View Full Version : A tribute to Don Ho


MrWarmth
05-15-2005, 07:35 PM
:wave: "Tiny Bubbles...In the Wine... Tiny Bubbles... Make Me Feel Fine.....Tiny Bubbles... Make Me Warm All Over.... With A Feeling that your gonna love me til the End of Time...........Everybody!........ :wave:

Penny Lane
05-15-2005, 07:48 PM
The last time that I saw Don Ho was on The Brady Bunch! :lol:

TJL
05-15-2005, 07:54 PM
Aloha Don Ho lovers!

;)

robyrob
05-15-2005, 07:59 PM
http://www.nndb.com/people/341/000023272/donho01.jpg

:rock:

Penny Lane
05-15-2005, 08:13 PM
http://www.nndb.com/people/341/000023272/donho01.jpg

:rock:

Tiny Bubbles and other hits? What other hits? :confused: :lol:

MrWarmth
05-15-2005, 08:51 PM
:wave: "So here's to the Golden Moon.... And Here's to the silver Sea.... and here's to the blah blah something.... and here's to you and me... Come on! Join in! :wave:

Janice
05-15-2005, 09:01 PM
I heard his wife was a Ho too.

James"Thunder"Early
05-15-2005, 09:03 PM
I heard his wife was a ho too.That's just wrong :rofl: :rofl: :rofl:

Cactus Jack
05-15-2005, 09:47 PM
I heard his wife was a Ho too.
:brent: :brent: :brent:

KJH278
05-15-2005, 11:45 PM
Did Don Ho die?

Mr. Television
05-15-2005, 11:47 PM
I heard his wife was a Ho too.


:rofl:

Mr. Television
05-15-2005, 11:49 PM
Did Don Ho die?


I don't think so. He just dissapeared. I haven't heard from him in years.

TripperFan
05-16-2005, 09:14 AM
I heard his wife was a Ho too.

:rofl: And his daughter is even a little Ho too!

Janice
05-16-2005, 09:30 AM
:rofl: And his daughter is even a little Ho too!
Yup, his wife, daughters....I even heard his own mother was a HO.

TripperFan
05-16-2005, 09:55 AM
Yup, his wife, daughters....I even heard his own mother was a HO.


Boy - that would make her a MOTHER OF A HO!!

bossradio93
08-25-2005, 10:41 AM
The good news Don's still very much alive and well at 74 and is still performing today. I think his most memorable moment was his appearance on "Sanford and Son" when he sang "Roll Out the Barrel" while Fred and Lamont were fleeing from suspected jewel thieves.

Don complained of shortness of breath when he entered a local hospital and was released.



Don Ho still savoring those 'Tiny Bubbles'

Legendary Hawaiian singer going strong into his 70s


Updated: 10:28 a.m. ET Aug. 9, 2004

HONOLULU - Dressed in a bright Hawaiian shirt, raspberry-tinted glasses and his trademark white slacks and loafers, Don Ho creeps into a white rattan throne behind his electric organ and begins to sing “Tiny Bubbles.”

The crowd at the Waikiki Beachcomber Hotel enthusiastically sings along.

“I hate that song,” he tells them, mocking his signature tune. He’ll sing it again at the end of the show because “people my age can’t remember if we did it or not.”

The legendary Hawaiian crooner, who turns 74 on Friday, keeps tourists and locals laughing, singing and cheering three nights a week.

Ho’s soothing and seductive baritone voice, treasury of stories and warm island personality, have been entertaining generations of fans for four decades.

Few artists are more associated with one place than Ho, a Waikiki icon.

“Hawaii is my partner,” said Ho.

And Ho has no plans of stepping down from the stage anytime soon.

“I’ll be here for another 30 years,” he tells his audience. “I’m going to look like hell, but you’ll look like hell too. ... We’ll look like hell together.”

Schmoozing with fans keeps Ho’s spirit young. Keeping with a tradition he started during the height of his popularity in the 1960s and ’70s, he meets with every fan for pictures and autographs.

For Ho, it’s not like he’s actually working.

“I retired 30 years ago. I just come over and have fun,” Ho said. “And it’s not like I have to work seven days a week anymore. Like in the old days, I worked 24-7 because my fans would stay up to 3 in the morning. Now, lucky if they stay up until 10 o’clock.”

Stars such as Lucille Ball, Sammy Davis Jr. and Frank Sinatra attended Ho’s shows. These days, Ho’s pop star daughter, Hoku Ho, is helping to introduce her father to a younger generation of stars and fans. Maxim magazine named the elder Ho one of “50 Coolest Guys Ever,” and younger musicians including Green Day, the Foo Fighters and No Doubt, have come to Waikiki to watch Ho perform.

Tom Moffatt, a Honolulu concert promoter who works with national groups, says Ho has a place in American music history, but it’s difficult to pinpoint where it is.

“In a way, he’s Hawaii’s contribution to American music,” Moffatt said, putting him on a par with Dean Martin and Jimmy Buffet as cool, relaxed entertainers. He’s also a “very good musician, very conscientious,” he said.

While the Don Juan looks that made him a star on stage and television may have diminished, Ho hasn’t lost his smile, charisma, bronze tan or his love for the islands.

His worldwide base of loyal fans keep returning to see his show — now with their children, grandchildren and even great-grandchildren. And the women still swoon over The Don.

Nina Armstrong, 67, of Orange, Calif., who sat in the front row for a recent show, has seen Ho perform about 20 times since the 1970s. She gushed about a smooch she got from Ho about 30 years ago.

“Years ago, he was always kissing somebody,” she said.

Her son, Ray Armstrong, of Sumner, Wash., brought his three teenage daughters to see a living legend.

“My kids will see them as a piece of history of the Hawaiian Islands,” he said. “It won’t necessarily be their style of music, but he’s part of the flavor of Hawaii. When you think of Hawaii, you think of Don Ho.”

In addition to “Tiny Bubbles,” his other hits include “I’ll Remember You,” “With All My Love” and the “Hawaiian Wedding Song,” which was sung by Elvis Presley in the movie “Blue Hawaii.”

During his nearly two-hour show, Ho reminisces about everything from the old charm of Hawaii and the attack on Pearl Harbor to marijuana and how many children he’s fathered.

Ho was a high school football star and Air Force pilot before appearing on countless television shows, including “The Don Ho Show” on ABC from 1976-77. One of Ho’s most memorable TV appearances was a 1972 cameo on an episode of “The Brady Bunch.”

Ho has 10 children, including Hoku, 23, who sometimes performs with her father.

“When my daughter sings with me, I’m really proud,” Ho said. “People can tell on my face and my smile. I cannot hide it. It just automatically lights up. I really love my children. The minute they walk on stage and sing with me, the audience knows it’s a different me, and I try to be cool, but you can’t hide some stuff.”

© 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
MSNBC.com

Jrnygrl
08-25-2005, 11:50 AM
Tiny Bubbles and other hits? What other hits? :confused: :lol:


ROTFLOL!!!!



:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: