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Five
nights a week, Don Ho sits center stage behind his Hammond Organ,
sings some of his favorite songs and "talk story" with his audience.
He teaches the mainlanders how to make an "Aloha" sign. Holding up his
right hand with thumb and pinky finger extended, he says, "This means
Family in Hawaii," and jokes, "or at least it did when I was growing
up. Nowadays to the kids, it just means hang loose."
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| What he does is easy to describe: He lounges at the organ, caressing the keys. He sings a song in a sleepy, intimate voice. He gets the audience singing and clapping and pretty soon he gets individual members of the audience on stage to be kissed and hugged and teased. But what the magic is, is harder to figure. |
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Don was born in the little Honolulu neighborhood of Kakaako of
Hawaiian, Chinese, Portuguese, Dutch, German parentage but soon moved to
Kaneohe. Don's climb to today's heady heights began in a cocktail
lounge in the windward Oahu town of Kaneohe called Honey's, named after
his mother. After returning from the Air Force, Don took over Honey's in
Kaneohe, Hawaii.
"When I took it over, the place was empty," says Ho. It was packed
everyday during the war years. My dad said 'Son, why don't you go make
music." Ho gathered a couple of friends who knew how to play musical
instruments and started a band. "I was terrible," says Ho. "So, I just
played very softly." Needless to say, business boomed.
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| Playing and learning from the talented musicians he hired for shows, Ho created his own musical image. In 1962, Ho began playing at Duke's in Waikiki. "That's when things started happening for us with records, TV shows and everything," says Ho. These were the days of Don's greatest development as an entertainer and a star. Backing him were the sensational five Aliis, playing piano, drums, two guitars, xylophone and doubling on half a dozen other instruments. Don presided at the organ, a glass of scotch in his hand, a cigarette burning in the ashtray. (Not anymore. He quit drinking and smoking fifteen years ago) The music was outstanding; the humor was fast and snappy. Tourists came, but so did locals and, after a while, visiting Hollywood stars--any of whom might take to the stage. Raising his glass in salute, Don would urge the audience to "suck'em up," and they did. | ![]() |