Kauai鈥檚 premier performing arts stage has been closed for more than four of the last six years, reducing the island鈥檚 ability to attract big name acts and frustrating a rural arts community left with scant alternative venue options.
The closed for a year and a half in 2017 when the transformer that powered the air-conditioning system went dead. It reopened for a matter of months in 2019. Then the coronavirus pandemic struck, shutting the theater down again in March 2020.
The stage has remained dark since.
鈥淭his is a state-funded facility that is tragically going to waste,鈥 said Greg Shepherd, who teaches music and acting courses at the college, part of the University of Hawaii system.
Faulty theater rigging is to blame for the prolonged closure, according to Interim Vice Chancellor for Administrative Services Calvin Shirai. Repairs, which have not yet begun, are expected to cost about half a million dollars.
The college has enlisted a structural engineer for the project but supply chain snarls have made the work slow-going. As such, it鈥檚 difficult to predict a reopening date.
鈥淲e realize how important it is to the community and we are sorry that it鈥檚 taking so long,鈥 Shirai said, adding that the college can鈥檛 afford the repairs so the University of Hawaii Community Colleges System has agreed to foot the bill.
He said he hopes the theater will be ready to resume productions sometime between late spring and fall of 2023.
Since 1995 the 560-seat Performing Arts Center has been the top performing arts stage on the island in terms of acoustics, location and appearance. It鈥檚 the only venue on Kauai with a Steinway concert piano, which many professional musicians who travel to the island require to perform. And it鈥檚 equipped with professional sound and lighting systems, along with the staff to operate it.
Centrally located on the college campus in Lihue, the theater in a typical year hosts up to 100 performances 鈥 from string quartets and tango ensembles to musicals and hula shows. The venue draws international and national talent but also accommodates nonprofit performing arts programs, including youth groups, with discounted rental rates.
On rural Kauai, the venue is in a league of its own. During its closure, local performing artists say they are forced to utilize venues with inadequate seating capacity, poor acoustics, no staff to help with production or which have higher rental costs.
Island School, a private college preparatory academy near the KCC campus, relies on the Performing Arts Center as a concert venue. With the theater closed, student performances have relocated to a small stage in the school cafeteria.
鈥淚t was heaven-sent to have this gorgeous theater right in our backyard,鈥 said Philip Steinbacher, who staged two dozen concerts at the theater as the former head of the school鈥檚 arts department. 鈥淚t elevates the experience to them in a way that makes them feel like they are doing something really, really special and important, whereas to perform a concert in the place where you eat your lunch everyday is not the same experience.鈥
The theater鈥檚 closure has also reduced opportunities for Kauai residents to see big name acts.
鈥淎s small and as rural and as remote as we are, we often got top name classical or pop performers here,鈥 Steinbacher said. 鈥淛udy Collins is an example of that. But it doesn鈥檛 look promising that we鈥檙e going to get these names again because there鈥檚 no suitable place for them to go. They鈥檙e not going to perform at a pavilion at the food court.鈥
Plans recently fell apart to bring Christina Bianco, who won acclaim for playing Fanny Brice in a production of Funny Girl in Paris, to perform on Kauai, according to Steinbacher, because with the theater shut down there was no suitable venue.
Chris 鈥淎ngus鈥 Sweitzer, who has designed sound and lighting in the theater, said he鈥檚 concerned that if the theater continues to go unused, it will start to degrade.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how many countless millions of dollars of taxpayer money went into building that facility, but it鈥檚 going to fall into beyond neglect unless it starts getting used,鈥 he said. 鈥淏uildings are in a sense like living breathing things. If they aren’t used, they begin to fall apart. Equipment begins to fall apart. It鈥檚 not unlike sports in that if you suddenly stop an athlete from working for two years they can鈥檛 just jump back into it.鈥
Almost as frustrating as the theater鈥檚 shutdown, members of the Kauai performing arts scene say, is the fact that the college has not responded to questions about why the theater remains closed now that the pandemic has subsided.
鈥淭here鈥檚 been no transparency about it, no accountability,鈥 said Jason Blake, president of the Kauai Concert Association and founder of Kauai Sings. 鈥淲e still have been given no specifics on what鈥檚 really going on.鈥
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About the Author
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Brittany Lyte is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can reach her by email at blyte@civilbeat.org