Word: kaawaloa
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...board member of HRGSP, adding that the performances usually draw 50-100 people. The reprise will contain six Gilbert and Sullivan favorites, including a couple from “Ruddigore” and “The Yeomen Of the Guard.” Instead of an orchestra, Pedro Kaawaloa ’05 will accompany on piano.“Arts First is totally amazing because you don’t really realize how much art is on this campus until you cram it into one insane weekend,” says Miller, mirroring the widely held belief that...
...rightful baronet is hiding, presumed dead, and thus free to shyly woo young Rose Maybud (Caitlin C. Vincent ’07) in a small town, while his younger brother bears the brunt of the curse. That is, until his adopted brother Richard Dauntless (Pedro K. Kaawaloa, Jr. ’06), a much bolder sailor who is prone to having audible conversations with his heart, comes along and steals the pliable Rose...
...plotted form works well for the humorous aspects of the operetta—which are numerous, thanks to the content of the work, the stage direction of professional J. Jacob Krause with music direction by Aram N. Demirjian ’08, and the strong cast performances. In particular, Kaawaloa portrays Richard as a caricature of a swaggering sailor—wonderfully drunk and obnoxious but generally good-hearted. Also noteworthy is Mad Margaret, love interest of Robin’s brother, played by Jessica G. Peritz ’06 with a mixture giddiness, attention-deficit disorder, and barely...
...setting is a dress rehearsal, days before the premiere of “Ruddigore,” the new production by the Harvard-Radcliffe Gilbert and Sullivan Players. Dick Dauntless (Pedro K. Kaawaloa ’06) strides across the stage and looks incredulously at the wretched, love-lorn face of his half-brother, Robin Oakapple (Benjamin T. Morris ’09) “Why, you’re a fine, strapping, muscular young fellow—tall and strong as a to’-gall’n’-m’st—taut...
...rare foray by Gilbert and Sullivan into social criticism, the musical treats the titular namesake Princess Ida (Lisa D. Lareau ’06) in her battle against patriarchy and the masculine world. Engaged from infancy to Prince Hilarion (Pedro K. Kaawaloa Jr. ’05), a 20-year-old Ida chooses to forsake the safety of her relationship with her male partner and instead cloisters herself within a female university, where she abandons all things male...