About

**Kumu (Instructor/source): Liana Iona**

Experience: Liana Iona has over 25 years experience of  Hula & Mele.
Studied Under: Uncle George Naope - Ray Fonseca .
Resources: Kumu Nahoku Gaspang & Kumu Harmony Brighter.
Style of Mele: Chant / Ha'i.
Location: North Park, San Diego.
Halau Hula Founded: 1999.
Formerly known as: "Na Olapa Onahoku'okalani".

**Hula Introduction**
A hula dance is a choreographed interpretation of a poetic text. At the heart of a hula performance is the poetic text called mele; without a poetic text, there is no basis for the choreographed movement interpretation. Body movements combine pictorial hand and arm gestures with rhythmic lower-body patterns that are named.

The hula tradition is far more than just the dance. In fact, dances are the visual end products of a comprehensive cultural system presided over by hula's patron goddess, Laka. Religious rituals dedicated to Laka surround the training of dancers. The life of a hula dancer is permeated with prayers, offerings, and protocol. The plants used on the hula altar are also the basis for the lei adornments worn by dancers in performance.

The dedication of much traditional hula repertoire to gods and ruling chiefs — who, in traditional Hawaiian society, were regarded as descendants of the gods on earth — has cloaked much of the hula tradition with an aura of sacredness. Yet from its beginnings in mythic antiquity, the hula has always also been a form of entertainment. One of the earliest recorded accounts of hula is in the epic myth of the volcano goddess Pele. In it, her younger sister Hi'iaka learns a dance from her friend, and performs it to Pele's delight.

After American Protestant missionaries converted Hawaiians to Christianity in the 1820s, the rituals of hula were maintained only in secret and by very few performers. The hula itself survived because its adherents maintained it underground, out of the sphere of missionary censure and suppression. In the 1870s, King David Kalakaua encouraged a revival of hula, and public performances flourished throughout the 1880s and 1890s.

By the early 1900s, the transformation of hula into general entertainment coincided with the rise of tourism. A new form of song that incorporated stringed instrument accompaniment and tuneful melodies, and subsequently the adoption of English-language lyrics, eclipsed in popularity the older chanted tunes accompanied solely by indigenous percussive instruments. This newer, westernized style of hula circulated widely, and eventually was subjected to distorted stereotypes in media and Hollywood movies that continue even today.

A roots-inspired revival of hula in the 1970s has brought about a coexistence of the older indigenous style of hula, now called hula kahiko, alongside the widely-recognized westernized style of hula now called hula 'auana. The basic features defining these two contrasting categories are listed below:

**Hula Descriptions**

Hula Kahiko

Hula Auana

"Ancient"

"Modern"

Indigenous performance style.

Westernized performance style.

Tunes are chanted.

Tunes are sung.

Tunes are often not melodious.

Tunes are melodious.

Multiple voices chanted in unison.

Multiple voices harmonize or sung in falsetto.

Accompaniment is by indigenous percussive instrument.

Accompaniment is by string instruments such as; Ukulele, guitar, bass, piano, etc.

Movement style of dance is vigorous.

Movement style is softer, fluid, languid.

Costuming is indigenous; may also imitate the late 19th-century photographs that show traditional skirts over western attire.

Costuming is often western apparel.

 

*Hula Proverb* 

"When one wants to dance the hula, Bashfulness should be left at home. "

Contact Us: Ph (619) 501-4022


 

 

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