School Performance: Honolulu Theatre for Youth | Joseph Kekuku and the Voice of the Steel Guitar (KCYS)
It’s the late 1800s, a time of invention. Trains, steamboats, cameras, even electricity are new at the King’s palace in Honolulu. Eleven-year-old Joseph Kekuku accidentally strikes the strings of his guitar with a bolt from a railroad track and unlocks a brand new sound. Hawaiian music—and the music of America—is never the same.
Playwright Moses Goods, one of Hawaiʻi’s most prominent theatre artists, in collaboration with Kealakai Center for Pacific Strings, captures the true story of Joseph Kekuku’s invention of the steel guitar (kīkā kila). The multi-media production features a live Hawaiian slide guitar soundtrack and projections as it celebrates innovation, engineering, and the global exchange of ideas and sound. Rich in history, the play also looks forward and encourages children of today to celebrate their voice, culture, and sense of curiosity.
Recommended for grades 2-8
Sponsors
- Ann H. Bender Youth Series Endowment
- Susan Sargeant McDonald Endowed Fund
- Illinois Arts Council
- National Endowment for the Arts
- Bernard & Prudence Spodek Endowed Fund
- Judith Bojar Kaplan
- Susan & Michael Haney
- Brenda & Stephen Pacey
- Jill & James Quisenberry
- Linda & Ronald Roaks
- Carol & Ed Scharlau
- Jane & Christian Scherer
- Anne & David Sharpe