Press Release Headlines

Calling All 'Ukes'!

Ukulele enthusiasts and players to help kick-off centennial celebration of the 1915 World's Fair with fun-filled Uke-A-thon where the 'Uke' craze began 100 years ago

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 11, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — As part of the opening weekend celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition (PPIE), organizers are "calling all Ukes" to join in the festivities by hosting a massive PPIE100 Uke-A-thon at the historic Palace of Fine Arts, the only remaining structure from the 1915 Worlds Fair.

Uke-A-thon Poster

The PPIE100 Uke-A-thon will begin at 3:00 p.m. on Saturday, February 21, 2015 and take place in and around the beautifully restored Palace Rotunda.  Registration and details are available at www.PPIE100.orgAll participants are asked to register online at: www.uke-a-thon.eventbrite.com.

"We want to celebrate the historic launch of the ukulele's popularity in the United States and re-create some of the enthusiasm and fun where the 'Uke' craze began one hundred years ago," said Jan Berckefeldt, Executive Director of the Maybeck Foundation, a PPIE100 organizer which oversaw the restoration of the Palace of Fine Arts with the San Francisco Department of Recreation and Parks (RPD).  "We are literally calling all 'Ukes' to the Palace to be part of this amazing celebration."

The Uke-A-thon is expected to draw hundreds, possibly over a thousand, ukulele players and enthusiasts, performing together and includes:

  • Ben Ahn, (www.benahn.com), originally from Kaua'i and now lives in San Francisco, will serve as host and emcee of the Uke-A-thon.
  • Hiram Kaailau Bell, (www.hirambell.net), originally from Honolulu, now lives in South San Francisco, is a master Uke instructor and performer. He will be leading the teaching and play-along portion of the event.
  • Marc Goldyne, of San Francisco, will be performing with his group, Hana Hau 100. Marc is a Uke enthusiast, performer and historian. In honor of the PPIE100, Marc has hand-crafted a special Centennial ukulele that shows the official poster of the PPIE on the back of Hercules parting the continents and the PPIE star maiden on the front.
  • Numerous local ukulele clubs from the San Francisco Bay Area and around the country are expected to send members to play; and,
  • Hawaiian dancers will perform to the music of the ukuleles.

"We are all so honored and thrilled to help tell the story of the ukulele, its origin and historic relevance to the 1915 World's Fair," said Hiram Kaailau Bell, master Uke instructor and performer.  "The Uke-A-thon will bring together families and players to reignite the Uke craze that started 100 years ago and is so vibrant today among Uke players young and old."

In 1915, the ukulele was given a national stage on the U.S. mainland during the Panama Pacific International Exposition, which celebrated the completion of the Panama Canal, and showcased San Francisco's recovery from the 1906 earthquake and fire. With exhibits from countries worldwide, it attracted more than 17 million people.

The territory of Hawaii hosted a Pavilion that succeeded in creating a buzz with its main attraction – Hawaiian dancers and music performed by visiting groups of accomplished Hawaiian musicians playing slide steel guitar, Spanish guitar, mandolin, and of course, the ukulele. Henry Kailimai who headed the delegation of musicians from Hawaii, led the Quintet that introduced his hapa haole song "On the Beach at Waikiki" (AKA. The Golden Hula) to millions of exposition visitors. George "Aoki" Akai was another accomplished Hawaiian composer and steel guitar player who led the Royal Hawaiian Quartet at the exposition pavilion. Jonah Kumulai, a successful Hawaiian businessman, politician and manufacturer of Hawaiian ukuleles received a PPIE gold medal for the quality of his instruments.

The PPIE100 Uke-A-thon is part of an all-day Community Day at the Palace of Fine Arts, which takes place on Saturday, February 21st beginning at 12:00 noon and lasting throughout the evening.  Festivities include a day filled with fun, family events, free performances, entertainment, exhibitions, interactive innovation modules, games, art projects, displays of artifacts from the 1915 World's Fair, food, and a historic light display of the Palace as it was in 1915, among other exciting activities.

All the details for the weekend events can be found at www.PPIE100.org.  This specially designed website has been created to bring together all the history, stories, special events, activities, partners and exhibitions taking place during the year-long PPIE100 centennial celebration. Follow PPIE100 on Twitter @PPIE100, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/PPIE100

About PPIE100:  February 20, 2015 marks the 100th anniversary of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition (PPIE), the World's Fair celebrating the completion of the Panama Canal and showcasing San Francisco—its recovery from the ashes of the 1906 earthquake and fire and its world trade potential.  In commemoration of this seminal event in San Francisco history, the California Historical Society (CHS), together with the San Francisco Recreation and Parks Department (RPD), Innovation Hangar and Maybeck Foundation are organizing a yearlong series of public events, exhibitions and activities, presented by more than 40 Bay Area cultural, civic and business organizations to reflect on PPIE's historical significance and celebrate the innovations of "Then, Now and Tomorrow."  The celebration includes the reopening of the Palace of Fine Arts as Innovation Hangar.  Open to the public throughout the year, iHangar a unique social innovation space that facilitates connections, ideas and investments in a way that simply cannot happen in the virtual world, featuring new inventions and prototypes, hands-on educational activities and amazing exhibitions.  Also inside iHangar and at its galleries at 678 Mission Street will be exhibitions by CHS, City Rising: San Francisco and the 1915 World's Fair.  AT&T is the presenting sponsor of PPIE100 with other major support provided by Hearst Corporation, Wells Fargo, Ford, Henry Mayo Newhall Foundation and Sterling Bank/Seligman Family Foundation.

Planning Editors: Advance interviews, historic photos and videos available for publication and broadcast.

Contact:
Kevin Herglotz, PPIE100
415-963-2601
Email

Ukulele players at the Hawaiian Pavilion, PPIE, 1915. (Collection of Donna Ewald Huggins)

Photo – http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150211/174972
Photo – http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150211/174973