Monday, March 16, 2009

MTM: In Bed With an Elephant

Click on photos to enlarge!Hawaiian Rainbows


"Don't buy the house. Buy the neighborhood,"
Russian Saying



Welcome to the HHV!

“Love thy neighbor--and if he happens to be tall, debonair and devastating, it will be that much easier.”
Mae West



Wedding pictures at the Duke Kahanamoku Lagoon.

Hilton Rainbow Tower behind.

That is the world's tallest tile mural.


"Canada, in sharing a border with the USA" is like a mouse in bed with an elephant." Anonymous







Some people want to live adjacent to a college campus. I live next door to the 12th largest resort in the world. This "campus" boasts the largest number of rooms at any resort in the State of Hawaii with 3,543 total. Of these 2,860 are traditional hotel rooms, 639 are time share, and 44 (in the Diamond Head Rainbow Apartments) may be rented by the month.


Welcome to the Hilton Hawaiian Village Beach Resort & Spa!


When Duke Kahanamoku grew up here, folks still knew the area as Kalia, an age-old Hawaiian fishing village. Further down the beach were primitive tourist accommodations like Gray's Cottages (where Earl DeBiggers spent a summer, and found his most famous character: Charley Chan in local newspaper reports of the exploits of Honolulu Police detective Chang Apana).


In the Fifties, the early TV detective show, Hawaiian Eye, was filmed here. Remember Cricket (Connie Stevens) singing to the tourists, and local taxi driver Ponci Ponce playing his ukulele at the curb? Robert Conrad was the young "heart throb" of the show. All of the kitchey tiki paraphernalia has long since been purged. Pity. Arthur Godfrey (forgotten today - but BIG back in the day) sometimes broadcast from here. "How ah ya? How ah ya? How ah ya?" he said, mixing the magic name, "Hawaii," with "How-are-you;" pretty clever to a young kid (me). He too played the ukulele, and my earliest memories of Hawaiian Music are from hearing guests perform on his radio broadcasts. When I moved here, certain strangely familiar Hawaiian Classics gave me an unearthly memory of "small kid times." Part of my soul was here all along...



In the sixties, industrialist mastermind, Henry Kaiser, owned the property and prevailed on Buckminster Fuller to build one of his geodesic domes here. I walked past it many many times as long lines of visitors waited outside to be seated within for the dinner show. Today, the fountain with the three hula dancers (photo above) replaces the dome and welcomes visitors to Waikiki...


President JFK visited, as have many, many world personalities. I remember Bill Clinton drawing enthusiastic crowds to the lagoon, and George Bush rushing past less enamored crowds in his motorcade as he retreated to a closed fund raiser inside - or was it Cheyney?


The HHV is a small city unto itself. Almost daily, I walk down her beach, through her lobby, past her art, admire her carp, and over-hear her guests speak languages from around the world. Popular with corporations and conventions, the grounds often host grand private "events" with entertainment by famous artists. One of the high points of my life was presenting a paper about my work with youth to the annual meeting here of the Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatrists in 2001. A pleasant memory to conjure as I "schlep" through dressed like a bum, and covered in sweat on a hot day. . .


So this is my neighborhood. From my scow, I mean 'boat' I can see the bright windows of world-class hotel suites. There's no place like home!



A L O H A! Coudia





19 comments:

  1. Beautiful Rainbow !
    My husband built his house near a poplarfield. We got a lot of troubles with them and our neighbourgh cut tehem but the tress a re growing up again.

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  2. Morning Cloudia!

    "Living next to you is in some ways like sleeping with an elephant. No matter how friendly and even-tempered is the beast, if I can call it that, one is affected by every twitch and grunt."

    Pierre Elliot Trudeau, Past Prime Minister of Canada

    Trudeau actually used a slightly different animal for Canada, but the political editorial cartoonist used a mouse the next day and the image stuck in popular consciousness.

    Scow or dhow
    your ship's a trip
    from all you've shown us.

    (And how many times a day do you have to water that grass patch for Miss Kitty?)

    Tschuess,
    Chris

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  3. In my 40th birthday in 2002, I was lying beneath a beach umbrella in the late afternoon behind the HHV. It was a wonderful afternoon...

    Peace - D

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  4. It's amazing how many of these "micro cities" there are in the world. Makes me think of what'll happen when we settle in space and on the planets.

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  5. As always I wanna be there not here .. as for Mr Godfrey a bigger anti-semite there wasnt ...

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  6. I suppose there's an up and downside to your view from the scow. I'm sure you have your 'getaway' spots to go to as well!

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  7. Great shot of the rainbow!

    I attended a high school prom at the Hilton Dome. Pity it was torn down.

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  8. Really enjoyed reading about your neighborhood and letting the wonderful descriptions & history swirl around me on a 'Monday.' And I appreciated your earlier advice about the picnic. . .something I intend to remember! Did I tell you that I just love to open your blog and lose myself for a moment in the beautiful photo/header?
    Have a great week, my friend!

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  9. Oh I remember Hawaiin Eye - I thought Connie Stevens was lovely! :)

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  10. What an interesting post. I still haven't been to Hawaii, you make me want to go!

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  11. What a wonderfully vivid picture you paint of your neighbourhood, Cloudia! Makes me want to be there.
    The saying is good, "Don't buy the house. Buy the neighborhood."

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  12. Hawaiian Eye/Connie Stevens reruns were big when I was growing up.

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  13. Great rainbow, Cloudia. I admire your view.

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  14. I like this post, as I can imagine you living there now better, on your boat but comfortable walking around at the resort, choosing to be both part and apart. That's cool!

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  15. I love that area and didn't know its history so thank you! One year we stayed at the Hale Koa next door and walked around the the Village many times during our stay. Those statues were my all time favorites. We went to the luau this time and again took photos of the statues. Great quotes, enjoy reading those every time and as always I leave your blog with a smile.

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  16. It is fun to learn about your neighborhood. Don't you just love to walk through looking like a local who belongs there, one who does't leave the island after a week?!

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  17. Claude: Bon!

    Chris: Oh thanks for the back story on that quote! The boat (junk) has been amazing lately - more on that in a future post! - We water kitty's "Central Park" often as she is a snooty dowager. Thanks lots for visiting!!

    River Poet: That was YOU???

    Charles: Interesting. No wonder you are an SF & Fantasy author! "Space Resort Battles" Sound good?

    Daryl: Thanks for tainting my cherished memories. JUST KIDDING, Luv!! ;-)

    Deborah: Oh I DO! Heh Heh Heh...

    Gigi: You are part of history!!

    Noni: Thanks for saying that; I appreciate your kind words!!

    Ake: Yes!!

    Welcome, Elizabeth! Thanks for visiting us here. Please return often!

    Mr. NECKman: Charmed, dear.

    David C: You too! Wasn't the theme cool too?

    Love ya, GRAN.

    Magic Eye: My Friend!

    Junosmom: You put that so well! I think blogging is making us better writers, Sistah.

    Denise: You are lucky you attended the luau at the lagoon. they've moved it to the roof of the ballroom! You are sweet.....MAHALO.

    Dina: How did you know?! I love being distinguishable from our visitors. Do you also? Thanks for visiting and for taking us to Jerusalem via YOUR blog. Shalom & Aloha, Dear. (I thought of you when I used the word 'schlep')

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  18. Loved Hawaiian Eye and Hawaii Five O, and now I'm admitting I'm old.

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