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Alfred Apaka (March 19, 1919 – January 30, 1960) was born Alfred Aholo Afat Jr in Honolulu, Hawaii to vocalist Alfred Aholo Afat Sr. Alfred was a graduate of President Theodore Roosevelt High School where he was an athlete and ROTC cadet captain. The family lived for a short time on Molokai but returned to Oahu. ==Biography== He was an American singer who possessed a romantic baritone voice. He was closely identified with Hawaii between the late 1940s and 1960. Alfred Apaka was arguably the foremost interpreter of Hapa haole music, which melded Hawaiian music with traditional pop music arrangements and English lyrics to convey Polynesian imagery and themes. He was of Chinese, Portuguese, and Hawaiian ancestry. The 1938 Royal Hawaiian Hotel engagement with Don McDiarmid was Apaka's first professional performance, followed by an engagement with Ray Kinney, and a tour of the mainland. Apaka's band played up and down the Pacific coast of the United States 1946-1949. In 1951, Apaka became established at the Moana Hotel in Waikiki. Bob Hope〔 first saw Apaka in 1952 performing at a luau at Don the Beachcomber's in Waikiki. Apaka performed on many of Hope's and Bing Crosby's TV and radio shows, as well as The Ed Sullivan Show. Joe Glaser and Jay Faggen signed on as his talent agents, and Apaka was groomed to become a mainstream crooner to compete with the likes of Bing Crosby. Industrialist Henry J. Kaiser stepped into the picture and forever fused the name of Alfred Apaka with that of Hawaii. When Kaiser built his Hawaiian Village, he specifically created its Tapa Showroom〔 exclusively for Alfred Apaka. It was a running gag that Kaiser so loved Apaka as his own son that he planned to buy the island of Molokai and rename it "Apaka Island." Kaiser established Hawaiian Village Records, supposedly to record many local talents, but initially only naming the first Christmas release of an Apaka package. Apaka was a regular on the enormously popular syndicated radio program ''Hawaii Calls'', produced by Webley Edwards. The radio program was heard around the world and helped to propel Apaka's career worldwide. The Decca Records release "The Best of Alfred Apaka" noted the following information in the album's liner notes:
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Alfred Apaka」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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