A land before HYT
The Dinosaur Play / It takes more than just the Jurassic Park trilogy, Godzilla mania and the colossal Tyrannosaurus Rex fossil display in New York City’s Museum of Natural History to satisfy our fascination with dinosaurs. Heck, the prehistoric creatures–whose vitality exists in the images we’ve adapted from paleontological discoveries–are so intriguing to us human beings that they have long been a staple of pop culture and have gained an enduring role in literature, film and other media.
Here to add to the obsession is Honolulu Theatre for Youth’s The Dinosaur Play, a performance that immerses the keiki and their ‘ohana in a story about natural history and the bygone Mesozoic creatures who dominated this planet gazillions of years ago. Honolulu Theatre for Youth’s resident costume design team, headed by Sandra Payne, has created puppets and costumes to render a colorful variety of dinosaurs onstage. Set and lighting designer H. Bart McGeehon’s backdrop is a prehistoric oasis of environmental décor. Volunteers from the audience must help unlock the secret of a massive dinosaur egg, feed an Apatosaurus (think Littlefoot from The Land Before Time) and apply their mammalian brains to outwit a voracious T-Rex.






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