George Kon of Honolulu has been showing Hawaiʻi teenagers how to rehearse for life for nearly 35 years. Kon co-founded and continues to lead the T-Shirt Theatre, a performance group based out of Farrington High School in Kalihi, Oʻahu. The theatre uses what he calls a “low-tech, high-zest” approach, forgoing elaborate sets and costuming, and relying on honest, sometimes raw, performances by the students.
This is the third of four specials in which outstanding HIKI NŌ graduates from the Class of 2019 (and one student from the Class of 2020) gathered at PBS Hawaiʻi to discuss their HIKI NŌ experiences and how they feel the skills they learned from HIKI NŌ will help them in college, the workplace […]
In the pursuit of happiness, Tom Vendetti, a Maui-based psychologist and filmmaker turned a series of unexpected life twists into two intertwined careers. He shares how his unlikely journey unfolded.
Home is where the heart is, and for Francis “Palani” Sinenci of Hāna, Maui, this statement holds true. He left the islands to spend over 20 years in the military, and then returned home inspired to reconnect with his Hawaiian roots. He later became a master builder of traditional Native Hawaiian houses.
Can you tell me how to get, how to get to Sesame Street? Principal puppeteer Pam Arciero can as she has been with the children’s series for nearly 40 years, primarily as Oscar the Grouch’s girlfriend, Grundgetta. Arciero, who hails from ʻĀina Haina in East Honolulu, got her start in the Department of Theatre and Dance at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. There, she joined a summer program in puppetry – one that would change the course of her life.
Jim Dator of Waikīkī has spent the last 50 years pondering and researching what the future might hold. He is a futurist, a pioneer in this academic field and is an internationally respected voice in futures studies. Learn how a series of family tragedies in his early life propelled him to always look forward, not back.
Water – a necessity in our daily lives that we often take for granted. Imagine a day with no access to water to drink, to water the garden or to flush a toilet.
This is the final episode in a series of four specials in which outstanding HIKI NŌ graduates from the Class of 2019 (and one student from the Class of 2020) gathered at PBS Hawaiʻi to discuss their HIKI NŌ experiences and how they feel the skills they learned from HIKI NŌ will help them […]
Every day, people post pictures, videos, songs and other property to social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Many of those posts are shared – and some are used or stolen by a competitor, a rival or someone you don’t even know.
Honolulu-born Lorenzo DeStefano is a photographer, filmmaker, film editor and writer who uses his skills to explore the hidden lives of those who are often overlooked by society. His play Shipment Day tells the true story of his feisty cousin Olivia, who contracted leprosy at age 18 and was exiled to Kalaupapa, Molokaʻi.