Center, Dance Theatre Workshop, Lower East Side Tenement Museum, The Asia Society and Bronx Academy of Art and Dance. He has danced in the Modern Dance companies of Pilobolus, Alison Chase, Murray Louis and Alwin Nikolais, Anna Sokolow, among others.

Māhealani Uchiyama is an award-winning dancer, musician, composer, choreographer, recording artist, author and teacher. She studied hula under Kumu Hula Hoʻoulu Cambra and primarily under Kumu Hula Joseph Kamohaʻi Kahāʻulelio. She is the founder and director of the Māhea Uchiyama Center for International Dance (MUCID) of Berkeley, California and is Kumu Hula of Hālau Ka Ua Tuahine. She is the creator and director of the Kāpili Polynesian Dance & Music Workshops. She holds a BA in Dance Ethnology and an MA in Pacific Islands Studies from the University of Hawaiʻi, has led performance tours to Tahiti, New Zealand and the islands of Hawai’i, and has taught workshops throughout the United States and Mexico. She has taught Hawaiian Language at Stanford University and authored the Haumāna Hula Handbook for Students of Hawaiian Dance, and The Mbira, An African Musical Tradition (both published by North Atlantic Books / Penguin Random House). She has released numerous collections of Hawaiian and Tahitian music. Her CDs “Tatau”  and “Pasifika” are widely used by Polynesian dance organizations worldwide. She has two recordings of mbira, the spiritual music of the Shona people of Zimbabwe, “Ndoro dze Madzinza” and “The Sky That Covers Us All”. Her CD “A Walk by the Sea” was awarded a Hawai’i Music Award for Best World Music Album.

She has been honored by the City of Berkeley with a proclamation declaring January 22, 2019 as Māhealani Uchiyama Day. Ms. Uchiyama has served on the panel of judges for the San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival (for which she is also former Co-Artistic Director) and the Tahiti Fete of San Jose and Hilo. 

She is currently using her unique perspective as a lineally recognized Kumu Hula and one of (possibly the only) Kumu Hula of African descent to inform her next recording project, Pōpoloheno: Songs of Resilience and JoyThe Untold Stories of Africans in Hawaiian History, supported by grants from the Gerbode Foundation and the Kenneth Rainin Foundation. 

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Wai Ola
ʻAukele and the Waters of Life – A Celebration of Hula Kiʻi

is made possible by a 2021 Choreography Grant from the Gerbode Foundation, and touring grants from the Gerbode Foundation and the Zellerbach Family Fund. We thank the Hawaiʻi State Foundation for Culture and the Arts for partnering with the Mahea Uchiyama Center for International Dance for this production.

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