Things that go bump in Chinatown
Ghosts in the Plague Year / It’s 1900 in Chinatown. Men gather in a brothel to smoke opium, imbibe alcohol and satiate their desires with the pleasures of the female flesh. Meanwhile, the government is working overtime to crack down on the bubonic plague and will do it by any means possible. (A century later, how different is this from our First Fridays? Ba dump bump.)
That’s the premise for Ghosts in the Plague Year, the latest play by Bob Okazako and Dennis Carroll to debut at Kumu Kahua Theatre. Carroll is also Kumu Kahua’s playwright and one of its founding members. He wrote Way of a God and Age Sex Location and is the chairman of the Department of Theatre and Dance at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. Basically, the man knows his shizz and with Harry Wong III directing the production, BullDog doing set design, lighting by Daniel Sakimura and costumes done by Nara Cardenas, Ghosts is going to be one helluva way to welcome the fall drama season. The fact that it takes place in the theater’s intimate, 100-seat venue will probably make things even more eerie.
(Note: The play features adult language and content so this boo-tastic event may not be suitable for keiki.)






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