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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, March 9, 2007

Three day Honolulu Festival celebrates Pacific nations

By Wayne Harada
Advertiser Entertainment Writer

The vibrantly colorful Waikiki Grand Parade is always a highlight of the annual Honolulu Festival. This year's parade features three phases and starts at 4:30 p.m. Sunday, beginning at Saratoga Road, traveling down Kalakaua Avenue and ending at Monsarrat Avenue.

Honolulu Festival photos

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Performances take place at Hawai'i Convention Center, Waikiki Beach Walk and Ala Moana Center, above.

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FESTIVAL HOT LINE: 596-3327

LEARN MORE: www.honolulufestival.com

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A three-pronged cultural celebration themed "Pacific Renaissance" assembles art, music and dance of Hawai'i, Japan and Pacific nations in a mammoth Honolulu Festival, today through Sunday. About 5,000 participants from Japan, Taiwan, Australia and the Philippines join Island artisans and performers in a lavish exchange of heritage and good will.

Public events Saturday and Sunday unfold at three sites: the Hawai'i Convention Center, Ala Moana Center and the work-in-progress Waikiki Beach Walk site on Lewers Street and Kalia Road.

(Today's activities are by invitation only and are largely educational, targeting school groups.)

The festival will attract both local residents and visitors to Hawai'i with its mix of culture and performance artists. Exhibitors and crafters, local as well as visiting, will show and sell their wares at the convention center.

Amid the mounds of special programming, you'll find a bit of celebrity (Raiatea Helm, one of the Isles' top singers, sings twice; teen golf wizard Tadd Fujikawa will be in a parade — without his clubs) and Australian aborigine dances by Descendance.

Crowd pleasers? Probably the eye-filling mikoshi (portable floats), a highlight at the Sunday parade through Waikiki, from Saratoga Road via Kalakaua Avenue to Monsarrat Avenue, which also features about 2,000 marchers, beauty queens, bands and more.

Bring a camera, because there will be lots of photo ops; and something to sit on because the parade is a long one, slated from 4:30 to 8 p.m. Sunday.

HONOLULU FESTIVAL CALENDAR OF EVENTS

SATURDAY

Hawai'i Convention Center

  • Exhibition Hall

    10 a.m.-5 p.m. — Cultural displays, crafts

  • Omatsuri Hiroba stage

    10 a.m. — Tahiti Nui International

    10:35 a.m. — Philippines Dance Troupe

    11:10 a.m. — Yamagata Minyo Mutsumikai

    11:35 a.m. — Mainichi Bunka Center

    12:10 p.m. — Raiatea Helm

    12:45 p.m.— Music Line Kotomu

    1:20 p.m. — Puanani Kobayashi Hula School

    1:55 p.m. — Suga-Ren

    2:20 p.m. — Lei Lani Hula Studio

    2:55 p.m. — Descendance

    3:30 p.m. — Japan Nankin Tamasudare Association

    4:05 p.m. — Studio Hoaloha

    4:40 p.m. — Yasuco Shimizu and Her Fellow Singers

  • Omatsuri Hiroba Friendship Gala ($85 admission)

    7 p.m. — Entertainment

    7:50 p.m — Opening ceremony

    8:15 p.m.— Best contribution awards

    9 p.m. — Finale

    Ala Moana Center — Centerstage

    10 a.m. — Music Line Kotomu

    10:35 a.m. — Hana Hano Hula Oita

    11 a.m. — KMI Kitsuke party

    11:35 a.m. — Studio Hoaloha

    12:10 p.m. — Lei Aloha Ayako Hula Hui

    12:45 p.m. — Republic of China (Taiwan) Formosan Aboriginal Culture Village

    1:20 p.m.— Tsugarushamisen Shihoukai Kokusai Kouryu

    1:40 p.m. — Samurai Spirits Furin Kazan Karate-do

    1:55 p.m. — Yasuco Shimizu and Her Fellow Singers

    2:30 p.m. — Korean Christ United Methodist Church

    3:05 p.m. — Kaiulani Hula Community

    3:25 p.m. — Hui O Na Pu Makamae

    4 p.m. — Hula Circle Le'ale'a

    4:35 p.m.— Eun-Sun Jung Korean Dance Studio

    5:10 p.m. — Okayama Gakugeikan High School chorus and performance club

    5:40 p.m. — Lei Lani Hula Studio

    6:15 p.m. — Japan Nankin Tamasudare Association

    6:50 p.m. — Kansai Student Band Federation

    Waikiki Beach Walk

    10 a.m. — Descendance

    10:35 a.m. — Hula Circle Le'ale'a

    11:10 a.m. — Okayama Gakugeikan High School chorus and performance club

    11:40 a.m. — Hui O Na Pu Makamae

    12:15 p.m.— Mikoshiba Group

    12:50 p.m. — Tsugaru No Saiten Hirosaki Neputa Shouki

    1:25 p.m. — Philippines Dance Troupe

    2:05 p.m. — Nagauta, Mainichi Bunka Center

    SUNDAY

    Hawai'i Convention Center

  • Exhibition Hall

    10 a.m.-3 p.m. — Displays, crafts

  • Omatsuri Hiroba stage

    10 a.m. — Asomikai

    10:35 a.m. — Tsugaru No Saiten Hirosaki Neputa Shouki

    11:10 a.m. — Kashiwashi Minyo Renmei

    11:45 a.m. — NHK Mito Komaki Kei Hula Halau

    12:20 p.m. — Raiatea Helm

    12:55 p.m. — Chum-Sa Rang traditional Korean dance

    1 p.m. — Setagaya Aloha

    2:05 p.m — Republic of China (Taiwan) Formosan Aboriginal Culture Village

    Ala Moana Center — Centerstage

    10 a.m. — Keiki Hula Hawai'i

    11:05 a.m. — Tonosama-Ren

    11:40 a.m. — Puanani Kobayashi Hula School

    12:15 p.m. — Philippines Dance Troupe

    12:50 p.m. — Mikoshiba Group

    1:15 p.m.— Descendance

    1:50 p.m. — NHK Mito Komaki Kei Hula Halau

    2:25 p.m. — Suga-Ren

    2:50 p.m.— Na Puakea O Kalani Kitajima Hula Studio

    Waikiki Beach Walk

    10 a.m. — Yutaka Hula Halau

    10:35 a.m. — Japan Nankin Tamasudare Association

    11:10 a.m. — Saitama Ryujin Matsuri Kai

    11:45 a.m. — Kansai Student Band Federation

    12:20 p.m. — Republic of China (Taiwan) Formosan Aboriginal Culture Village

    12:55 p.m. — Kashiwashi Minyo Renmei

    1:30 p.m. — Japan Nankin Tamasudare Association

    2:05 p.m. — Kaiulani Hula Community

    2:25 p.m. — Tonosama Ren

    3 p.m. — Samurai Spirits Furin Kazan Karate-do

    3:15 p.m. — Tsugarushamisen Shihoukai Kokusai Kouryu

    3:30 p.m. — Iki Iki Aloha Hula Circle

    Waikiki Grand Parade

    4:30-8 p.m., Kalakaua Avenue, from Saratoga Road to Monsarrat Avenue

    The parade unfolds in three waves:

    Phase 1 — Hawai'i, with government groups, school marching bands, cultural organizations. Look for Tadd Fujikawa, golf phenom; Cherry Blossom Queen Heather Suehiro; Mayor Mufi Hannemann; Narcissus Festival Queen Jessica Lau

    Phase 2 — Performances by visiting Japanese and Chinese ensembles and organizations

    Phase 3 — Shinko/Yaguruma Rengo, with numerous mikoshi organizations from Honolulu and Japan

    Reach Wayne Harada at wharada@honoluluadvertiser.com.