Edward Kamanaloha Kenney, Jr. (August 8, 1933 – October 5, 2018) was an American singer and actor from Hawaii best known for the role of "Wang Ta" in the original Broadway production of Flower Drum Song. In retirement, he lived on the island of Kaua‘i and occasionally made public appearances.
Family
editBorn in Honolulu on Oahu to a Hawaiian-Chinese mother and a Swedish-Irish father. He married Judy Bailey and lived on Kauai.
Kenney was married to hula dancer Beverly Noa and was the father of Honolulu restaurateur, Edward Kenney, III.[1][2]
Kenney and Noa headlined shows at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel and the Halekulani Hotel for years. They reunited for a Honolulu television show on KGMB-TV in the 1980s.
Stage credits
editBroadway
edit- 13 Daughters as Mana, Prince of Hawai‘i (1961)
- Flower Drum Song as Wang Ta (1958–1960)
- Shangri-La as Rimshi (1956)
Honolulu Community Theater
edit- Principal "Ali Baba" role during late 1960s in large hit production of Kismet musical.
- Various other productions (1950s and after)
University of Oregon
editPresident William McKinley High School Theater
edit- 13 Daughters as Chun (late 1980s)
Hawaii Theatre
edit- 13 Daughters as Kahuna (early 1990s)
Discography
editAlbums
editSolo
edit- Exotic Sounds of the Spice Island (Columbia, 1960)
- My Hawai‘i (Columbia, 1962) (later reissued with a different cover on a Columbia budget label, Harmony)
- Ed Kenney's Hawaii (ABC/Paramount, 1962) (later reissued with a different cover by Decca, 196?)
- Somewhere in Hawai‘i (Waikiki, 1964)
- Waikiki (Decca, 1966)
- Royal Hawaiian Luau (Decca, 1967)
- An Island (Lehua, 1977)
Included
edit- Hawaii's Favorite Christmas Songs – Vol 2 (1999)
- Hawaii's Sunset Melodies (1996)
- Hawaii's Golden Treasures (1996)
- Hawaii's Favorite Christmas Songs (1993)
- Flower Drum Song: 1958 Original Broadway Cast (1958)
Singles
edit- "Numbah One Day of Christmas" the Hawaiian Pidgin version of The Twelve Days of Christmas
Co-wrote this with Eaton "Bob" Magoon, Jr.[3][4][5] (13 Daughters composer) and Gordon Phelps.
References
edit- ^ "Honolulu Star-Bulletin Features Column /2005/04/10/". Starbulletin.com. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ "Eddie Sherman 05.04.05". Midweek.com. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ 'Eaton Magoon, Jr.'. Music Theatre International. (USA)
- ^ 'Eaton Magoon, Jr.'. discogs.
- ^ 'Eaton Magoon, Jr.'. Playbill. (New York City).