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STORYTELLING: Students perform
hula at the luau.
Rod Searcey
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hips swaying and
hands portraying a timeless story, Ryan McCormack, ’03,
led the procession of hula dancers to the center of Manzanita
Courtyard. The only guy in the flower-adorned bevy, he
opened Stanford’s 23rd annual luau with a mellifluous
Hawaiian chant.
“Men dancing hula,” says teaching associate music
professor Stephen Sano. “Now that’s a powerful
thing.”
Sano, MA ’91, DMA ’94, studies the
renaissance of Hawaiian musical tradition, teaching
a sophomore seminar
about slack-key guitar (ki ho`alu) and the culture
that produced it. He says the hula revival of the 1960s—with
men performing publicly —bore some similarities to
the resurgence that King David Kalakaua led in the
late 1880s, when he reintroduced
the dance that had been quashed by the first U.S. missionaries
to the islands in the 1820s. And Sano suggests that
there’s
a similar flowering of Hawaiian culture on campus today: “We’re
experiencing a wonderful high point because of an exceptional
critical mass of students from the islands.”
Between
20 and 30 freshmen arrive from Hawaii each fall, according
to Amanda Rang, who just finished a term
as
chair of the Stanford Hawai`i Club. Many are from the
Kamehameha Schools, which enroll only native Hawaiians;
several
others
are graduates of Punahou, the first American secondary
school founded west of the Mississippi, in 1840.
Rang, ’03,
who grew up on Oahu, has been dancing hula for 12 years
and studied Hawaiian language in high school.
At Stanford, she has been what Sano calls “an amazing
force.” She teamed up with Julia Nelson, ’04,
to teach a student-initiated course about Hawaiian
sovereignty in 2001, and has tracked down Bay Area instructors
to teach
a first-year Hawaiian language course. As a junior,
Rang led an alternative spring break trip that looked
at
contemporary
native Hawaiian issues. “We spent a night at Waikiki,
and it was wonderful because everyone was so disgusted,” she
says. “That was my goal—to show how tourism
has impacted ecosystems and to do some beach cleanups.”
During
this year’s spring break, Sano, who is recording
his third CD of slack-key guitar music, took Stanford
Taiko to a drum-building workshop on Maui. Next spring,
he will tour
the islands with the Stanford Chamber Chorale, performing
at Honolulu’s Bishop Museum and Kawaiaha`o Church,
where Queen Lili`uokalani, the last reigning monarch
and a prolific
composer, was choir master and organist. “It should
be a rich experience for students,” Sano says. “But
to sing the queen’s music with the portraits of the
royalty looking down on you is kind of spooky, too.”
Perhaps
a subject for the hula at next year’s luau.
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