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The Natives Are Restless

A San Francisco dance master takes hula into the twenty-first century

Published by SparkPress
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

About The Book

The art of hula is thriving in cities all over the country and the world, but it is not always understood. In The Natives Are Restless, journalist Constance Hale presents the largely untold story of the dance tradition, using the twin keyholes of Kumu Patrick Makuakane (a Hawai‘i-born, San Francisco–based hula master), and his 350-person arts organization (Na Lei Hulu i ka Wekiu). In the background, she weaves the poignant story of an ancient people and the resilience of their culture. In the foreground, she tells the story of an electrifying new form of hula that has emerged from a restless generation of artists like Makuakane. The crisp narrative is complemented by full-color photographs and illustrations. Her love for hula, and her history with the dance, inform Hale’s prose on every level. She makes Makuakane’s exuberant, fierce, sensuous dance style come alive on the page.

About The Author

Constance Hale is a Hawaii-born, San Francisco-based journalist who has been writing about Hawaiian culture for more than twenty-five years. Her award-winning features on slack-key guitar, the sovereignty movement, the Hawaiian language, Big Island cowboys, and Spam sushi have appeared in the Atlantic, National Geographic Adventure, Afar, Smithsonian, Los Angeles Times, Miami Herald, and Honolulu. She has also worked as a staff reporter and editor at the Oakland Tribune, the San Francisco Examiner, Wired, and Health magazines. She has written three books on language and literary style, including the best-selling Sin and Syntax, and her eight-part series on writing a sentence is on the New York Times “Opinionator.” Hale started dancing the hula at seven and performed each year in May Day festivals at Hale‘iwa Elementary School, switching to ballet and jazz dance while at Punahou School and Princeton University. She holds a bachelor’s degree from Princeton and a master’s degree from UC Berkeley. She has studied hula with Patrick Makuakāne for twenty years and edits the hālau’s annual newsletter, Kaholo‘ana.

Product Details

  • Publisher: SparkPress (October 11, 2016)
  • Length: 244 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781943006069

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Raves and Reviews

2017 USA Best Book Awards Finalist in Performing Arts: Film, Theater, Dance, Music

“Constance Hale is a beautiful writer with a sensitive appreciation of Hawaiian culture. Combining her deep knowledge of Hawaii with her talents as a prose stylist, she is following in the footsteps of the late James D. Houston as one of our most profound thinkers on island history and culture.”
—Julia Flynn Siler, journalist and author of Lost Kingdom

“To the story of hula, Constance Hale brings the dance vocabulary of Joan Acocella and the stylistic verve of Laura Hillenbrand. What a gift this book will be!”
—Julie Mushet, Executive Director of World Arts West, the creators and producers of the San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival

“He looks like Michelangelo's Adam in a grass skirt and dances like a god, sings like a cantor, and works the crowd like Bill Clinton . . . He's not only keeping Hawaiian culture alive, he’s a populist making the case for it.”
Bay Area Reporter

“Makuakane knows how to adapt and turn the familiar into the fabulous. He is a master of innovation, bar none.”
—Wayne Harada, Honolulu Star-Advertiser

“Patrick Makuakane is a maverick in the world of hula—a unique product of both Hawaiian traditional culture and the giddy world of San Francisco experimental dance.”
San Jose Mercury News

“Patrick Makuakane continues to mix and match the modern and ancient, East and West, creating a cultural collage that is informative, respectful and dares to be funny.”
Asian Week

“Patrick embodies an important quality of our people—resilience. In his work we see the form and content of the past, expressed in a new way. What’s traditional is the way he thinks—in sync with the land, the history, the mindset, the philosophy. What’s the future is his ability to reach out across time and space. He is just an amazing example of who we are, today.”
—Maile Meyer, entrepreneur and proprietor of Na Mea Hawai‘i

“I can’t look at this. It’s too beautiful. It’s going to make me cry.”
—Roberta Flack, after a performance in which she accompanied Na Lei Hulu dancers on “First Time Ever I Saw Your Face”
“[Patrick Makuakane is] an evangelist for hula itself—and damn if the most casual attendee won't be converted by his beguiling company . . . There's something for every taste: hula ancient (with chanting and music played on percussive gourds), contemporary (live guitar, bass and singing) and beyond (Makuakane's signature hula mua, set to pop music).”
San Francisco Chronicle

“The departures from the traditional, lovingly preserved and beautifully danced, were the most fascinating parts of the evening. Mr. Makuakane retained the purity of the form and intent in choreography that clearly held tradition in esteem.”
New York Times

“Bow Down, Mister” . . . depicts, in the language of hula, an encounter with a crowd of Hare Krishnas who wanted the same picnic ground in Golden Gate Park that the hula folk occupied . . . Nothing I can say can convey the fizzy preposterousness of this piece. I felt the building was going to explode.”
Bay Area Reporter

“I’m not sure I can find adjectives to describe these performers. Not only are they perfectly synchronized, but their movement comes from the heart and rides the wave of the music, not merely using it to mark the beat. I am mesmerized. Only the Bolshoi and Kirov Ballets have ensembles that can rival these women in their esprit de corps.”
The Dance Insider

“Na Lei Hulu I Ka Wekiu is something else. Lines of dancers provided an ineffably smooth unison reminiscent of the best corps de ballet moments of classical masterpieces. The lasting aftereffect is something like having seen flowers that breathe and butterflies that think.”
Los Angeles Times

“In his disarming way, Makuakane has made us aware of the potential of hula as more than a national dance of Hawaii. It is a movement language adaptable to various circumstances and musics, suitable for both transmitting narrative and expressing emotional states.”
—Allan Ulrich, review of Na Lei Hulu I Ka Wekiu’s “25 Years of Hula,” SF Chronicle, October 19, 2010

“Who, a quarter century ago, could have dreamed that a company devoted to hula dance would become one of Northern California's most appealing dance entertainments? I doubt that even Patrick Makuakane, the founder of the company Na Lei Hulu I Ka Wekiu harbored such fantasies . . . In his disarming way, Makuakane has made us aware of the potential of hula as more than a national dance of Hawaii. It is a movement language adaptable to various circumstances and musics, suitable for both transmitting narrative and expressing emotional states.”
—Allan Ulrich in review of Na Lei Hulu I Ka Wekiu's “25 Years of Hula,” SF Chronicle, October 19, 2010
“Given enough artistry and marketing flair, a professional dance company can survive for perhaps 30 years. But when a troupe that is fueled by talent, goodwill and community spirit rather than money endures and prospers for three decades, you suspect there’s a bit of magic involved.”
—Allan Ulrich, SF Chronicle
“The intriguing sound and look of Hawaiian pronunciation and dancing carried the night. There is nothing quite like the lilting flow of it all, and the way that flow abruptly comes to momentary staccato halts and then resumes, not unlike the motion of the sea, to which so much of the program alluded.”
—Jennifer Dunning, New York Times

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