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Kumu Kahua Theatre Presents 3rd Annual Halloween Fundraiser, 10/28

By: Oct. 20, 2011
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Kumu Kahua Theatre presents the "Merchant Street Mash" - its 3rd annual Halloween Fundraiser! The fun begins at 6:00pm on Friday, October 28th. Tickets to the event are $20 and include a drink from the bar. For more information, email kumukahuatheatre@hawaiiantel.net. For tickets call the Kumu Kahua Box Office at 536-4441 or go online to www.honoluluboxoffice.com.

This year's event includes a chilling and creepy performance of unknown proportions from Hawaii's longest-running improv group "On The Spot", a blood-curdling acoustic musical interlude from that spooky faux-80s/90s group "Oil In The Alley" and possible surprise appearances from even more petrifying and malificious groups.

"On The Spot" featuring Alissa Joy Lee, Art Koshi, Garrick Paikai, Jordan Savusa, and Rod Cachola, is back from a recent triumphant showing at the Chicago Improv Festival (named "most innovative group in the world" by Festival Producer Jonathan Pitts) and has just hosted the wildly entertaining 6th annual Improvaganza Hawaii. For one night only, "On The Spot" rolls out another one-of-a-kind Halloween performance guaranteed to make you laugh or run screaming from the theatre.

"Oil In The Alley" returns from the dead for one-night only to satisfy their ecstatic and hungry fans with selections of their one-hit wonders from their catalog of #1 arena rock monster hits from their 1989-1993 heyday. Longtime Honolulu improvisors Sean T.C. O'Malley and R.Kevin Garcia Doyle with guest bassist Brian X will be playing their 'classic' songs which will all be improvised live!

Kumu Kahua Theatre is an air-conditioned, intimate 100-seat performance space; Patrons are strongly advised to purchase tickets in advance as performances do sell out.

Kumu Kahua productions are being supported by the State Foundation on Culture and the Arts, celebrating more than thirty years of culture and the arts in Hawai‘i (with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts); the Annenberg Foundation; the Mayor's Office of Culture and the Arts; paid for in part by the taxpayers of the City & County of Honolulu, the Hawai'i State Legislature, and Foundations, Businesses and Patrons.



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